What did this to my beatiful Austrolorp? (graphic pics)

chesapeakechickens

In the Brooder
8 Years
Oct 26, 2011
28
0
22
Suburban Maryland
We went out to put the ladies up for the night and about half of the flock was missing. After nearly an hour of searching we found all of the missing birds hiding very well and many playing dead. (We've never seen this behavior before) Eventually, Josh found Susan with only her neck flesh eaten. No damage to her head or the rest of her body. Just her neck eaten to the bone from shoulders to her head. This must have happened pretty quickly as she was still warm and we had already been outside looking for more than an hour. Any ideas or insight would be appreciated. Thanks.



 
While coons generally move by night they will move whenever hunger or the urge hits them. They don't always eat/consume the head first. Mostly they target the bite sized neck and chew on it and the head first. I think this one was young and/or interrupted.
 
While coons generally move by night they will move whenever hunger or the urge hits them. They don't always eat/consume the head first. Mostly they target the bite sized neck and chew on it and the head first. I think this one was young and/or interrupted.

Sounds reasonable. Thanks. Would a fox attack look different? She was within a foot of the initial attack (according to the feathers) and only about 10 feet from the coop door. I do believe that this attack was interrupted as we were searching the area for quite some time and she was still a little warm when we found her. I'm certain that we have coons but we don't see them except once in a while as road kill. We did see a red fox in the yard the other week and that is somewhat unusual. My thinking is that a fox might have dragged her off away from the house and coop although she was a big chunky chicken.
 
I'm going with a raptor of some sort - probably a large hen Coopers hawk.

The feathers were very neatly plucked out. Not wet or looking chewed which made me think either a coon or a raptor. Is it typical for raptors to eat just the neck meat like this? I was thinking that a raptor would have torn her up quite a bit more to get to the good bits inside. Her neck was very carefully stripped of any useable meat. seems more of a "chew" type wound but I'm just guessing here. We do have hawks here and Coopers at that.
 
We went out to put the ladies up for the night and about half of the flock was missing. After nearly an hour of searching we found all of the missing birds hiding very well and many playing dead. (We've never seen this behavior before) Eventually, Josh found Susan with only her neck flesh eaten. No damage to her head or the rest of her body. Just her neck eaten to the bone from shoulders to her head. This must have happened pretty quickly as she was still warm and we had already been outside looking for more than an hour. Any ideas or insight would be appreciated. Thanks.



Oh my, i am soo sorry!! We dont have many predators here so i cant help (we just have hawks, and thye only takew chicks...)!
 

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