The Eurasian eagle-owl Flaco, who flew the coop after his exhibit was vandalized at New York’s Central Park Zoo, died Thursday after flying into a building.
Flaco escaped on Feb. 2 and was found dead on the ground after colliding with a structure in Manhattan.
“Flaco frequently had been seen in and near Central Park and other locations across Manhattan. … Our staff monitored him throughout the year and were prepared to recover him if he showed any sign of difficulty or distress. We appreciate all the support and concern over the well-being of Flaco throughout the past year,” the Wildlife Conservation Society, which operates the zoo, said in a release.
The society added that it hopes the person responsible for vandalizing Flaco’s exhibit, allowing him to escape, is arrested.
“The vandal who damaged Flaco’s exhibit jeopardized the safety of the bird and is ultimately responsible for his death,” the WCS said.
The specific cause of death will be determined following a necropsy.
“Our initial exam, and information from the scene, indicated that Flaco had collided with a window. Whether there was an underlying cause, such as rodenticide, we don’t yet know,” the Wild Bird Fund, a New York wildlife rehabilitation center whose staff recovered Flaco at the bottom of the building, said in a post on X.
In his time on the lam, Flaco became something of a local celebrity. After living 13 years in the zoo, he quickly adapted to preying on the city’s rat population.
“To me, the folk hero is Flaco. It’s an amazing thing: He lives his whole life in captivity, and in a matter of days he taught himself to fly and to hunt rats,” David Barrett, who posts on X about Manhattan’s birds, told The Associated Press this month.