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This popular Halloween decoration could be a danger to wildlife: Here's why

Wildlife agencies and rehabilitation centers are warning the public that animals and insects can get trapped in a certain Halloween decoration, and potentially die.

While Halloween is a few weeks away, wildlife experts throughout the country want the public to know that there's a specific decoration that could pose hazards for birds, bugs and other animals, when set up outside.

In Nebraska, officials with the Nebraska Wildlife Education group are warning residents that fake spider webs can entangle hummingbirds, owls, butterflies, bees and small critters.

"Often the creatures moving through the bushes or trees decorated with this material can get caught, resulting in the animals dying of injury, starvation or predation unless they are rescued and rehabilitated," Amber Schiltz, interim division administrator of the Nebraska Game & Parks Commission’s (NGPC) Fish & Wildlife Education Division, wrote in an email to Fox News Digital.

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Synthetic spider web decorations are made with plastic-based materials that aren’t biodegradable, which could pose a threat to wildlife if winds blow the fake webbing to other areas, according to Schiltz.

She noted that fake spider webs also don’t break as easily when compared to real spider webs. 

"These spider web decorations trap creatures by entangling their wings and limbs," wrote Schiltz.

Halloween celebrants typically hang fake spider webs on the exterior of their homes or landscaping each fall.

Animal care experts with the Nebraska Wildlife Rehab in Omaha have observed juvenile squirrels getting entangled in fake spider webs when parent squirrels use the decorative material in burrows for winter nesting, according to Schiltz.

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In recent years, wildlife rehab centers throughout the country have seen an increased number of entangled animals and insects, including warblers, hummingbirds, screech owls, dragonflies and butterflies, according to Schiltz.

The life-threatening entanglements are happening because the Halloween-decorating season "overlaps with key migration periods," which affects creatures who "rely on urban areas as part of their habitat," she explained.

Statistics on how many animals and insects are trapped in fake spider webs aren’t readily available, but wildlife experts and environmental watchdogs have also made announcements about the dangers the decorations pose to small wildlife.

Those who run the Facebook page Help Save Our Hummingbirds HSOH, which has a following of 56,000 users, issued a warning on Saturday, Sept. 2.

"Halloween is fast approaching. Please be mindful on how you decorate outside," the group wrote.

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"The fake webbing is horribly dangerous for wildlife. Fake spiderweb decorations kill birds. It's strong enough to snare an owl and takes a terrible toll every October on small birds. They get tangled up in it and cannot get out, therefore leading to a slow, agonizing death," the post goes on. 

"In warmer climates, flowers may still be blooming, and bees are still out, the fake webbing can be deadly to them too, as well as butterflies and still migrating hummingbirds."

WildCare, a nonprofit organization and wildlife hospital in San Rafael, California, reports that it treats dozens of animal patients for entanglement injuries, according to an article the group published entitled, "Keep Halloween Safe for Wildlife."

The wildlife hospital urges home decorators to refrain from using fake spider webs placing garden netting or webbing in yards to avoid entanglement risks.

If fake webs or nets are already set, WildCare suggests home decorators check their webbing or netting twice a day for stuck animals.

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The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign’s College of Veterinary Medicine – Wildlife Medical Clinic also advises Halloween decorators to ditch fake spider webs, according to the school’s "Wildlife Friendly Halloween Decorations" from 2020.

Some Halloween decorators may find it difficult to let go of their spooky home furnishings.

Schiltz told Fox News Digital that there are three options decorators can consider if they want to practice wildlife-friendly decorating.

Halloween decorators who feel they can’t part with their fake spider webs can safely place them inside their home, including their interior front windows.

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Decorators can consider thicker rope-like decorations and similar ornaments that don’t entangle birds, small mammals and insects.

If spiders are around, decorators can let the insects build their own webs, which offer natural pest control and a "spooky" ambiance, according to Schiltz.

"As someone who loves Halloween almost as much as I love animals, my suggestion would be [to find] a balance [between] the materials we’re putting out for decorations, and remembering our nature neighbors we’re fortunate to share our space with," she wrote.

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