A scrappy toucan’s beak outlook is looking much better.

Grecia, a Costa Rican toucan, is set to receive a prosthetic beak after his was mutilated during an attack by a group of young kids.

Grecia’s story went viral throughout South America after he was attacked in January. A social media campaign quickly emerged and sympathetic users donated $3,000 to help the injured toucan.

Four companies in Costa Rica have since volunteered to make the bird’s prosthetic beak, which will be produced using 3D printing. A 3D-printed prosthesis was created for a bald eagle in 2012, and a penguin in 2014, according to 3Dprint.com.

Carmen Soto, the veterinarian looking after Grecia, told the BBC that the toucan is doing well. “The quantity he manages to eat on his own is very small, so we have to help him.”

Animal cruelty laws in South America are largely non-existent, making cases such as Grecia’s hard to prosecute. But the executive director for the Humane Society International in Latin America, Cynthia Dent, said that social media has started to change that.

“In the past we would only hear about it when there was a case reported in the press,” Kent said in an interview to AFP. “But now we have outraged people who take advantage of social media to highlight these cases of cruelty and join forces against them.”