Sunday, March 18, 2007

Pet gerbil found dumped in hedge

By Richard Hartley-Parkinson
A SHOCKED Bucks Herald reader contacted the newspaper to tell of her disgust at the person who dumped a gerbil at the side of the road on Sunday.
Carla Parish's partner Bradley Tickner was turning the car in which they were travelling around in a gateway on a road into Dinton when she spotted a cage dumped in a ditch with the creature inside.



The animal's cage had no food, an empty water bottle and there was a label on it with children's writing which said 'Blake' and is presumed to be the previous owner's name for the gerbil.

Miss Parish decided to take him home and Mr Tickner has called him Maverick named after the character played by Tom Cruise in Top Gun.

She said: "I said we can't just leave it there so we decided to take it home and I'm going to look after it now.

"It looks fairly young and it's very tame so I guess it wasn't there for all that long.

"I've been keeping an eye on it, but it seems very healthy and it's got no marks on it."

Maverick is now said to be enjoying his new home with Miss Parish and is looking forward to taking delivery of a brand new gerbil tank that has been ordered.

Anyone who thinks they may know who the gerbil belonged to is asked to contact The Bucks Herald on 01296 619767.

Reference:aylesburytoday

Teenager forces his ferret to rip apart a baby guinea pig

A teenager reportedly forced his ferret to rip apart a baby guinea pig as its screaming owners looked on in horror.

John Brennan then urged a pal to film the sickening attack on his mobile phone as he encouraged the ferret to eat the guinea pig.

The 19-year-old has now been warned he faces jail after being found guilty of animal cruelty charges by South Tyneside magistrates. Friend Andrew Wyness, 18, has already been jailed for three months for his part in the attack and banned from keeping animals for 10 years after he pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing.

During his trial, magistrates heard how Brennan, 19, and Wyness called at the house of Kevin Knowles and his girlfriend Michelle Bannister in Dock Street in the early hours of the morning on Friday, October 13.

Brennan, of Beattie Street, went straight over to their eight-week-old guinea pig, pulled out the ferret, which was hidden in his coat sleeve, dropped it in the cage and closed the lid.

The court heard that the two visitors laughed as the female guinea pig squealed in agony.

Its injuries were so severe that a vet who examined its body found its skull was missing.

The pet's right leg had been ripped off, its back and ribs were broken and it had several puncture wounds.

Giving evidence, Mr Knowles, 24, said: "The ferret ripped it to bits.

"I was trying to comfort my girlfriend, who was screaming and hysterical."

"John Brennan said, 'Look it is killing it', then John said to Andy, 'Pull your phone out and take pictures of it and record it'."

When Brennan pulled out the ferret, it was still holding the guinea pig by its neck.

LiveAquaria.com

He then subjected the defenceless animal to more torture by putting them both back in the cage and encouraged the ferret to attack again.

When Brennan left the house, he took the cage with him for the ferret.

Police later found the ferret and the cage still containing the dead guinea pig at Brennan's former Dock Street home, and he was arrested on suspicion of animal cruelty and theft of the cage.

Mr Knowles and his girlfriend had just bought the guinea pig the day before for Miss Bannister's daughter.

Reading from the vet's statement, Stan Sudworth, prosecuting, said: "The guinea pig has been caused unnecessary suffering, ending in a painful death."

Pictures of the mauled guinea pig shown to the court were so gruesome, local news was unable to print them.

Brennan denied animal cruelty but was found guilty on Feb 26.

Magistrates adjourned sentencing, but warned him they were considering jail due to factors including the death of a defenceless animal in a vicious act of cruelty, and that the offence was committed intentionally.

Speaking after the case, an RSPCA spokeswoman said: "We are pleased that the police, the CPS and the courts took this matter seriously and that it was investigated and it led to a prosecution.

"This sort of behaviour cannot be tolerated."

Reference:southtynesidetoday

Jury awards man $122,400 for bite from sister's cat

FLUSHING, Mich. (AP) - A nasty bite on the hand from his sister's Siamese cat is worth $122,400 for one man.

A Genesee County jury on Friday awarded Michael Sabo, 57, of Flushing the money for an injury he sustained when the cat named Randy bit in March 2004. The bite had brought more than $20,000 in medical bills.

Sabo's fingers swelled so much that his fingers looked like "plump hot dogs," Sabo's attorney, Tom Pabst, told The Flint Journal, and an infection from the bite put Sabo in a hospital for three weeks.


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Pabst said Sabo's sister, Jean Toney, had warned people not to pick up Randy because he had bitten people before. But the newspaper said the cat leapt into Sabo's lap before biting his right hand.


Sabo initially tried to get his sister's homeowner's insurance policy to cover the cost of the bite, but when that request was refused, Pabst said his client had no choice but to take the matter to court.

There was no answer Sunday at a telephone listing for Toney.

Reference:southbendtribune

Massive pet foods being recalled Update

The Food and Drug Administration March 17 issued a statement to warn consumers not to use any of "cuts and gravy" style dog and cat food produced by Menu Foods Inc at the facility in Emporia, Kansas between December 3, 2006 and March 6, 2007.



Menu Foods Inc, a private-label pet food manufacturer based out of Statesville, Ontario Canada issued a voluntary recall on March 16 of the noted pet food after a small number of instances have been reported indicating that the potentially affected pet food may be linked to kidney failure in some cats and dogs.



According to the company, "following feedings of the product, some cats and dogs refused further feedings." Some pets showed signs of renal failure and died from the condition.



The FDA said at least ten cats and dogs have died after eating the affected pet food. The agency urges consumers not to feed the affected product to cats and dogs.



The product under a variety of brands are distributed by many pet food retailers in the United States, Canada and Mexico including Ahold USA inc., Kroger Company, Safeyway, Wal_Mart Stores Inc., PetSmart In and Pet Value, Inc.



It remains unknown what in the pet food might have caused the problem. But the company urged consumers whose dogs and cats consumed the suspect feed and showed signs of kidney failure such a loss of appetite, lethargy and vomiting to consult with their veterinarian.



Meanwhile, Nestle Purina PetCare Company recalled on March 16 its 5.3 ounce Mighty Dog® brand pouch products that were produced by Menu Foods, Inc. from December 3, 2006 through March 14, 2007, but emphasized that no Might Dog canned products or any other Purina products are affected by Menu's recall.

LiveAquaria.com

According to Purina, the affected Might Dog products in multi-pack cartons carry code dates of 6337 through 7073, followed by the plant code 1798.



On the same day, in response to Menu’s recall, Hill's Pet Nutrition Inc. also announced its own voluntary precautionary recall in the U.S. and Canada of canned cat products that are co-manufactured by Menu.




Recalled Dog Product Information
Recall Information 1-866-895-2708
Americas Choice, Preferred Pets
Authority
Award
Best Choice
Big Bet
Big Red
Bloom
Bruiser
Cadillac
Companion
Demoulas Market Basket
Eukanuba
Food Lion
Giant Companion
Great Choice
Hannaford
Hill Country Fare
Hy-Vee
Iams
Laura Lynn
Loving Meals
Meijers Main Choice
Mighty Dog Pouch
Mixables
Nutriplan
Nutro Max
Nutro Natural Choice
Nutro Ultra
Nutro
Ol'Roy Canada
Ol'Roy US
Paws
Pet Essentials
Pet Pride - Good n Meaty
Presidents Choice
Price Chopper
Priority
Publix
Roche Bros
Save-A-Lot
Schnucks
Shep Dog
Springsfield Prize
Sprout
Stater Bros
Total Pet
Western Family
White Rose
Winn Dixie
Your Pet


Recalled Cat Product Information
Recall Information 1-866-895-2708
Americas Choice, Preferred Pets
Authority
Best Choice
Companion
Compliments
Demoulas Market Basket
Eukanuba
Fine Feline Cat
Food Lion
Foodtown
Giant Companion
Hannaford
Hill Country Fare
Hy-Vee
Iams
Laura Lynn
Li'l Red
Loving Meals
Meijer's Main Choice
Nutriplan
Nutro Max Gourmet Classics
Nutro Natural Choice
Paws
Pet Pride
Presidents Choice
Price Chopper
Priority
Save-A-Lot
Schnucks
Science Diet Feline Savory Cuts Cans
Sophistacat
Special Kitty Canada
Special Kitty US
Springfield Prize
Sprout
Total Pet
Wegmans
Western Family
White Rose
Winn Dixie

Police Dog Goes Missing

GLOUCESTER CITY, N.J. - March 18, 2007 - Police in Camden County are warning people to be on the look out for one of their police dogs, which is missing and could pose a danger if not handled correctly.

The dog, named "Scotty," escaped from his Gloucester City Police kennel Sunday morning between 3:30 a.m. and 7:30 a.m.
The 3-year-old German Shephard is black, with some brown on his tail, is wearing a silver choke chain.
Picture: ABC




The dog is friendly with people, however police warn that if you put him in your car, then try to take him out, he could become aggressive because he thinks that he's working.

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If you spot Scotty, you're asked to call Gloucester City dispatchers at (856)456-0900.

Copyright 2007 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

Reference:abc

San Diego Dog Wash Raises More Than $800

SAN DIEGO -- The San Diego Animal Support Foundation cleaned up Saturday by raising over $800 during a dog wash an oranizer said.


Most of the money raised will go toward 24 spay and neutering programs in the San Diego area, said Darlene White, SDASF spokeswoman.



"We raised the money free and clear," White said. "I'm excited about it."

Some 44 pooches got the royal treatment, courtesy of volunteers from Dogs On The Run, a volunteer pet adoption group that supplied the elbow grease.


The event took place at the Dunk 'N Dogs Self-Serve Dog Wash, 3056 Clairemont Drive, on Clairemont Mesa.

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The group may also use some of the money to help pay for surgery on a paralyzed dog, whose 19-year-old owner cannot afford the $3,800 operation, White said.


"She called, offering to scrub floors for us," to help her dog, said White. "We're hope to raise the money for the surgery."


In addition, volunteers at Saturday's event found new homes for 17 dogs.

Reference:10news

Friday, March 16, 2007

Fascinating seahorses a reflection of many animals

By AMANDA STRINDBERG
It was the nod that changed his life.

Crawling on all fours, Bruce Watts made his more-than-hourly check on his baby. This time was different.

With his face nearly pressed against the aquarium glass, the yellow seahorse drifted closer. Their eyes met. Barbie reared his head in recognition of his keeper.


"That sealed the deal," said the Idyllwild resident. "I knew I was going to pursue this. Typically fish aren't that interactive of pets. But that was a special thing. It was as if he was saying, 'Hey dude.' "

The hours of nursing the sick and finicky creature instantly became worth it.

And from that simple gesture a passion was born that would later lead to a life of breeding and raising hundreds of the enchanting marine fish.

"I'm a parent to seahorses," said Watts, 57, sitting in his Idyllwild home rimmed with seahorse-filled aquariums, his own little sea world in the midst of mountains and pines.

Spending a portion of his childhood growing up on Oahu, Watts was fascinated by marine life at an early age. At 8 years old, he was collecting guppies and swordtails on family outings to a nearby stream.

A few fish bowls quickly ballooned into multiple tanks. Free time was spent watching colorful creatures at a local fish store or taking care of his aquatic pets. A tank here. A fish there. Watts began to breed the fish and sell them to local stores.

The money, of course, was put back into his tanks.

The hobby stuck.

As an adult, Watts had a room dedicated to his fish. But a breakup led him to put the tanks in storage when he downsized to a smaller pad.

But it wasn't long before Watts was back at it. Life just wasn't the same without his swimming companions. But the fish enthusiast wanted a new challenge. He began to focus on saltwater fish.

Seahorse Fanatic

Then he met Barbie and everything changed.

It was April 2003 and Watts was paying a regular visit to Zen Aquatics in Palm Desert, an aquarium store. On the counter in a small aquarium was a sickly seahorse that hadn't eaten in more than a week.

The owner begged Watts to adopt him, confident he could give him a chance at survival. Watts couldn't resist the animal's cute white-striped snout and yellowish coloring. But this wasn't a typical first seahorse. Barbie was a wild-caught barbouri seahorse. Wild-caught seahorses are more difficult to raise than captive-bred seahorses because they only eat live food and have been exposed to numerous diseases.

But Watts poured his heart and money into the creature, spending $100 a month on live shrimp imported from a Nevada shrimp farm, the only food he could get the picky seahorse to slurp into his snout.

"It was a challenge," Watts said. "But I loved it. These fish were exotic, beautiful and interesting."

Their monkeylike prehensile tail, horselike head, anteaterlike snout, kangaroolike pouch, flirty personalities and chameleon color changes made for endless hours of seahorse gazing.

The fascination only grew. Watts purchased more and more of the marine animals, joined chat rooms dedicated to raising seahorses, and read up on endless books and articles published about the vertical fish.

Raising the babies quickly crescendoed into a full-time job in addition to his day job an adventure-store manager. But Watts was good at it. Few can say that, said Dan Underwood, president of Seahorse Source, a Florida-based aquaculture facility that breeds seahorses.

"There's a lot of people out there trying to do it, but not many people succeed," Underwood said. "It's very time-consuming and laborious. Only a handful of hobbyists nationally are as successful as Bruce is."

Watts sells his marine horses for about $50 each, sending about 100 fish across the country each year. But not to just anyone.

"I'm not a businessman -- I'm a hobbyist," he said. "These are my babies and I want to make sure they have good homes."

High-Maintenance Fish

Jennifer Setterstrom, owner of Coral Sea Tropical Fish in Riverside, said interest is high in the seahorses until people find out how much work they entail.

"Raising the babies can be harder than taking care of a newborn," she said.

But for some the animal's fascinating features are worth it.

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"They are magical," said Perry Hampton, director of animal husbandry at Long Beach's Aquarium of the Pacific, where the seahorses are one of the most popular exhibits. "They are cute and appealing and you won't find anything else like them."

For one, the fish is the only vertebrate animal to have a true male pregnancy. The fathers carry the developing young in a bulging pouch. When the seahorse is ready to give birth, he pumps up and down, releasing squirts of the babies, which can range from 25 to hundreds of the fish, perfect miniature replicas of an adult seahorse.

Almost immediately they need to eat live food. Watts sucks them up with a turkey baster and then squeezes the infants into a nursery tank filled with brine shrimp, which he hatches for the youngsters.

Then there's the constant water changes and the weekly trips down the twisting mountain road to Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla for fresh seawater -- five hours round trip.

"My babies do better in all-natural sea water," Watts said. "It's their natural environment."

Oh and there's the burping. As the seahorses mature, the males can get air bubbles stuck in their pouch, causing them to rise to the surface. When this happens Watts has to coax their pouch open with a bobby pin and massage the air bubbles out.

Watts also weans the young onto frozen food and must constantly observe the fish. The little ones are sensitive, with about a 30 percent survival rate, Watts said.

"You have to be tough-skinned to do this," he said. "If anything goes wrong you can lose the whole brood. It's a full-time job to raise them. My social life is the seahorse chat room."

But the rewards are great. The hours spent staring at the fish as they play, tangling their tails like pretzels, watching the animals pirouette through the water in a flirtatious morning dance, part of the courtship process, and knowing that you helped raise an animal that is considered threatened in some areas, collected for both the aquarium trade and Chinese medicine purposes.

"I feel privileged to have them in my house," Watts said, gazing at six of his fish wrapped around a fake coral plant.

But of the hundreds of seahorses that Watts has cared for, none will replace Barbie, his first seahorse. He may have only lived four months, plagued with various diseases, but he ignited a lifelong passion. Occasionally, Watts will stare at photos of the animal that changed his life.

"He'll always be special to me," he said. "He got me started. It was a crushing blow when he died, but he made me want to breed them so that other seahorses wouldn't have to be taken from the ocean to have as pets."

Reference:pe

Ohio Woman Confessed To Killing 650 Animals

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Police in Columbus, Ohio, are getting calls from all over the country about a woman who is being described as a serial animal killer.

Investigators said Maureen McLaughlin admitted to killing 650 animals because she had lost faith in the animal adoption system.

In a written confession, McLaughlin said that during the past five years, she killed 650 animals from Central Ohio that were given to her.

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She was charged on Wednesday with one count of animal cruelty.

McLaughlin said she would put the animal in a crate. Using a huge trash barrel completely filled with water, she would lower the crate into the water and hold it under until the animal drowned, NBC affiliate WCMH reported.

People have called police and said they gave McLaughlin animals because they thought she was going to find a good place for them.

"There was no need for them to be killed. I mean, it's just really sad," said Angela Bennington, who said she gave an animal to McLaughlin.

Reference:nbc11

Racing 'strain' on animal welfare

By James Lynn

The sheer number of sick or injured racing dogs is putting a strain on animal welfare organisations, according to a greyhound protection group.
Greyhound Action said most are forced to retire by the age of three and about 15,000 dogs disappear each year.

Less than one tenth of greyhounds which retire from racing are found a home, according to the group.



The welfare of greyhounds has been placed in the spotlight by the case of David Smith who killed racing dogs with a bolt gun and buried them at his home.

The builders' merchant was fined £2,000 by a court on Friday after he admitted disposing of the greyhounds without a permit.

Spokeswoman Jan Lakey said the case was a "terrible way" to bring the problem to public attention.

She said: "Some trainers have up to 100 dogs and if lots of them fall ill or become injured that puts a lot of strain on organisations dedicated to looking after sick animals.

"For those that are ignoring the problem, ask yourself how many greyhounds you've met. How many old greyhounds do you see?"

The RSPCA is also calling on the government to reduce the number of greyhounds bred for racing.

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The charity hopes that the new Animal Welfare Act, which comes into effect in England on 6 April, will lead to tighter regulation of the industry.

Spokeswoman Becky Hawkes said: "There is simply no justification for killing racing greyhounds just because they can't do their job anymore - it is shocking and unnecessary.

"An animal should be the owner's responsibility for life, not just until they are no longer useful."

The British Greyhound Racing Board (BGRB) disputed that 15,000 animals disappear each year and said it spent £4m annually on dog welfare.

Welfare officer Peter Laurie said: "We were disgusted by what happened at Seaham and there is no evidence that this is happening anywhere else in the country.

"10,000 racing greyhounds were registered with the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC) in 2006 and in the same year the Retired Greyhound Trust re-housed almost 4,000.

"Other organisations, like the Battersea Dogs Home, take them in and some are looked after by owners and trainers.

'Safer tracks'

"People who dispose of dogs in the way that David Smith did are not welcome in the sport."

He added that the board was working hard to make tracks safer and was training vets in specialist treatment methods to ensure that dogs can race for longer and live healthier lives.

An NGRC spokesman confirmed that approximately 4,000 greyhounds were retired and re-homed in 2006.

But the spokesman said that some dogs go on to race at tracks unregistered by the NGRC, which the club has no control over.

Reference:bbc

Pet food manufacutrer recalls product causing kidney failure in pets

A major manufacturer of dog and cat food is recalling 60 million containers of wet food.


Menu Foods says it's received report of dogs and cats suffering kidney failure after eating the food. About ten animals died. Menu Foods supplies store brands to Wal-Mart, Safeway, Kroger, PetSmart and other retailers. The recall covers its "cuts and gravy" style food sold between early December and March. The food comes in cans and small foil pouches. It consists of chunks of meat in gravy.


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The company says it's not sure what happened, and product testing hasn't revealed a link that would explain the illnesses and deaths.


Menu Foods didn't immediately provide a full list of brand names and lot numbers covered by the recall, but says the information will be on the company's Web site tomorrow morning.

Reference:49abcnews

March Mammal Madness breaks out March 24

In an effort to increase awareness of small mammals as family pets, the Dumb Friends League is holding March Mammal Madness on Saturday, March 24. This event is from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at both shelter locations - 2080 S. Quebec St. in Denver and the Buddy Center, 4556 Castleton Court in Castle Rock.


March Mammal Madness will feature fun activities and demonstrations for the whole family, including:
· Guinea pig races
· Hamster and gerbil races
· Rat maze demonstration
· Rabbit agility demonstration
· Informational booths on small mammal care


People may bring their own small mammal or borrow an adoptable one to participate in any of the activities. There will also be crafts, face painting, a beanbag toss and lots food and fun.
People are encouraged to bring their own small pets if they are thinking of adopting another one, and stop by the "XY Identify" station to verify if their pet is male or female. "One of the reasons that shelters receive so many small pets is that people unknowingly put opposite-sex pairs together," says Theresa Geary, vice president of shelter operations. "If we can help people adopt same sex pairs, we can decrease the number of unwanted small pets in our community."
Dozens of small pets will be available for adoption. The adoption fee for rabbits is $30 each and guinea pigs are $10 each. Other small pets, such as hamsters, gerbils, rats and mice, may be adopted for $5 each.


"Many people think to adopt dogs and cats at animal shelters but don't realize that there are also rabbits, guinea pigs, hamsters and other small pets in need of good homes," Geary says. "Small pets make wonderful family pets as they're very social and help to teach children lessons of kindness and responsibility; however, it's important to be aware of each pet's unique characteristics and care requirements. Ultimately, adults need to be prepared to take on the responsibility of caring for the animal."


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The League's Sit, Stay, Shop will be selling small pet food and supply packages. For more information on March Mammal Madness, including adoption procedures and activity and demonstration times, visit www.ddfl.org, or call 303- 751-5772, Ext. 1378.


Table Mountain Animal Center is also hosting March Mammal Madness at their location at 4105 Youngfield Service Road in Golden . For more information on event times and activities at the Table Mountain Animal Center, visit www.tablemountainanimals.org.

About the Dumb Friends League
As the leading animal welfare organization in the Rocky Mountain region, the Dumb Friends League has been helping pets and people in the Denver metro area and beyond for more than 95 years. The Dumb Friends League has two shelter locations: its main shelter at 2080 S. Quebec St. in Denver and the Buddy Center at 4556 Castleton Court in Castle Rock. For more information about the Dumb Friends League, visit www.ddfl.org, or call (303) 751-5772.



Reference:denver

Rescued Cat Dies After Four-Story Fal

SHERWOOD, Ore. - A cat that was rescued by a good samaritan after falling four stories from an apartment building has died.

Daredevil was brought to the Cat Adoption Team by Paul Hart who says he found the cat in an empty apartment when he arrived to do some construction work. Hart says when he tried to approach the cat, it panicked and ran out to the balcony where it lost its balance and fell four stories. Hart scooped Daredevil into a cardboard box and took him to the shelter in Sherwood where there is a veterinarian on site.
It first appeared that Daredevil was suffering minor injuries such as broken teeth and trapped air in his chest from the impact of the fall. A veterinarian from CAT says that Daredevil was extremely malnourished and was suffering from severe dehydration.

CAT and its veterinary staff provided critical care to stabilize him and as of Thursday night his condition had improved but by Friday morning Daredevil's condition worsened and he passed away peacefully.
"I am so glad that during his final hours he was in our hospital. He was so malnourished and in such poor condition when he came in, that the last 24 hours of his life were probably the ones were he was the most loved and supported," says Britta Bavaresco of CAT.




Bavaresco says that any money donated towards his care will now be used in his honor to help other cats in distress If you want to make a donation in honor of Daredevil and support the care of the community's abandoned and injured cats and kittens, please go to CAT's Web site, visit the shelter in Sherwood, or call (503) 925-8903.

Reference:koin

West Virginia Man Accused of Decapitating Cat as Part of Satanic Ritual

SPENCER, West Virginia — A West Virginia man is in jail, accused of decapitating a black cat in a public park in December as part of a satanic ritual.

Kenneth Leroy McCoy, 22, was arrested last week after a witness linked him to the crime, Roane County Chief Deputy J.S. Smith said Friday.

Two women walking around Charles Fork Lake near Spencer in early December found the cat's body in the middle of a pentagram painted on the floor of a picnic shelter, Smith said.

Not only was the cat's head cut off, but its stomach was cut open and its feet were bound with string. Nearby bathroom walls also were spray-painted with skulls, inverted crosses and other strange symbols.





Smith said McCoy has been a suspect since the investigation began. Two days before the cat was found, deputies patrolling the lake area stopped him for questioning and found him carrying pocket knives and rope.

McCoy was being held in jail on a felony charge of cruelty to animals, a misdemeanor charge of destruction of property and an unrelated charge.

Reference:foxnews

Search for person who shot dog in the head

PLANT CITY, Fla. (AP) — Hillsborough County authorities are searching for the person who they say shot a dog in the head. An animal services spokeswoman says a postal worker found the German shepherd mix dog still alive yesterday morning near Keysville Road in Plant City. The dog was then rushed to the hospital where it was later euthanized. The dog is described as large male German Shepherd mix, mostly tan with a white chest. Anyone with information is asked to call animal services 813-744-5660 ext. 241.

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Reference:tampabays10

Shot and abandoned, beagle is euthanized

Veternarian believes dog suffered for at least two days

BY LISA CORYELL
TRENTON -- A dog shot in the face and left suffering in a crate for at least a day was euthanized yesterday after animal control officers deemed the beagle's injuries too severe to treat.

The male animal, estimated to be about 3 years old, was found by a man walking along the train tracks behind the Lincoln Homes housing project on Brunswick Ave nue.

The dog was inside a closed carrying crate lined with newspaper. A small pile of dry dog food was inside the crate. Animal control officers said they believe the dog was shot before it was placed in the crate.

"Maybe someone found him wandering around like this and put him in the crate instead of bringing him in," said Eric Maldonado, di rector of the Trenton Animal Shelter. "A lot of people are afraid they'll be blamed. They want to mind their own business."

The dog is believed to have suf fered for a while.

"This didn't happen today," said Kathleen Ranalli, a Willingboro veterinarian who volunteers at the city shelter once a week. "He's been like this for at least a day or two."

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The dog had been shot in the muzzle, suffering severe damage to his mouth. He also appeared to have fresh injuries to his neck, face and ears, indications that he'd re cently been bitten by another dog.

Eric Maldonado, director of the Trenton Animal Shelter, said the dog, a docile breed, was most likely used to train dogs to fight.

"People don't want to test their own dogs against other aggressive dogs," he said. "They use smaller, weaker dogs to test how hard their dog will fight. Someone probably fought this dog until they were done with him. Then they shot him and left him for dead."

If caught, the person who shot the dog faces animal cruelty charges, he said. Ranalli cried as she prepared to euthanize the dog, which had been heavily sedated during the examination process.

"It's hard to see a dog in so much pain for no reason," she said.

Reference:nj

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

St. Paul, Minn. Dog Beheading Case

ST. PAUL, Minn. — The Humane Society of the United States is offering a reward of up to $2,500 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for beheading a teenager's therapy dog in St. Paul, Minnesota in late February.

The Case: According to published news reports and the St. Paul police department, the dog had been missing since around Valentine's Day, and the family distributed missing posters throughout their St. Paul neighborhood. Chevy, an Australian Shepherd, was a special therapy dog for the family's 17-year-old daughter. In late February, the daughter found a package wrapped in Christmas paper and addressed to her on the front porch of their home. The girl opened the package and found the dog's head inside. The St. Paul Police Department's homicide division is investigating active leads in the case and is looking for public cooperation and information that would lead to an arrest.


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Animal Cruelty:Acts like this have disturbing implications for the community at large because there is a well-documented connection between animal cruelty and human violence. The HSUS First Strike Campaign® raises public awareness and educates communities about this connection while providing resources to law enforcement agencies, social work professionals, educators, legislators and families. The HSUS offers rewards in animal cruelty cases across the country and works to strengthen laws against animal cruelty. Visit www.hsus.org/firststrike.
The Investigators:The St. Paul Police Department is investigating this case. Anyone with information should call Sergeant Jim Gray at 651-266-5650, extension 65659.
Learn More:The HSUS will participate in a conference on family violence and animal abuse with members of law enforcement, education, and social agencies on March 29 at the St. Paul campus of the University of Minnesota; to learn more, visit www.cvm.umn.edu/outreach/events/bridge.

Reference:hsus

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Polar bears,the poster animals of climate change

The combination of polar bears and melting ice is heady mix so much so that the animal's plight as become a rallying cry in the fight against climate change
By Simon Garfield
THE GUARDIAN, LONDON



Not so long ago polar bears were a symbol of cold, but these days they are a symbol of warmth. In the past few weeks it has become difficult to open a newspaper or web page without seeing photographs of the beautiful yellowy-white animals leaping, or lying on sea ice in the Arctic, the newly helpless emblem of climate change. The traditional threats to the polar bear — hunting, toxic waste, offshore drilling — have been overshadowed by a new one: the ice around them is melting, and we are to blame.

This new threat is not new, of course — about as new as deforestation. But two things have put the polar bears on top of the vanishing ice, where they pose unwittingly as the latest poster animals in a distinguished and photogenic parade of endangered pandas, gorillas, dolphins and whales. At the end of December, the US Secretary of the Interior revealed the US Fish and Wildlife Service was considering adding the polar bear to its list of threatened species. A three-month consultation process began in January, and the world's Arctic specialists have been making appointments to deliver their expertise. This is a more significant addition to the at-risk list than a rare gazelle or panther: it is an admission, after years of denial, of the existence of global warming. The Bush administration could no longer disavow the effects of climate change if one of its departments had acknowledged such visible and dramatic effects. The polar bear had done what environmentalists could not, and opened a window on a global crisis. Three lawsuits against the White House — from Greenpeace, the Center for Biological Diversity and the Natural Resources Defense Council — were settled at a stroke.

Then, at the beginning of last month, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) delivered its damning verdict on rising temperatures and disappearing sea ice, and polar bears had even more reason to feel loved. Six hundred scientists attempted to dismiss all lingering cynicism about global warming, and to pin the blame on its human perpetrators. The reality is now stark and quantifiable, they stated, and in some areas the devastation is irreversible: we are already too late, for example, to avert the effects of the recent rises in sea levels. This news is particularly bad for polar bears, for the earlier melting of spring ice and the later formation of autumn ice has an immediate impact on their ability to feed. In some areas there is evidence that sea ice breaks up three weeks earlier than it did 30 years ago.

Which seems to be good news for polar bear photographers. There is no such thing as an ugly polar bear, and even the less handsome ones appear to have learnt to conceal their claws as they leap the ice floes. Like panting labradors, they always appear to be smiling (no such fillip for the equally threatened but unglamorous walrus).



Polar bears, which are dropping in numbers and weight in the Arctic, are in deep trouble because of global warming.
Picture(s): DCI Picture(s):Alfonso Romero




One photograph in particular has captured the imagination. In a neat piece of marketing, the Canadian Ice Service made available a stunning image to coincide with the IPCC report. Two bears, probably a mother and her cub, are pictured on a spectacular ice block off northern Alaska that might have been modeled by Henry Moore. They appear to be howling against injustice. The drama is clear: this is truly the tip of an iceberg, the bears are desperately stranded as the water swells around them. The first thought among viewers is surely one of pity and concern, but this is to misjudge the situation: polar bears are reasonable swimmers, and certainly climbed upon such sculptures centuries before we climbed into our 4x4s.

"Initially I thought the picture was a Photoshop fake," Ian Stirling, senior research scientist with the Canadian Wildlife Service, e-mails from his home in Edmonton. "But I have since checked and it is authentic. There is no doubt the photo is used because of its dramatic effect, and it is true it does not represent the kind of sea ice bears normally live on and depend upon for hunting seals."

The photograph was taken in 2004. Naysaying bloggers have used the fact the picture has been romanticized to discredit the claim of bears at risk, and in some cases the very existence of global warming. Several sites link to the original text that accompanied the photograph when it was first used three years ago, in an online journal of the Beaufort Gyre Exploration Project, in which the ice block is described as "extraordinary." The bears were seen during a late-summer arctic drilling mission that found the ice much thicker than expected.

Elsewhere, images of the polar bear are used to further other ends. The World Wildlife Fund features four of them, sketched in Biro, in its latest magazine campaign to "Change the world with a pen," an attempt to encourage corporate responsibility: "Climate change is no longer a debate," the advertisement says, "it's a business challenge."

"The fate of the polar bear has been on our minds for several years," says Stefan Norris, head of conservation for the WWF International Arctic Programme. "The polar bear is at the very top of the food chain, and is easy to sell, and is an iconic species — but they are just an indication of what's happening to the entire Arctic ecosystem."

Easy to sell, but hard to save. Despite their uncertain fate, you wouldn't mind having their PR account. They look sweet, embraceable even. Those who have run from them on land, or witnessed a savage, ripping kill on an ice floe will have a different perspective, but the bears do not yet seem to be aware they are a business challenge, or even that another TV crew is at this very moment packing for a trip to Churchill, Manitoba, for a closer glimpse of the imperiled bears, and an examination of their myths. No, polar bears are not left-handed. They do not kill seals with blocks of ice, although they do occasionally pound the ice in frustration when a seal gets away. And they do not cover their black noses for camouflage when stalking their next meal.

The polar bear has traditionally been an adaptable creature. But, though it may receive a little sustenance from birds' eggs and from scavenging in rubbish bins, it cannot survive without large supplies of seal meat and blubber, and for its kill it must be on or near sea ice. And the problem is broader still. Polar bears may be feeding on fewer seals not just because of melting sea ice; the seals may be declining because they aren't finding enough fish, and the fish aren't finding sufficient krill, and the krill aren't finding the algae.

"Every time we look at this, the urgency becomes greater," Norris says. "The scientific thinking in 2004 was that there was a significant chance that at the end of the 21st century there would be no sea ice at all at the North Pole during the summer. But at the end of last year the US Geological Service came out with a report that this is likely to happen by the middle of this century, in the lifetime of our kids."

How did we get here? There is no agreed date that we can pinpoint as the beginning of our concern for Ursus maritimus. A more civilized approach to their fate began, perhaps, in 1985, when the polar bears disappeared from London Zoo at the temporary closure of the Mappin Terraces. Animal husbandry matured: Regents Park was no longer considered the ideal habitat for the King of the Arctic. The last polar bear in Britain is a female called Mercedes at Edinburgh Zoo, who looks distinctly forlorn on her Web site photo.

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But we could just as reasonably choose 1993, the year Coca-Cola adopted the animal to spearhead its new global marketing campaign. The Cola Bear reinforced the notion that Coke was best served ice-cold, and it was a drink that spread the love: the bears, who made deep and reassuring guttural noises and never had seal blood on their fur, were represented in family groups playing with penguins and admiring the Aurora Borealis. There was no cuter or more deceptively cuddly anthropomorphism on the tundra — the little ones even wore red scarves — and merchandise followed; keyrings, soft toys, pencil toppers, now quite big on eBay. The only downside for the polar bears was they didn't own their image rights.

That was also the year when Ian Stirling and Andrew Derocher, both of the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Polar Bear Specialist Group (IUCN PBSG), wrote their first scientific paper on what they perceived as a deterioration in the condition of polar bears in western Hudson Bay, Canada; they also noted unfamiliar patterns in the break-up of ice. Another paper appeared six years later with stronger evidence, and since then similar patterns have been reported in five of the 19 polar bear sub-populations in the Arctic. More young cubs are found dead each year; adults have lost weight, from an average of 250kg in 1980 to 230kg in 2004; there have been instances of cannibalism; and in western Hudson Bay the polar bear population decreased from 1,200 in the mid-nineties to less than 1,000 in 2004.

There are thought to be between 20,000 and 25,000 polar bears in the world, and all but one member of the PBSG believe global warming poses a critical threat to their long-term survival. The exception, quoted by contrarian writers, is Mitchell Taylor from the Government of Nunavut, who remains skeptical about the climate modeling projections and their impact. "I'm not sure I understand his logic," Stirling says. "However, at the last meeting of the IUCN PBSG in Seattle in June 2005 the group [including Taylor] unanimously agreed to classify the polar bear as vulnerable."

But as numbers decline, polar tourism flourishes. Companies promise a trip like no other, with buggy tours lasting two days and one evening, "long enough," one brochure states, "for nature enthusiasts to keep their excitement, but not too long to the point of monotony." The same brochure also advertises the "Ultimate Churchill," which offers an optional helicopter journey to the female bears' denning area "where we can have the chance to crawl inside an unoccupied polar bear den."

The path to preservation has been a slippery one. There have been laws prohibiting excessive hunting since the 1970s, and concern about oil drilling began a decade later, but the case for climate change demanded sterner proof. In 2001, the WWF issued a report called Polar Bears at Risk, but it was speculative. According to Stefan Norris, "We had a little trouble getting the scientists to say, "Yes, there is a one-to-one link here" because there hadn't been long enough statistical studies to link everything together. But we're now seeing direct scientific linkages in Canada, Alaska, Norway and Russia."

Norris says the WWF has come under a lot of pressure to predict when polar bears will become extinct, but no one is prepared to be so precise, or so doom-laden. He is increasingly optimistic that an immediate cut in greenhouse gas emissions "may yet turn the ship around."

Others are less certain. Peter Wadhams, professor of ocean physics at Cambridge, has made frequent observations of Arctic sea ice from submarines, recording more than a 40 percent loss in ice thickness in the past 25 years. He is not surprised at predictions that the Arctic summer ice will disappear much earlier than previously envisaged — "perhaps before 2040." Wadhams says he is about to leave Britain due to inadequate funding for his research, despite its influence on government reports. He is one of those scientists who has no difficulty making a direct link between climate change and the fate of the polar bear. "If the pack ice has retreated far from the coast, the bear will start swimming, thinking there is only a small shore lead, as has usually happened in the past. If the distance to the ice is too great, he may tire and drown. This has been observed in bears denning in north Alaska then trying to get out on to the Beaufort Sea pack ice."

After years of hesitancy, there is now a sense of urgency. Tomorrow night in Washington the US Fish and Wildlife Service held the second of its public hearings Thursday on whether the polar bear should be officially regarded as a threatened species. The third and final meeting took place in Alaska yesterday. But it may be too late to be squabbling over semantics. To some extent the fate of the polar bear is already fixed: unless it is able to adapt to spending far greater periods of the year on land, it may not recover from our devastating impact on its Arctic environment.

But not all polar bears are in the Arctic. This month the Horniman Museum in London has a timely display of 32 photographs of polar bears, and they make sober viewing. They are all stuffed, and their habitat is wooden packing crates and storage units: this is a collection of every taxidermists' polar bear in Britain. A chilly vision of the past and, maybe, the future too.


Reference:taipeitimes

Ban on hunting is misguided

By:John M’jongola

WHILE Kenya misses out on the huge worldwide outdoor sports industry, that includes sport hunting, bird shooting and game fishing, the debate on whether or not to legalise sport hunting has become stale, unimaginative, illogical and repetitive.

Strangely enough, Kenya allows game fishing and bird shooting, but not sport hunting which is the biggest money earner and conservation tool of all. Meanwhile Botswana, Nambia, Zambia, Tanzania, Zimbabwe, Mozambique and South Africa rake in billions of shillings annually in hunting and conservation revenue.

Lost in this impenetrable debate (“Scramble for Africa’s wild life,” The EastAfrican March 5-12) is the need to bring Kenya’s wildlife policy up to date with the rest of Africa and international norms and away from the colonial rules where the government decided issues such as hunting for the entire country, by decree of remote authorities.

That is what radical conservationists like International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW) and others want to retain, so that they can command all Kenya’s complex web of wildlife users (from landowners to tourist lodges) to adopt a single, rigid wildlife policy. This is bad conservation at its worst. And it has failed.

KWS should implement a number of pilot hunting schemes with selected landowners and communities. Opponents like IFAW and wildlife experts such as the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and other UN affiliates can be invited to monitor these schemes.

Kenya has lost 70 per cent of its wild animals outside parks since the ban on hunting in 1976. Hunting therefore cannot be blamed per se.

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There should be no countrywide lifting of the hunting ban, nor any total imposition, but selected projects to be assessed.

This will help landowners and communities choose the wildlife policy that suits their needs.

That is smart conservation and Kenya’s way forward.

Despite regulated hunting being a legal and valuable conservation tool that is used by most countries worldwide and endorsed by the most respected and senior wildlife bodies such as the WWF and World Conservation Union/IUCN, the matter in Kenya is wholly dominated by extremist conservationists.

They are spending millions of shillings opposing hunting in Kenya by every means.

Thus Kenyans have a weird impression that the only choices are a complete hunting ban, or else hundreds of foreigners will descend on the country and invade national parks, guns blazing away at all sorts of animals, endangered or not.

But the truth is that nobody has ever proposed the latter, not even hunters.

Reference:nationmedia

Animals threatened by snowmobiles

Hazardous to pedestrians walking on footpaths, and threatening to both wildlife and plant life; drivers of snowmobiles and all-terrain vehicles are not welcome at the Marguerite-d'Youville wildlife refuge. Their growing and disturbing presence is of grave concern to Héritage St-Bernard which manages the area and which is sounding the alarm.

"Not only is their presence illegal, but besides that they are not the least bit shy to circulate outside of the paths," said Dominic Gendron, co-ordinator for the protection and management of the territory. "They travel at high speeds which above all presents a great danger for people who are touring the site on foot. Also, by driving all over the place, they are destroying numerous plants, uprooting young trees and stressing out the animals who inhabit the island."

The discovery of a carcass of a young Virginia deer two weekends ago sent warning bells ringing and Héritage St-Bernard management lodged complaints with Chateauguay police.

"Some people unfortunately take pleasure in chasing the animals at high speeds," fumed Luc L'Écuyer, Heritage St-Bernard's director general. "We seriously believe this particular deer died because of undue stress, probably after having been chased. This must stop! This type of behaviour is totally unacceptable.

"For several species, including the Virginia deer, winter is the period where they are most vulnerable. They have only the necessary reserves to survive the cold season. To be chased by a snowmobile requires a huge expending of energy and creates an enormous amount of stress which can cause death," L'Écuyer explained.

From his house nearby, Robert Harrison daily sees snowmobiles transgressing onto the wildlife sanctuary. "They are there every day," he attests. "Sometimes they are in groups, sometimes individually. I find it very sad. They are causing lots of damage to nature in a protected zone." Harrison has regularly contacted Héritage St-Bernard to denounce offenders.

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This problem is nothing new. Every winter, snowmobile aficionados benefit from the frozen Chateauguay River and Lake St. Louis to invade Ile St-Bernard.

"It's even worse this year," L'Écuyer reports. "We lack the means to prevent them from circulating in the refuge. Warning posters are not enough. So we are asking for co-operation from the public at large, and of snowmobile and all-terrain vehicle clubs."

Chateauguay police say they are treating this problem very seriously. They have asked for assistance from the Sûreté du Québec, which patrols the shores of the island. People are also being asked to please jot down the licence numbers of offending vehicles and to expose transgressors.

Delinquent snowmobile and all-terrain vehicle drivers are leaving themselves vulnerable to heavy fines. According to the law governing off-road vehicles, they can be fined anywhere from $100 to $200 for having circulated in footpaths where their use is not permitted, or from $250 to $500 for travelling in a private area without the owner's permission.

Moreover, the law governing the conservation of natural heritage prescribes fines ranging from $500 to $100,000 for anyone contravening activities permitted on a protected site, or for damaging or destroying the area. People who torment the animals are also targeted by these fines.


Reference:hebdos

Animals Seized In Sumner County Over Poor Care Conditions

Animal rescue workers found a gruesome site on a Sumner county farm, horses trying to survive in desperate conditions.

Jamie Clifton described the condition of one of the horses she is caring for. The three year old horse with a body score of one out of nine, that's as low as it can go before the horse dies.
She and she Sumner county Sheriff's Department went to confiscate the animals from a farm in Sumner county. Clifton is the director of the Volunteer Equine Advocates. She has seen a lot with this group but over the past few months has become overwhelmed.

Clifton said this most recent case was more then she imagined, "Around behind the barn there was a pile of animals. It was the most sickening thing I've seen in a long time."

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The Equine Advocates help out whenever there is a problem and horses need to be removed and given proper care. These horses and a llama were taken back in February. Clifton said, the owners had the proper facilities and amount of hay for the animals but she is unclear whey the animals were in such bad shape.
She said most of the horses they have seen this year, the owners had what they needed to care for them. Clifton said, some people just don't realize the cost and time it takes to properly care for the animals.

"Buying feed, buyinghay can cost the average person about $1200 a year to just adequately maintain a horse. That's not having a fancy barn or stalls or bedding or keeping them all night," said Clifton.

She said she does expect these horses to make a full recovery. And depending on the outcome in court, against the man charged in this case, they could be placed on another farm where they will be able to thrive.


Reference:wkrn

Shelter not willing to transport animals

By Ronica Shannon
Register News Writer


Madison Fiscal Court spends about $200,000 annually to fund the county’s animal shelter, which has come under scrutiny from a Menifee County rescue group out to stop euthanasia in animal housing facilities.

Susan Lacy, a member of the Menifee group, has drafted a letter to be sent to Madison County magistrates explaining her problems with the Madison County Animal Shelter, which is operated under the direction of Keith Crawford.

The rescue group operates a separate facility to house puppies rescued from euthanasia at surrounding county shelters.

“We transport many of the animals to humane societies and reputable rescue groups in New England,” Lacy wrote. “The New England states have spayed and neutered for so many years they actually have a greater demand for shelter dogs than they have locally. In order not to kill any Menifee County animals, we have no choice but to take them to these areas.”

Lacy claims that Crawford will not give her any animals.

Crawford said that his facility is not overpopulated at the time, and even if it were, he is not so sure he would hand the animals over to Lacy’s group.

“It’s not like a real established animal shelter was asking for puppies,” Crawford said. “To be a professional facility, it would have to have standard operating hours. It concerned me as to whether or not I would be doing a good thing or a bad thing.”

When Lacy and her colleagues realized that they always had extra space in their transport van, she wrote, “It only seemed sensible that we save as many animals as possible.”

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The group’s effort began to generate so many puppies that a rescue facility was began in Lacy’s home.

“If my people had their houses, barns and sheds full, the public would be outraged at me for allowing those kinds of things,” he said. “I wouldn’t want to send some of my animals to a place that had those kinds of conditions.”

Because the operation has grown to the point that Lacy must use her home as a rescue facility, Crawford is not sure why she is pushing so hard to receive animals from the Madison County shelter, he said.

As far as giving Lacy animals to transport, Crawford pointed out that there is a monetary incentive for doing so.

“Sometimes, yes, we do get money,” Lacy said. “If they’re hard to place, we don’t get anything for the animal. Some shelters give us $40 (per animal) for transporting, but we go in the hole on every transport. You don’t ever get your money back.”

Euthanasia is an inevitable part of operating an animal shelter, Crawford said.

“We keep them as long as we have cage space and as long as they’re adoptable,” he said. “We get a lot of animals that are not adoptable. Every facility has to put animals to sleep. You don’t want to take an animal that is a risk to the public and turn it back out on the streets.”

The Madison County Animal Shelter, located at 1386 Richmond Road, has about 20 cages for adoptable dogs, 20 for cats, 23 maximum security cages where strays are lodged and 23 other cages available for use.

The shelter could house many more animals before reaching full capacity, Crawford said.

“We adopt over 1,000 animals over a year and have about 50 people each day who come into the shelter,” he said.

The shelter is open to the public Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the animals can be viewed from noon to 5 p.m. The office is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and the animals also are available for viewing from noon to 5 p.m.

For more information about adopting an animal from the shelter, call 986-9625.


Reference:richmondregister

Shelter not willing to transport animals

By Ronica Shannon
Register News Writer


Madison Fiscal Court spends about $200,000 annually to fund the county’s animal shelter, which has come under scrutiny from a Menifee County rescue group out to stop euthanasia in animal housing facilities.

Susan Lacy, a member of the Menifee group, has drafted a letter to be sent to Madison County magistrates explaining her problems with the Madison County Animal Shelter, which is operated under the direction of Keith Crawford.

The rescue group operates a separate facility to house puppies rescued from euthanasia at surrounding county shelters.

“We transport many of the animals to humane societies and reputable rescue groups in New England,” Lacy wrote. “The New England states have spayed and neutered for so many years they actually have a greater demand for shelter dogs than they have locally. In order not to kill any Menifee County animals, we have no choice but to take them to these areas.”

Lacy claims that Crawford will not give her any animals.

Crawford said that his facility is not overpopulated at the time, and even if it were, he is not so sure he would hand the animals over to Lacy’s group.

“It’s not like a real established animal shelter was asking for puppies,” Crawford said. “To be a professional facility, it would have to have standard operating hours. It concerned me as to whether or not I would be doing a good thing or a bad thing.”

When Lacy and her colleagues realized that they always had extra space in their transport van, she wrote, “It only seemed sensible that we save as many animals as possible.”

Drs. Foster and Smith Inc.

The group’s effort began to generate so many puppies that a rescue facility was began in Lacy’s home.

“If my people had their houses, barns and sheds full, the public would be outraged at me for allowing those kinds of things,” he said. “I wouldn’t want to send some of my animals to a place that had those kinds of conditions.”

Because the operation has grown to the point that Lacy must use her home as a rescue facility, Crawford is not sure why she is pushing so hard to receive animals from the Madison County shelter, he said.

As far as giving Lacy animals to transport, Crawford pointed out that there is a monetary incentive for doing so.

“Sometimes, yes, we do get money,” Lacy said. “If they’re hard to place, we don’t get anything for the animal. Some shelters give us $40 (per animal) for transporting, but we go in the hole on every transport. You don’t ever get your money back.”

Euthanasia is an inevitable part of operating an animal shelter, Crawford said.

“We keep them as long as we have cage space and as long as they’re adoptable,” he said. “We get a lot of animals that are not adoptable. Every facility has to put animals to sleep. You don’t want to take an animal that is a risk to the public and turn it back out on the streets.”

The Madison County Animal Shelter, located at 1386 Richmond Road, has about 20 cages for adoptable dogs, 20 for cats, 23 maximum security cages where strays are lodged and 23 other cages available for use.

The shelter could house many more animals before reaching full capacity, Crawford said.

“We adopt over 1,000 animals over a year and have about 50 people each day who come into the shelter,” he said.

The shelter is open to the public Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and the animals can be viewed from noon to 5 p.m. The office is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday and the animals also are available for viewing from noon to 5 p.m.

For more information about adopting an animal from the shelter, call 986-9625.


Reference:richmondregister

Abandoned Ponies, Donkey, Other Animals Await Adoption

by: The Associated Press

Wanted: a good home for 23 neglected and abandoned ponies, 10 dogs, some goats, and one donkey.

The animals were rescued Mar. 7 from a ranch in Menifee, Calif., where they were abandoned several weeks ago. A concerned resident contacted animal-control officers, who found the animals with some food but a dwindling water supply.

After several unsuccessful attempts to contact the missing owner, the department decided to move the animals to another ranch in Nuevo.

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"We've been feeding them and trimmed (hooves on) half of the them, and the other half will be trimmed this week," said Doug Williams, the ranch owner, whose property has been used for several years as temporary housing for abandoned animals. "They'll be in excellent condition before they go out to a good home."

For $150, interested parties can take home any of the neglected animals.

"These animals mean the world to Animal Services, especially when they're abandoned," said Samantha Phillips, a Riverside County animal-control officer. "I'm just looking for them to go to a great home."
Reference:thehorse

Stump Hill Farm brings exotic animals to Emerson to help spark interest in reading

By ERIN PUSTAY

Butterscotch stretched his long, scaly neck and hissed his little pink tongue. He let it wag in the air, taking in all of the smells that swirled through the Emerson Elementary gymnasium. He waited patiently for the students to file in and take their seats, squirming only slightly when he coiled himself around handler Mick Mayne’s broad shoulders.

“It’s a snake!” students gasped, chattering amongst each other. Some girls screamed, startled while others held their hands to their eyes and walked quickly by.

Cindi Huntsman just smiled. As operator of Stump Hill Farm in Perry Township she is no stranger to the reactions like these.

Tuesday, Hunstman and some of her coworkers brought with them three of their most exotic animal friends to introduce to the students as part of an educational assembly at the school.

As Huntsman talked about Butterscotch, an Albino Burmese Python, Mayne carried him over to the seated children so they could reach up and pet the snake’s scaly back. After running their fingers gingerly over the snake’s smooth back they would turn to each other and laugh.

The assembly was a part of the school’s Right to Read Week activities, themed “Read in the Wildest Places.”

The idea of the theme, according to Debbie Smith, a school counselor and member of the Right to Read committee, was to jump start the student’s interest in reading by including some of things they love most – adventure and animals.

“One thing leads to another,” Smith said. “They may start reading a fiction book about animals, but they want to learn more so they start to read non-fiction.”

Getting to the fiction might take a little prodding, though. That’s where Hunstman comes in.




Students just couldn’t contain their excitement as she introduced the animals. They knew the best was yet to come because a large animal carrier covered with a pink, leopard-print blanket was shaking and rattling off to the side.

They knew who was in that cage.

“Obie!” several of the students yelled excitedly when Maria Tilton helped Chrystal, a white bangle tiger, from the cage. The entire gym erupted with applause.

OK, so it wasn’t Obie, but it was Obie’s best friend and that certainly was the next best thing.

As Tilton walked Chrystal around the gym, the students stretched and strained to watch her big, fluffy paws flop silently on the hardwood floor. Occasionally she would growl, plop to the ground and roll around like a over-grown kitten.

“When she was born,” Huntsman told the kids, “she weighed only pounds.”

Students giggled and gasped thinking about how such a tiny cat could grow to be so big in just 11 short months. They listened carefully to her talk about her parents and asked eager questions about tigers living in the wild.

Hopefully, Huntsman said, that curiosity is just the start to the things they will learn about the majestic animals.

“We are here because we want you to learn more about the animals,” Huntsman told the kids. “There are lots of books you can read to find out more about the animals.”


Reference:indeonline

Group forms to save neglected animals

Last November, dozens of neglected animals were found in Calhan. Dogs, llamas, and horses were malnourished, others died and the bodies were found across the property.

Jerry Rineck and his wife Diane live across the street. They couldn't just sit back and watch these animals suffer. He says "we called the humane society 6 or 7 times in the previous month and they just didn't come out." The animals were eventually removed.





The Rinecks took a dog and cat. District 19 State Representative Marsha Looper took a herd of llamas. She says, "The issues out here with large animals, horses, llamas, and cattle is an issue that needs to be addressed. It's only going to get worse." It's a complaint you hear more and more in Eastern El Paso county.

Reports of animal abuse are on the rise, and the humane society and sheriff's office isn't equipped to handle all the cases.

Sheriff Terry Maketa says, "It's a growing problem, but also it's very inefficient when we take possession of animals to then try to find what we're going to do with them." So the Rinecks started SAINT, which means saving animals in need together.

His group of volunteers use their own money and resources to rescue and care for neglected animals.

Rineck says, "we could have 3 or 4 things a day where we have to do. I just got two calls this morning." He donated part of his property to SAINT, and plans to build a shelter there.

He's hoping grant money will help pay for this operation. Rineck just completed certification to become an animal investigator. He hopes that will give him the authority to seize animals.

Reference:koaa

Circus animals: Entertaining or inhumane?

By John Reinan, Star Tribune
Last update: March 11, 2007


Circus animals won't be performing in Minneapolis any more if a proposed ban passes the City Council.


Lions and tigers and bears -- no way. And no elephants, either, if Minneapolis joins about two dozen cities nationwide in banning wild circus animals.
City Council members Ralph Remington and Cam Gordon say they hope to amend city laws to bar circuses from bringing elephants, tigers and other exotic critters into Minneapolis.

"It's adapting to the times and trying to be more humane in our treatment of wild animals," said Remington, who represents the 10th Ward. The proposed ban could be introduced later this month, said Remington.

He added that he believes he has the seven votes necessary to pass the measure.

The idea, part of a movement to get animals out of the Big Top, drew a roar from the circus business.

"I think it's one of the most un-American things I've ever heard of," said Rodney Huey, a spokesman for the Outdoor Amusement Business Association, which represents about 2,500 circuses, carnivals and other entertainment companies.

"If you are against animals working in a circus, then don't support it," Huey said. "But to keep a legitimate, traditional American business from coming to your town is ridiculous. You're denying thousands of children the right to see an elephant or a tiger in person."


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Bans in other cities

Bans on circus animals have been enacted in a number of North American cities, including Stamford, Conn.; Boulder, Colo., and Burlington, Vt. But proposed bans have failed in several larger cities, including Seattle, Denver, Winnipeg and Edmonton, Alberta.

The circus industry has mounted an informational campaign to head off bans. Feld Entertainment, owner of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus, has an extensive website with information on animal care. The site also includes an open letter to animal rights groups, accusing them of targeting well-cared-for circus animals while ignoring wild animals that are "starving, ill, overpopulating, and dying in habitats that can no longer support them."

Gordon said the proposed ban in Minneapolis is the result of a long-term lobbying effort by animal rights activists.

"It's arisen organically," said Gordon, who represents the Second Ward. "It is an issue coming from some active constituents and some people in my ward. But it's not a groundswell of people who are impatiently pounding on doors."

Among the circuses potentially affected would be the Minneapolis Shrine Circus, which is scheduled for the Target Center in mid-October. About 59,000 people attended the circus last year, said Don Wurden, potentate of the Zuhrah Shriners. Wurden declined to comment on the proposed ban.

It's unthinkable to have a circus without wild animals, said Tom Albert, a spokesman for Feld Entertainment.

"The fact is, people who come to the circus make it clear that the animals are the single biggest attraction," Albert said. "There may be activist groups, but our constituency is the millions of people who attend our circus and other circuses."

Those millions are watching tigers, elephants and other animals that have suffered inhumane treatment, said Nick Coughlin of Circus Reform Yes, a Minneapolis group that has pushed for the ban.

"You've got animals that are used to traveling 25 miles a day in the wild. Now they're tethered to chains 22 hours a day and forced to perform unnatural acts," Coughlin said.

"The tools of the trade tell the story. They use bullhooks, which are long, sharp rods with metal hooks. You've got hotshots -- electric prods -- whips and chains," Coughlin said. "These are the tools they use to train these animals to do these tricks."

Albert said modern training methods stress positive reinforcement.

"You don't get a reliable, predictable animal through mistreatment," he said. "We have every reason to take the best care of our animals. Our trainers live with the animals 24 hours a day."

Reference:startribune

Dog walking ban for five or more

Dog lovers in Camden who walk more than four animals at a time face on-the-spot fines under a council crackdown.

The council also plans to introduce an £80 fixed penalty for owners who let their dogs off the lead on public streets, land and parks in the borough.

Ten special areas have been created for dog exercise and owners will be fined if they fail to remove dog mess.

The council said it would extend a consultation period with dog owners after criticism of the plans.

The Kennel Club urged owners to put their objections in quickly as three weeks of the four-week consultation period had already elapsed.

They said dog-owners' freedoms were in jeopardy and criticised the fact that all a council had to do to publicise the consultation period was to place an advertisement in a local newspaper.

Fixed penalty tickets would mean we would not have to resort to the courts

Mike Greene, Camden Council

The councillor in charge of the scheme, Mike Greene, responded to the criticism that notices had not been put up in local parks for dog-walkers to see, by extending the period by a further fortnight.

He said Hampstead Heath would be exempt from the requirement that dogs should be kept on a lead at all times.

Mr Greene said they had had trouble with dogs in the borough in the past and were now trying to tackle the problem.

"Fixed penalty tickets would mean we would not have to resort to the courts and people would not get a criminal record," he said.


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Mixed reaction

He added that the scheme was not a money-making exercise, as the cost of enforcement would outweigh the income from it.

A council statement said they had 83 recorded incidents in Camden-run parks last year, ranging from owners not picking up dog mess, animals being exercised off the lead and fouling in children's play areas, to dogs attacking wildlife and children and owners.

Dog owners exercising their animals on Hampstead Heath on Sunday gave a mixed reaction to the proposals.

Professional dog walker and local resident Mike Harris - who often walks six dogs at a time - said limiting the number to four could put some of his colleagues out of business.

"I am insured to walk up to seven," he said.

"I think the best way of going about it would be for the council to licence dog owners and professional dog walkers to keep out the irresponsible people, rather than fining on the spot".



Reference:bbc

Dorchester County deputy to be buried with his police dog

SUMMERVILLE, S.C. A Dorchester County deputy once named South Carolina deputy of the year and his police dog will be buried together this week.

Sheriff's Corporal Mike Deese was killed on patrol Friday when a pickup truck crossed the median of I-26 near the Harleyville exit and slammed into his cruiser.

The coroner says Deese and the driver of the pickup, Christopher Burnham Junior, both died instantly.





Deese's patrol dog, Sonja, was in the back of his cruiser and also died.

Deese's funeral was scheduled for 11 a-m Tuesday at Faith Assembly Church in Summerville, with the burial the next day.

Sheriff Ray Nash says Deese and Sonja, one of two working dogs that lived with Deese and his family, will be buried in the same coffin.

Refernce:http://www.fox21.com

Outrage halts Okla. prairie dog poisoning

LAWTON, Okla. - Efforts by city officials to poison black-tailed prairie dogs who make their home at a local park have been put on hold after enraged residents voiced their complaints.

The rodents have been burrowing through Elmer Thomas Park for decades, drawing the ire of city workers even while attracting tourists.

Parks and Recreation Director Kim Shahan estimates the prairie dog population at the park has doubled to 8,000 since 2002, and the chubby rodents have started to encroach on neighboring Lawton High School athletic fields.

"This isn't about the prairie dog," Shahan said. "I like the prairie dog as much as anyone else. But the issue now is safety."

City officials received harsh criticism last week when city workers spent two nights dropping poisonous pellets into prairie dog holes to trim the population.

Critics claim the public wasn't informed.

Aluminum phosphide is contained in the pellets, which are dropped into a hole that is then sealed. Moisture in the soil produces a phosphine gas that kills the prairie dogs.




When word leaked about what was happening, angry protesters converged on the park Saturday to voice their complaints. The group began an online petition drive to "stop the poisoning of our Lawton Prairie Dog Population!"

"We found out about it the next day, and the people that loved the prairie dogs really started hollering," said Lawton resident Sherry Bly. "I think it was horribly cruel, and it was done in an inhumane way. Those little prairie dogs suffered horribly."

Shahan said the city has halted its poisoning efforts for now.

Keith Mitchell, Lawton Public Schools spokesman, has seen countless prairie dog holes appear on the grounds surrounding Lawton High School, including the baseball field and football practice field.

"We're fighting them back," Mitchell said. "Right now, our groundskeepers fill holes with dirt as soon as they see them. Naturally, our concern is the safety of our students.

"When we have teams come to Lawton High to play a baseball game, they should be able to focus on nothing else but playing the game. We don't want some kid going back on a fly ball, worrying that he might step in a hole and break his ankle."

Reference:kansas

Man Saves Dog with Mouth-to-Snout Action

OMAHA, Neb. - March 11, 2007 - Lucy was drowning and turning blue, so Randy Gurchin recalled his Air Force training on mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.

It didn't matter that Lucy is a 10-month-old English bulldog, because he and Lucy are "best buddies."

"Once you get a pet, it's truly part of your family," he said. "You just tend to do whatever it takes to save their life."

Lucy had jumped into a partly frozen lake in pursuit of ducks and geese, but the water was too cold for her.




When Gurchin edged onto the ice and pulled Lucy out of the water, she was unresponsive and her face and paws were blue.

He closed her mouth, put his mouth over her nose, breathed air into her lungs and pushed on her chest, and after about a minute she began shallow breaths.

He drove her to a veterinary clinic, where she was immersed in warm water, given injections and placed in an oxygen tent.

By Friday, a week after her ordeal, Lucy was back to normal, said Gurchin, a pilot who retired from the Air Force two years ago.


Reference:abclocal