Wildlife rehabilitation wiki designed like a scientific journal. Browse species by taxonomy or search across all entries. Built for rehabbers and people who find wild animals needing care.
Product, brand, and engineering — start to ship
If you've ever found a fledgling on the sidewalk, or a fawn alone in the grass, or a bat in your living room, you've probably done what most people do: panic-Googled it.
The results are a mess. Forum threads from 2009. Conflicting advice from blog posts written by no one in particular. Real information buried under SEO. And if you're a wildlife rehabber, the situation is barely better — the field's actual knowledge lives across PDFs, listservs, and the heads of people who've been doing this for thirty years.
Juniper is our attempt to fix that. A wildlife rehabilitation wiki, structured like a scientific journal. Here's how it works.
Browse by taxonomy. Every species sits inside the tree it actually belongs to — kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species. Click your way down to the animal in front of you, or click your way up to see related species when you're not sure exactly what you're looking at.
Search across every entry. If you know the common name, the scientific name, a behavior, a symptom, or a stage of life — type it. Juniper searches the full body of the wiki, not just titles.
Entries that read like research, not opinions. Each species page is structured the way a journal article would be — natural history, common reasons for intake, immediate care guidance, long-term rehab considerations, references. Citations where citations belong. Plain language where it helps.
Built for two audiences at once. For rehabbers, it's a reference you can actually trust mid-shift. For someone who just found an animal and doesn't know what to do, it's a starting point that takes the situation seriously.
It's free, public, and ready to browse. No account needed.



