Since August 1997, Wild ARC has treated over 16,000 wild animals. The main reason these animals are in need of help is due to human activity, generally causing trauma to the animal.
Many of the animals we admit are severely injured after being hit by a vehicle, hitting a building or window, attacked by a cat or dog or even a natural predator, or caught in a fence or netting. Many young animals are also orphaned when their parents suffer from fatal trauma. Some animals are sick with disease or covered in oil or a sticky substance.
In 30-40% of the cases, we are able to treat and release the animal back to the wild after a short or long period in care. Another third of the animals may die in care within hours or days of being admitted or before they even reach the center. The remaining animals suffer from severe injuries, illness, or emaciation that they will never recover from to function in the wild again, and therefore they are provided with a humane euthanasia - another form of release - that from a very painful life. In a few rare cases we are able to locate breeding or educational programs for non-releasable wildlife.
We have seen increasing numbers of wildlife admitted to Wild ARC over the years, likely from a combination of more people becoming aware of Wild ARC, more wild animals being injured or orphaned with increasing human population in the region, and finally, more people being out in the wilderness interacting with wild animals.

The spring and summer are the busiest times of the year with many baby animals needing both medical care for injures and supportive care when their parents have been killed. This is a monthly breakdown of intake in 2005:

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American Bittern
American Coot American Robin American Wigeon Ancient Murrelet Anna's Hummingbird Bald Eagle Band-tailed Pigeon Barn Owl Barn Swallow Barred Owl Belted Kingfisher Bewick's Wren Black-capped Chickadee Black-headed Grosbeak Black Swift Blue Grouse Brewer's Blackbird Brown Creeper Brown-headed Cowbird Brewer's Blackbird Bufflehead Bushtit California Quail Canada Goose Canvasback Duck Cedar Waxwing Chestnut-backed Chickadee Chukar Cliff Swallow Coopers Hawk Common Merganser Common Murre Common Raven Common Nighthawk Common Snipe Dark-eyed Junco Double-crested Cormorant Downy Woodpecker Domestic Duck species* European Starling |
Evening Grosbeak
Fancy Pigeon* Fox Sparrow Gadwall Great Blue Heron Great Horned Owl Green-winged Teal Glaucous Gull Glaucous-winged Gull Golden-crowned Kinglet Golden-crowned Sparrow Golden Eagle Hairy Woodpecker Hermit Thrush Herring Gull Hooded Merganser House Finch House Sparrow Killdeer Laysan's Albatross Lesser Scaup Lincoln's Sparrow Long-eared Owl Mallard Merlin Mew Gull Mourning Dove Mute Swan Northwestern Crow Northern Flicker Northern Fulmar Northern Pygmy Owl Northern Saw-whet Owl Orange-crowned Warbler Osprey Pacific Loon Peacock* Pelagic Cormorant Peregrine Falcon Pileated Woodpecker Pied-billed Grebe |
Pine Siskin
Racing Pigeon* Red-breasted Merganser Red-breasted Nuthatch Red-breasted Sapsucker Red Crossbill Red-tailed Hawk Red-throated Loon Red-winged Blackbird Rock Pigeon Rhinoceros Auklet Ring-necked Dove* Ring-necked Pheasant Ruby-crowned Kinglet Ruddy Duck Ruffed Grouse Rufous Hummingbird Savannah Sparrow Sharp-shinned Hawk Short-eared Owl Sooty Shearwater Sora Spotted Towhee Steller's Jay Swainson's Thrush Tree Swallow Turkey Vulture Varied Thrush Violet-green Swallow Virginia Rail Wilson's Warbler Winter Wren Western Gull Western Grebe Western Tanager White-crowned Sparrow Willow Flycatcher Wood Duck Yellow-rumped Warbler Yellow Warbler |
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Beaver
Big Brown Bat Black-tailed Deer California Bat Deer mouse Eastern Cottontail Rabbit Eastern Grey Squirrel |
European Rabbit*
Harbour Seal House Mouse* Little Brown Bat Mink Muskrat Norwegian Rat* |
Raccoon
Red Squirrel River Otter Silver-haired Bat Yuma Bat |
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Garter Snake
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Painted Turtle
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Red-eared Slider Turtle*
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* indicates feral wildlife also treated.