MORNING ROUNDS: Rosie, a small parrot, accompanies a staff member checking on patients.
The Center for Avian and Exotic Medicine in New York City is not your typical veterinary hospital. When I visited recently, the center’s patients included four rabbits, a pair of colorful birds called budgies, a bigeared rodent called a chinchilla, two bearded dragon lizards, a turtle, and a small black bird—a starling named Seymour.
Vicente Vergara, a licensed veterinary technician at the hospital, tells me that Seymour is having digestive trouble. His owners are extremely concerned. Starlings are common in New York, but they’re wild birds. I tell Vergara that I didn’t realize people kept them as pets. “Neither did I,” he says.
The center is one of a handful of hospitals in the country that specializes in treating exotic pets. In veterinary medicine, an exotic animal is anything that’s not a cat or a dog. Hamsters, iguanas, fish, frogs, hedgehogs, snakes, birds, squirrels—and even stranger creatures—come here for expert medical treatment. Veterinarians who care for this motley mix must develop a deep understanding of each species’ unique biology—and the potential health problems each is likely to encounter.
The Center for Avian and Exotic Medicine in New York City isn’t your normal veterinary hospital. I visited the center recently. Four rabbits, two colorful birds called budgies, and a big-eared rodent called a chinchilla were patients there. So were two bearded dragon lizards, a turtle, and a small black bird. He’s a starling named Seymour.
Vicente Vergara is a licensed veterinary technician at the hospital. He says Seymour is having digestive trouble. His owners are very worried. Starlings are common in New York, but they’re wild birds. I tell Vergara that I didn’t know people kept them as pets. “Neither did I,” he says.
Not many hospitals in the country focus on treating exotic pets. The center is one of them. In veterinary medicine, an exotic animal is anything besides a cat or a dog. Hamsters, iguanas, fish, frogs, hedgehogs, snakes, birds, and squirrels come here for treatment. So do even stranger creatures. Caring for so many different kinds of animals is a challenge. Veterinarians must understand each animal’s biology. And they need to know the health problems each might face.