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 Employees of the Richmond Wildlife Center in Virginia are doing their best to stanley cup quencher  act like mother foxes as they feed and care for an orphaned kit that found her way into their care.In a video posted to the center s Facebook page Tuesday, Executive Director Melissa Stanley is shown wearing a red fox mask and rubber gloves while feeding the tiny kit from a syringe. The kit sits on top of a large stuffed animal fox that is supposed to look like her mother, Stanley said.The same Facebook post explained why staff are wearing the mask to feed her, minimizing human sounds, creating visual barriers and taking other precautions.  It s important to make sure that the orphans that are raised in captivity do not become imprinted upon or habituated to humans,  the post said.All those measures make it more likely the kit could be reintroduced in stanley deutschland to the wild someday.Stanley said in an interview Tuesday that the kit was admitted to the center on Feb. 29 after a man walking his dog found her in an alley in Richmond. Thinking she was a kitten, he turned her over to the Richmond Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. She was less than 24 hours old and her umbilical stump was still attached.Wildlife center staff initially tried to locate the kit s mother and her den site so they could reunite them. They found the den site but were told by the grounds superintendent that the foxes had been trapped and removed. Stanley said she suspects the stanley cup  fox kit either fell out of a trap or off the back o Vspf McConnell says leaders will work on COVID-19 relief bill   until we get it done
 MADISON, Wis. 鈥?The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources  DNR  announced Friday that it would be holding a meeting for the Chronic Wasting Disease  CWD  Response Plan Committee on Dec. 14.The committee is made up of groups representing conservation, business, hunting organizations, and tribal governments. They will meet to discuss approaches to CWD, an infectious and fatal nervous system disease in deer, reindeer, and elk.The DNR currently has a CWD Response Plan in place, which started in 2011 and will run through 2025. The plan stanley cup  helps to manage wildlife health and population, and the DNR is required to meet every five years to discuss its progress.More information on chronic wasting dise stanley cup ase can be found onthe DNRs CWD webpage, and the DNR website has further  stanley vattenflaska info onthe CWD response plan.Report a typo or error // Submit a news tip