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Flamingo gets prosthetic leg Flamingo gets prosthetic leg
(35 minutes later)
A flamingo in Brazil has been given a new leg to stand on: an artificial one. A flamingo in Brazil has been given an artificial leg in what zookeepers believe is a world first. The six-year-old Chilean flamingo at Sorocaba zoo fractured his left leg a month ago.
Zookeepers in south-east Brazil say they think it is the first time a flamingo has used a prosthetic leg. “To prevent infection from setting in and spreading, which would have killed him, we decided to amputate the leg,” said the zoo’s veterinarian, Andre Costa, who performed the surgery on the bird.
The six-year-old Chilean flamingo at Sorocaba zoo fractured his left leg a month ago. It was partially amputated due to an infection. Costa said it was not known how bird’s leg was injured, but that “perhaps one of the clumsy pelicans that share the enclosure crashed into him, or he was attacked by one of the crowned cranes”.
Andre Costa, the vet who performed the amputation, said the bird would not have survived with just one leg. Since the bird would have had little chance of survival with one leg, the zoo decided to try an artificial one. The seven-inch carbon limb was donated by a local prosthetics manufacturer. Within days, the flamingo was adjusting nicely to his new leg even tucking it under his body in the classic flamingo pose.
The seven-inch carbon limb was donated by a local prosthesis manufacturer. Costa said the bird was being kept apart from the other 28 flamingoes and would be reintroduced to the flock by degrees. “The other birds might see the prosthesis as an object to be attacked,” he said. “They may shun or attack, and even kill him.”
Within days the flamingo was adjusting nicely to his new leg, even tucking it under his body to make the flamingo’s classic one-leg standing pose.