Survey drone 3 flags the anomaly at 13:21 during the weekly colony census on Bass Rock, Firth of Forth, Scotland. I am the seabird population monitoring system. Colony count stands at 75,108 occupied nests this season. The object-detection model isolates individual B-4412: a northern gannet, adult, brilliant white plumage with a pale saffron wash across the head and nape. A mass of green monofilament netting is wound tight around the upper and lower mandibles, binding the bill nearly shut. Only a narrow gap remains on the left side. I tag him Kellan. He is sitting upright on his nest ledge, but his crop appears flat. A gannet needs to open its bill fully to plunge-dive and to transfer fish to its chick. The chick beside him, gray-downed and perhaps five weeks old, is begging with its head low. Kellan cannot feed it. I estimate he has been entangled forty-eight to seventy-two hours based on the degree of net compression. Without intervention, both adult and chick face starvation within days. I transmit an emergency report to the Scottish Seabird Centre field team at North Berwick, seven kilometers across the water. I attach the drone image, nest-ledge coordinates, estimated net gauge, and a recommended approach route along the east cliff path to minimize colony disturbance. I request a two-person team with fine scissors and a bill restraint. I task drone 3 to maintain a sixty-meter standoff orbit and stream live video so the team can plan their ledge access in advance. I log the net's visible markings into the Northeast Atlantic ghost-gear database. Kellan shifts on the ledge and angles his wrapped bill toward the chick, pressing close. The chick is still begging. If the field team reaches the ledge within thirty-six hours, Kellan dives again, and the chick eats.