Wash. Admin. Code § 220-450-060 - Definitions- Wildlife rehabilitation permits
For the purposes of WAC 220-450-070 through 220-450-220, the following definitions apply:
(1)
"Alcid" means a bird of the family Alcidae. The alcid family includes murres,
guillemots, auklets, puffins, and murrelets.
(2) "Daily ledger" means a record, kept
current daily and available for inspection, documenting all wildlife
admissions, transfers, releases, and deaths; reason for admission; case number,
date of admission; date of release, transfer, euthanasia, or other type of
disposition; any tag or band numbers.
(3) "Director" means the director of the
department of fish and wildlife or his or her designee.
(4) "Education animal" means a permanently
injured or otherwise nonreleasable wildlife permitted to be kept in permanent
confinement on public static display or used in educational programs.
(5) "Euthanasia" means compassionate killing
with a minimum of pain and distress, in a timely manner, and safely to prevent
disease transmission, public health or human safety risks, or prolonged or
unrelenting animal suffering due to illness, injury, unremitting
pain.
(6) "Foster" means to serve
as a conspecific surrogate parent or conspecific companion to wildlife in
rehabilitation.
(7) "Habituate"
means an animal stops responding to frequently occurring stimuli (like noises,
sights or smells) because no negative consequences occur; it may be temporary
and reversible or behavior may become ingrained (i.e., taming) and prevent
return to the wild. See "Tame."
(8)
"Hacking" means to transition a young raptor using temporary release to the
wild and allowing it to return for food and shelter while learning to hunt and
survive on its own.
(9) "Humane"
means providing care such as water, food, safe handling, clean facilities,
medical treatment, and euthanasia if needed, and conditions including
environments sensitive to species-typical biology and behavior, with the intent
to minimize fear, pain, stress, and suffering.
(10) "Imping" means a method of replacing a
broken feather with an undamaged feather.
(11) "Imprinting" means a period of rapid
learning occurring during a brief critical period typically soon after birth or
hatching that establishes a strong and long-lasting attachment to a specific
individual or object, such as to a parent where the animal becomes socially,
and later sexually, bonded to that object or creature, identifying itself
irreversibly as the species it imprints upon.
(12) "Mal-imprinting" means imprinting on a
species not its own, preventing the animal's return to the wild.
(13) "Nonreleasable" means wildlife that
cannot be released with a reasonable potential for survival in the wild due to
physical or psychological impairment, such as the inability to express
species-specific appropriate behavior, including the ability to hunt or forage,
recognize threats; or is tamed or mal-imprinted.
(14) "Oil" means oil of any kind and any
form, such as petroleum and nonpetroleum oils including, but not limited to,
crude oil and refined petroleum products, animal fats and vegetable oil, other
oils of animal or vegetable origin, and other nonpetroleum oils.
(15) "Oiled wildlife rehabilitation" is a
specialized form of wildlife rehabilitation and means the process of caring for
oiled wildlife during intake, stabilization, washing and rinsing, and drying,
to allow the wildlife to return to their natural habitat.
(16) "Oiled wildlife rehabilitation facility"
is a specifically permitted type or portion of a wildlife rehabilitation
facility used for the rehabilitation of oiled wildlife.
(17) "Orphan-imprinting" means to use
conspecific wildlife for the purpose of feeding, socializing, and teaching
appropriate wild behavior to young wildlife.
(18) "Patient record" means a record, kept
current daily and available for inspection, documenting each wildlife animal's
species, age and sex; daily care including feeding, watering, and cleaning;
medical care; and veterinary notes regarding treatment and health of wildlife
in the permittee's care.
(19)
"Primary permittee" means the person listed on the wildlife rehabilitation
permit who applies for and receives a wildlife rehabilitation permit and is
responsible for monitoring and approving any subpermittee's conduct and
practices; also, "wildlife rehabilitator."
(20) "Principal veterinarian" means a
licensed veterinarian who agrees, in writing, to provide and direct, timely,
appropriate veterinary medicine in conjunction with wildlife rehabilitation
services and activities.
(21)
"Public display" means to place or locate wildlife so that they may be viewed
by the public.
(22) "Record" means
the wildlife rehabilitation permit(s) associated with a particular facility and
permit-tee(s); daily ledger; patient records; and annual wildlife
rehabilitation reports.
(23)
"Stabilize for transport" means life-threatening injuries are addressed
including patient airway is clear, patient is hydrated, hemorrhage is
controlled, shock is treated, and broken bones are immobilized.
(24) "Subpermittee" means person or persons
listed on the primary permittee's wildlife rehabilitation permit who care for
wildlife either at the facility as the primary caretaker in the primary
permittee's temporary absence or at an off-site facility with the permission
and under the direction of the primary permittee.
(25) "Tame" means an animal, such as
wildlife, purposefully seeks out human company and social interaction, care, or
attention, does not reject human handling, and learns to not fear humans, all
of which prevents the animal's return to the wild.
(26) "Veterinarian" means a licensed
veterinarian.
(27) "Veterinary
summaries" means those findings, treatments, and directives written by a
veterinarian in summary form and submitted to the wildlife rehabilitation
facility.
(28) "Wildlife
rehabilitation" means the care and treatment of injured, diseased, oiled, or
orphaned wildlife including, but not limited to, capturing, transporting,
treating, feeding, housing, and conditioning animals so they can be released
back to the wild.
(29) "Wildlife
rehabilitation facility," or "facility," means the authorized site(s), as shown
on the wildlife rehabilitation permit, where treatment and rehabilitation of
wildlife takes place.
(30)
"Wildlife rehabilitation permit" means a permit issued by the director that
authorizes a person to practice wildlife rehabilitation.
(31) "Wildlife rehabilitator" means a person
who conducts wildlife rehabilitation and possesses a current wildlife
rehabilitation permit from the department.
Notes
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No prior version found.