Martha is injured again, and this time her outlook is not as good.
It sounds like she may be spending the rest of her life in a wildlife rehab center. Such centers provide care and a safe home for the birds, and educational opportunities for the rest of us. Still it is sad to see wild birds unable to fly again, especially birds with the fierce wildness of raptors.Baker said it was unknown whether the beloved Martha, whose story captured the nation's attention in the spring, will survive her latest setback. She suffered a dislocated elbow, a grave injury for an eagle.
"The wing injury is pretty serious stuff," said Glenn Therres, eagle biologist for Maryland's Department of Natural Resources. "It's not like a broken leg, like you can put it in a cast and it will heal up." Therres guessed that she flew into a power line or tree branch during a recent storm.
She has been taken back to the Tri-State Bird Rescue and Research center in Delaware, where she recuperated from her other injuries this year. Specialists are deciding whether to send her to a special facility in Minnesota for surgery or to wrap the wing and hope it heals, Baker said.
Update: Martha was euthanized due to her injuries.