A 'tropical bird' found in the north west turned out to be a seagull dyed blue

A 'tropical bird' found in the UK turned out to be a seagull dyed blue - and it has now been rescued by the RSPCA.
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The bird was spotted wandering round a car park on shocked onlookers thought they'd seen a rare and tropical bird.

They called the RSPCA who attended the scene in Carlisle, Cumbria, but they soon realised the bird wasn't tropical at all.

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Instead it was a regular seagull that had been dyed electric blue, and was also struggling to fly.

The blue bird was spotted wandering round a car parkThe blue bird was spotted wandering round a car park
The blue bird was spotted wandering round a car park

Graham Carter, animal welfare officer, said: “I have been in this job for about 20 years and I have never seen anything like this! This bird was incredible.

“We have similar situations before where gulls have got themselves into trouble after falling into containers of beer, curry or oil.

"We have also seen situations where some birds have been dyed pink before, but we just don’t know what happened in this case with this poor bird.

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“I wonder if some kind of blue powder has fallen on him and left him in this state.

“We would really like to hear from anyone who knows how this happened.

"If it's a case of the bird falling into a liquid or substance we would really like to know so that we can find the source and make sure this doesn't happen again.

"Or if it was done on purpose we would really like to know so we can look into this further. At this stage we simply don't know if this was an accident or malicious.

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“Whatever the substance is, it has affected his feathers and meant that he was unable to fly, so I’m really glad we were able to rescue him."

After trying to clean the blue dye from the gull’s feathers, mystery still surrounds what it is and how it got there.

Stephen Wakelin, from Wolfwood Wildlife and Dog Rescue, said: “We are doing our best for this poor gull and are hoping that he makes a full recovery.

"We still don’t know what the substance is but we are concerned that it is affecting him as he is a little dazed and is still unable to fly at the moment.

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“We think he is around two years old. It will take some time for him to go back to normal colour as he will have to moult and grow new feathers first.

"We are doing everything we can for him and making sure he is safe and well looked after.”

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