In this video, Toronto Wildlife Centre’s rescue team helps a mallard family who nested on a on a building rooftop in downtown Toronto.
Our orphaned squirrels are starting to go back to the wild! Find out how you can lend a tree on your property to help them with their transition.
A woman from Pickering called us after a robins’ nest was blown out of a tree and she found the babies lying helpless in the grass.
Toronto Wildlife Centre comes to the rescue when a mother grebe is spotted with a fish hook stuck in her neck.
Wild animals in the city have it pretty tough. They face danger everywhere they turn—on our roads, from our pets, from our litter. Sometimes they try to make a safe home in a nice warm attic or underneath a deck, only to be trapped and released far away from home.
Four tiny short-tailed weasels were found orphaned in a parking lot under a van. Sadly only two made it through the night, but they’re thriving in foster care. They have a few months ahead of them yet before they’ll be ready to start their lives in the wild!
This little lady came in as a single orphan on Tuesday. Luckily she’s around the same age as the 2 other orphaned male coyotes that we have in care. They’re now being raised together and she’ll have 2 siblings to look after her as she grows up.
Our Wildlife Rehabilitation Manager Lisa Fosco hand-feeds a ravenous little coyote. He and his brother were admitted to Toronto Wildlife Centre after they were found scattered in the grass by…
Toronto Wildlife Centre’s rescue team re-nested this baby great-horned owl after Saturday’s windy weather blew him out his tree, nest and all. We made him a new home, and with the help of local arborists Paul and Dan, affixed it high in the tree.