My precious 3-month old D'uccle chick died today in the morning. She was the only one that hatched in her batch. Based on my mom's account, the chick had a bleeding wound on her neck and a bunch of feathers in her playpen. Whatever happened occurred in the morning at 7-8AM.
The chick was temporarily living in a mesh playpen that can be zipped up entirely. The playpen was placed in chicken wire steel walk-in coops. The coop was used as a makeshift shed and was pretty run down with large holes in the wires and large gaps above the door and below the coop. I know the coop itself was unsafe, but I was sure it could at least survive a few days within the playpen and coop combined. I was halfway done with her permanent coop and would've finished today..
I live in SE Texas in a small quiet neighborhood and the main predators around my area are animals like possums, cats, dogs, owls, and hawks. Raccoons are rarely seen around here. Foxes and coyotes don't exist near me. Snakes are even rarer and usually are just harmless small ones. My best guess is a regular rat, but I never seen a rat around here for the past 20+ years especially outdoors (I seen a few in people's houses).
If it was a possum or a similar animal, wouldn't it make sense for them to attempt to rip a hole into the weak mesh or yank the chick out? There was NO holes or any signs of damage on the playpen. There was no sign of blood stains anywhere (white playpen). Also don't they primarily hunt at night?
There was a brick inside the playpen (to prevent it from flying off) along with a food/water container. It might be a long shot, but could the chick accidently sliced its own neck open on the brick? The brick is pretty rough around the edges. The chick does like to hug objects while sleeping (she doesn't perch/roost for some reason).
My mom and me have been thinking about the cause the whole day and can't figure out what could've caused it. My question is what animal could have done this? We plan to set up a trap tomorrow near the scene of the crime.
I know there was a lot of things I could've done to prevent this, but what's done is done. I just want to know who or what the culprit is for the chick's death.
The chick was temporarily living in a mesh playpen that can be zipped up entirely. The playpen was placed in chicken wire steel walk-in coops. The coop was used as a makeshift shed and was pretty run down with large holes in the wires and large gaps above the door and below the coop. I know the coop itself was unsafe, but I was sure it could at least survive a few days within the playpen and coop combined. I was halfway done with her permanent coop and would've finished today..
I live in SE Texas in a small quiet neighborhood and the main predators around my area are animals like possums, cats, dogs, owls, and hawks. Raccoons are rarely seen around here. Foxes and coyotes don't exist near me. Snakes are even rarer and usually are just harmless small ones. My best guess is a regular rat, but I never seen a rat around here for the past 20+ years especially outdoors (I seen a few in people's houses).
If it was a possum or a similar animal, wouldn't it make sense for them to attempt to rip a hole into the weak mesh or yank the chick out? There was NO holes or any signs of damage on the playpen. There was no sign of blood stains anywhere (white playpen). Also don't they primarily hunt at night?
There was a brick inside the playpen (to prevent it from flying off) along with a food/water container. It might be a long shot, but could the chick accidently sliced its own neck open on the brick? The brick is pretty rough around the edges. The chick does like to hug objects while sleeping (she doesn't perch/roost for some reason).
My mom and me have been thinking about the cause the whole day and can't figure out what could've caused it. My question is what animal could have done this? We plan to set up a trap tomorrow near the scene of the crime.
I know there was a lot of things I could've done to prevent this, but what's done is done. I just want to know who or what the culprit is for the chick's death.