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Odesa Zoo saves birds after Russian attacks

Volunteers lift a dead bird from the wind-swept beach of 'Odesa. The Black Sea port town where an oil spill, blamed by Ukrainian officials on Russian attacks, has left wildlife fighting for survival.

Odesa is a Russian target, and has been since the Russian troops invaded Ukraine on February 20, 2022. However, the attacks are more intense now. Wildlife is also among the victims.

Russia hasn't commented on the spill but previously denied targeting civilian infrastructure.

Odesa Zoo is determined to save birds that survive after being coated with oil.

Birds can no longer move due to their feathers becoming coated. "They can't fly or swim," said zoo director Ihor Bilyakov outside a rescue point to rehabilitate the birds.

They lose their mobility and freeze quickly because it is cold now.

The spill, which was caused by Russian air strikes that damaged storage tanks of sunflower oil in Pivdennyi Port last week, killed dozens of birds. Regional governor Oleh Kiper blamed the incident on Russian attacks.

The birds screech indignantly when volunteers clean them of oil from their bill to toe.

Biliakov said that the two most elegant species, the great crested and horned Grebes, were the worst affected.

He said that the great crested Grebe is a waterfowl species that is particularly vulnerable to contamination by oil.

The port administration reported that emergency crews deployed floating barriers and specialised vessels to contain spillage, and temporarily closed the channel.

The oil will degrade organically, according to authorities. However, monitoring and cleanup efforts are ongoing in order to prevent any further spread. Reporting by Iryna Nazaarchuk, writing by Ron Popeski and editing by Howard Goller

(source: Reuters)