Grubby (opossum)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Grubby is an opossum that traveled from somewhere in Washington State to Homer, Alaska in a shipping container and eluded authorities for over a month, delivering a litter of joeys in the process. Opossums are considered an invasive species in Alaska.[1]

Initial capture, escape, and recapture[edit]

Grubby was first spotted in Homer in a shipping container delivered to the local Spenard Builders Supply store in the spring of 2023. Store employees were unsure what to do with an opossum, so they contacted the local animal shelter. The shelter in turn contacted the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (ADF&G) that advised the shelter to attempt to trap the animal and provide it to them. The shelter did manage to trap the opossum, but it subsequently escaped and was on the loose in central Homer for several weeks before being spotted by local police outside their station on Grubstake Avenue, inspiring the name "Grubby". When it became public knowledge that there was an opossum loose in Homer, the animal became a local topic of debate, with some favoring trapping and destroying the opossum while others showed enthusiastic support for saving Grubby, or even electing Grubby as mayor.[1] Some local businesses offered opossum-themed sales and a "Free Grubby" hashtag trended on local social media groups.[2]

In May 2023, a Homer police officer did manage to trap Grubby, and due to the public interest in the matter, she was handed over to the Alaska Zoo to reside in their invasive species collection instead of being euthanized.[3][4][5][6]

Offspring[edit]

Shortly after Grubby's relocation to the Alaska Zoo, there were more opossum sightings in Homer, and it became clear that Grubby had given birth to a litter of joeys, leading to a much more intensive trapping operation in Homer by ADF&G. Residents were advised to keep pets indoors while live trapping was taking place.[7] By June fifth, three joeys had been captured, but with opossums having an average litter size of nine to thirteen joeys, biologists continued trapping efforts.[8][9][10] On June thirteenth, five joeys had been captured, but local ADF&G biologist Josh Herriman stated, "No matter what, unless we catch 13 of 'em, I wouldn't ever really be comfortable to say we got them all."[11] One of the offspring, nicknamed "Homer" was later relocated to the Oregon Zoo in December of 2023.[12]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Grove, Casey, Homer’s opossum visitor, Grubby, still on the lam as town remains divided Alaska Public Media April 18, 2023
  2. ^ Pacer,Megan:WA opossum hitches ride to Alaska, eludes capture, sparks ‘Free Grubby’ campaign, Seattle Times, April 17, 2023
  3. ^ Klint, Chris, Homer police take Grubby the opossum into custody, Alaska Public Media, May 25, 2023
  4. ^ Hooper, Ben, Grubby the stowaway opossum captured after nearly 2 months in Alaska UPI, MAY 26, 2023
  5. ^ An opossum’s impossible journey to Homer, Alaska and how she beat the odds! To live! Alaska's News Source/KTUU May. 26, 2023
  6. ^ Pacer, Megan: Opossum that ran loose in Homer for weeks finds a home at the Alaska Zoo, Anchorage Daily News, May 26, 2023
  7. ^ Lopez, Simon:Grubby leaves a surprise for Homer area biologists, KBBI, June 5, 2023
  8. ^ Shreck, Carly: 3 of Grubby’s offspring captured, more remain at large Alaska's News source/KTUU, Jun. 5, 2023
  9. ^ Klint, Chris:Grubby’s son captured as Homer faces growing opossum oproblem Alaska Public Media, June 2, 2023
  10. ^ Collins, Dac: Grubby, the Invasive Opossum That Hitched a Ride to Alaska, Had Babies Outdoor Life June 10, 2023
  11. ^ Hardikar, Dev: Fifth child of Grubby captured in Homer’s opossum odyssey Alaska Public Media, June 13, 2023
  12. ^ Desaulniers, Robert (2023-12-02). "Stowaway possum gets new home at Oregon Zoo". KEZI 9 News. Retrieved 2023-12-03.