Bold opening: A helpless seabird fights for its life at a hospital doorway, and the rescue unfolds in real time.
Seabird Finds Help at ER
A Bremen Fire Department firefighter gently cradles an injured cormorant that had pecked at the glass emergency-room door of a hospital in Bremen, Germany, on Sunday, February 15, 2026. The image captured by the Bremen Fire Department (via DPA for AP) shows the moment the bird’s distress drew medical staff’s attention and set in motion a coordinated rescue.
What happened
The cormorant—a large, sleek black waterbird with a long neck, a wedge-shaped head, and a sharply hooked beak—arrived at Klinikum Links der Weser in Bremen, repeatedly pecking at the hospital’s door. It had a triple fishing hook lodged in its beak, a painful and dangerous situation for a wild animal in need of urgent care.
Rescue and treatment
Medical staff and firefighters worked together to carefully remove the fishing hook and treat the resulting wound. The collaboration helped stabilize the bird, which was then released back into its natural habitat within the hospital’s grounds, specifically the park area surrounding the facility.
Why this matters
Officials note that when an injured cormorant approaches people, it is typically a sign of extreme distress and a loss of its natural wariness. Without prompt intervention, complications such as infection, ongoing pain, and even starvation can follow a hook injury.
About the species
Cormorants are sizable waterbirds known for their long necks and pointed, hooked beaks. A hook lodged in a bird’s beak presents a serious risk: it can cause infection, hinder feeding, and exacerbate suffering. The successful rescue here underscores the importance of rapid response and careful handling by trained professionals in wildlife emergencies.