donderdag 31 juli 2008

Krokodil in Louisiana (VS) bijt arm af van 11-jarig jongetje


Teen's arm retrieved from gator stomach

31-07-2008 By NBC News Channel, WCBD, USA


A boy's arm has been recovered after it was bitten off by an alligator Wednesday near Slidell, Louisiana. The alligator severed 11-year-old Devin Funck's arm Wednesday, according to police. Officers said the boy and two girls played near a body of water at the Kingspoint subdivision near Slidell when the gator attacked and tried to pull the boy under.
Police said the gator swallowed the boy's arm.


Officials said they retrieved the limb from the alligator's stomach after searching for, catching and cutting the animal.
Around 6:40 p.m., a deputy at the scene said the arm had been rushed to Ochsner Medical Center in Jefferson.
The boy was airlifted to the hospital, according to officials, where he was undergoing surgery to attempt to reattach the severed arm.
Dr. Corey Hebert said survival is their biggest concern in operating on the boy.
He said their second concern is blood loss.

Two deputies helping with the rescue were treated for minor injuries because of heat exhaustion.

Last month, a teen in Okeechobee, Fla., lost an arm in an alligator attack while swimming across a canal.
Kasey Edwards, 18, was traversing a canal that empties into Lake Okeechobee when an 11-foot alligator bit him and tried to drag him under.

(Bron: http://www.wcbd.com/)
(Bron foto: WCBD TV)

Spitsmuisje Maleisië leeft van alcohol....


Vederstaarttoepajas in Maleisië elke dag dronken

31-07-2008 Nieuwe Maleisië, Belgium


Een zoogdiertje in Maleisië laaft zich elke nacht aan een bloem waarvan de nectar zó alcoholisch is, dat de plant naar een brouwerij ruikt. Het is goed mogelijk dat het beestje, de vederstaarttoepaja, zo veel drinkt dat hij naar menselijke maatstaven niet meer achter het stuur zou mogen zitten.

Het wetenschappelijke tijdschrift Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences publiceerde deze week een studie naar het beest. Het is de eerste keer dat van een zoogdier nauwkeurig is vastgesteld dat het van nature leeft op een alcoholhoudend dieet. En dat is relevant, vindt de Duitse onderzoeker Frank Wiens. "Nu hebben we naast de mens nog een dier dat van nature regelmatig drinkt."

Dat dieren dronken worden als ze maar genoeg bier of wijn wordt voorgezet, hebben biologen altijd met enthousiasme opgeschreven. Het was een van de observaties waarmee Charles Darwin zijn The Descent of Man (1871) begon. Een van zijn argumenten dat mensen nauw verwant zijn aan apen, was dat zij van dezelfde stoffen in een roes raken. "Veel apensoorten hebben een sterke voorkeur voor thee, koffie, en alcoholische dranken: en, zoals ik zelf gezien heb, roken ze ook graag tabak."

Er is in de natuur niet veel alcohol aanwezig. Als rijp fruit gist, bevat het vaak minder dan 0,5 procent alcohol. Een leven met alcohol is voorbehouden aan enkele diersoorten die veel fruit eten. Fruitvliegen consumeren regelmatig alcohol, en ook fruit etende vleermuizen staan in de belangstelling. Dat olifanten dronken worden door fruit van de marula (een boom), is door biologen als een broodje aap afgedaan.

De vederstaarttoepaja (Ptilocercus lowii) schaart zich nu ook onder de schaarse alcoholconsumenten. Tijdens veldwerk in het Maleisische regenwoud naar de voedselvoorkeur van toepaja's en lori's (halfapen) ontdekten Duitse biologen van de Universiteit van Bayreuth dat deze en andere kleine zoogdieren vaak afkwamen op een palm waarvan de bloemen flink naar gist roken. De toepaja's werden verder onderzocht. De Duitsers filmden bloeiende palmen, voorzagen de dieren van een zender, en analyseerden de nectar en de haren van de beesten. De toepaja's bleken dagelijks meer dan tien planten te bezoeken en vertoonden sporen van chronisch alcoholgebruik. De bloem herbergt gistcultures die alcohol produceren. Het alcoholpercentage van de nectar lag rond de 0,5 procent maar werd in uitzonderlijke gevallen opgedreven tot 3,8 procent. Dat is zo sterk als bier. De toepaja's leken niet onder de alcohol te lijden.

De palm heeft baat bij het bezoek, want rondscharrelende zoogdieren zorgen voor de bevruchting. De Duitse onderzoekers benadrukken dat de toepaja zo interessant is omdat het dier verwant is aan de primaten. "Het laat zien dat er al 55 miljoen jaar geleden blootstelling aan alcohol was", zegt Wiens aan de telefoon. Maar over de precieze plek van de toepaja's in de zoogdierstamboom is het laatste woord nog niet gesproken, en de relatie tussen toepaja en palm is niet uniek. Ook ratten en eekhoorns bezochten de bloemen.

Hoe gaat de toepaja om met de alcohol en wat heeft hij eraan? Dat vraagstuk interesseert biologen die willen verklaren waarom mensen tot alcoholisme geneigd zijn. Wiens: "Er zijn veel voordelen te bedenken. Suiker, vitaminen, sporenelementen, insecten op de bloemen." Misschien is de alcohol zelf voordelig voor de dieren. Maar dat zal moeten blijken.

(Bron: http://nieuws.maleisie.be/)
(Bron foto: Nieuws Maleisie)

18.000 Alpaca's in Peru in nood door koudegolf - FAO stuurt noodhulp


Belgische regering helpt alpaca's redden in Peru

31-07-2008 De Standaard, Belgium


ROME - (Belga) Het Wereldvoedselagentschap (FAO) heeft dringende noodhulp gestuurd naar Peru, waar meer dan 18.000 alpaca's - een kleinere variant van de lama - dreigen om te komen door een koudegolf. Dat meldt het FAO donderdag.

Het FAO laat weten dat er dankzij de hulp van de Belgische regering 36.800 doses antiparasitairen en antibiotica verstuurd zijn voor de 18.000 alpaca's in de provincie Huancavelica. De dieren, de bron van inkomsten voor de bevolking op de hoge Andesvlakten, zijn verzwakt en ziek door de koude.

"De alpaca's zijn verzwakt door de koudegolf die de hoogvlakten dit jaar veel vroeger getroffen heeft dan anders en waardoor het gras waarvan de dieren eten constant bedekt is door sneeuw. Daardoor lijden de dieren honger en worden ze ziek", aldus Marc Vandersmissen, coördinator van de noodoperaties van de FAO in Peru. "De voeding van de alpacakwekers bestaat uit aardappelen en een beetje alpacavlees. De alpaca's zijn dus heel belangrijk voor hen", luidt het nog.

(Bron: http://www.standaard.be/)
(Bron foto: http://lh3.ggpht.com/_hlDvjxCm_9E/RyOVfhr5vlI/AAAAAAAAAvQ/iyfyBsayw6c/Peru+2007+184.jpg)

Verkoop honden en katten in Riyadh (Saudi-Arabië) verboden...


Saudi Arabia bans sale of dogs, cats in capital

31-07-2008 By (AP) Location: RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, The Southern Ledger, USA


Every single man knows: Walking a dog in the park is a sure babe magnet. Saudi Arabia's Islamic religious police, in their zeal to keep the sexes apart, want to make sure the technique doesn't catch on here.
The solution: Ban selling dogs and cats as pets, as well as walking them in public.


The prohibition went into effect Wednesday in the capital, Riyadh, and authorities in the city say they will strictly enforce it _ unlike previous bans in the cities of Mecca and Jiddah, which have been ignored and failed to stop pet sales.

Saudis play by their cat outside a pet shop in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Thursday , July 31, 2008. In their zeal to keep the sexes apart, the kingdom's religious police say they have begun enforcing a ban on the sale of cats and dogs as pets and walking them in public because men use the animals to hit on women. (AP Photo)

Violators found outside with their pets will have their beloved poodles and other furry companions confiscated by agents of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, the official name of the religious police, tasked with enforcing Saudi Arabia's strict Islamic code.

The commission's general manager, Othman al-Othman, said the ban was ordered because of what he called "the rising of phenomenon of men using cats and dogs to make passes at women and pester families" as well as "violating proper behavior in public squares and malls."
"If a man is caught with a pet, the pet will be immediately confiscated and the man will be forced to sign a document pledging not to repeat the act," al-Othman told the Al-Hayat newspaper. "If he does, he will be referred to authorities." The ban does not address women.

The Saudi-owned Al-Hayat announced the ban in its Wednesday edition, saying it was ordered by the acting governor of Riyadh province, Prince Sattam, based on an edit from the Council of Senior Islamic Scholars and several religious police reports of pet owners harassing women and families.

Commission authorities often do not formally announce to the public new rules that they intend to implement. Officials from the commission and Riyadh city government could not be reached for comment Thursday, which is a weekend day in Saudi Arabia. The English-language Arab News reported on the ban Thursday.

So far, the prohibition did not appear to have any effect in Riyadh. It's extremely rare, anyway, to see anyone in the capital walking a dog _ much less carrying a cat in public _ despite the authorities' claims of flirtatious young men luring girls with their pets in malls.
Salesmen at a couple of Riyadh pet stores said Thursday they did not receive any orders from the commission banning the sale of pets. Cats and dogs were still on display.
"I didn't hear of the ban," said Yasser al-Abdullah, a 28-year-old Saudi nurse, who was at one pet store with his 3-month-old collie, Joe.

Al-Abdullah, who also owns an 8-month-old Labrador, said a couple of Western friends had been told to get off the streets by the religious police for walking their dogs.
"I won't allow the commission to take my dogs from me," he said.
The religious police prowl streets and malls throughout the kingdom, ensuring unmarried men and women do not mix, confronting women they feel are not properly covered or urging men to go to prayers.

They also often make attempts to plug the few holes in the strict gender segregation that innovations bring. In 2004, for example, they tried to ban cameras on cell phones, fearing that men and women would exchange pictures of each other _ though the prohibition was quickly revoked.
There was no word whether commission authorities intend to expand the dog and cat ban beyond the capital.

The prohibition may be more of an attempt to curb the owning of pets, which conservative Saudis view as a sign of corrupting Western influence, like the fast food, shorts, jeans and pop music that have become more common in the kingdom.

Although it has never been common to own pets in the Arab world, it's becoming increasingly fashionable among the upper class in Saudi Arabia and other countries such as Egypt.
In Islamic tradition, dogs are shunned as unclean and dangerous, though they are kept for hunting and guarding.
In large cities around the Middle East, stray dogs are considered pests.

The ban on cats is more puzzling, since there's no similar disdain for them in Islamic tradition.
One of the Prophet Muhammad's closest companions was given the name Abu Huraira, Arabic for "the father of the kitten," because he always carried a kitten with him and a number of traditional stories of the prophet show Muhammad encouraging people to treat cats well.

(Bron: http://www.southernledger.com/)
(Bron foto: The Southern Ledger)

Paardenvlees in VS mogelijk in toekomst niet meer verkrijgbaar


House considers ban on killing horses for food

31-07-2008 By STEPHANIE S. GARLOW, Associated Press Writer, The Ottawa Recorder, Canada


WASHINGTON - One menu item could soon disappear from foreign dinner tables: meat from slaughtered American horses.

Witnesses at a House Judiciary subcommittee hearing Thursday recounted graphic stories of the methods of slaughter and provided photos of bloodied horses.
The last three horse slaughterhouses in the United States closed in 2007 but horses are currently exported to Mexico and Canada for slaughter there.


The bill under consideration would criminalize the domestic or international sale, delivery or receipt of horses for processing for human consumption. The House passed a similar measure last year but not the Senate.
Some veterinarians say a ban on slaughter would eliminate a necessary end-of-life option for unwanted horses.

The sides disagree about what percent of slaughtered horses are unwanted and whether there are sufficient rescue facilities to deal with the animals if slaughter were outlawed.
___
___
For bill text: http://thomas.loc.gov/
Veterinarians for Equine Welfare: http://www.vetsforequinewelfare.org/index.php
American Association of Equine Practitioners: http://www.aaep.org/

(Bron: http://www.newsone.ca/ottawarecorder/stories1/index.php?action=fullnews&id=22168)

Bliksem treft 11 koeien dodelijk in zuiden Duitsland


11 cattle killed in lightning strike in Germany

31-07-2008 By Associated Press, The Boston Herald, USA


BERLIN - A bolt of lightning killed 11 cattle that took shelter under a tree during a storm in southern Germany.

The cattle had been out to pasture when a severe storm came up near the southwestern town of Freiburg and deluged the area with rain and hail Wednesday night.
The animals were pressed together under the tree when the lightning splintered the trunk and sent a bolt of electricity into the ground that killed the animals, police said Thursday. The loss of the livestock was estimated at €50,000 (US$77,945).

Two of the herd survived the lightning strike.
No injuries to people were reported, although the storm flooded basements and uprooted trees.

(Bron: http://news.bostonherald.com/)
(Bron foto: AP)

25-Jarige Nederlandse slangenonderzoeker op cover 'Nature'...


Eén keer krassen en je bent vergiftigd

30-07-2008 Door onze redacteur Michiel van Nieuwstadt, NRC


Giftanden van slangen variëren van groefjes tot uitklapbare weerhaken. Slangenonderzoeker Freek Vonk ontdekte dat het wapen bij één gedeelde voorouder ontstond.

Leiden, 31 juli. Na een uurlang betoog over de evolutie van giftanden gaat Freek Vonk wijdbeens staan om te laten zien hoe hij begin dit jaar op Java een koningscobra ving. De 25-jarige bioloog legt zijn rechterhand behoedzaam op de achterkant van de denkbeeldige kop van ’s werelds langste gifslang. De andere hand draait bezwerend door de lucht om de slang af te leiden. Zachtjes drukt hij het denkbeeldige dier tegen de grond.

„Dat laten ze toe”, vertelt Vonk op de werkkamer van een collega van het instituut voor integratieve zoölogie van de Universiteit Leiden. Misschien omdat ze gewend zijn om hun territorium te vechten in een verstrengeling, waarbij ze de achterkant van hun koppen tegen elkaar drukken. „Ik stond stijf van de adrenaline. Koningscobra’s kunnen een olifant doden met één beet in hun slurf. En ze zijn intelligent, als je een stok voor ze heen en weer zwaait dan happen ze niet zo maar toe zoals andere slangen. Ze blijven jou aankijken.”

Het vangen van die koningscobra, een vrouwtje in de buurt van haar nest, was een van de hoogtepunten in zijn leven, zegt Vonk. „Maar bij de acceptatie van mijn Nature-papers heb ik nóg harder gejuicht. Ik denk dat het allebei evenveel kicken is.”

Freek Vonk ving in Indonesië een vrouwtjes koningscobra (Ophiophagus hannah), de langste gifslang ter wereld. Foto Sumardi Moentiah

Vandaag staat Vonk opnieuw in Nature, op de cover zelfs, dit keer met een studie die laat zien dat de giftanden van slangen in de loop van de evolutie één keer zijn ontstaan. Vonk en vijftien mede-auteurs concluderen dat uit onderzoek aan 96 embryo’s van acht verschillende slangensoorten. Het onderzoek sluit mooi aan op Vonks Nature-publicatie uit 2005, waarin hij aannemelijk maakte dat ook de gifklier van deze reptielen slechts een keer is ontstaan, zo’n 200 miljoen jaar geleden bij de hagedisachtige voorouders van moderne slangen.

Giftanden van slangen variëren van kanaliserende groefjes tot uitklapbare weerhaken en sproeiers die het gif naar belagers spuiten. Dat die variëteit ontstond vanuit één gemeenschappelijke voorloper maakt Vonk aannemelijk door te laten zien dat giftanden in embryo’s van verschillende slangensoorten steeds op dezelfde plaats ontstaan. Tijdens de ontwikkeling van het embryo krijgen ze een definitieve plaats in de bovenkaak.

Met kleurstoffen laat Vonk zien waar in de babyslangetjes de genen aan staan die zorgen voor tandvorming in de bovenkaak. Bij slangen die hun giftanden voor in de bek hebben zitten, zoals de adder en de cobra, reizen de giftanden in het groeiende embryo als het ware naar voren, doordat het kaakbot achter de achterste tanden snel groeit. Bij slangen met hun giftanden achter in de bek is die transformatie niet nodig. „Wij leveren als eersten het bewijs dat giftanden één keer in de evolutie ontstonden”, zegt Vonk.

Vonk viel als 14-jarig jochie als een blok voor de starre, mysterieuze blik van de tijgerpython van een vriendje. „Ik mocht hem aaien”, zegt hij nu. Een jaar later had hij een kamer vol niet-giftige slangen en toen hij gifslangen wilden gaan houden ging hij op 17-jarige leeftijd het huis uit. „Mijn moeder wilde geen gifslangen in huis, ik heb nog twee broers en een zus.” Zijn contacten met slangenliefhebbers hielpen hem om de eitjes te verkrijgen die nodig waren voor de Nature-studie: „Zelf ben ik immers ook een hobbyist. Mijn belangstelling wordt gedreven door mijn liefde voor deze dieren.”

De oudste fossielen van slangen zijn 95 miljoen jaar oud en de eerste slangen met giftanden, achter in de bek, ontstonden waarschijnlijk zo’n 60 miljoen jaar geleden. Alle slangen stammen daar vanaf. Uit de embryostudies maakt Vonk op, dat een stukje uit de bovenkaak is losgekoppeld bij primitievere slangen die hun prooi wurgen, zoals de python en de boa constrictor. Die evolutionaire opmaat maakte uiteindelijk de giftand mogelijk. Tanden in het achterste, losgeraakte deel van de kaak vormden samen met de eerder geëvolueerde gifklier „het machtigste wapen in het dierenrijk”. In de niet giftige slangen is de gifklier verloren gegaan, of werkt hij nog maar een beetje.

Het evolutionair voordeel van het naar voren plaatsen van giftanden is evident, vertelt Vonk. „Een slang met giftanden achterin de bek moet zijn prooi vangen en vasthouden. Hij moet erop kauwen om het gif goed te laten doordringen. Dat kost tijd en geeft de prooi de kans om terug te bijten. Veel van die slangen met giftanden achter in de bek eten kikkertjes of hagedisjes. Die dieren zijn niet zo gevaarlijk. Slangen met giftanden vóór in de bek kunnen grotere, gevaarlijke prooidieren aan. Ze hoeven hun prooi met hun giftanden maar een tikkie te geven. Dan kunnen ze zich terug trekken en wachten tot hij dood is.”

Slangen met giftanden voor in de bek zijn ook veel gevaarlijker voor mensen. „Ze hoeven je maar een keer te krassen en je bent vergiftigd”, zegt Vonk. „Een slang met giftanden achterin de bek moet je lang vasthouden om je te vergiftigen. Ik ben zo vaak gebeten door dat soort slangen. Je trekt ze gewoon van je vinger af. Pas als je ze vijf minuten laat zitten, dan heb je een probleem.”
De komende vier jaar hoopt Vonk in Leiden te promoveren op zijn passie, maar hij wil er ook op uit blijven trekken om documentaires te maken over slangen en wetenschap. Hij heeft alle vrijheid, want hij ontving in mei van dit jaar een ‘toptalentbeurs’ ter waarde van 180.000 euro van de wetenschapsfinancier NWO. De commissie die Vonk het geld toekende typeerde hem treffend als „prettig onbescheiden”.

Twee weken voor zijn publicatie van vandaag stond Vonk ook al in Nature, met een commentaar op een studie van collega-biologen die beschrijven hoe wervels ontstaan in een slangenembryo. De slang is een interessante evolutionaire casus, legt Vonk uit. Met meer dan 300 wervels zijn ze een schoolvoorbeeld van de flexibiliteit in de lichaamsbouw van gewervelde dieren. Biologen kunnen veel leren van de complexe embryonale ontwikkeling van slangen. Vonk richt zich voor zijn promotieonderzoek echter niet alleen op de embryonale ontwikkeling.

Hij wil zich ook verdiepen in de evolutie van gifsystemen. Hij hoopt als eerste het genoom van een slang op te helderen. Hij wil gifkliercellen in petrischaaltjes bestuderen, om te zien hoe giftige eiwitten gemaakt worden. Én hij wil onderzoeken hoe de samenstelling van het gif van een slang in de loop van zijn leven verandert. Vonk: „Daar weten we nog bijna niks van. Hoort een een wetenschapper zich te specialiseren? Daar heb je gelijk in, maar mijn specialisatie is gewoon slangen.”

Lees meer over slangen op http://www.evolutionbites.com/

(Bron: http://www.nrc.nl/)
(Bron foto: NRC)

Protest in Tallinn (Estland) tegen bontverkoop Escada


Animal rights activists organised demonstration

in Tallinn

31-07-2008 The Baltic Course, Estonia


The movement of animal rights activists Loomade Nimel (‘In the Name of Animals’) organised a demonstration against use of fur in front of an Escada store in the centre of Tallinn, writes the National Broadcasting.

The campaign “Free Escada of fur” took place on Wednesday evening in front of the commercial building on the Rävala Boulevard.
The same movement has organised demonstrations in front of Escada store before as well.

The demonstration in Estonia is a part of global campaign, the objective of which is to urge the Escada fashion corporation to abandon sales of fur products.

(Bron: http://www.baltic-course.com/)

(Voor meer informatie over Loomade Nimel: http://www.loomadenimel.org/)

Beer met kop in popcorn-emmer gedood bij Frazee (VS)....- Was doden beer noodzakelijk...??


Civilization's trappings prove fatal to bear

A bear whose head was stuck in a plastic food jar was photographed near an entrance to Itasca State Park on July 22 by Adam Guy, a state park naturalist intern. The bear was shot and killed near Frazee on Saturday.
Some have criticized Frazee police, who say they had no choice but to kill a bear that had wandered into town with a jar stuck on its head.


31-07-2008 By PAUL WALSH and ABBY SIMONS, Star Tribune staff writers, USA


The shooting of a black bear that wandered for six days with a plastic food jar covering its head in northern Minnesota has prompted angry calls and e-mails to police who shot it and debate in online forums.

The bear, a male about 2 years old that appeared to be starving and sickly after days without food or water, was shot Saturday night by police in the town of Frazee, which was bustling with visitors celebrating Turkey Days. That sighting was the last of several of the bear reported over a period of almost a week.

"With all the people around ... you're never sure what the outcome is going to be," said Rob Naplin, a wildlife supervisor for the state Department of Natural Resources in Park Rapids.
Naplin said efforts had been made to trap the bear as it moved from spots in or near Itasca State Park. At one point, the DNR was equipped to tranquilize the animal, "but we never had the opportunity ... because it stayed in forested areas" from its initial spotting July 21 until it met its fate in Frazee, he said.
Naplin said the bear "was in pretty tough condition after not being able to eat or drink for several days."

The 2.5-gallon plastic jar is the type that usually holds candy or popcorn, he said.
Frazee Police Chief Mike Lorsung said that at the direction of a DNR conservation officer, one of his officers killed the bear with one shot. He said his department did not have ready access to a tranquilizer gun and that approaching the animal to try to remove the jar would have been too dangerous. Also, the bear was behind the Baer Building while festivities were going on in front, he said.

On Wednesday night, Frazee police said they have received dozens of e-mails and calls, some from Georgia and California, most accusing them of acting too hastily. But almost no Frazee residents present the day the bear was shot complained, police said.
After the bear was killed, a game warden pulled for some time before the jar came off the bear's head, Frazee police said.

Asked what could be done to prevent a similar incident, Naplin said, "We're always encouraging the public to manage their refuse properly. Bears are opportunist feeders. They get access to human food, they don't know whether it's good for them or not."

Dennis Udovich, whose American Bear Association runs the Vince Shute Wildlife Sanctuary in Orr, Minn., sympathized with the dilemma police faced but said he would have not hesitated to approach the bear, subdue it with a trap device on a pole and remove the jar.
"The officer probably followed the proper protocol," Udovich said.
"It's a sad thing to do [but was] probably the most humane thing to do," he said. "If it would've gotten away, what a [painful] death it would have had."

pwalsh@startribune.com • 612-673-4482 asimons@startribune.com • 612-673-4921

(Bron: http://www.startribune.com/)
(Bron foto: The Star Tribune)

Britse 'honden' militair gedood in Afghanistan....


British army dog handler named

What does the British army do with defenceless dogs in the war in Afghanistan? How many dogs have been injured or killed? It is sad that an army has to use dogs......

Redding voor de aasgier in Nepal: 'aasgier restaurants'.....


Nepal's 'restaurant' for vultures

31-07-2008 By Charles Haviland BBC News, Nawalparasi, Nepal


As the early morning mist lifts on the farmlands at the edge of the jungle, Yam Bahadur Nepali embarks on a job which many would find difficult but which, for him, is a regular chore. He wheels his tricycle cart to collect the carcass of an old and sick cow which died during the night. It is to be fed to the vultures, under a unique initiative to conserve the scavenging birds. It is called the "vulture restaurant".

With some difficulty Yam Bahadur and his wife wheel the heavy beast past houses and down across wet paddy fields to the vulture feeding area.
The "restaurant" is a big grassy area surrounded by tall, fragrant sal trees. The peaceful scene is broken only by the cattle skeletons scattered around - and the vultures nestled above.

The birds resemble a 'grotesque gathering of clergymen'

'Kidney failure'
Nepali ornithologists have established it as a place where vultures can eat healthily.
Two of the seven vulture species in the Indian subcontinent - slender-billed and white-rumped - have declined catastrophically in number and are now endangered, explained ornithologist Dhan Bahadur "DB" Chaudhary.

"In 1997 in eastern parts of Nepal there were about 67 nests," he says. "And in four or five years, in 2001, there was zero.
"So that rapidly they declined from India, Nepal and Pakistan. And over 12 years they started declining - now more than 95% of the vultures' number has gone down."

Scientists recently pinpointed the cause - the drug, diclofenac.
Farmers often give it to their cows as a painkiller.
But if the cows die soon afterwards, the drug is deadly for the vultures which feed on their flesh. Mr Chaudhary says they rapidly die of kidney failure and gout.
As Hem Sagar Baral, executive director of Bird Conservation Nepal (BCN) explains, Nepal and India have now banned diclofenac because it was harming the vultures. It has been replaced by a safe drug called meloxicam.
"It is also anti-inflammatory but has been tested against vultures and other birds of prey and general birds and does not cause damage to these birds," he says.


Vultures are ugly looking, but they are really helpful for us
Dhan Bahadur Chaudhary, Nepali ornithologist


'Massive creature'
As Yam Bahadur skins the carcass, we go into a spacious, brand-new observation hide. With us are several of the villagers who serve as volunteers on the project committee. We watch as the vultures wait.
After half an hour we are still waiting. A stray dog starts feeding on the carcass but seems worried and keeps barking.
The birds gain confidence and 22 of them land, still just watching the dog. Nearly all are the endangered White-rumped Vultures but there is also a massive creature - the biggest, the Himalayan Griffon Vulture.
They look like a rather grotesque gathering of clergymen with their blackish coats and white "collars".
Then, suddenly, they close in on the cow's corpse. It is like a rugby scrum of vultures, all wanting to gorge on the carcass, fighting with each other, the strongest in front, the weaker behind.
One vulture attacks another which has a long strand of raw meat dangling from its mouth, already half-swallowed.
The scavenging birds jump clumsily around, their wings outstretched. I tell Mr Chaudhary I think they are truly ugly animals.

"Yes, they are ugly looking, but they are really helpful for us," he says. "See - within half an hour they finished eating all that dead animal. Only the skeleton is left. It is really helpful to clean the nature."
Nepalis even nickname these birds "kuchikar", meaning a broom.
The villagers on the project's committee are engrossed by the spectacle. One is a woman farmer, Tila Devi Bhusal.

'Preserve them'
"Traditionally we see the vulture as a very bad bird," she says. "If it passes your house, then the house has to be purified. They can bring danger.
"But that belief is disappearing. People realise that vultures eat rotten things and we must preserve them."


The 'restaurant' has no shortage
of food suppliers.

The vulture restaurant has many volunteers but only two full-time employees.
One is Yam Bahadur who looks after the cows when they are living, not only when they die.
The project buys elderly or sick cows from farmers, looks after them humanely and treats them, if necessary, with the safe drug, meloxicam.
The cows, considered sacred by Hindus, die a natural death.

The other employee is Ishwari Chaudhary, the educational officer. He is spreading the vulture conservation message among villagers and in veterinary shops.
"We tell them about the new medicine, meloxicam, and how we can save the birds by using it," he says.
The banned drug diclofenac is still being rounded up all over Nepal. Meloxicam is more expensive, but it is injected in much smaller doses which partly compensates.
The numbers of endangered vultures are rising again.
Mr Chaudhary says that before the project was opened, he used to see a maximum of 72 vultures around one carcass.

"Once we established the vulture restaurant, in five or six months we found double that number - the maximum number I have recorded is about 156, all at the same time on the same carcass."
BCN, with support from others like Britain's Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, now wants to open more "vulture restaurants" - and scientists in India too are now showing interest in the idea.

(Bron: http://news.bbc.co.uk/)
(Bron foto's: BBC News)

Drie jonge tijgertjes in dierentuin Kansas (VS) door hond geadopteerd


Golden retriever adopts tiger cubs at Kansas zoo

31-07-2008, The Associated Press, MLive, Michigan, USA


CANEY, Kan. (AP) — A dog at a southeast Kansas zoo has adopted three tiger cubs abandoned by their mother. Safari Zoological Park owner Tom Harvey said the tiger cubs were born Sunday, but the mother had problems with them.

A day later, the mother stopped caring for them. Harvey said the cubs were wandering around, trying to find their birth mother, who wouldn't pay attention to them. That's when the cubs were put in the care of a golden retriever, Harvey said.

Harvey said it's unusual for dogs to care for tiger cubs, but it does happen. He said he has seen reports of pigs nursing cubs in China, and he actually got the golden retriever after his wife saw television accounts of dogs caring for tiger cubs.
Puppies take about the same amount of time as tiger cubs to develop, and Harvey said the adoptive mother just recently weaned her own puppies.
"The timing couldn't have been any better," he said.

The mother doesn't know the difference, Harvey said. He said the adopted mother licks, cleans and feeds the cubs.

The Safari Zoological Park is a licensed facility open since 1989 and specializes in endangered species.
It has leopards, lions, cougars, baboons, ring-tailed lemurs, bears and other animals. It currently has seven white tigers and two orange tigers.
Because whit tigers are inbred from the first specimen found more than a half-century ago, they are not as genetically stable as orange tigers.

The zoo's previous litter of white tiger cubs was born April 23, although one of the three has since gone to a private zoo near Oklahoma City.

(Bron: http://www.mlive.com/)
(Bron foto: MLive)

Politie Baguio (Filippijnen) neemt op markt 250 kilo hondenvlees in beslag


6 retailers charged for selling dog meat

31-07-2008 By Ace Alegre, Sun Star, Baguio, The Philippines


GOVERNMENT charged six market retailers earlier arrested in a raid at the Baguio City Public Market for selling slaughtered dogs for violating the Anti-Rabies Law. Charged were Pio Montano, Nelson Patacsil, Bryan Angala, Jovelita Corpus, Rosalie Selga and Daniel Flores. The suspect could be imprisoned to a maximum of four years in jail and a penalty of P5,000.

Members of the Criminal Investigation and Detection Group, National Meat Inspection Service (NMIS)-Cordillera and the London-based Animal Kingdom Foundation (AKF) raided the public market on Sunday. Police seized a total of 258 kilos of butchered dogs which were brought to the NMIS regional office for government-approved disposal.

RP's Test Case "It is the first time in the country we are implementing the Philippine Anti-Rabies Law (Republic Act 9482) which has stiffer penalties," said AKF-Luzon senior investigative researcher Brando Gegway. "Compared to the Animal Welfare law or RA 8485, this new law imposes stiffer penalties under Section 11 which states all person found guilty of trading dog meat will be fined P5,000 per dog and imprisoned for one to four years," he said. The new law's implementing rules and regulations (IRR) was published July 15 and ended July 26. Sunday's operation, Gegway explained, meant to test the new law's "sharpened teeth", taunting the Animal Welfare Act (RA 8485) "kid gloves" treatment on apprehensions.

Under the old law, a violator only pays P1,000 and no more than P6,000 per offense and not per dog seized, lamented Gegway. "Hopefully this (new law with stiffer penalties) will end the practice in the Cordillera," the AKF representative claimed.

The NMIS insists dogs are not categorized as food animals, thus the trade is outlawed in the country. The AKF, one of the sponsors of the law, "planned to stage the test case in Baguio to challenge the political will of Baguio City officials because until now, the dog meat trade is still very rampant inside the Baguio public market."

This is hopefully a wake-up call for local authorities to put an end to the sale of dog meat, he added. Multimillion-peso trade AKF pegs the illegal dog trade business in Baguio and Benguet Province to reach millions of pesos. Gegway said traders at a minimum transport dogs four times a week to Baguio City and Benguet. A load of the contraband is estimated to cost P30,000. Thus, traders from the lowlands cart away P480,000 a month.

The AKF also bared there are at least a dozen restaurants in Baguio and Benguet serving dog meat as a dish. Gegway, a pure-bred Cordilleran by origin from Besao, Mountain Province, explained that "it is not to taunt Cordillera culture where most people insist eating dog meat is a tradition. It's all about protecting the people's health due to the high risk of rabies which can be taken from eating infected dog meat."

The old law (RA 8485) was enacted 1998 to protect animals from maltreatment, cruelty and abuses. One of the then immediate concerns of this law was to stop the massive dog trade. However, Gegway further lamented Philippine authorities seemed to neglect the implementation the law. "Some meat stalls are even situated in front of police stations but the authorities ignore their presence. Most government officials are costumers of these dog meat establishments," he said. He claimed numerous restaurants and bars which serve dog meat are increasing in Baguio, Benguet, Mountain Province, Abra and Kalinga "to attract customers, restaurant owners label cooked dog meat as 'pulutan' (finger food)."

Accordingly, authorities who attempted to clamp down on the illegal dog trade in the past were dampened by the old law's almost "toothless" penalties. But with sharper teeth, Gegway said, "we can hope in the near future, the illegal trade will stop." This week, AKF will be coordinating with law enforcement agencies in other regions in Luzon for similar raids and confiscations to finally nail down the trade, Gegway said.

(Bron: http://www.sunstar.com.ph/)
(Bron foto: http://www.gan.ca/campaigns/philippines+dogs/factsheets.en.html)

Eigenaar 36 honden, 25 pony's en 170 konijnen uit Haarsteeg door LID beboet voor slechte huisvesting dieren - Man krijgt tijd om hokken te vervangen..


Boetes voor foute fokker

30-07-2008 Trouw


(Novum) - Een 41-jarige eigenaar van tientallen pony's, honden en konijnen heeft boetes gekregen voor de slechte huisvesting van de dieren. De 36 honden stonden op hun eigen maandenoude ontlasting, 170 konijnen zaten in te kleine hokken en 25 pony's stonden in de drek. De man uit Haarsteeg in Noord-Brabant werd ook beboet voor illegale hondenhandel, meldt de Dierenbescherming.

De Landelijke Inspectiedienst Dierenbescherming (LID), een aparte tak van de Dierenbescherming die boetes mag uitschrijven, kwam de misstanden op het spoor na een tip over de huisvesting van de honden. Zeven volwassen honden en zestien pups werden gevonden in twee schuren naast het huis van de eigenaar. Ze leefden op een laag beschimmelde hondenpoep. In een oude paardenstal zaten nog eens dertien oudere honden en vijf pups. De man fokte de dieren zonder vergunning voor de handel.

In een andere schuur werd een vleeskonijnenfokkerij gevonden. Er zaten vijftig volwassen konijnen en 120 jongen. Bijna alle volwassen konijnen zaten twee aan twee in kleine gaaskooien, waarin ze niet rechtop konden staan. Deze 'dwangbuis-huisvesting' is niet toegestaan. Naast de boete die de eigenaar kreeg moet hij de kleine hokjes vervangen.

De pony's stonden op het land bij de woning van de man. De helft kon alleen maar op een modderige natte ondergrond lopen. De LID kreeg bij de inspectie steun van de politie. De eigenaar heeft twee weken de tijd gekregen om de huisvesting van de dieren te verbeteren.

(Bron: http://www.trouw.nl/)

Dierenbescherming strand op - Mensen duidelijk maken dat ook huisdieren last hebben van hitte......- Dat een dergelijke actie nog nodig is.....


Hond in snikhete auto? Gooi ruit in!

31-07-2008 De Pers


De Dierenbescherming ontfermt zich deze zomer meer dan ooit over het tragische lot van honden in snikhete auto’s. De belangenorganisatie voor dieren wil dat burgers voortaan autoruiten ingooien als ze honden in afgesloten voertuigen zien zitten. Dat meldt De Telegraaf donderdag.

Hond overleden in geparkeerde auto

"Als je een hond in een auto ziet met deze warme dagen, bel meteen de politie. Ze komen voor dit soort zaken. En als het dier in doodsnood verkeert, aarzel dan niet om de ruit in te slaan", aldus Frank Dales, directeur van de Dierenbescherming, in de krant. Burgers zijn wettelijke verplicht om levende wezens in nood te helpen, zegt de Dierenbescherming.

Snikheet
Vanaf de eerste warmteperiode in Nederland zijn vijf honden in auto’s bezweken aan de hitte. Temperaturen lopen in de brandende zon al snel op naar boven de 40 graden Celsius. "Mensen onderschatten het risico vaak en vergelijken een hond met zichzelf in een auto, maar een hond kan niet zoveel transpireren als een mens. Hierdoor raakt hij sneller oververhit en is de overlijdenskans groot'', aldus Dales.

Flyers
Ondanks herhaalde waarschuwingen blijft het voorkomen dat huisdieren worden achtergelaten in afgesloten voertuigen. De Dierenbescherming deelt op stranden flyers uit om mensen bewust te maken van het gevaar. “Auto's zonder hond krijgen een pluim. We moeten actief hierover mensen benaderen anders dringt het niet genoeg door", zegt Dales.

(Bron: http://www.depers.nl/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)

Steun gevangen Britse SHAC-activist Dan Amos


Support Animal Rights Prisoner: Dan Amos

30-07-2008 Contributed by: Anonymous, Infoshop


Dan Amos is a commited vegan shactivist who was arrested and bailed as part of NETCU's Operation Achilles, involving 32 separate police raids and 700 police officers in the UK, The Netherlands and Belgium on May 1st 2007.

Dan was charged with "conspiracy to blackmail" Huntingdon Life Sciences and was remanded today on 30th July 2008 at Winchester Crown Court after pleading guilty due to circumstantial evidence and the possibility of a trial lasting up to six months.
He is currently being held at Christ Church Police Station due to mass overcrowding of all prisons. He will be sent to the next prison available with a spare bed, so it is unknown where he will be.

Outside HLS

The trial for the other defendants is due to start on the 29th September 2008 at Winchester Crown Court.

If you live in Bournemouth, please help by handing in vegan food/toiletries which can help keep him going until he is taken to a prison, as they have no vegan food/toiletries in the police station and Dan hasn't eaten since 9am on Wednesday 30th July.

We will update and post bulletins as soon as we are updated on his whereabouts. Please add the Support Dan myspace to show your support.

Also visit SHAC's website and Indymedia newswire to learn about the campaign against the notorious animal testing lab, Huntingdon Life Sciences (HLS).
Once Dan is settled in a prison, please send him letters of support or in the mean time, leave comments of support on this myspace.
Support Dan MySpace

(Bron: http://news.infoshop.org/)
(Bron foto: Infoshop)

woensdag 30 juli 2008

Dierenactivisten bevrijden vier nertsen in noorden Spanje - Actie uit solidariteit met Oostenrijkse gevangen dierenactivisten


Four Mink Freed For Austrian Prisoners in Open


Rescue

30-07-2008 Animal Equalty - Open Rescue Team, IndyMedia UK


The Open Rescue Team of Igualdad Animal (Animal Equalty) have rescued four mink from a fur farm in northern Spain. This is the second open rescue by Igualdad Animal (in August 2007, six baby pigs were rescued from an intensive farm).

Photos http://www.rescateabierto.org/igualdad-animal-rescata-cara-descubierta-cuatro-visones-de-una-granja-peletera



Excerpt from rescue report (translation from
http://www.directaction.info/):

"Although legally non-human animals, including mink, are considered property and therefore to remove them from cages is considered 'theft,' a criminal act, at Igualdad Animal we believe that no individual is the property of another and the moment has arrived to liberate our slaves.

Just as in the past when some humans were considered property of others and this was an unjust situation, currently we are still involved with slavery. Animals are not property and to liberate them is not robbery but a legitimate act of justice. With these open rescues we not only intend to rescue a few animals that were going to suffer and die, but we want to provoke a social debate that causes us to rethink the exploitation to which we subject the animals with whom we share the planet, and to bring about a change of mentality and habits of consumption in each one of us, because ultimately we are the ones who-- with our daily decisions of how we dress ourselves, feed ourselves, or entertain ourselves-- can put an end to the daily suffering and death of animals.

We also want to remember all of the victims who still remain in cages, to show our support for all those who rescue caged animals, and finally to dedicate this action to the Austrian prisoners Martin, Christian, Christof, Elmar, Felix, Jan, Jürgen, Kevin, Leo and Sabine, who at this moment are victims of an unjust judicial system."

Notes:
In August 2007, six baby pigs were rescued from an intensive farm, see http://www.rescateabierto.org/primer-rescate-abierto-realizado-en-espana-igualdad-animal-rescata-seis-cerdos.

In late July, activists entered the fur farm and documented conditions inside. Four mink were carefully removed from cages and later released into a natural environment many miles away.

Austrian Prisoners:
Solidarity Website: http://www.austriasolidarity.com/
Legal Support http://www.antirep2008.tk/

Animal Equalty - Open Rescue Team Homepage: http://igualdadanimal.org/

(Bron: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/)
(Bron foto: IndyMedia UK)

Orang-oetan Leila verdronken in dierentuin Hamburg (Duitsland) - Leila wilde door bezoeker toegeworpen brood uit gracht halen...


Tragischer Unfall in Hagenbecks Tierpark

Orang-Utan - Dame Leila in Wassergraben ertrunken

30-07-2008 Bild, Germany


Drama in Hagenbecks Tierpark: Orang-Utan Leila (10) ertrank in Wassergraben des Affengeheges. Schuld ist offenbar ein Besucher. Laut Chef-Tierpfleger Walter Wolters wollte eine Person vermutlich die Affen-Dame füttern, schmiss trotz Fütter-Verbots ein Brötchen ins Gehege. Doch das landete im Graben.

Wolters: „Leila wollte sich das Brötchen holen, ist aber ins Wasser gefallen und ertrunken.“

Zoo-Besucher alarmierten sofort die Pfleger. Die konnten nur noch die Leiche der Orang-Utan-Dame bergen.
Wolters: „Wir sind alle sehr betroffen. Ein Pfleger ist sogar in Tränen ausgebrochen.“


In diesem Wassergraben ertrank die Affen-Dame.

Leila lebte von Geburt an in Hamburg.
Der Brötchen-Werfer konnte zunächst nicht identifiziert werden. Der Tierpark erwägt eine Anzeige.

(Bron: http://www.bild.de/)
(Bron foto's: Bild)

Huntingdon Life Sciences (HLS) in Engeland verliest weer belangrijke aandeelhouder....


Another shareholder dumps their shares in HLS as

some of the SHAC UK defendants plead guilty

30-07-2008 SHAC UK


Some of you may by now have heard that 3 of the defendants in the SHAC UK conspiracy trial have pleaded guilty today to conspiracy to blackmail at Winchester Crown Court. Two of the campaigners, Gregg and Natasha Avery were already in prison awaiting trial, the other, Dan Amos, has now also been remanded. Please write letters of support to Dan and all the prisoners.

As soon as Dan's number and address is confirmed it will be posted on the VPSG website:
http://www.vpsg.org/.

Show your solidarity and support at this, one of many injustices we fight to stop. Get angry, get active.

It is important to remember that this is just three of the thousands of SHAC activists and anti-vivisectionists in many countries around the world, and the campaign continues against HLS and against vivisection.

To illustrate the point, today we received cofirming news that yet another institutional shareholder, Acadian Asset Management (Old Mutual) have sold their shares. This is the third company to dump HLS shares in less than a month. This leaves the largest institutional shareholder, Barclays Global Investors UK Holdings Ltd hold 279,842 shares in HLS (LSR), who are part of Barclays Bank. Their website is: http://www.barclaysglobal.com/.

To put this in perspective, this means that less than 5% of HLS shares are currently being traded. Meanwhile HLS are still around $80million in debt, they don't own their own buildings or land, and are being propped up by the UK government who are continuing to provide banking and insurance facilities for a US registered company. This is an absurd position unprecedented in the history of commerce or protest groups, hundreds of millions of taxpayers money is being used to keep HLS afloat, while even more taxpayers money is used by the same government to persecute those who try to stop the suffering of both human and non-human animals.

We are all part of SHAC and we will all continue the fight against one of the most disgusting and exposed companies in the world.

Nobody said it was going to be easy, we must now re-double our anger and commitment. Don't forget that HLS have to pay back one of their loans of $50 million in a few years and we must not let HLS out of our grasp. Remember, the only reason HLS is still here is because of our corrupt government and it can come as no surprise, as this is the same government that are partners in an illegal war. They will not let ethical considerations cloud their goal of making money, at any cost. But their unethical policies will cost them dearly in the long run, the fight goes on.

(Voor informatie over SHAC: http://www.shac.net/)

Britse expeditie in regenwoud Guyana ontdekt bijzondere dieren....


New rainforest species revealed

30-07-2008 BBC News, UK


An expedition to the rainforests of Guyana has discovered species new to science.
A team of researchers and wildlife film-makers spent six weeks searching the pristine forest as part of a BBC documentary. The group believes it has revealed two fish species, one frog species and a number of bat flies that have not been described previously.

The finds are detailed in the BBC series Lost Land of the Jaguar.
The three-part documentary includes footage of the elusive South American cat.



Dr George McGavin was astonished
at the variety of life on show.

"In a short time, we caught hundreds of species, 10% of which may be new to science. It was unreal, unbelievable," exclaimed Dr George McGavin, a zoologist and one of the four presenters of the documentary.
He added: "Catching is the easy bit, the hard bit is going back to the lab and examining the species, comparing them to collections and books - seeing if they are new to science. One hour in the field can equal hundreds of hours in the lab."

Dr McGavin told the BBC News Website: "The expedition captured on film the discovery of the strongest candidates for new species - two fishes."
These are a small banded fish (Hemiodus sp.) netted near the expedition's base camp, and a parasitic catfish (Vandellia sp.) that fell out of the gills of a larger catfish.

The emerald tree boa was just one of the hundreds of extraordinary animals found in the Guyanese rainforest.

The expedition also filmed the world's heaviest snake, the anaconda, "which looked like a pile of tractor tyres," said Dr McGavin. It also shows the world's largest eagle, the harpy eagle.
Dr McGavin's highlight, however, was holding the Goliath spider. "It was quite a thrill, luring this spider, the size of a soup plate, out of its hole and holding it. Although I can see that this wouldn't be everyone's idea of fun," he laughed.

The film aims to highlight the need to save this truly unique rainforest.
"We have a choice, we really are at the cross-roads now. We can decide to keep these rich hotspots of nature or see them razed to the ground," said Dr McGavin.
He added: "If we lose the species at the rate we are going, we will be losing untold riches."

(Bron: http://news.bbc.co.uk/)
(Bron foto's: BBC News)

In Beijing restaurant Guolizhuang staat penis os, schaap, hert en ezel op menue en meer 'lekkers'.......


Animal penis tests the tastebuds of Olympic visitors

31-07-2008 Garry Linnell in Beijing, The Australian, Australia


SHOULD I? Inrepid reporter Garry Linnell surveys the offerings at Guolizhuang, a Beijing restaurant specialising in animal penises and testicles. Pic: Aysha Leo IT'S a hard act to swallow. Let's be honest. We came to China not for the Olympics, or the promise of new democratic freedoms, or even the chance to buy some cheap electronic equipment and flog it off to friends for a profit back home.

No, we came here for the food, in all its bizarre, exotic glory. Take your pick. Scorpion kebab? Roast dog leg? Deep fried worm? And for the absolutely fearless, what about the ham sandwich on offer at the Olympic media centre?
But nothing, surely, beats the diced, gristly thing dangling from my chopsticks.

Welcome to Guolizhuang, a Beijing restaurant specialising in animal penises and testicles.
The locals refer to it as a petrol station for men and a beauty parlour for women, so devoutly do they believe in the health-giving properties of animal genitals.

Related Links
Watch it: Penis on the menu

So there seemed no point in wasting time. Entrée was demolished quickly - a combination dish of fried, honeyed worms that spent their life eating only bamboo, the wagyu beef equivalent of the slug kingdom.

SHOULD I? Inrepid reporter Garry Linnell surveys the offerings at Guolizhuang, a Beijing restaurant specialising in animal penises and testicles. Pic: Aysha Leo

But now main course has arrived and it's far more confronting. The raw penises of four animals - ox, sheep, deer and donkey - lie limply on a plate as our waitress stirs a hot pot bubbling away on a portable stove in our private room.
The soup, enriched with chicken and fish bones, has a turtle floating helplessly in the middle, its head and legs swirling around the shell.
It smells and tastes similar to chicken and sweet corn soup.

Into this boiling stock go the penises. A few minutes later the first is hanging from my quivering chopsticks. Ox penis, says the waitress, is full of protein, good for the skin and aids longevity. And the deeper its colour, the more effective its properties.

Down the hatch it goes. The first thing you notice is the blandness. It's fatty, slightly chewy and awkward to swallow. The next piece is dipped in chilli sauce and there is an immediate improvement, but it still fails to blanket the growing queasiness in the pit of your stomach.
Next: Sheep's penis. A flabby little thing taken from a breed of Inner Mongolian sheep known for strength and speed. Clearly this one was not quick enough. There's no difference to the ox. Bland, soft rubber.

Things improve, flavour-wise, when the deer arrives. But the best is clearly the donkey penis. Slivered from the top half, it looks like a streak of bacon and carries the faint taste of pork.
By Chinese standards, it's an expensive meal, well over $A100 and easily beaten in flavour and texture by the scrambled egg with lily flowers and the mandatory accompaniment for an Australian in Beijing, fried rice.

Of course, we could have opted for the Canadian seal penis but at more than $500 a dish we begged off. And the “Head Crowned with a Jade Bracelet" sounded fascinating, but our appetite for horse penis from western China was by now diminished.
The waitress cast a withering look of contempt at us when she saw the amount of leftover food on our table. She was in an even worse frame of mind when we knocked back the chance for takeaway.

Those who keep coming back to this restaurant swear that the food on offer enhances their yang, or virility, and provides clear skin and an improvement in kidney function.
Unfortunately, the only thing we noticed was something far more startling. For the first time we could remember after eating Chinese food, we weren't hungry a few hours later.

(Bron: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/)
(Bron foto: The Australian)

Grootse plannen in VS voor de bison - Bison moet terugkeren in meerdere staten, niet alleen in Yellowstone Park


Bison bouncing back:

Effort aims to return herds to reservations, other

Western land

30-07-2008 By MATTHEW BROWN Associated Press Writer, The Morning Call, USA


CORWIN SPRINGS, Mont. (AP) _ More than a century after Buffalo Bill and others hunted America's wild bison to near-extinction, researchers at a compound near Yellowstone National Park have launched an ambitious restoration effort.

Inside the Corwin Springs compound, government veterinarians draw blood from the necks of young bison for disease screening and clip off pieces of ears for genetic testing. Those that pass muster become eligible for relocation outside Yellowstone, which could occur as soon as this winter on American Indian reservations in Montana.

"Our goal is to put them back on the landscape across the country, wherever state agencies and tribes can manage them appropriately," said Jack Rhyan, a veterinarian with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which operates the Corwin Springs compound with the state of Montana.
For bison advocates, the project is the first step toward their dream of thousands of wild bison again thundering across broad areas of the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountain West. Ranchers, however, consider it a potential nightmare driven by nostalgia and filled with risks.

"The 18th century is gone. It's not coming back," said Jason Camp, a Montana cattle rancher who wants bison confined to Yellowstone.

Once numbering in the tens of millions in North America, bison populations plummeted in the 19th century as settlers moved West and hunted the animals for food. Later, hired guns such as Buffalo Bill Cody killed bison by the thousands — both for sport and to supply hides to growing domestic and European markets.
By the 1880s, only about 500 bison were left.

To stave off extinction, Teddy Roosevelt and others looked to save the animals by concentrating them in Yellowstone National Park. This spring, there were about 2,100 wild bison in the park.

Overall, there are about 20,000 wild bison in places including the National Bison Refuge in Montana, South Dakota's Wind Cave National Park and Utah's Henry Mountains. Another 500,000 bison in North America are being raised commercially for meat.

For ranchers, the primary concern over expanding the territory wild bison can roam is the livestock disease brucellosis. While Yellowstone offers the most genetically pure stock of bison in the world, about half the animals have brucellosis — which can cause pregnant cattle to abort their calves.
"Until they have a handle on brucellosis in that buffalo herd, they shouldn't be talking about moving any buffalo around the state," said Camp, whose ranch sits about 60 miles from Yellowstone.
Even disease-free bison would pose a threat, he added, by competing with cattle for grazing land.
For the last two decades, state and federal officials have been capturing and killing a large number of bison that migrate outside the park to prevent an outbreak that would trigger serious and costly restrictions on the ranching industry. Cattle at two ranches in Montana and Wyoming, however, recently tested positive for the disease.

Researchers at Corwin Springs employ intensive screening to help allay disease concerns, although they acknowledge brucellosis can lay dormant for months or even years before showing up in a test.
"We had one bison we had tested four times and then we tested it again and it converted to positive," Rhyan said. "It's sneaky — it becomes latent and cooks along, and then all of a sudden it blows up."

Animals at the compound are kept under strict quarantine and tested for brucellosis up to a dozen times. Infected animals are sent to slaughter. The project costs about $130,000 annually, according to Montana officials.

On a recent day, state and federal veterinarians herded 40 bison through a cattle chute on the compound. Wild-eyed, the animals smashed against the chute's steel bars. They twisted and bucked until a veterinarian locked down a head brace to still their movements.

More veterinarians moved in, to draw blood and take skin samples.
Most of the 400-pound bison showed no sign of disease and were set loose. Six animals that tested positive for brucellosis were loaded onto a trailer bound for a nearby slaughter plant.

Three years into the project, the first batch of about 40 bison adults and calves are slated to be shipped out this winter. Once on the reservations, tribal leaders will take over management of the animals, which must be fenced off from livestock and other wildlife. After five years of additional brucellosis testing, the tribes can set loose those animals testing negative.

Tribes interested in the herds have been following the program closely. Ervin Carlson, a member of the Blackfeet tribe and president of the InterTribal Bison Cooperative, said he expected several tribes to submit proposals to take animals from the quarantined Yellowstone bison.
"Buffalo have always been a part of us, for our culture and a lot of our spirituality," Carlson said. "I'd like to see them just like other wildlife. They'd be able to roam free just as other wildlife are able to do."

At least three states also have expressed interest in bison, according to Keith Aune with the American Bison Society, who has been serving as a liaison between agencies involved in the quarantine project and parties interested in bison.
Once the bison are placed, the bison will be designated as wildlife and fall under state regulation. If one migrates off the reservation, it will still be considered wildlife and can be hunted only under state regulations. The tribes will be encouraged to manage bison numbers through hunting.

A group of scientists hope the Corwin Springs project is just the beginning of a new chapter for bison restoration in North America. This spring, in a paper published in the journal Conservation Biology, 28 scientists and bison advocates argued the small, isolated herds now dotting the West could grow over the next century to occupy vast swaths of North America, including sites in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico.

Kent Redford with the Wildlife Conservation Society in New York said the group wants to "broaden the scope" of bison conservation and move past the troubles at Yellowstone, where more than 1,600 bison were killed last winter by government wildlife agents and hunters after the animals migrated outside the park.

"There's no reason you couldn't have many more bison across a much broader area than is currently available," Redford said. "We've got Alaska to Mexico to talk about."

(Bron: http://www.mcall.com/)
(Bron foto's: archief Kraaijer)

Uniek: bultrug walvis in Baltische Zee bij Duits eiland Rügen


Humpback Whale Spotted in German Waters

30-07-2008 Der Spiegel, Germany


In the past century and a half there have been exactly three documented sightings of living humpback whales in German waters. Marine biologists say that makes last Friday's sighting a "sensation."

Biologists Andreas Nick and Christoph Bock had travelled to the German island of Rügen in the Baltic Sea to watch birds. Yet, instead of spotting some rare animal in the sky or in a tree, they came across a far more unusual sight: a humpback whale.


This photo montage shows roughly how big the whale is. At the back of the image, a ship goes by. At the front right the whale leaps out of the water and in the front left the whale is shown jumping and falling back into the sea.

Bock told SPIEGEL ONLINE he recognised the animal straight away. The biologists grabbed their cameras and started to click away, as the whale kept jumping out of the sea -- in total the show lasted two hours.

The last time a living humpback whale was spotted in German waters was nearly 30 years ago: in August 1978, also off the coast of Rügen. But to find a prior documented sighting you have to go back another 127 years -- to 1851.

"It's a sensation," Harald Benke, the director of the German Oceanographic Museum in Stralsund told SPIEGEL ONLINE. Benke managed to verify that the animal was in fact a humpback whale after the biologists sent his museum the pictures they took.
"The men's descriptions were detailed and exact," he said. "Besides, the photos left no doubt: I could clearly make out that it was a humpback whale. It had the typical long white pectoral fin, which can make up a third of the animals' bodies." The whale, which is estimated to be around 12 meters long, was spotted last Friday, but the news of the sighting only came out on Tuesday.

Benke believes the animal might have got lost -- swimming first into the North Sea and then into the Baltic Sea -- by following a swarm of fish during its usual trip to spend the summer in the Artic. Although the animal will probably stick around the Baltic Sea for a few more weeks, Benke added, it is likely it will look for other hunting grounds, as it will struggle to find enough food in those waters.

The whale is only the latest unusual sighting in the Baltic Sea in recent years: A giant swordfish stranded on the Darß peninsula in the German state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania earlier this month; in September 2007 several dolphins were spotted between Darß and the island of Hiddensee; and seals began appearing on Baltic Sea beaches in August 2007.

According to Greenpeace, humpback whales live in all the world's oceans. In the summer they tend to flock to the polar regions and in winter to subtropical waters. The animals, which can grow to 18 meters and weigh up to 40 tons, live off small fish and krill. Their population is estimated to number between 35,000 and 40,000.

Humpback whales are also known as "singing whales" because they compose intricate compositions that can last 10 minutes or more. Their songs, which are comparable to human ones, are the most multifaceted and longest among whales.

(Bron: http://www.spiegel.de/)
(Bron foto's: Der Spiegel)

54-Jarige inwoner Leersum gearresteerd verdacht van beschieten katten


Leersummer vast voor beschieten katten

30-07-2008 De Pers


Een man uit Leersum is opgepakt op verdenking van het beschieten van meerdere katten. Dat meldt de politie woensdag. De afgelopen jaren zijn in de woonplaats van de verdachte zeker negen katten beschoten, waarvan er vijf kwamen te overlijden.

De 54-jarige man werd donderdag aangehouden op basis van een incident op 27 juni. Op die dag kreeg de politie een melding binnen over een kat die zou zijn beschoten. Uit onderzoek bleek dat het dier een kogeltje in zijn poot had, vermoedelijk van een luchtbuks. Het bot was verbrijzeld.

Sinds 2002 ontving de politie negen aangiften van kattenbezitters in het Utrechtse dorp. In zowel 2002 als 2004 werden drie katten beschoten, in 2005 één, en dit jaar twee. De politie laat woensdag weten dat de verdachte vastzit voor alleen het laatste incident maar dat hij mogelijk verantwoordelijk is voor meer beschietingen.

(Bron: http://www.depers.nl/)

Amerikaanse moeder, zoon (13) en dochter (16) in onbewoonbare woning met 212 katten - 206 katten moesten worden ingeslapen....


212 cats found in condemned Leo-area home

206 euthanized after examinations

30-07-2008 Amanda Iacone, The Journal Gazette, USA


Officials found 212 cats living in a condemned Leo-Cedarville home last week and euthanized all but six of them. Two teenagers and a 36-year-old woman also lived in the home at 15217 Amstutz Road in Leo-Cedarville, according to an Allen County Sheriff’s Department report. Police did not release the woman’s name.

Staff with the Allen County Building Department called county animal control officers to the house July 22. The home was going to be condemned, and the woman living in the home reported that she had about 40 cats living there, said Steve Stone, spokesman for the Allen County Sheriff’s Department.
Staff with the Fort Wayne-Allen County Department of Health asked for the building department to condemn the home because it was uninhabitable, the report said.

Animal control officers went back to the home the following day with cages to transfer the cats. The woman agreed to give ownership of the cats to the Fort Wayne Animal Care and Control shelter, which handles animals taken in county cases. The officers were at the home all day while the woman collected and caged the animals, the report said.
As the number of cats surpassed 40, animal control officer David Baber asked how many animals she had inside the house. The woman said she was unsure, the report said.
In all, 212 cats were taken from the home.

The woman was allowed to keep five One cat escaped, and 206 were taken to the shelter where they were evaluated and euthanized.
Baber wrote that many of the cats were not socialized, and he considered the animals feral. Some suffered birth defects the officer believed was the result of inbreeding, his report said.
Animals taken from such conditions suffer skin conditions from lying on urine-soaked carpet. They suffer upper-respiratory problems from inhaling the ammonia in the urine. They can also suffer from feline leukemia. Those conditions pose a risk to the healthy animals housed at the shelter, shelter spokeswoman Peggy Bender said.

The cats don’t make good candidates for adoption because of the health risks and because the cats weren’t litter-box trained, she said.
The woman who lived at the house told officers that more than two years ago she had just three cats, a male and two females. All of the cats in the home descended from the original three animals, the report said.

Baber described the conditions inside the home in his report. “The smell of cat urine and feces was overpowering. The hardwood floors were buckled from the urine. The drywall was saturated with urine in several areas.”

He recommended that Child Protective Services monitor the family’s situation because a 13-year-old boy and a 16-year-old girl were also living at the home.
“If you have a loved one or family member who is amassing animals, it’s time to make a phone call,” Bender said. If caught early, the animals can be rehabilitated and saved.

aiacone@jg.net

(Bron: http://www.journalgazette.net/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)

200 Geiten en 4 buffels geofferd na winst politieke partij premier Singh van India.....


Indian pol sacrifices 200 goats to celebrate win

30-07-2008 WHEC TV, Rochester, USA


(AP) GAUHATI, India - A lawmaker said he sacrificed more than 200 goats and four buffaloes at a temple in northeastern India to thank a goddess for delivering victory to the prime minister’s government last week.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and his Congress party survived the July 22 confidence vote after weeks of political uncertainty that nearly toppled the government.
The last-minute support of Kishor Samrite’s Samajwadi party, a one-time opponent, was key to the victory.

And since Sunday, Samrite has been participating in rituals at the 16th-century Kamakhya temple in Gauhati, the capital of the northeastern state of Assam.
Animal sacrifices are traditional rituals at the hilltop temple, a famous Hindu pilgrimage destination.

The animal sacrifices have sparked controversy, however, as animal rights activists have held street demonstrations near the temple protesting Samrite’s prayer ceremonies.
"Animals cannot just be sacrificed for the interest of political leaders," said Sangeeta Goswami, head of the Assam chapter of the activist group, People for Animals.

"It is strange when India talks of progress in science and technology and is clamping down on child marriages, it is allowing such practices as animal sacrifices in temples," she said.
Samrite defended animal sacrifices, calling it "an age-old practice."
"How can anyone interfere with a religious practice inside a temple complex?" he asked.

(Bron: http://www.whec.com/)

LTO Nederland: 'Er is geen boer die vee houdt om het doelbewust te verwaarlozen' - Organisatie stelt loket tegen dierverwaarlozing in


LTO start loket tegen dierverwaarlozing

30-07-2008 de Gelderlander


Vermagerde runderen. Koeien die een beschutte plek ontberen en in de bittere kou tot hun knieën in de modder en mest staan. Of een stal met daarin vee in verre staat van ontbinding. Het zijn taferelen die het beeld oproepen van harteloze boeren die hun vee, geheel aangewezen op hun zorg, doelbewust laten verkommeren.

Volgens Bert Muller, coördinator van het Vertrouwensloket Preventie Dierverwaarlozing van LTO Nederland klopt dat beeld echter zelden. "Er is geen boer die vee gaat houden om het doelbewust te verwaarlozen."

Het landelijke vertrouwensloket is in het leven geroepen om dierverwaarlozing door boeren te voorkomen. Jaarlijks krijgt het loket veertig tot vijftig 'serieuze' meldingen van mogelijke dierverwaarlozing. Ze komen onder meer via de Algemene Inspectie Dienst (AID), zodra die bij een controle op een veehouderij een zorgwekkende situatie aantreft die nog net niet strafbaar is. Het vertrouwensloket probeert vervolgens te voorkomen dat het alsnog uit de hand loopt. Een vertrouwensteam van twee personen gaat naar de boer en inventariseert wat er aan de hand is. Een van hen is dierenarts en kijkt naar de feitelijke verzorging van de veestapel.

Muller: "De dierenarts bekijkt of de dieren mager zijn, hoe ze zijn gegroeid, hoe hun haarkleed eruit ziet, wat ze te eten krijgen." De tweede persoon verdiept zich in de achtergronden van de boer en hoe het komt dat zijn bedrijf dreigt af te glijden. Het team biedt de boer kortdurende begeleiding aan, op vrijwillige basis. Soms met hulp van het eigen netwerk, zoals familie of de kerk.

"De meeste boeren aanvaarden de hulp als laatste strohalm of in het besef dat anders de AID opnieuw komt." Meldingen van dierverwaarlozing komen niet alleen via de AID binnen, maar bijvoorbeeld ook via 'de dierenarts, de buurman of een passant'. "Veel mensen vinden het lastig. Ze voelen zich een verklikker, maar uiteindelijk bewijzen ze dieren, boer en sector een dienst." Vaak schuilen sociale, psychische of economische problemen achter dierverwaarlozing, zegt Muller. Een sterfgeval, echtscheiding, eenzaamheid, financiële problemen.

"De boer zit in een neerwaartse spiraal en komt er zonder hulp niet meer uit. Soms laat hij zich kennen als een wereldverbeteraar die alles weet van problemen elders en de oplossingen daarvoor. Maar dat hij op zijn eigen erf de zaken niet voor elkaar heeft, ziet hij niet of wil hij niet zien." Soms helpt het vertrouwensteam om het bedrijf te beëindigen. "Niet iedere boer die van koeien houdt, beschikt ook over genoeg managementkwaliteiten die je tegenwoordig wel nodig hebt", zegt Muller. Als een bedrijf als vanzelfsprekend overgaat op een kind, kunnen problemen op de loer liggen. Muller: "Bijvoorbeeld als een zoon, zonder aansturing van vader, niet tot besluiten kan komen."

(Bron: http://www.degelderlander.nl/)

Veetransport over zee naar Indonesië aanleiding hernieuwd verzoek Australische dierenbescherming tot export verbod levend vee


RSPCA urges ban on live exports

30-07-2008 ABC News, Australia


A record shipment of cattle has arrived in Indonesia after leaving Townsville two weeks ago, amid renewed calls from the RSPCA for a ban on all live animal exports destined for slaughter. The animal welfare organisation's Doctor Hugh Wirth says disease can spread quickly among animals on board the ships and many die en route.

The Norvantes set off on its nine-day journey to Indonesia in July 2007 with 1,552 head of cattle on board. Photographer: Vicki Wilson

Dr Wirth says it can take around three weeks for sheep and cattle to reach their destination.
"From the time they're selected on the property until the time they get shipside, then they've got the ship journey, landing in the country they've got importing them, and then distribution across another country, and finally slaughter," he said.
"There's slip ups in animal welfare in every one of those stages."


The Norvantes can carry four levels of cattle. There were
around 420 head on this top deck.
Photographer: Vicki Wilson

The RSPCA says cattle and sheep could be slaughtered in Australia using religious principles before the meat is exported.
Dr Wirth says Australia could replace live exports with a chilled meat trade and stop animals from suffering.
"We can supply our customers, particularly our religious customers, by dealing with slaughtering according to religious principles in Australia," he said.
"It creates new abattoirs, new workloads for Australians and you've got value adding to the product."

(Bron: http://www.abc.net.au/)
(Bron foto's: http://www.abc.net.au/rural/content/2007/s1975981.htm)

Forse stijging aantal dierenmishandelingen in 'dump' Groot Brittannië


Cruelty to animals rising in "throwaway" Britain

30-07-2008 By John Joseph, LONDON (Reuters), The Mirror, UK


Cruelty to animals is rising fast in Britain's "affluent, throwaway society," the RSPCA said in a report on Wednesday.

Among the worst incidents were the discovery of a dog's decaying body chained to a radiator, a cat kicked to death for having muddy paws and 316 rats crammed into just eight cages.

As many as 137,245 alleged acts of cruelty to animals were committed in 2007, a 12 percent rise on the previous year, according to the annual report by the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

"These animals are the helpless victims of our affluent, throwaway society," said Tim Wass, chief officer of the RSPCA Inspectorate.
"They're bought on a whim and discarded when the novelty wears off. Today's must-have item quickly turns into tomorrow's cast-off.
"Worse still, some animals are violently abused because they don't meet their owners unrealistic expectations -- like the dog strangled with its lead for misbehaving."

Amid the grim statistics, many pets are now enjoying new lives in good homes after the RSPCA intervened, including a dog so thin rescuers were unable to identify its breed and a Staffordshire Bull Terrier whose owners had cut its ears off.
Wass said the cruelty figures might have been worse had it not been for the introduction of the Animal Welfare Act in 2007, which allows the charity to intervene more quickly when there are cruelty concerns.

"Even in these early days, the benefits of the new law are clear," said Wass. "Without the new Act, this year's cruelty figures could have been even more horrific."
The RPSCA was particularly concerned by the 34 percent rise (1,917 people) in convictions for cruelty to dogs in 2007 as well as 13 percent increase (119) in convictions for cruelty to horses.
"Dogs have always borne the brunt of cruelty -- from violent outbursts to extreme neglect," said Wass.
"But that's what makes this year's horrendous 34 percent increase even more shocking: it's a massive increase on an already high figure."

British courts also issued 861 banning orders during 2007, preventing people from keeping animals in future if they had been convicted of cruelty.

(Bron: http://www.mirror.co.uk/)

The Holy Cat - Jesus!, that people fall for this.....

Dierenactivisten vrijdag voor poort Philip Morris in Bergen op Zoom - Tabaksfabrikant voert rooktesten uit op proefdieren


Actie tegen dierproeven

29-07-2008 BN/De Stem


BERGEN OP ZOOM - Voor de tweede keer in twee maanden houdt de Anti Dierpoeven Coalitie een demonstratie voor de poort bij Philip Morris aan de Marconilaan.

De actiegroep wil dat de tabaksfabrikant stopt met het testen van het product op dieren. Jaarlijks sterven er tienduizenden dieren door tabakstesten, stelt de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie.

De demonstratie is vrijdag 1 augustus van 07.30 uur tot 11.00 uur. De gemeente heeft toestemming verleend.

(Bron: http://www.bndestem.nl/)

Amerikaanse poes Princess Chunky vestigt gewicht record...


Shelter caters to 44-pound Princess Chunky cat

29-07-2008 McClatchy Newspapers, The Dallas Morning News, USA


PHILADELHPIA – There are fat cats and then there are fat cats.
South Jersey, to be sure, has seen its fair share of the indictable variety, but never before has it seen the likes of the portly pussycat found waddling in Voorhees.
Meet Princess Chunky – all 44 pounds of her and just two pounds shy of the 1987 Guinness World Record for overweight cats.


Camden County Animal Control Officer Jim McCleery got the call Friday. There was a stray cat prowling on a patio in the Ashley Run condominium development.
"We picked him up and I knew from the get-go it wouldn't fit in the regular cat carrier, so we had to put him in a dog carrier ... it was a big cat, the biggest one this year," said McCleery, of the Camden County Joint Municipal Animal Control Program.

Princess Chunky, estimated to be about 4 years old,
is staying at a foster mom's home in New Jersey.

Employees at Camden County Animal Shelter called the feline "Captain Chunk." Realizing she was female, the name was quickly changed to "Princess Chunk." Her "foster mom" – shelter volunteer Deborah Wright – calls her "Princess Chunky."
As the shelter seeks to find the feline's owner, Princess Chunky is now in "foster care" at Wright's Sicklerville home. She is fed only wet and dry cat food.

Wright is trying to develop an exercise routine for the orange and white, short-haired domestic cat, estimated to be about 4 years old.
"I won't feed her table scraps because I have a funny feeling that's what it's been fed. The cat doesn't seem unhealthy at all. You can tell she is carrying weight, but I am going to start taking her out on walks, but have to get a dog harness first," said Wright, who works as a driver assistant for the state Commission for the Blind and Visually Impaired in Cherry Hill, N.J..
"She's bigger than my Yorkie dog," added Wright who is also currently caring for six other shelter animals – including a 40-pound cat named Yanni and another cat, named Bullseye, who was injured by a BB from an air gun.

Because of the media attention, Princess Chunky has preferred Wright's bathroom to roaming the home with the six other pets.
Wright and others speculate Princess Chunky may suffer from diabetes or a thyroid condition.
Weighing the cat on Saturday turned out to be quite an adventure, as shelter workers realized that the cat scale couldn't hold Chunky.

"Our cat scale only goes up to 25 pounds; the needle bounced off the machine, so they put her on the dog scale instead. I have been doing rescue for ten years and I've never seen anything like this in person," said Jennifer Anderch, the shelter's executive director.

Dennis Green, a librarian at the central branch of the Philadelphia Free Library, researched records on the fattest cat in the world. Green said the record was held by 46 pound, 15 1/4 ounce Himmy of Australia who was entered into the 1987 Guinness Book of World Records, the last year the organization had the weight category for cats. Himmy died of respiratory failure.

(Bron foto: Dallas Morning News)

dinsdag 29 juli 2008

Vrijgelaten Japanse witbuikeekhoorns in Amersfoort moeten door eigenaar gevangen worden - Minister Verburg (Landbouw) grijpt in


Amersfoorter moet exotische eekhoorn vangen

29-07-2008 Trouw


(Novum) - Een bewoner van de Amersfoortse wijk Vathorst moet zijn exotische eekhoorns zo snel mogelijk vangen. Minister van Landbouw Gerda Verburg (CDA) heeft de eigenaar twee weken de tijd gegeven om de Japanse witbuikeekhoorn binnen te halen. Deze eekhoorn kan een gevaar vormen voor de inheemse rode eekhoorn, meldt het ministerie.

De Amersfoorter heeft volgens de minister vier eekhoorns gevangen en drie dieren zijn overleden. Verburg liet dit dinsdag weten in antwoord op vragen van Kamerlid Ineke van Gent (GroenLinks). Wanneer de overige dieren niet binnen twee weken worden gevangen, laat de minister ze vangen en dat moet de eigenaar dan betalen.

De Japanse witbuikeekhoorn eet hetzelfde voedsel als de Nederlandse rode eekhoorn en leeft ook in dezelfde omgeving. De Japanse eekhoorn kan de Nederlandse eekhoorn verdringen. Ook is het op grond van de Flora- en faunawet verboden om dieren in de vrije natuur uit te zetten.

(Bron: http://www.trouw.nl/)

(Lees ook dit eerder verschenen artikel:
http://animals-in-the-news.blogspot.com/2008/06/buurtbewoner-laat-tien-japanse.html)

Anti Dierproeven Coalitie zendt open brief aan Belgisch bedrijf Janssen Pharmaceutica - Activisten willen 'in gesprek' en rondleiding


Open brief aan Janssen Pharmaceutica

ADC gaat graag in op uitnodiging

29-07-2008 Anti Dierproeven Coalitie


Naar aanleiding van verklaringen die dhr. Gijssels, woordvoerder van Janssen Pharmaceutica, in de Vlaamse media aflegde, stuurde de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie deze brief.

Geachte,

zoals u weet heeft de Anti Dierproeven Coalitie een vreedzame maar gedreven actie gevoerd aan de hoofdingang van uw bedrijf op vrijdag 18 juli.

Groot was onze verbazing via de pers te vernemen dat uw woordvoerder, dhr. Gijssels, verklaarde : 'De activisten stonden hier plots voor de poort. Nooit hebben ze ons om een onderhoud gevraagd.'

Nochtans hebben wij onze aanmelding voor deze actie weken geleden verstuurd aan burgemeester Willemsens, die trouwens al jarenlang werknemer is bij uw bedrijf. U wist dus lang op voorhand van onze actie af en had dan ook de kans ons uit te nodigen voor een gesprek. Dit hebt u niet gedaan.

Graag willen wij dan ook van uw aanbod gebruik maken om een bezoek te brengen aan uw laboratorium om uw verklaring dat 'slechts' 5% van de dieren pijn lijdt, te verifiëren.

Wij zien uw antwoord met interesse tegemoet.

Met vriendelijke groeten,
Anti Dierproeven Coalitie

(Bron: http://www.stopdierproeven.org/)

(Voor eerder verschenen artikelen over Janssen Pharmaceutica:
http://animals-in-the-news.blogspot.com/2008/07/belgische-janssen-pharmaceutica-ziet-30.html
http://animals-in-the-news.blogspot.com/2008/07/belgische-bedrijf-janssen-pharmaceutica.html)

Amerikaan gooit tijdens ruzie zwangere chihuahua naar zijn vriendin


Sheriff's department: Man threw pregnant

Chihuahua

29-07-2008 Associated Press, Fox 28, USA


KEELER TOWNSHIP, Mich. (AP) - A man has been charged after Van Buren County authorities say he threw a pregnant Chihuahua at his girlfriend.

The South Bend (Ind.) Tribune and television stations WOOD and WWMT say the sheriff's department was called to a home in Keeler Township in response to a domestic violence report Friday.
Authorities say the man threw a beer can at the woman and later threw a rock at her vehicle while she was inside before throwing the dog.
The woman and dog were injured.

Forty-3-year-old Pedro Diaz was arraigned Monday on charges including domestic violence and cruelty to animals. He was being held at the Van Buren County Jail ahead of an Aug. 5 preliminary hearing.
The sheriff's department said Tuesday it didn't know whether Diaz had a lawyer.

(Bron: http://www.fox28.com/)

PETA VS wil einde gebruik proefdieren door Defensie


PETA targeting military for its use of animals for

medical and trauma subjects

29-07-2008 By JAYMES SONG Associated Press Writer, Newsday, USA


HONOLULU (AP) _ Animal-rights activists want the U.S. to stop using animals as subjects to help train its military, calling the medical and trauma exercises cruel and a disservice to the troops. The People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals sent a letter Monday to Defense Secretary Robert Gates asking him to replace the use of animals with non-animal methods such as human simulators.

In the letter, PETA said the military inflects gunshot, burn and chemical wounds on monkeys, pigs and goats for training." This outmoded practice is not only cruel, but is a disservice to the men and women who risk their lives in defense of our country and who deserve the most effective trauma training methods available," wrote Kathy Guillermo, director of the PETA's Laboratory Investigations Department.

Pentagon spokeswoman Cheryl Irwin on Tuesday said military officials will take a look at the letter and respond appropriately.PETA's letter comes 10 days after the group failed to prevent the Army from shooting live pigs and treating their gunshot wounds in a medical trauma exercise at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii.

The Army said the training is critical to teach soldiers how to manage critically injured patients within the first few hours of their injuries when there are no medics, doctors or facilities nearby.

PETA believes the military's Combat Trauma Patient Simulation system, which is being used at other bases such as Camp Pendleton in California and Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, is a more advanced and humane option.
PETA noted the Department of Defense's animal welfare policy that states, "Alternative methods to the use of animals must be considered and used if such alternatives produce scientifically valid or equivalent results to attain the research, education, training, and testing objectives."

(Bron: http://www.newsday.com/)

In Quirimba nationaal wildpark Mozambique twee vrouwen door leeuwen opgegeten....


Two women eaten by lions

30-07-2008 By staff writers, Mercury, Tasmania


TWO women have reportedly been eaten by lions near a national park in northern Mozambique, bringing the number of people killed by wild cats in the region to 16 in six months. The women's bodies were found on the weekend near Quirimba National Park in the Cabo Delgado province, DPA has reported.

It is not known why the women came into contact with the lions, however attacks by wild animals on humans are frequent in Cabo Delgado.
The number of attacks continues to rise as humans and animals share diminishing resources such as water and pastures.

Among measures reportedly implemented to protect communities include mobile brigades which discourage animals from entering populated areas.
The brigades are authoried to kill animals that pose a threat to humans, regardless of whether they are a protected species.

(Bron: http://www.news.com.au/)

Ondervoede honden en hondenskeletten gevonden in woning Boulder Creek (VS)....


5 skulls, 1 decapitated dog head and 38 dogs found

near Boulder Creek

29-07-2008 Melissa Weaver and Jennifer Squires - Sentinel staff writers, Contra Costa Times, USA


Animal Services officers and sheriff's deputies removed 38 emaciated dogs and puppies from a Boulder Creek home Saturday after finding many locked in small cages without food or water and covered in their own feces and urine.

A dead dog was found on the roof of the house, a shed-like structure made of plywood, and a dog head hung from a tree branch. Investigators guessed it had been there less than a month. Deputies reported finding an array of dog skeletons on the roughly 3-acre property, and in the house five dog skulls were found on top of a hutch where food was stored.


The kitchen inside the house on Hartman Creek Road is
littered with trash and dog biscuit boxes.

Authorities were alerted to the distressing scene Friday when a neighbor said he could hear "animals crying in pain" from a residence on the 100 block of Hartman Creek Road. He said the owner there had a large number of mangy, mistreated dogs.
It's not the first time neighbors have reported problems with the man and the way he treats his dogs.

"It's my understanding that there had been similar complaints years ago but this is the first complaint we've had recently," said Todd Stosuy, county Animal Services field manager.
The man's name was not released because charges have yet to be filed against him.
Animal Services officers actually discovered the horrific scene Friday, according to Stosuy. He said authorities were not allowed entry by the man; however, they saw "enough evidence in plain view to get a search warrant."

By the time seven sheriff's deputies and animal care staff from the Scotts Valley animal shelter arrived at the scene around 4 p.m. Saturday with a search warrant, the man had left.
"There were a number of dogs running around loose," Stosuy said. "Several dogs were locked up in small dog crates that you would use to transport, covered in their own feces and urine."

Puppies confiscated from a home north of Boulder Creek relax in the safety of a County Animal Services kennel on Monday.

He said it appeared one old dog had been living inside the cab of a truck for "probably over a year or two," the cushions ripped apart and soaked in urine. No food or water was in sight.
Inside the house, a quarter inch of dust covered everything and animal feces littered the floor.
Outside, some dogs were allowed to roam free on the property, which was surrounded by an electric fence. A few dogs jumped the fence and ran off before officers were able to round them up. Officers intend to go back to the house, which also has an address on the 18000 block of Bear Creek Road, to look for them.

Tricia Geisreiter, animal services coordinator, said most of the dogs were in "pretty bad condition" and were scared and not friendly.
"It's horrible. This literally makes me want to cry," she said.
Geisreiter said in her 11 years of working for animal shelters, this was one of the worst cases she has ever seen.

A number of puppies were removed, some as young as 2 days old, some 6 weeks old. Most of the dogs are at an area veterinarian's office being treated for severe worm infestations, severe flea problems, mange and skin issues.

The rest of the rescued cane corsos, also called Italian mastiffs, as well as Rottweilers, Labrador retrievers and other mixed breeds are recuperating at the Scotts Valley Animal Shelter.
Most of the dogs are so skinny their ribs are showing through; some have "quite a bit of fight scars on them that had been sutured together," Geisreiter said.
"We don't know that this gentleman was using them for fighting," she said. "Sometimes when animals are in huge packs, they will fight."

Authorities think the man may have been illegally breeding and selling the dogs as purebreds to buyers in San Jose and San Francisco, even though he didn't have permits to keep unaltered dogs or operate a kennel.
"He had ads in newspapers over there. I don't know if he currently has ads," Stosuy said, adding it's possible the man was actually passing off mixed-breed dogs as purebred. "The majority of the animals that we pulled out of there were not purebred."

Animal services officers are doing their best to care for the animals, Geisreiter said. However, since animals are considered property under the law, they remain under the resident's ownership until he either surrenders them or they are confiscated through the court system, Stosuy said. Until then, the dogs are not available for adoption.
"We have no intention of giving any dogs back to this gentleman," Stosuy added.
He said Animal Services officers removed at least three boxes of evidence, including sales records, from the man's house.

District Attorney Bob Lee said he couldn't comment on any charges the man might face or the fate of the dogs until Animal Services officers turn over their investigation to the District Attorney's Office. "The case ... won't be coming to us until at least Wednesday," Lee said.
Neighbors said they have had ongoing issues with the suspect.
"A lot of his dogs were very aggressive," said neighbor Gordon Stewart, who lives on Deer Creek Road. "He uses a pellet gun to shoot trespassers."

Stosuy said deputies delayed the search a day when they were alerted to arrive with backup because of concerns the suspect might be armed. They were on the property for about six hours Saturday.
"I'm sure the animals will be a lot better off somewhere else," said neighbor Janet Laidlow. "It's just a sad situation."

Contact Melissa Weaver at 706-3279 or jcopeland@santacruzsentinel.com or Jennifer Squires at 429-2449 or jsquires@santacruzsentinel.com.

(Bron: http://www.contracostatimes.com/)
(Bron foto's: Contra Costa Times)

Geheim dierproeflaboratorium in Princeton Universiteit (VS) - Hersenonderzoek bij 18 apen door o.a. boren gaten in hoofden van de apen


At Princeton, 18 monkeys and one secret lab

Animal research angers activists, but school calls it vital

29-07-2008 BY ROBERT STERN, The Star Ledger, USA


PRINCETON BOROUGH -- Somewhere at Princeton University, 18 monkeys are kept in a mystery-shrouded lab. It's a lab so secret that the university won't even reveal which building it occupies or give a reporter a glimpse inside.

University officials say the insistence on such secrecy is largely for security reasons, based on worries that calling attention to the lab could make it a target of animal rights extremists.
At a time when activists are pressuring scientists to allow test animals to retire to nature preserves, Princeton researchers are continuing to look to monkeys for help, as they have since the 1970s.

In June, an Ohio-based animal research watchdog group unsuccessfully petitioned the university to halt aspects of its primate research it alleged are unethical and inhumane, such as the use of surgically attached skull restraints.
University officials, however, rebuff such calls, saying the monkeys are sensitively treated and are part of important basic research.
"We work very diligently to provide the best care for these primates that we can," Princeton spokeswoman Lauren Robinson-Brown said. "We have many levels of internal controls, from strict guidelines in the facilities to our oversight board. And then we have federal regulations and inspections."

Inside Princeton's lab, neuroscientists study the brains, actions and behavior of the monkeys to gain better insight into the human brain and neurology.
"Everything we know about the human brain is based four-square on monkey work -- the visual system, the nervous system, how (neural) circuits are put together really came from monkey work," said a veteran Princeton researcher, who agreed to be interviewed on condition of anonymity.

Nationally, the number of nonhuman primates used in research grew to a record high 62,315 in fiscal year 2006, the most recent for which such data are available, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The agency has tracked those numbers annually since 1973 and provides a report to Congress on research animals each year.
But Princeton has reduced its nonhuman primate rolls from 71 to 18 since 2005, Robinson-Brown said. The retired primates were sent to a sanctuary in Texas.
Still, research goes on at Princeton and elsewhere.

In some cases, a monkey under full anesthesia undergoes delicate invasive surgery in which a tiny hole gets drilled through its skull, the anonymous Princeton researcher said.
The hole gives scientists a pathway for inserting an ultra-thin instrument called a microelectrode to stimulate, probe and measure activity in different parts of the brain once the monkey recovers from the two-hour procedure, he said.

Monkeys -- macaque monkeys in Princeton's case -- are ideal for this type of experimentation because people and monkeys are primate cousins with remarkably similar brain structure, he said.
The scientist said he does not want his identity disclosed because, like the university, he wishes to avoid becoming a magnet for harassing threats or violence from animal rights extremists.

CRUEL OR CRUCIAL?
The Princeton researcher agreed to be interviewed in the wake of criticism directed at the university over its monkey research by Stop Animal Exploitation Now (SAEN), an animal advocacy group in Milford, Ohio.
He said that many prospective discoveries would elude neuroscientists if they abandoned invasive animal research entirely.
For example, neuroscientists were certain that new brain cells don't form in adult primates -- people and nonhuman alike.

But a pair of Princeton researchers studying adult rhesus monkeys in the 1990s turned that established wisdom on its head with the discovery that the monkeys do grow new neurons.
Experts said that revelation has sparked a massive new area of research. It could lead to advancements on a broad range of issues, from how we learn as we age to rehabilitating stroke victims to helping solve the puzzle of Alzheimer's disease.

But SAEN's executive director, Michael A. Budkie, contends that some of the methods Princeton and other research labs commonly use, such as surgically attaching restraining devices to monkey skulls or otherwise limiting their movement, are unethical and cruel because they cause unnecessary pain and distress.
"Most people think this type of research simply isn't happening anymore," Budkie said.
Budkie wrote to Princeton President Shirley M. Tilghman last month asking that Princeton ban any procedures that surgically attach restraining devices to nonhuman primates, confine them to restraint chairs while they are under observation or deprive them of water for extended periods of time.

USDA spokeswoman Jessica Milteer said nonhuman primate research that uses surgically attached restraints, restraining chairs and water deprivation aren't prohibited by federal law, as long as they are part of the authorized research protocol for a specific project.
Budkie pointed out that during a routine inspection in April 2006, the USDA flagged Princeton for twice -- on consecutive days -- failing to provide water for more than 23 hours to one of its nonhuman primates.

Princeton spokeswoman Robinson-Brown said that problem was an error of administrative oversight that was not part of the research design and the university corrected the issue right away.
Still, in an interview, Budkie questioned the justification for any surgically invasive research on monkeys by Princeton because, he said, many universities and research labs around the country conduct similar work.
The anonymous Princeton researcher countered that it's not the research itself that is duplicated from lab to lab but the surgical and observation procedures.

"It is a property of basic research that you can ask a very large number of basic questions with very similar standard techniques," he said.
However, this researcher said he hasn't done nonhuman primate work for two years and doesn't expect to return to it, in large part because technological advances have helped make a lot of -- though not all -- animal research unnecessary.
For instance, some previously invasive brain research on primates can now be done using increasingly detailed and accurate computer modeling.
Also, improvements to brain-scanning equipment like fMRI (functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) machines offer scientists opportunities to study the brain in human volunteers who aren't subjected to any invasive surgery, as well as in monkeys, he said.

Projects that use monkeys or other nonhuman primates, especially when they involve invasive surgery, should be -- and at Princeton are -- a last resort when computer modeling or other nonintrusive procedures aren't viable alternatives, Princeton spokeswoman Cass Cliatt said.

SINGER'S VIEW
Even Princeton bioethicist Peter Singer, a trailblazer in the animal rights movement who generally opposes biomedical research on animals, doesn't argue for an all-out ban on surgically invasive research on nonhuman primates -- either at Princeton or more broadly.
"In general, I am opposed to the use of animals in research because the entire practice is based on speciesism -- that is, a prejudice against taking seriously the interests of the animals involved," Singer wrote in an e-mail.

"I would need to know more about what is happening to the monkeys to offer an opinion on any specific research," Singer stated. He said that "individual experiments may be defensible, depending on the care given to the animals (including the way they are housed) and the purpose of the experiment."

Singer said he has never called on Princeton to end use of nonhuman primates in research but noted that in recent years most of his animal advocacy has focused on another arena entirely -- factory farming.
"As compared with the use of animals in research, the numbers of animals used (in factory farming) is vastly larger, and there is no possibility of arguing that the close confinement and other forms of animal abuse serve a useful purpose," Singer said.

The anonymous Princeton researcher said he is glad to have ended his work on monkeys.
"Probably all researchers who do any animal research have a certain sense of respect for the animal and the sense that this is something we do because it's necessary to answer our questions," he said. "Wouldn't it be nice to be able to move from that research? That's a thought that's never far away."

Contact Robert Stern at rstern@njtimes.com or (609) 989-5731.

(Bron: http://www.nj.com/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)

Europese farmaceutische industrie vreest dierenrechtenactivisten.....


Ecoterrorisme, nieuwe dreiging?

29-07-2008 De Morgen, Belgium


De federatie van de Europese farmaceutische industrie (EFPIA) verzamelde gisteren in Brussel om er zich te buigen over een nieuw fenomeen: ecoterrorisme. Het ging om een vertrouwelijke ontmoeting waar ook vertegenwoordigers van Europol en de Europese instellingen aanwezig waren.

EFPIA wilde niets kwijt over wat er besproken is. De onderhandelingen waren "voor intern gebruik". Radicale bewegingenVolgens de krant LLB kijkt de farmaceutische industrie met steeds meer ongerustheid naar de toenemende acties van ecologisten en dierenrechtenactivisten in Europa.

De radicale bewegingen ontstonden in de jaren '70 in Groot-Brittannië, maar breidden nadien uit naar de rest van Europa en de VS. Eén van de meest bekende bewegingen is het Animal Liberation Front (ALF), van Britse oorsprong. Andere bewegingen die gelijkaardige gewelddadige methodes hanteren, zijn Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty (SHAC) of het Earth Liberation Front.

In verband met de term ecoterrorisme wordt er in het rapport voor 2007 van Europol enkel melding gemaakt van één incident: de aanval door een honderdtal personen op een veld met genetisch gemanipuleerde maïs in Portugal. (belga/gb)

(Bron: http://www.demorgen.be/)

Hert met zes poten in Georgia (VS) wordt geen circusattractie....


6-legged deer gets new home after dog attack

29-07-2008 Associated Press


ARMUCHEE, Ga. (AP) — A six-legged deer found in north Georgia after being attacked by a dog has a new home. An Athens woman with a permit to keep unique animals in captivity has agreed to take the unusual deer. The animal was found July 18 near Armuchee and underwent surgery to repair its minor injuries.

A six-legged fawn is recovering at West Rome Animal Clinic in Rome, Ga. after sustaining minor injuries this weekend from two dogs in Everett Springs, Ga. Due to the injuries, one of its two tails had to be amputated. The fawn has two distinct pelvises and uses one leg from each pelvis to walk seen Monday, July 21, 2008. (AP Photo/The Rome News-Tribune, Brittany Hannah)

Berry College animal science professor George Gallagher took the deer after its surgery.
He said he is hoping to avoid making the deer a "circus sideshow." He said the animal's condition prevents it from surviving in the wild.

The fawn has two complete pelvises and two tails. One of the tails had to be amputated.
Gallagher said the fawn has a condition that is similar to Siamese twins in humans.

(Bron: http://ap.google.com/)
(Bron foto: Associated Press)

Politie Vietnam onderschept smokkel van 2 ton levende slangen en 770 kilo schildpadden op weg van Laos naar China...


Vietnam seizes tons of live wild animals bound

for China

29-07-2008 by Raman Iyer, Top News Law, India


Hanoi - Police in Vietnam seized more than 2 tons of live snakes and 770 kilograms of tortoises about to be smuggled into China, officials said Tuesday. Following a tip-off, customs police and the environment police department stopped a truck in Quang Ninh province, 160 kilometres east of Hanoi, and found the animals, said Nguyen Quoc Trung, a senior official with the department.

"The wild animals had been illegally imported from Laos and were on the way to China," Trung said. "They might be bound for Chinese restaurants."

The smuggled tortoises belong to six different species. All tortoises and snakes were classified as rare by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, and were transferred to the Soc Son Wild Animal Rescue Center in Hanoi.
"The animals are in good condition, but we haven't decided what to do with them yet," Ngo Ba Oanh, the centre's director said.

Vietnamese authorities last year seized more than 7,700 trafficked wild animals, including more than 1,000 rare animals, the national forest protection department said.

According to Vietnamese law, people hunting, transporting or trading in rare animals are subject to a prison term of up to seven years and a cash fine of up to 20 million dong (1,250 dollars).

(Bron: http://www.topnews.in/)

Pas in 2005 ontdekte nieuwe apensoort kipunji in Tanzania nu al met uitsterven bedreigd...- Ontbossing en jacht voornaamste oorzaken


Tanzania: New monkey species may soon be extinct

29-07-2008 People's Daily, China


Found only three years ago in its tiny forest home in Tanzania, a monkey species may soon be extinct. The kipunji (Rungwecebus kipunji and also known as the Highland Mangabey) was discovered in 2005 in the Southern Highlands and Udzungwa Mountains in Tanzania. In 2006, genetic analyses revealed the species represented an entire new genus of primate — the first since 1923.

"The kipunji is hanging on by the thinnest of threads," said Tim Davenport, Tanzania country director for the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). "We must do all we can to safeguard this extremely rare and little understood species while there is still time."

The WCS has published a census of the endangered primate, revealing 1,117 individuals of the species reside in two isolated forest regions spanning less than 7 square miles (18 square kilometers). The animals live in 38 groups, each with 15 to 39 members. The forest-dweller sports long whiskers and a crest of hair on the tip of its head. The monkey is known for its unique honk-bark call.

WCS researchers found that much of the monkey's remaining habitat is severely degraded by illegal logging and land conversion. This loss of habitat along with the monkey being hunted by poachers has WCS scientists worried about the species' survival. WCS officials are proposing that that the kipunji be classified by the World Conservation Union (IUCN) as "critically endangered," which means the species is threatened with extinction in the wild if immediate conservation action is not taken.

(Bron: http://english.people.com.cn/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)

(Meer weten over de ontdekking van de kipunji:
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/20/science/20primate.html?_r=1&oref=slogin)

Zeldzame Gray Beaked walvis spoelt aan op kust New South Wales (Australië)


Rare whale washes ashore

29-07-2008 LAURIE BULLOCK, Mcleay Argus, Australia


The skeleton of a dead whale that was washed ashore into Horseshoe Bay could end up in Sydney’s Australia Museum. Discovered by a council staff member on Saturday morning the whale attracted a lot of interest from onlookers before Kempsey Shire Council removed and buried it.

Rare: A whale, believed to be a Gray’s Beaked, washed ashore into Horseshoe Bay on Saturday morning attracted a lot of interest from onlookers.

Andy Marshall, a ranger from National Parks and Wildlife Service, said it was probably a Gray’s Beaked Whale but he said little was known of the species.
He said they live out in the open ocean and are rarely seen near land.

Mr Marshall said the whale washed into Horseshoe Bay appeared to be a female but a cause of death was harder to establish. The species lives to between 40 and 50 years of age and if they are not taken by predators their corpse can wash ashore.
Mr Marshall said this was rare with, on average, only one beaching of the species about every three years in NSW.

It was removed from Horseshoe Bay because of public health reasons and transported to a burial site. Mr Marshall said they were looking at a long time burial site so the skeleton of the rare whale could be removed and reassembled for display in the Australia Museum, which has a large collection of maritime exhibits.
He said an autopsy, which would reveal more details about the species, was impossible because of the level of decomposition.

(Bron: http://kempsey.yourguide.com.au/)
(Bron foto: Mcleay Argus)

Fiji ondertekent Universele Verklaring voor Dieren Welzijn


Fiji supports animal welfare

29-07-2008 Fiji Times, Fiji


Update: 10:20AM Fiji has taken a step towards supporting the Universal Declaration on Animal Welfare (UDAW). Joketani Cokanasiga said UDAW is a set of guiding and non-binding principles on animal welfare, designed to assist Government develop legislation, codes and best practices for the humane care and management of animals.

"The Declaration covers animals used for food, transport, work, recreation, racing, companionship, special purpose such as guide dogs and research and also includes wild life and zoos," he said.
He said the UDAW is built on the premise that animals are "sentient" in that they have feelings and experience pain.

"It also recognises that there have been major changes in global attitudes toward an understanding of animals, driven by research, education and experience," Mr Cokanasiga said.
He said Fiji is committed to continuing to improve standards in a range of areas and ways.

Mr Cokanasiga said our support for UDAW will serve as a catalyst and give momentum to a review of Fijis animal welfare practices and legislation and also of relevant elements of the school curriculum.
The decision was approved by Cabinet yesterday.

(Bron: http://www.fijitimes.com/)
(Bron foto: WSPA)

(Voor informatie over de UDAW: http://www.animalsmatter.org/)

Oud werknemer Universiteit Californië (VS) en dierenactivist tot 15 maanden cel veroordeeld - Man deed nep bommeldingen


Animal activist sentenced 15 months in bomb hoax

28-07-2008 The Associated Press, San Jose Mercury News, USA


SAN DIEGO—A former temporary employee at a University of California, San Diego biomedical research facility was sentenced Monday to 15 months in federal prison for calling in bomb threats to disrupt animal testing.

Richard Sills pleaded guilty in March to making the threats and sending a letter warning that bombs had been placed in six campus buildings. The 55-year-old also acknowledged he was responsible for a fake bomb that was found on campus after a Dec. 5 telephone threat.

Sills was ordered to pay the university more than $10,000 restitution.

(Bron: http://www.mercurynews.com/)

maandag 28 juli 2008

Ooievaar overlijdt in schoorsteen garagebedrijf Sprang-Capelle


Ooievaar vast in schoorsteen en overlijdt

28-07-2008 Omroep Brabant


SPRANG-CAPELLE - De brandweer heeft maandagmiddag een ooievaar uit de schoorsteen van een garagebedrijf aan de Heistraat in Sprang-Capelle gehaald. De hulp kwam te laat. De vogel was al overleden.

De reddingspoging kwam te laat.

Het korps van Sprang-Capelle kreeg bij de reddingsoperatie hulp van de ladderwagen van Oosterhout.

De vogel kwam waarschijnlijk vast te zitten onder de kap van de schoorsteen. Hoe lang de ooievaar bekneld heeft gezeten, is niet duidelijk.

(Bron: http://www.omroepbrabant.nl/)
(Bron foto: Omroep Brabant, Iwan van Dun, Reality Photo)

'Geheim moerassig eiland' in Zuid Carolina (VS) verbergt 3500 makaken voor proefdierindustrie.....


Thousands Of Monkeys Live On Hidden S.C. Island

Animals Are Used For Lab Testing

28-07-2008 KNBC TV Los Angeles, USA


MONKEY ISLAND, S.C. -- Once thought to be an urban legend, thousands of monkeys live on their own on a swampy island in the South Carolina low country, reported Charlotte, N.C., NBC affiliate WCNC-TV.

The 3,500 Rhesus monkeys on the island are federally protected. WCNC did not disclose the island's exact location to protect its inhabitants.
"A lot of people don't believe it," said Vince Loper, whose family has owned a home directly across from "Monkey Island" for decades.

Loper himself had thought it was an urban legend until he finally spotted the monkeys.
On a recent trip to the island with Loper and his son, Devin, it took several hours for the monkeys to slowly come out of the trees and toward the boat.

Rhesus monkeys, which are native to India, were first brought to South Carolina in 1979. They were left on the island to live and breed almost 750 newborns a year.

Every monkey is tagged or tattooed, and each year, 500 monkeys are taken to labs.
Over the decades, they've been used to test vaccines for everything from AIDS to bio-terrorism agents.

Few people, even those who live nearby, have ever seen the animals.
"It's just amazing," said Vince Loper. "There's monkeys running around on that island right there."

(Bron: http://www.knbc.com/)
(Bron foto: KNBC TV)

Inspecteurs woningbouwvereniging Den Haag ontdekken bij toeval 40 dode duiven op dak flat


Veertig duiven dood door verwaarlozing

28-07-08 RTV West


DEN HAAG - Een duivenhouder in Den Haag wordt ervan beschuldigd veertig duiven dusdanig verwaarloosd te hebben, dat alle dieren zijn overleden.


Inspecteurs van woningbouwvereniging HaagWonen waren bezig met een dakinspectie en vonden de duiventil op het dak van een flat in de Haagse Schilderswijk.
In vijftien hokjes lagen geraamtes van duiven.

In vuilniszakken onderaan de flat vonden de inspecteurs nog eens 25 dode duiven. Vermoedelijk zijn de vogels omgekomen door verhongering.

Proces verbaal
De eigenaar van de vogels heeft zich gemeld bij de politie. Tegen hem wordt proces verbaal opgemaakt.

(Bron: http://leiden.westonline.nl/)
(Bron foto's: RTV West)

Acht luipaardhuiden inbeslaggenomen in Uttar Pradesh (India) - Misdaadsyndicaten verdienen miljoenen dollars aan smokkel en verkoop zeldzame dieren


Police seize eight leopard skins from poachers in UP

28-07-2008 Saharanpur (Uttar Pradesh), Newstrack India


Saharanpur (Uttar Pradesh), July 28 (ANI): Uttar Pradesh police seized eight skins of leopards from poachers from Saharanpur on Monday. Acting on a tip off, the police arrested four persons possessing leopard skins.

Wildlife officials say that illegal trade is growing with crime syndicates making millions of dollars from the killing, smuggling and selling of rare animals like Tigers.

Feigning innocence, one of the arrested persons said that he was lured with money to sell the skins.
"A person named Liaqat had given these to me to sell them. He said he would give me the money after selling them. I did not know the rate," said Majid, who was arrested for poaching.

Leopards, rhinos, reptiles, birds and insects as well as rare species of trees and plants are also being smuggled to Southeast Asian countries and China.

Wildlife experts say Tiger and Leopard parts are in great demand in China and other Asian countries. They are wanted for their skins, which are worn during festivals, as well as for their bones and body parts, which are used in traditional medicines.

Those involved in the trade are mostly highly organised cross-border criminal syndicates and involve a large supply chain, ranging from the forest dwellers, who kill the animals, to transporters, smugglers and ultimately the buyers. (ANI)

(Bron: http://www.newstrackindia.com/)

Andes condor met uitsterven bedreigd....


Development could spell doom for Andean condor

28-07-2008 Star-Telegram Texas, USA


TALAGANTE, Chile — The people of the Andean mountain range have long seen the condor as more than just a big bird. With a wingspan stretching up to 10 feet and a cruising altitude higher than 16,000 feet above sea level, this majestic creature was considered a supernatural being, a source of national pride and even an immortal divinity.

Today, however, the Andean condor is in danger of becoming nothing more than a myth.
Expanding human development in the Andes, which stretch the length of South America, has upset the delicate balance of food that the condor depends on to survive, and the consequences have been drastic.


The condor has become virtually extinct in Venezuela and is highly endangered in Colombia and Ecuador, in the continent’s north. The bird is considered endangered in Peru and Bolivia, farther down the Andes, and flourishes only in the southern end of the mountain range, in Chile and Argentina.

But even there, in two countries that have been described as the condor’s last haven, the giant bird faces growing difficulties. In the winter months, for example, when food becomes scarce in the mountains of central Chile, the mythic birds become trash eaters at city dumps.
The biggest fear here is that the same combination of man-made forces that pushed the California condor to the brink of extinction in the southwestern United States could finish off the Andean condor.
California and Andean condors are different species; the South American variety weighs more and features different markings on its neck and wings.
Their feeding patterns have complicated the survival of both types of condors: They’re both carnivorous scavengers, which means that they eat dead or wounded animals.

In nature, Andean condors survive off the remains of deer, guanaco — a llamalike mammal — and other animals that predators such as pumas leave behind.
Such food supplies fell sharply throughout the 20th century in countries such as Chile when people settled farther out into wild lands.

(Bron: http://www.star-telegram.com/)
(Bron foto's: archief Kraaijer)

Roep om paardenraces in deelstaat Victoria (Australië) onmiddellijk te stoppen na zoveelste dood paard


Horse death sparks call to end jump racing season

28-07-2008 ABC News, Australia


An animal rights group is calling on the Victorian Government to cancel the rest of the jump racing season, after another horse death at the weekend.

Eleven horses have been put down this season, the most recent during a race at Moonee Valley.
Glenys Oogjes from Animals Australia says if the high fall rate continues, another four horses could be put down before the season ends in September.

She says even in country Victoria, public opinion is turning against jumps racing.
"The community are going to turn against this sport, because they know when they go along they're likely to see a fall, they may even see a death, it's not what they want to see, this is not a sport, in fact some people are starting to call it a blood sport," she said.

(Bron: http://www.abc.net.au/)

Wilde zwijnen teisteren oogsten bewoners dorpjes in Bhutan


Wild boars besiege villages

28-07-2008 Kuensel Newspaper, Bhutan


28 July, 2008 - Farmer Tashi of Bayur village in Kanglung woke up to the biggest loss of the year on June 23. Her only maize field, measuring not bigger than a football field, was trampled and destroyed by wild boars. The single mother of five school-going children depends largely on corn produced from the field. “A promising harvest is gone now,” said Tashi, adding that she was relying on the maize after her potato harvest betrayed her this year. “I wonder how we’ll survive until the next harvest.”


WILDLIFE CROP DAMAGE –
Tashi’s damage field in Bayur.

About ten to twelve wild boars came again the next night but farmers on vigil chased them away by shouting, banging empty tins and pelting stones. Officials in Kanglung and other gewogs in the dzongkhag say that reports are pouring in almost every day about crop damage by wild animals.
The Radhi gewog clerk said that wild boars have already begun raiding the fields and would do so for some time to come. He said that there were reports last year that wild boars had destroyed entire maize fields in Dung Gonpa village.

Farmers said there could be more cases, but that they stopped reporting to authorities knowing nothing would come of it. “We’ve reported crop damage in past years but nothing was done,” said a farmer from Seytsangri village in Rongthong.
Dzongkhag officials also noted the change. “Earlier, there used to be a huge number of reports of such problems, but this year there aren’t much because they feel it’s useless anyhow,” said an agriculture officer.

A few days before the Bayur incident, a large herd of wild boar on the rampage destroyed maize fields in Dungjur village. “There are several groups coming at the same time, which makes guarding fields very difficult,” said a farmer.
Farmers said that the wild boars are returning after an outbreak of a disease curtailed the problem for a few years.
Farmers in Trashiyangtse and Pemagatshel are facing the same problem, according to agriculture officials.

The agriculture officer in Pemagatshel, Yadunath Bajgai, said that villagers in his dzongkhag have abandoned cultivating their fields that are located away from human settlement. “By abandoning fields, we’re losing out on cultivable land and this will result in food insecurity,” he said.
The Kanglung gup said, “The wild boar problem was not new, but the animals have started invading villages that are located near towns.”
Meanwhile, back in Bayur, Tashi and her children are guarding the remainder of their damaged crop every night.

By Tshering Paldentshering_palden@kuensel.com.bt

(Bron: http://www.kuenselonline.com/)
(Bron foto: Kuensel Newspaper)

Protest in Wales (UK) tegen doden van dassen


North Wales Rally against the Badger 'Cull'


27-07-2008 Broch, IndyMedia UK


A good crowd gathered in Colwyn Bay on Saturday 26th July to protest against the proposal by the Welsh Assembly government to kill badgers.

Displaying colourful placards and banners and with some wearing badger face masks we met up outside the Welsh Assembly offices and then had a short procession to the promenade for a rally and speeches. All the time we were there, cars driving along the prom were hooting their support, showing that the decision to placate a few farmers with a 'cull' is going to backfire hugely with the electorate.

The next stage of the campaign will be to publicise more widely which AMs voted in favour of wasting money on killing our wildlife, going against the clear advice of an Independent Scientific Group.

Thanks to North Wales Animal Rights organiser Judi Hewitt for coordinating this successful event. For more information on the background to these events see http://www.viva.org.uk/campaigns/badgers/.

(Bron: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/)
(Bron foto's: IndyMedia UK)

zondag 27 juli 2008

Ruiters laten hun paarden in hitte Soester paardenmarathon lopen - Dierenkwelling: 33 en 60 km in benauwd weer lijdt tot diverse uitvallers


Extra uitvallers tijdens bloedhete Soester

paardenmarathon

27-07-2008 De Gooi- en Eemlander


Soest - In de tropische hitte stappen ruiters met rode koppen op bezwete paarden de parkeerplaats aan de Foekenlaan in Soest op. Hoewel het zaterdag belabberde weersomstandigheden waren voor de eerste Soester paardenmarathon, zijn deelnemers enthousiast.
,,Dit is de paardenbewaking. Hier wordt tussentijds hartslag, ademhaling en temperatuur gecontroleerd'', zegt jurylid Jeike Boswijk van de Endurance Soest, een duurloop voor paarden door bos- en duingebied. Voor het spektakel is zelfs het militaire terrein de Vlasakkers speciaal opengesteld. Van de honderd ruiters die bij de Bernhardkazerne in Amersfoort zijn gestart, rijden tachtig de route van 33 kilometer en twintig de zestig kilometer. En nee, dat is volgens jurylid Boswijk niet zielig.

,,Zie jij een zweep of sporen? Paarden vinden dit geweldig, zijn bewegers van nature. Maar het is goed dat ruiters hun paard sparen, het rustig aan doen. Het belangrijkst is dat ze gezond over de finish komen.''

Het klamme weer is volgens haar vergelijkbaar met dat van olympisch Peking. Daarom worden de dieren tijdens de tussenstop zeer goed verzorgd en direct gekoeld met liters water. Meegebracht in flessen door 'grooms' (helpers) die de amazones per auto volgen. Paarden mogen pas door met een hartslag onder de zestig, in echte rust is die tussen de 28 en 40.

Veearts Eveline Bannink is onverbiddelijk en haalt diverse deelnemers uit de race. ,,Door de hitte meer uitvallers dan normaal'', zegt ze. Dekhengst Amplik met hartslag 64 mag pas door als hij is bedaard. ,,Was niet van inspanning, maar opwinding'', verzekert groom Irene van Laar. ,,Hij ziet andere paarden en wil maar één ding: seks.''' Ans de Bie moet afhaken omdat Nine een te hoge hartslag heeft. ,,Was er al bang voor, hij liep zo te stressen. Balen, maar de gezondheid van mijn paard gaat voor.'' Fenna van Noort mag wel door. ,,Ik heb zere billen en blaren op mijn vingers. Nog nooit zolang gereden. Maar ik vind het super!''

(Bron: http://www.gooieneemlander.nl/)
(Bron foto: Gooi- en Eemlander)

Protest bij dierentuin Dallas (VS) tegen verhuizing olifant Jenny naar amusementspark in Mexico


Protesters demonstrate at Dallas Zoo over move

of Jenny the elephant

27-07-2008 By JOANNA CATTANACH / The Dallas Morning News jcattanach@dallasnews.com


Protesters gathered in front of the Dallas Zoo this afternoon demanding the zoo move its lone elephant, Jenny, to a sanctuary rather than a zoo. Concerned Citizens for Jenny organized the afternoon protest after zoo officials announced Jenny would be moved to the Africam Safari Park outside of Puebla, Mexico, in the fall.

Animal activists including People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals are requesting Jenny be sent to The Elephant Sanctuary in Hohenwald, Tenn.

It’s a move supported by Dallas City Council member Angela Hunt, who visited the sanctuary earlier this month. It far outshined her visit to Africam, she said, where she saw three Asian elephants in a small enclosure.
Ms. Hunt has posted video and photographs of her visit to both locations on her Web site, angelahunt.com.

The Elephant Sanctuary is the nation’s largest natural-habitat refuge. It’s 2,700 acres and home to 17 female elephants—14 are Asian and three are African.

The sanctuary was featured on the ABC news show 20/20 on Friday. Founded in 1995 by Carol Buckley and Scott Blais, the sanctuary is known as a haven for troubled elephants, including Winkie, a female Asian elephant who killed elephant keeper Joanna Burke at the sanctuary in 2006. Ms. Burke is now buried at the sanctuary.

(Bron: http://www.dallasnews.com/)
(Bron foto en meer informatie:
http://current.com/items/89122024_please_help_jenny_the_elephant_now_animal_law_coalition)

This video was shot by Dallas City Councilmember Angela Hunt while on a fact-finding trip to The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee. In the video, TES Executive Director Carol Buckley gives Hunt a guided tour of the facility's habitat.
The City of Dallas plans to send its lone African elephant, Jenny, to the Africam Zoo in the near-future. Angela opposes this decision, and wants to send Jenny to The Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee.

For more information:
http://www.elephants.com/ (The Elephant Sanctuary)
http://www.africamsafari.com.mx/ (Africam Safari Zoo)

Rotweiler overlijdt door hitte in afgesloten bestelbus Amsterdam


Hond overlijdt in warme auto

27-07-2008 De Telegraaf


AMSTERDAM - Vermoedelijk als gevolg van de hitte is in een op De Boelelaan in Amsterdam geparkeerd bestelbusje opgesloten hond, zondagmorgen 27 juli rond half twaalf, overleden.

Een voorbijganger reageerde op het auto-alarm en zag de Rotweiler hevig hijgend en piepend in de volledig afgesloten auto zitten. Hij belde de politie. Vrij kort na de melding belde de melder opnieuw dat de hond vermoedelijk overleden was. Na het inslaan van het achterraam konden politiemensen slechts vaststellen dat de melder gelijk had.

Volgens de kentekengegevens komt de eigenaar niet uit Amsterdam. De politie van wijkteam Van Leijenberghlaan stelt een onderzoek in.

(Bron: http://www.telegraaf.nl/)

Politie Santpoort-Noord opent jacht op Jack Russel en grote zwarte hond... - Honden vallen andere huisdieren aan


Honden op strooptocht in Santpoort-Noord

27-07-2008 De Pers


Een Jack Russell terriër en een grotere zwarte hond terroriseren andere dieren in Santpoort-Noord. De Noord-Hollandse politie kreeg vrijdag een melding dat een konijn was doodgebeten aan de Hoofdstraat.

Ter plaatse bleek dat het dier niet was doodgebeten, maar zich letterlijk was doodschrokken nadat zijn hok 'met grof geweld' was opengekrabd en -gebeten. Nog niet zo lang geleden was een ander konijn in dezelfde straat het slachtoffer van hondengeweld, zegt een politiewoordvoerder. Het dier was met geweld uit zijn hok gehaald en doodgebeten. En drie weken geleden beten de honden een gans dood, waarna ze ervandoor gingen. Ze liepen volgens de politie onaangelijnd over straat.

De woordvoerder vermoedt dat de honden 's nachts op strooptocht gaan. "We hebben buurtbewoners gevraagd extra alert te zijn. Ook willen we het natuurlijk graag weten als iemand een kennis heeft met een Jack Russell en een grotere zwarte hond."

(Bron: http://www.depers.nl/)

Binnen 14 uur 4 panda's geboren in Chengdu panda fokcentrum (China)


Four panda cubs born within 14 hours in

SW China

27-07-2008 People's Daily, China


Four giant panda cubs were born within 14 hours in separate births at a panda breeding base in southwest China's Sichuan Province from Saturday evening to Sunday morning. The event was considered a rarity in panda breeding history.

Nine-year-old Qiyuan ("Magic Luck" in Chinese) gave birth to a pair of twin female cubs weighing 135 grams and 132 grams, respectively, at 5:24 p.m. and 6:16 p.m. on Saturday at the Chengdu Panda Breeding Research Center, said Yang Feifei, a center expert.

Eight-year-old Chenggong ("success" in Chinese) gave birth to a117-gram cub at 7:51 p.m. on Saturday. Zhuzhu ("Pearl in Chinese"), also eight-year-old, gave birth to a 186-gram cub at 6:55 a.m. on Sunday, Yang said.

Currently, the center has 71 pandas in captivity, the largest of its kind in the world. Twelve panda twins were born in captivity in the country last year, the most since an artificial breeding program started more than 40 years ago.

The giant panda, known for being sexually inactive, is among the world's most endangered animals due to its shrinking habitat. There are about 1,590 pandas living in the wild in China, mostly in Sichuan and the northwestern provinces of Shaanxi and Gansu.

(Bron: http://english.people.com.cn/)

(Voor meer informatie over het Chengdu Panda Breeding Research Center:
http://www.panda.org.cn/english/index.htm)

Heeft Twente echt last van een 'rattenplaag'.....


Rattenplaag breid zich uit

27-07-2008 Twentsche Courant/Tubantia ('Dorpsplein Enschede')


De bruine rat in Twente is een wandelende tijdbom. Het beest is resistent en kan zich daarom ongebreideld voortplanten. Er moet snel een gecoördineerde aanpak van het probleem komen om het niet verder uit de hand te laten lopen zeggen de gemeente en andere instanties tegen elkaar volgens deze krant.

Gemeente, VROM, LTO Noord, KAD het zijn vele organen die zich er mee bezighouden ook al ver voor hun vakanties. En wat is er gebeurt. Het is alleen maar erger geworden. Demp de put eens met die ratten.De Inspectiedienst van het ministerie van VROM, de boerenorganisatie LTO Noord en het Kennis en Adviescentrum Dierplagen (KAD) uit Wageningen overleggen na de vakantieperiode verder over de aanpak van de problematiek. De rat kan ziekten overbrengen en veroorzaakt schade.


Inspecteurs van VROM-Inspectie hebben in een brief aan LTO Nederland alarm geslagen over het grote aantal ratten in Twente dat resistent is tegen het enig in het open veld toegelaten middel bromadiolon. Tubbergen, Dinkelland, Borne en Wierden worden als brandhaarden genoemd, met grote concentraties ratten die niet meer reageren op het bestrijdingsmiddel bromadio­lon.

Op en rond sommige boerderijen scharrelen rattenvolken van duizend tot tweeduizend dieren rond. Kunnen deze instanties ze niet temmen en verkopen als tamme ratten? Nee, natuurlijk niet.

Volgens het KAD ( alweer een ander orgaan) is de rattenexplosie te wijten aan een niet afdoende bestrijding door de boeren die te weinig bromo hebben gebruikt of op een verkeerde manier. ,,Daar­door overleven sommige ratten een bestrijdingsaanval en worden resistent." VROM meldt dat boeren ten onrechte grijpen naar middelen die ze uit Duitsland halen, waardoor de problemen juist verergeren. Bepaal­de middelen zijn Waarom bruine ratten juist in Twente op dit moment flinke problemen en zo wordt het probleem weer afgeschoven of met vakanties verschoven. Volgens mij is dat op dit moment minder belangrijk.

Provinciaal secretaris Henk Brummelman van LTO Noord bevestigt dat er ‘lokaal problemen' zijn. Volgens hem is er echter geen sprake van een onoverkomenlijke rattenplaag. ,,Ik wil de zaak niet bagatelliseren, maar we hoeven de rattenvanger van Hamelen nog niet in te schakelen." De heer Brummelman heeft nog nooit een bruine rat gezien net als vele anderen dus we zitten er nog wel even mee mits............en dat zeg ik erbij het zo erg is als vermeld wordt.

N. Verkerk

(Bron: http://www.enschede.tctubantia.nl/)
(Bron foto: Twentsche Courant/Tubantia)

AIDS-onderzoek VS gaat meer proefdieren gebruiken....


AIDS vaccine search in US makes major U-turn

after letdowns

27-07-2008 by IANS, Thaindian News, Thailand


Washington, July 27 (DPA) After major disappointments, AIDS research in the US is making a significant turn away from human clinical trials and back to laboratory basics in the search for an elusive vaccine, according to a top US AIDS scientist.

Anthony S Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), and his colleagues announced the turnabout in an article in the Science magazine, which released the item a day before its formal publication Friday.

In an interview with DPA ahead of the embargoed publication, Fauci said that his federally funded institute - which distributes about 80 percent of the money spent worldwide on vaccine research - would “rev up the burners” to tackle the decades-old puzzle of how to create antibodies against the disease without causing an actual infection.
That means less money will be spent on human trials of vaccines that work in less conventional ways, and which buoyed hopes in the past several years only to disappoint.
More use will be made of animals, not humans, in the research, Fauci said.

“What the emphasis right now will be, is on improving the non-human primate model,” Fauci said. “What is the best animal model that we can perfect? Why does the body not make good neutralizing antibodies in natural infection?”

The shift in focus follows intense discussion within the HIV/AIDS research community, and comes just a week after Fauci decided to cancel a large human trial of the institute’s own PAVE vaccine similar to one privately produced and tested by Merck pharmaceuticals that was dropped in September 2007.
Instead of trying to create antibodies and permanent immunity, those two vaccines aimed to marshal the body’s T-cells to reduce the HIV viral count in people subsequently exposed to the AIDS virus.

But the vaccines were found ineffective, and in fact appeared to have inadvertently increased the HIV infection rate, and trials were dropped midway.

(Bron: http://www.thaindian.com/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)

Gewonde greyhound in race Birmingham (Engeland) van dood gered door dierenvriend


Greyhound's escape by a whisker

27-07-2008 By Scott McPherson, This Is Wiltshire, UK


Injured greyhound Star was moments away from being put down when she was saved and taken to a sanctuary in Chippenham. Three-year-old Star badly fractured her leg while racing in Perry Bar, Birmingham, and her owners were prepared to destroy her as she could no longer race.

A dog lover at the track intervened and persuaded the owners to hand Star over.
Fortuitously, the good Samaritan was a friend of Dave Garland who runs the Greyhound and Lurcher Welfare and Rescue Centre in Bradenstoke, where Star has been nursed back to health.
Mr Garland, 73, then won £500 from pet insurer Petplan in a monthly draw, which covered the cost of Star's treatment.

Dave Garland with the greyhound he saved from being put down.

He said: "Star is a lovely dog but like so many others she stared death in the face when her racing career came to an abrupt end.
"She was in a cast for five weeks and was painfully shy when around people.
"I lose sleep about the way these animals are treated because I care so much. These animals need to be protected and cared for properly."

Although Star is still not well enough yet to be rehomed, she will be ready to find a new home later this year.
Meanwhile, Mr Garland currently has six dogs ready to be rehomed and anyone interested should call the centre on (01249) 890178.

The rescue centre is marking National Greyhound Remembrance Day on Saturday - the 80th anniversary of the start of greyhound racing - by taking 60 dogs to Eastville Park in Bristol for an open day.

(Bron: http://www.thisiswiltshire.co.uk/)
(Bron foto: This Is Wiltshire)

zaterdag 26 juli 2008

De Australische populaire knuffel koala in gevaar - Verstedelijking, honden en auto's en trucks bedreigen het diertje


Help save the koala

27-07-2008 By
Amy Remeikis, The Daily, Australia


There is a group of Aussie battlers out there who need your help. For years they have been chased from their homes. Ravaged by diseases. Starved. Attacked. And all this time they have suffered in silence.
With the situation having reached crisis point, those in the know have warned us it is time to act or we will lose the koala forever.


The news that koala populations in the wild are under threat is nothing new. But their plight has slipped from the national consciousness. Urbanisation continues to be one of the biggest dangers to the dwindling population, with development bringing a loss of habitat, dogs and other predators, and motor vehicles.

Senior veterinary surgeon at Australian Wildlife Hospital at Australia Zoo, Beerwah, Dr Jon Hanger, checks the condition of Mollie a 6 month old orphaned koala on July 23, 2008. Photo: Nicholas Falconer: 177208.

Across south-east Queensland more than 2000 sick and injured koalas are presented to wildlife organisations for treatment each year.
The Australian Wildlife Hospital treats 600 of those animals and only one third can be released back into their natural environment.
Orphaned koala joeys can need up to 15 months hand rearing before they are able to be released into the wild.

Releasing those which can be saved, rehabilitated or have been hand reared is a common enough practice, but up until now, not much has been done to track the success of those animals after they are reintroduced, or as the case may have it, introduced into the wild.
With financial support from Zarraffa’s Coffees, the AWH and University of Queensland have spent the past year following the progress of 10 koalas which, up until their release, had never lived independently.
The six females and four males ranged in age from 15 months to two years and eight had been hand reared, while the remaining two had been raised by their parents in care.
The Australian Wildlife Hospital completed a progress report into the koala research project last month.
The results were both heartening and disappointing.

Heartening because within the first year, the koalas took to their new environment in the Australia Zoo-owned conservation property in the north-east of the Darling Downs without major problems.
A rural conservation site was chosen to limit the impact from urbanisation – three of the most common reasons for koala deaths being domestic dog attack, motor vehicle incidents and disease.

Senior veterinary surgeon at Australian Wildlife Hospital at Australia Zoo, Beerwah, Dr Jon Hanger, checks the condition of Puffin a 6 year old koala on July 23, 2008. Puffin was hit by a car recently and is being teated at the hospital. Photo: Nicholas Falconer: 177208.

Because of its setting, the 1396 hectare Ironbark Station reduced two of those likelihoods.
The koalas exhibited normal behaviours. They selected a tree preference, established home ranges and utilised their habitat in a way which is normal for a koala in the wild.
The females created home range patterns closest to the release site, while the males took their exploring a little further – one travelled 14 kilometres from the release site.
All except one of the six females produced offspring.
At the six and 12 month mark the koalas were given a health check. Three of the koalas needed medical attention.
One of the males had contracted chlamydiosis, a potentially fatal disease which can lead to blindness, infertility, urinary tract infections and pneumonia. It is at epidemic level in koala populations.
He required a two-week hospitalisation period, while one of the females developed reproductive cysts resulting in infertility and needed surgery.
to correct the problem.

The biggest blow to the team was when one of the females was diagnosed with lymphoma one month before the first year was up and had to be euthanised.
These results have told researchers that while there are no real problems with releasing hand reared koalas into their natural habitat, they are still susceptible to the diseases which have ravaged their population.
“It shows that even in a secure habitat the koala population is suffering very badly from disease,” Dr Jon Hanger said.

The koala population is in huge trouble. This is what we are trying to highlight. We have grave concerns for the future and sustainability for the koalas, particularly in south-east Queensland.
“We recently inspected a koala population which was living in a proposed development site. Of the 13 koalas in that population, two needed to be euthanised and another five had to be hospitalised. and treated. "More than half that little population was sick. That tells us we are not dealing with a tough species which can handle development and encroachment.
“It tells us that we are dealing with a species not able to withstand the impacts of urbanisation. If we don’t do something we are going to lose them in this area.”
They just won’t be there.”

In south-east Queensland, the koala is listed as vulnerable.
Dr Hanger said the only way to change this is if people start paying attention to conserving their habitat.
“Koalas, even in remote regions, are showing signs of disease,” he said.
“There needs to be more value placed on conserving these animals at all levels of government. Government should invest in the resources necessary to protect habitat, and monitor and prevent the koala population from further decline.

“We have seen a massive decline in the last 20 years.
“We may not be able to do much about the major issue of disease just yet. But there is a lot we can do about their loss of habitat.
“People just need to start acting again, start pressuring the government to do something.
“This is a situation we can do something about.”

(Bron: http://www.thedaily.com.au/)
(Bron foto's: The Daily)

Rond 40 kariboes dood geschoten bij Point Hope in Alaska


Dozens of caribou found shot near northwest

Alaska village

26-07-2008 The Associated Press, Daily News Miner, Alaska


ANCHORAGE -- Alaska State Troopers are investigating the killing of dozens of caribou near Point Hope. Mayor Steve Oomittuk says about 40 animals were shot and left to rot in nearby mountains between Point Hope and Kivalina.

Troopers spokeswoman Beth Ipsen confirms that officers are investigating.
But she says the agency promised village officials it would keep the case quiet until the investigation is complete to ensure their cooperation.

Point Hope is a Chukchi Sea community of about 700 people 330 miles southwest of Barrow.
Oomittuk says the slaughter will not be tolerated and steps must be taken to make sure that residents' subsistence lifestyle is protected.

(Bron: http://newsminer.com/)
(Bron foto: http://www.alaska-in-pictures.com/caribou-animal-and-mt-mckinley-denali-national-park-7278-pictures.htm)

Ondanks industriële bedrijvigheid blijft de lepelaar in Sloegebied broeden


Lepelaar blijft trouw aan Sloe

26-07-2008 door Rinus Antonisse, BN/De Stem


VLISSINGEN-OOST - Temidden van de industriële bedrijvigheid in het Sloegebied hebben ruim twintig lepelaarparen het afgelopen broedseizoen met succes jongen voortgebracht.Doordat Zeeland Seaports een deel van hun broedgebied - braakliggende grond tussen de vuilstortplaats en aluminiumfabriek Zalco - op de schop nam, bestond de vrees dat de vogels niet meer terug zouden keren. De kolonie zat er zo'n tien jaar.

"Het lijkt toch te zijn goedgekomen", zegt Mark Hoekstein van de werkgroep lepelaar. "Ze zijn wel op een iets andere plek gaan broeden, niet meer op de oude plek want die is nu veel te kaal. Er zijn aardig wat jongen groot gekomen."

Het aantal van twintig broedparen is iets lager dan voorgaande jaren, maar dat kan aan natuurlijke schommelingen liggen. De jonge lepelaars zijn inmiddels vliegvlug en wachten nu op de komende trek, in de loop van september, naar de overwinteringsgebieden in Afrika. De jonge dieren keren pas na drie jaar daaruit terug. Doorgaans weten ze dan feilloos hun geboorteplek terug te vinden.

Momenteel zoeken ze hun voedsel (garnalen, stekelbaarsjes, kleine platvis) in omringende wateren, zowel grote plassen als slootjes. In ondiep water zeven ze met hun kenmerkende snavel het voedsel uit het water. Of de broedplek intact blijft, is onduidelijk. ZSP werkt aan een natuurplan.

(Bron: http://www.bndestem.nl/)

(Lees ook dit artikel - tevens bron foto:
http://www.pzc.nl/regio/zeeland/2593579/Broedplek-lepelaars-loopt-gevaar.ece)

Bestuurders Taipei (Taiwan) en dierenorganisaties willen zwaailichten en voorrang voor dierenambulances


Government urged to give animal ambulances

road priority

26-07-2008 China Post, Taiwan


TAIPEI, Taiwan -- The government should allow animal ambulances to install flashing yellow warning lights and enjoy road priority to facilitate their work saving injured animals, Taipei city councilors and an animal protection group said yesterday.

In response, Hsu Hsiu-lung, a section chief of the city's Motor Vehicles Office, said the Taipei city government had already discussed the matter with the Council of Agriculture and the Ministry of Transportation and Communications last week.

A Taipei City Councilor and an animal protection group urged the public to give animal ambulances right of way. The group has provided its animal ambulances with life-saving equipment and has painted 'Cat Dog 119' on the vehicles. '119' is Taiwan's official emergency services line for humans.(CNA)

The council will formulate related measures within one month and send them to the ministry for approval, Hsu said, predicting that the measures will take effect by the end of this year.
As an advanced city, the Taipei city government should take the lead in awarding priority road rights to animal-saving vehicles, Taipei City Councilor Lee Ching-feng said at a press conference outside the council hall.
Taipei City Councilor Chien Yu-yen also urged the public to give animal ambulances right of way.
Councilor Chen Chien-ming noted that the Taiwan Life Caring and Animal Rescue Organization (LCO) based in the northern county of Taipei has equipped its animal ambulances with life-saving equipment and has painted "Cat Dog 119" on the vehicles. "119" is Taiwan's official emergency services line for humans.
However, the animal ambulances do not have right of way on the roads, which sometimes makes the rescue process difficult, Chen noted.

LCO spokesman Chang Lee-jen also pointed out that time is critical during animal rescue operations.
Public donations received by the organization should be used for saving animals rather than for repairing ambulances or paying for traffic tickets, he added.
The organization relies solely on private donations and spends NT$700,000 (US$23,007) to NT$1 million per month, according to Bert Dung, CEO of the organization.

Dung said that the three-year-old organization has several chapters in many parts of Taiwan, providing a 24-hour rescue service that covers the whole country.
The organization handles seven or eight rescues on average per day, with some cases transferred from the Taipei city government, Dung said.

The city government has also drafted an animal medical rescue plan, said Lu Meng-long, a section chief at the Taipei Municipal Institute for Animal Health, at the press conference.
Under the plan, slated to be inaugurated in mid-August, the city government will cooperate with local animal hospitals to treat injured animals sent through the city's "1999" hotline, Lu said.

(Bron: http://www.chinapost.com.tw/)
(Bron foto: China Post)

Yorkshire Terrier gedood in wasmachine tijdens feestje in de VS


Dog Found Dead In Washing Machine

25-07-2008 WBZ TV, Boston, USA


NANTUCKET (AP) ― Police on Nantucket are investigating the death of a dog that was found in a washing machine following a house party. Police believe the 8-year-old Yorkshire Terrier was placed in the machine Tuesday night or Wednesday morning, and the machine turned on.

A member of the family that owns the house found the dog dead early Wednesday and called police. Detective Lieutenant Jerry Adams told The Boston Globe police have no motive or suspects, but have asked for a list of the estimated 35-40 people who attended the party at the home.

The Massachusetts Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Animals is assisting island police in the investigation. A spokesman for the organization called the case "mindboggling," but added that extreme cases of animal abuse are not uncommon.

(Bron: http://wbztv.com/)

Gedreven Britse dierenactivisten transformeren tot keurige dames en heren in gewone organisaties, aldus landschapsorganisatie Countryside Alliance


Lobby groups 'hijacked by animal rights fanatics'

25-07-2008 Farmers Weekly, UK


Organisations like the RSPCA and RSPB have been hijacked by former animal rights campaigners who have swapped their balaclavas for smart suits and abandoned their beards to convince people of their respectability, according to Simon Hart, chief executive of the Countryside Alliance.

Speaking in a debate on the future of animal rights at today’s Game Fair, Mr Hart said:
“Animal rights as a movement has become less fashionable. We’re seeing less of the really vile, semi-terrorist activity of the Animal Liberation Front but more of the legitimate welfare organisations – the so-called reputable ones like the RSPCA and RSPB.

“The animal rights agenda is being played out by people who have shaved off their beards and bought a smart suit and are saying the same thing as before but in another coded language. They are the original architects of the lunatics in balaclavas but they are delivering the message in a sinister and subtle manner. It’s very dangerous.”

Solicitor Jamie Foster, who runs the CA’s legal helpline, agreed that animal rights activists were getting smarter and working hard to “look uncontroversial”. He queried the charity status of the RSPCA when it has £100m worth of capital and about £50m worth of income.

RSPCA inspectors have no right to enter anyone’s home without a police officer, he warned, and they are only prosecuting extensively because the publicity fuels more public donations.
Another panellist, author and TV personality Clarissa Dickson-Wright, claimed that she had been number three on the ALF’s death list. She said her media career was destroyed by activists appealing to the BBC governors not to use her after her hugely successful Two Fat Ladies cookery series.

“The BBC was hijacked by activists, “ she said. “All the Countryfile presenters were told that if they went to the Great Countryside March in London they would never work for the BBC again. That’s worthy of Hitler’s Germany.”

On the government’s decision not to cull TB infected badgers, she said: “I have the answer on the badger cull. Badgers are delicious.”
Simon Hart described the Government’s move not to cull as “principles abandoned because of political expediency”.

He reminded the audience that politicians were terrified of a public backlash on animal health issues and therefore were unable to have a meaningful debate and do the right thing. He called for better use of the media to get across simple, positive messages about the countryside and to convince the public that the government meddles too much.

(Bron: http://www.fwi.co.uk/)

(Voor informatie over de Countryside Alliance: http://www.countryside-alliance.org.uk/)

Chimpansee even op vrije voeten in Japanse dierentuin....

Amerikaans proefdierlaboratorium MPI de fout in met behandeling dieren - Dierenrechtenorganisatie SEAN maakt inspectierapport publiek


Animal-rights issues at MPI have been fixed,

USDA says

25-07-2008 BY ALEX NIXON anixon@kalamazoogazette.com, Kalamazoo Gazette, USA


MATTAWAN -- An Ohio-based animal-rights group says a federal-government inspection report shows MPI Research committed ``serious violations of federal regulations which led directly to unnecessary pain and suffering for animals.''

Stop Animal Exploitation Now this week released a copy of an October 2007 inspection report on MPI's Mattawan facility that listed two violations of the Animal Welfare Act.
Officials of MPI and the U.S. Department of Agriculture, which performed the inspection, both said two violations were found but that they have been corrected.

In one of the violations, researchers failed to include among written records information that test animals receiving a specific drug could experience alopecia, or loss of hair. Two animals receiving the drug were found by an inspector to be ``suffering from significant alopecia,'' the report stated.
In the second violation, a nonresponsive and barely breathing dog was not euthanized ``in a timely manner,'' the report stated.

MPI was inspected again in June and found no problems, said Nolan Lemon, a spokesman for the USDA's Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, which has regulatory authority over animal care at research facilities such as MPI.
MPI has never been fined by the USDA, Lemon said.

``It's not unusual for even a good facility to get some citations from time to time,'' Lemon said. ``The important thing is to get them cleared up as soon as possible. They've got a clean inspection record now.''
MPI President and Chief Operating Officer William Harrison said the company resolved the violations ``immediately'' and upon reinspection in June had ``no findings.''
``We take the animal regulations from USDA very seriously,'' Harrison said.

Michael Budkie, executive director of Stop Animal Exploitation Now, twice has requested the USDA investigate MPI for violations Budkie says he learned about from company whistle-blowers.
Budkie has refused to reveal his sources, saying they fear reprisal from MPI.
Budkie first called for an investigation of MPI in October, during National Primate Liberation Week.

In April, after MPI's announcement of a $330 million expansion, Budkie again asked authorities to inspect the company. Budkie said the request was not related to MPI expansion but to World Laboratory Animal Liberation Week.

(Bron: http://www.mlive.com/)

(Voor informatie over
SAEN: http://www.all-creatures.org/saen/index.html
MPI: http://www.mpiresearch.com/)

Onzekere toekomst voor de olifant in Thailand....- 2000 Olifanten aan het werk voor toeristen


Uncertain Future for Elephants in Thailand,

Scientists Say

25-07-2008 By ScienceMode


Worries over the future of Thailand’ s famous elephants have emerged following an investigation by a University of Manchester team. Professor Rosaleen Duffy and Dr Lorraine Moore from the University’ s School of Social Sciences say many problems have endured since the ending of the logging trade which employed virtually all Thai elephants in 1989.

The ban made 2,000 animals and their Mahouts - or trainers - unemployed overnight, forcing many onto the streets to beg for cash.
Though transferring to the tourism trade has improved working conditions for many elephants, their future remains under a cloud argues Professor Duffy.


Elephants with their Mahouts.
Credit: Manchester University


“Despite the move into tourism, we have found evidence that street walking persists in some areas and that can be traumatic for the animals and a nuisance for humans,” she said.
“And the almost total reliance on the tourist trade makes the Thai elephants especially vulnerable to a downturn in the market.
“If that happens more are forced onto the streets or into inappropriate activities in towns.
“The December 2004 tsunami had - at least to some extent - that effect. The rising oil prises of today are bound to affect air travel and hence tourism as well.
“The elephants are very important in Thai culture, and mahouts generally only beg on the streets with their elephants as an absolute last resort.
“It’s a sad outcome for these once proud animals and their trainers.”

A powerful symbol of the problem is provided by a video of a baby elephant used to attract people to a Flintstone themed bar in the Phuket resort - taken by Professor Duffy.
The animal is made to stand outside the bar each night to attract customers.
“This a very questionable practice as at night baby elephants will be scared by the lights,” she said.
“They shouldn’t be forced to stand on concrete for long periods of time as it will damage their feet and be extremely painful according to Dr Moore. “I also witnessed other poor treatment: for example elephants trained to stand on their heads during a show. “This is bad practice as the elephant’s head is not designed to take its body weight in this posture.
“In addition, a minority of the elephant camps do not provide proper working hours or conditions for their animals.”

However, the picture is not all bad: mistreatment of elephants was far more prevalent in the logging industry than in tourism.
According to Professor Duffy and Dr Moore, many of the elephant camps in Thailand treat their animals well.
And the 2000 elephants employed in today’ s Thai tourism industry may be used to add the declining elephant gene pool of 1000 wild elephants.

A scheme which trains captive elephants to survive in the wild is undertaken at the Thai Elephant Conservation Centre (TECC).
TECC is also experimenting with alternative schemes to generate income from elephants including elephant dung paper and elephant dung fertiliser.
A TECC project with University of Chiang Mai has found that when autistic children are allowed to interact with the elephants their condition improves.

Mae Sa elephant camp has an elephant nursery which is engaged in artificial insemination.
The Manchester team hope to repeat their research in Botswana later in the year and aim to publish advice for tourist companies and guide books working in both countries. Some southern African countries are starting to train African elephants for elephant back safaris.
Professor Duffy added: ” We hope this project will provide the impetus for travel companies and travel guide authors to provide information to their clients and readers on how and where to report cruelty to elephants.”

source: University of Manchester.

(Bron: http://sciencemode.com/)
(Bron foto: Science Mode)

Laatste nieuws over de Oostenrijkse gevangen dierenactivisten


News from the Austrian Prisoners


25-07-2008 VGT, IndyMedia UK


Last week we “celebrated” Kevin’s, Jürgen’s and Felix’s birthdays outside the prisons. These were not normal vegan birthday parties. More info (English solidarity website) http://austriasolidarity.com and http://antirep2008.tk

We played lots of loud music on a sound system and ate a piece of vegan birthday cake for each of them. The rest of the cake we froze for when they are released. The atmosphere was withdrawn and sad, inside and out. The following updates are from recent visits to the prisoners.

Jürgen insists that this grotesque miscarriage of justice will not break him. What he really treasures is receiving and reading information about the many different solidarity actions and animal protection news.

Felix appears calm and collected. He is also interested in receiving as much news as possible from outside. As the chair of the Austrian Vegan Society (VGÖ) he is extremely concerned about the next issue of the Vegan.at magazine. This is an enormous project that he normally orchestrates. Not being permitted to get on with important work is a very frustrating part of being incarcerated for Felix. Another big worry for him is the refusal of the police and prosecution to return confiscated Austrian VGÖ property, especially the membership database, even though the organisation itself is not a suspect in the investigations. Felix is alone in a cell in the same prison as Elmar.

Elmar also has his own cell. He is still dumbfounded by the ridiculousness of the situation. Only being allowed to use the prison gym twice a week, Elmar is finding the lack of sport and movement very tough to bear. He is spending a lot of time learning Turkish.

Between 6 and 7 p.m. is a time that Sabine looks forward to each day. In this hour she gets some comfort from hearing the Solidarity demos outside the Vienna prison. She is missing her human and non-human companions terribly .

Martin is down and frustrated, but holding up. The nights are the worst for him at the moment. He has lost a lot of weight due to the hunger strike. He remains on the prison hospital wing where he is allowed to train and shower alone each day.

Chris, an artist, has lost the motivation to draw or even to write his diary. These were two ways that he was managing to fill some of the long hours, but now the constant fear and worry about being separated from his family seems to be plaguing his every moment. The pain of having recently missed his daughters second birthday is unbearable for him. Apart from missing his family dreadfully and worrying about how this forced separation will affect them, Chris is also deeply concerned about how his family can financially keep their head above water until he is released and able to work again. "In my freetime I spent every spare minute with my children. Who will jump with them on the trampolin, who will build damms with them in the streams? What can possibly replace the kong walks and hiking tours that we did together? Who will be responsible when my family runs into trouble, financial or emotional and all that longterm?"

The prisoners are spread out in three different prisons. Making sure that all three prisons provide appropriate vegan food is a big concern. While some of the prisons are doing a better job than others, conditions are far from ideal in any of the jails.

The Austrian Vegan Society, with assistance from the UK based Vegan Prisoner Support Group, is in the process of nutritionally analysing prisoners food diaries to establish dietary deficiencies and trying to enter into communication with prison officials to improve the situation.

Letters Christoph http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/07/404265.html
Jan & Sabine http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/07/404257.html & http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/07/403482.html
Kevin http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/07/403547.html

Previous http://indymedia.org.uk/en/2008/06/401323.html

VGT Homepage: http://vgt.at/index_en.php

(Bron: http://www.indymedia.org.uk/)
(Bron foto: IndyMedia UK)

vrijdag 25 juli 2008

Twee jaar lang mag veehouder Hazerswoude-Rijndijk geen vee houden


Boer mag geen vee meer houden

25-07-2008 Van onze correspondent, Reformatorisch Dagblad


DEN HAAG - Een 51-jarige veehouder uit Hazerswoude-Rijndijk mag twee jaar lang geen runderen houden. De Haagse rechtbank heeft dat vrijdag bepaald.

De man werd vrijdag veroordeeld tot een werkstraf van 180 uur en een voorwaardelijke gevangenisstraf van drie maanden. De veehouder moet naar de gevangenis als hij in de proeftijd van twee jaar opnieuw runderen aanschaft.

De rechtbank heeft de man veroordeeld wegens het onthouden van medische zorg aan zijn vee, het geven van bedorven kuilgras, het niet opruimen van kadavers, het ontbreken van oormerken en diverse overtredingen van de milieuvergunning.

Volgens officier van justitie mr. R. de Rijck is het bedrijf de alleenstaande veehouder boven het hoofd gegroeid en verwaarloost de man zijn veestapel in alle opzichten.
De veehouder is zijn 165 runderen al kwijt. Alle dieren zijn vorig jaar door het openbaar ministerie in beslag genomen en verkocht.

Justitie wilde dat de opbrengst van 61.000 euro naar de staat gaat, maar de rechtbank bepaalde dat de man het geld krijgt.

(Bron: http://www.refdag.nl/)

Man in deelstaat Uttar Pradesh (India) probeerde tijgerhuid te verkopen


Tiger, gazelle skins seized in Uttar Pradesh

25-07-2008 SmasHits, India


Lucknow, July 25 (IANS) Four skins of wild animals, including one of a tiger and two gazelles, were seized Friday from a man who wanted to sell them here, a police official said Friday. The skins of the wild animals were brought from the Manikpur-Chitrakoot jungles, located on the Uttar Pradesh-Madhya Pradesh border.

'Virendra Singh said that he and his partner, who managed to escape during our raid, bought the skins from tribals living in the jungle,' Paresh Pandey, superintendent of police (east), told IANS.
The police seized one tiger skin, one chital (deer) skin and two skins of chinkara (gazelle) from Virender.

'We have also recovered a skull and a skin of an unidentified animal and they are being sent to the forest department officials for identification,' Pandey added.

The police have collected information about other people involved in the illegal trade, he said.

(Bron: http://news.smashits.com/)

Huisvesting honden van illegale hondenhandelaar in Mariahout onder de maat


Illegale handel in honden in Mariahout

25-07-2008 Eindhovens Dagblad


MARIAHOUT - Een inwoner van Mariahout is donderdag bekeurd omdat hij illegaal in honden zou handelen. Inspecteurs van de landelijke inspectiedienst van de Dierenbescherming troffen in de fokschuur in Mariahout 8 hondenverblijven waarin 15 fokteven en 23 pups waren ondergebracht, allen van het ras retriever labrador.

De handelaar bood onder andere via advertenties op Marktplaats pups zonder stamboom aan voor bedragen tussen de 150 en 200 euro. De man had geen vergunning voor de handel. Hij liep tegen de lamp nadat een koper van een pup de Dierenbescherming had ingeseind.

De huisvesting van de honden was onder de maat. De Mariahoutenaar heeft drie weken de tijd gekregen om de huisvesting van de dieren te verbeteren.

(Bron: http://www.ed.nl/)

Veehouder Achterhoek weer in de fout - Verwaarloosde koeien inbeslaggenomen - Ook dode en zieke dieren aangetroffen


AID neemt verwaarloosde koeien in beslag

25-07-2008 De Telegraaf


DEN HAAG - De Algemene Inspectiedienst (AID) heeft bij een veehouder in de Achterhoek 26 verwaarloosde runderen in beslag genomen. Dat heeft de dienst vrijdag laten weten.

De veehouder heeft eerder al twee keer een boete en een keer een waarschuwing gekregen van de AID voor het verwaarlozen van zijn dieren. Een paar weken geleden hadden de AID en een dierenarts van de VWA samen met de veehouder een verbeterplan opgesteld.

Maar bij een hercontrole vrijdag bleek dat er in plaats van verbetering sprake was van verslechtering. Daarop heeft de AID 24 volwassen koeien en twee kalfjes in beslag genomen. De dieren waren sterk vermagerd. Ook werden een dood dier en drie zieke dieren aangetroffen. De drie zieke beesten zijn afgemaakt.

(Bron: http://www.telegraaf.nl/)

In India zijn mensen steeds vaker prooi voor dieren als krokodil en tijger - Vrouw door krokodil opgepeuzeld in Sunderbans


Woman chewed up by crocodile in Sunderbans

25-07-2008 MeriNews, India


With man-animal conflict in Sunderbans, one of the largest mangrove forests in the world, increasingly coming to the fore, a woman was chewed up by a crocodile. There have been recent instances of tigers lifting and mauling villagers.

In a ghastly incident, which has left villagers traumatised, a crocodile dragged Durgarani Khatua, a 42-year-old woman, into a canal. The reptile killed the woman, desperately trying to free herself from the giant jaws and chewed off huge portions of her body in the Sunderbans on Thursday. This is the first incident of a crocodile eating a human in the Sunderbans in recent memory.

Hearing her cries for help Durgarani's husband rushed to her aid as soon as the reptile grabbed her. But the crocodile swiftly pulled her under the water giving little time to rescue her.

Tigers straying into kitchens of villagers and crocodiles and gharials drifting into sweet water ponds in the periphery of the Sunderbans are not uncommon. On earlier occasions, villagers managed to spot the reptiles and tigers in time and informed forest officials who trapped the intruders with nets and ropes and carried them off in launches to release them in the core area or the crocodile sanctuary in the Sunderbans.

However, mauling by a crocodile is not a common incident in the Sunderbans. Earlier this year, a similar incident occurred in Kerala when a 57 year old woman was caught by a crocodile in the Neyyar dam reservoir area and dragged around for four and a half hours.
There have been several incidents of tiger attacks too. A boy was carried away by a tiger recently and a number of villagers severely mauled in the Sunderban fringes.

With habitats being squeezed out by rising population, the man-animal conflict is coming to the fore. Crocodiles and tigers in the Sunderbans have been straying rather frequently into populated areas of one of the largest mangrove forests in the world crisscrossed with myriad waterways and dotted with virgin islands, where trees have roots go deep down into the muddy rivers.

With increasing population, intrusion into forest areas by humans is becoming frequent too. Forest produce remains the only means of livelihood for many. Locals fish in the Matla River and its tributaries, collect honey from the dense jungle which also provides firewood. During these activities people often stray into core areas of the reserved forest that are strictly off limits for humans, and invite fatal attacks by wild animals. In the latest incident of mauling in the Sunderbans the police of Basanti have registered a case against the victim for actually trespassing into the core area of the Reserve Forest.

“Life has turned into a nightmare for us. Every other day, someone is killed either by a tiger or a crocodile,” Sukumar Sardar, a former panchayat president was quoted as telling reporters.
The villagers complained to reporters that they were totally at the mercy of wild animals and demanded that the forest department should come with a plan to protect villagers.

And who shall protect the animals? Despite large parts of the Sunderbans being a reserved forest area, where tiger conservation and protection are the key issues, forest and wildlife officials have so far failed to stop villagers from straying into the jungles and unable to prevent them from killing tigers that stray into villages foraying for goats and cattle. It is only on a small number of occasions that forest and wildlife authorities have managed to tranquilise tigers and put the big cats back to where they belong.

(Bron: http://www.merinews.com)/
(Bron foto's: archief Kraaijer)

In 2008 mogen geen ganzen in Noord-Holland worden gedood


Doden ganzen Noord-Holland helemaal van de baan

25-07-2008 De Telegraaf


HAARLEM - Het blijft onmogelijk dit jaar in Noord-Holland ganzen te doden. De provincie heeft een ontheffing, die de voorzieningenrechter begin juni al schorste, ingetrokken. Dat heeft de provincie vrijdag bekendgemaakt.

De ontheffing betrof het afschieten, vangen of vergassen van 12.000 grauwe ganzen en van brandganzen en kolganzen in Noord-Holland in de periode 1 april tot en met 1 oktober 2008. Volgens de provincie richten de ganzen schade aan de natuur en de landbouw aan. „Dat probleem blijft nu bestaan en wordt mogelijk ook groter”, aldus een woordvoerder van de provincie.

De Faunabescherming heeft een bezwaarschrift ingediend tegen de ontheffing. Als de provincie over dit bezwaarschrift zou beslissen, zou de schorsing nog zes weken van kracht blijven. De provincie besloot de ontheffing in te trekken, omdat het hierdoor onmogelijk werd al die ganzen af te schieten, te vangen of te vergassen.

Volgend jaar gaat de provincie het opnieuw proberen. Op dit moment stelt de Faunabeheereenheid Noord-Holland een nieuw Faunabeheerplan op, op basis waarvan de eenheid volgend jaar een nieuwe ontheffing kan aanvragen. „We gaan ervan uit dat als er dan een bezwaar wordt ingediend, de rechter wel goedkeuring verleent aan de ontheffing.”

De ingetrokken ontheffing staat overigens los van de ontheffingen voor het doden van ganzen op Texel en het bestrijden van vogels in een straal van tien kilometer rond Schiphol. De ontheffingen hiervoor hebben de juridische procedures wel doorstaan.

(Bron: http://www.telegraaf.nl/)

Japanners gebruiken acupunctuur om smaak tonijn te verbeteren


Acupuncture used to improve flavour of tuna

for sushi

25-07-200 Leo Lewis, The Times, UK


Their prized terriers are given samba-dancing lessons, their choicest beef herds are treated to daily massages and now, in an effort to produce the most delicious sushi in the world, Japanese tuna are to be given acupuncture.

The company in Osaka that patented the technique claimed that calm tuna thrashed about less in their death throes. Once the fish have received the brief treatment the blood becomes purer and the flesh has a better flavour, Toshiro Urabe, the president of the Osakana Planning Company, said.

The tuna do not need to be dosed with chemicals to keep them tasting fresh during transportation.
The acupuncture can be used on bream and the company plans to begin testing it on salmon.
“With their costs rising every day, Japanese fishermen cannot compete in these markets any more,” Mr Urabe said. “This is about giving them the chance to give the fish they catch added value.”

The treatment was exhibited at the International Japan Seafood Show but where the needles are inserted remains a secret.

Many of the exhibitors and buyers at the show said that a boom in the demand for sushi was pushing their businesses towards crisis. Japan, which used to be able to supply its own seafood, now has to import fish. The entire Japanese fishing fleet also went on strike last week over fuel prices.

(Bron: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/)

Vossen, konijnen en herten wreed afgeslacht in regio Brampton, Engeland


Wildlife brutally slaughtered

25-07-2008 By Linzi Watson, The Cumberland News, UK


DEAD foxes, rabbits and deer have been found in fields around Brampton prompting fears that poachers are brutally killing animals. Parish councillor Ian Pennington believes Brampton’s wildlife is being “decimated” after he found two fox cubs slaughtered on a public path.

He said he had also received reports from concerned animal lovers about dead rabbits, foxes and deer found in woodland and fields nearby.
“There has been a spate of killings and there are a lot of dead animals lying around,” he said.
“It is very concerning.
“I was approached by a woman who found deer parts in a bin bag at the Ridgewood. I have also been told about rabbits that have been killed and left to rot.”

Mr Pennington believes “people with rifles are just decimating local wildlife” and said it was the worst he had seen in 40 years living in the area. “I was watching two little fox cubs playing near the old church at the Irving,” he added.
“They were barking and chasing each other around.
“Then I came across these two dead cubs on the bridle path, near the plantation wood. Someone had spiked one of their little bodies on a fence. It is disgusting.

A spokeswoman for the RSPCA in Cumbria, Leanne Goacher, said that the law surrounding the shooting of wildlife is very complex but added that animals should not be allowed to suffer unnecessarily.
“Wildlife is not automatically covered by the Animal Welfare Act 2006 but there are certain circumstances where they may become a protected animal, for example if they are in the control of a person,” she said.
“There is legislation, the Wildlife and Countryside Act, which protects some species from being taken or killed, but that list doesn't include foxes, rabbits or deer, which are considered to be pest species.”

The latest incident comes just days after a bag of rotting rabbits with their stomachs slit were discovered on a Carlisle estate. The bin bag with its grisly contents was found lying on a pavement in Creighton Avenue, Raffles, on Tuesday.

Two weeks ago, more than 40 dead animals were found scattered across a 10-metre stretch in a field near Maryport. Two days before that two dogs were found dead in separate incidents in Carlisle. And the previous day, a cat was found shot dead in a shed near Penrith.

Anyone with information about animal cruelty is asked to contact the RSPCA on 0300 1234 999.

(Bron: http://www.cumberland-news.co.uk/)
(Bron foto dode vosjes: Cumberland News / Bron foto Google Earth: archief Kraaijer)

Wilde zwijnen in omgeving Helmond mogelijk uit de Groote Peel


Wilde zwijnen nabij stad

25-07-2008 door Johan Otten, Eindhovens Dagblad


HELMOND - Waar ze vandaan komen is niet duidelijk, maar ook in de buurt van Helmond zijn de afgelopen weken wilde zwijnen gesignaleerd. De dieren – mogelijk gaat het slechts om één zwijn, dat is niet helemaal duidelijk – zijn gezien in het bosgebied ten westen van Brouwhuis, aan de andere kant van de N279.

Het is niet zeker dat het om zwijnen gaat die afkomstig zijn uit de Groote Peel, maar onmogelijk is het niet. Ze moeten dan de snelweg A67 gepasseerd zijn, maar dat is voor de dieren geen probleem. Ze laten zich door zo'n barrière niet weerhouden, zegt boswachter Piet Zegers. "Het zijn geen egels die er een tijd over doen voor ze aan de overkant zijn. En ze zijn 's nachts actief, dan zit er niet zo veel verkeer op de weg."

Wilde zwijnen hebben in Nederland erkende leefgebieden op de Veluwe en in natuurpark de Meinweg bij Roermond. Vanuit Limburg, en noordelijker ook vanuit Duitsland, komen ze in omgevingen waar hun aanwezigheid niet wordt getolereerd. Er is vrees voor het overbrengen van varkensziekten en de zwijnen kunnen op landbouwgrond behoorlijke schade aanrichten.

"Het zijn geen reeën, die pakken het subtieler aan. Een varken gaat meteen flink te keer", zegt Zegers. Ook in het verkeer vormen zwijnen door hun robuuste postuur een groter risico. "Je hebt er van zestig kilo, maar ook van honderd. Als je daar met tachtig kilometer per uur tegenaan rijdt, is de schade fors."

Wildbeheereenheden mogen de wilde zwijnen bejagen, behalve in natuurgebieden. Wat de Groote Peel betreft is onder voorwaarden een uitzondering gemaakt voor de randzones die direct aan landbouwgrond grenzen. Volgens de boswachter zitten in de Groote Peel geen grote aantallen zwijnen. "Wie zegt dat het er vijftig zijn, overdrijft." Zelf houdt hij het eerder op tussen de tien en twintig. Sinds juli vorig jaar zijn er tien à vijftien afgeschoten. Vermoedelijk zijn dieren vanuit de Groote Peel ook doorgetrokken naar de buurt van Neerkant en Helenaveen. Het is overigens moeilijk om ze waar te nemen, want het zijn schuwe beesten.

Bij Cranendonck zitten zwijnen die veel tammer zijn en makkelijker kunnen worden geobserveerd. Ze zijn waarschijnlijk ontsnapt bij hobbyhouders. Iets dergelijks is mogelijk ook aan de hand in Brouwhuis.

(Bron: http://www.ed.nl/)

Kangoeroe doodgeslagen door man in Templestowe Park, Australië - Mensen leggen bloemen op plek waar kangoeroe werd gedood...


Man punches kangaroo to death in Templestowe

park

25-07-2008 Danielle Crowe, Manningham Leader, Australia


A MAN killed a kangaroo that he said attacked him and his dog at Westerfolds Park, Templestowe.
Gallery: locals lay flowers on the kangaroo's body(warning, viewer discretion is advised)


The dead kangaroo. Picture: Martin Reddy.

The man told police his dog escaped from his car about 10pm on Tuesday and ran towards a mob of kangaroos, which started to attack the dog.
He said when he tried to rescue his pet staffie, one of the kangaroos turned on him and he was forced to defend himself and punched the kangaroo.

After hearing a commotion, neighbours phoned Doncaster police.
The man told radio station 3AW that he suffered a gash to his face and scratches and was treated in hospital.
``It was pretty scary,'' he told the radio station.
The man said he repeatedly punched the kangaroo until it died.
``I didn’t want it to die – I love wildlife, but I had no choice.’’

Some neighbours shocked by the incident laid flowers on the dead kangaroo.
Westerfolds Park ranger Rick Young told the Leader people to respect native wildlife and keep a safe distance from the animals.
Police are investigating the incident.

(Bron: http://www.manninghamleader.com.au/)
(Bron foto: Manningham Leader)

Iguana's (groene leguanen) op Cayman Eilanden voorzien van zendertjes - Brits/Amerikaans wetenschappelijk onderzoek van iguana's


Iguanas being tagged

25-07-2008 Cayman Net News, The Cayman Islands


Four individuals are in Little Cayman tagging and tracking iguanas and looking for their eggs. Two from the United States and two from England are engaged in the research. They are in Little Cayman in conjunction with the Department of Environment and the Durrel & Wildlife Conservations Trust from the United Kingdom.

They were here last year October, November and December and are back on island since June. This segment of their research will conclude early August and they will return to their respective homeland.

A tagged iguana

This tagging and tracking of iguanas and search for their eggs are based on population growth and development of the species.

The Cayman Islands Government is hoping that this will help in the conservation process of the species for many years to come. The eggs are dug up and a data log is implanted with them to test the humidity, egg size and how long it takes for them to hatch. The tagging aids in tracking the iguanas year long and acquiring geographic locations of the patterns of the animals in where and how they will lay their eggs.

A comparison of the iguanas’ behavior will be made with that of soldier crabs, to specify whether eggs are laid by the sea or within land. They are tagged with a tracking device and the men from the Durell Wildlife Conservation Trust have an equipment comprising of an antennae and receiver to locate the animals across the islands. Most of the tracking is conducted around the Mahogany Bay area where the feeding of the iguanas is a popular spot for visitors and locals alike.

(Bron: http://www.caymannetnews.com/)
(Bron foto: Cayman Net News)

Oproep OIPA: Help de dieren in laboratoria in de EU


Help animals in EU laboratories

25-07-2008 OIPA, International Organization for Animal Protection, Milan, Italy


In 1986 the Council adopted Directive 86/609/EEC on the protection of animals used for experimental and other scientific purposes. The Directive seeks to improve the controls on the use of laboratory animals, sets minimum standards for housing and care as well as for the training of personnel handling animals and supervising the experiments.

It also aims at reducing the numbers of animals used for experiments by requiring that an animal experiment should not be performed when an alternative method exists, and by encouraging the development and validation of alternative methods to replace animal methods. The latter served as the basis for the Commission to set up ECVAM, the European Centre for the Validation of Alternative Methods, in 1991.

The wording of the Directive follows international Conventions. Therefore, a significant number of its provisions are open to interpretation, and the style of some provisions is more political rather than regulatory in nature. The Directive does also not include ethical review processes or compulsory authorisation of experiments. Furthermore, the Directive does not explicitly mention the concept of the 3Rs - Reduction, Refinement and Replacement (Russel and Burch 1959), which is a generally recognised approach to minimise the use of laboratory animals.

In recent years, it has become increasingly apparent that the Directive needs to be revised in order to promote improvements in the welfare of laboratory animals and to further foster the development of alternative methods. Since 1986 important progress has been made in science and new techniques have become available, such as use of transgenic animals, xenotransplantation and cloning. These require specific attention, which the current Directive does not provide for.

Finally, the EU Treaty now formally recognises the welfare requirements of animals. The protocol on protection and welfare of animals, annexed to the Treaty of Amsterdam, provides that "In formulating and implementing the Community's agriculture, transport, internal market and research policies, the Community and the Member States shall pay full regard to the welfare requirements of animals, while respecting the legislative or administrative provisions and customs of the Member States relating in particular to religious rites, cultural traditions and regional heritage".

More than 12 million animals die each year in research and testing laboratories across the European Union (source: Fifth Report on the Statistics on the Number of Animals used for Experimental and other Scientific Purposes in the Member States of the European Union). This is because the 20-year-old EU animal experiments directive is out of date.

In 2007 the Commission adopted Recommendation 2007/526/EC on revised guidelines for the accommodation and care of animals used for experimental and other scientific purposes. The Recommendation, which was adopted on 18 June 2007, will align EU legislation with the revised Council of Europe guidelines (Appendix A of Convention ETS 123), on accommodation and care of laboratory animals.

This Recommendation reflects the current best practice and the latest scientific knowledge on good husbandry and care of experimental animals. It assists Member States in the implementation of Article 5 of Directive 86/609/EEC on the protection of animals used for experimental and other scientific purposes.

Now, the EU Commissioner for Research, Janez Potocnik doesn’t want support a ban on the use of great apes in experiments. We need a comprehensive revision of Directive 86/609EEC which is by now out of date since it was adopted more than 20 years ago. The objective is also to ensure that the Three Rs principle – Replacement, Reduction and Refinement – is rigorously applied throughout all animal breeding, housing and use for scientific purposes.

The EU Commissioner responsible for Environment, in the SPEECH/08/349, said “that given the current state of scientific knowledge, the use of a limited number of other species of non-human primates is still unavoidable for a number of vital research programmes. This is especially true of research on severe global diseases. It would therefore be premature to set a timetable with fixed deadlines to phase out all use of non-human primates”.

Animals in laboratories are shocked, infected, burned, poisoned, shot, surgically mutilated and subjected to many other types of torture in order to test all sorts of products. Diseases that are artificially induced in animals in a laboratory are never identical to those that occur naturally in human beings. And because animal species differ from one another in many biologically significant ways, it becomes even more unlikely that animal research will yield results that will be correctly interpreted and applied to the human condition in a meaningful way.Please, send a mail and ask the Commissioner Potocnik to support the new legislation.

Vivisection is scientific fraud. Animal experimentation does not make sense.

SEND THIS PROTEST LETTER!

(Bron: http://www.oipa.org/)
(Bron foto's: archief Kraaijer)

donderdag 24 juli 2008

Verontwaardiging in Canada over Europees voorstel tot importverbod zeehondproducten


Cdn. sealing industry in doubt after EU proposes

to ban seal products

24-07-2008 Posted By Tara Brautigam, The Canadian Press, Herald Leader, Canada


ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — The future of Canada’s commercial harp seal hunt, a centuries-old industry and way of life for several thousand East Coast fishermen, was plunged into uncertainty Wednesday after the European Union proposed a partial ban on seal products.

The legislation, if approved, would prohibit the EU from importing seal products from countries that ‘‘practise cruel hunting methods’’ — wording that critics say is fraught with ambiguity.
For weeks, the sealing industry — most of which is based in Newfoundland — had been bracing to learn details of the proposal from EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas.

An import ban could deliver a devastating blow to Atlantic Canadian fishermen who rely on the annual hunt as a source of income, but the measure must first win approval from the EU’s 27 member states.
The ban would shut down critical shipment points for the sealing industry, including Holland and Germany.

Canada’s largest markets for seal products, such as Russia, China and Norway, are outside the EU. But sealing industry experts fear a ban would curb the demand for sealskins from the fashion industry and disrupt shipping routes.

‘‘It will be interesting to see now if this is the final end, to see what kind of a stand that Ottawa takes on our behalf, which I’m pretty well sure won’t be very harsh,’’ said Jack Troake, who has hunted seals off the coast of Twillingate, N.L., since 1951.

Dimas’s move comes despite lobbying efforts from the Canadian and Newfoundland and Labrador governments, and after intense pressure from animal welfare organizations.
Sheryl Fink, a Canadian researcher with the International Fund for Animal Welfare, was cautiously optimistic about the proposal.
‘‘The European Commission has shown that they are concerned about animal welfare and they’ve shown that they’re listening to their citizens,’’ she said in an interview from Guelph, Ont.
‘‘Unfortunately, the Canadian government isn’t doing the same thing — listening to Canadians who also are concerned about animal welfare and want to see an end to the seal hunt.’’

Still, Fink said the proposal doesn’t go far enough because it could allow for a commercial hunt if the EU determines the hunt is humane. Fink said this should not be open for debate because the hunt is simply a cruel slaughter.
Sealers vigorously dispute that claim. They say the hunt is humane, sustainable and a critical source of their annual income, particularly in remote coastal communities where there is little else to do in the winter.

‘‘We do it because it’s part of our culture and we try to survive on this rock,’’ Troake said.
The seal hunt, arguably the most politically and emotionally charged issue in Newfoundland and Labrador, did not always arouse such public interest.
Its roots run deep in the province, where the seal was once second only to cod as the most economically valuable species.

The EU’s proposed legislation would allow the import of seal products from countries that can guarantee their hunting practices are ‘‘consistent with high animal-welfare standards’’ and that the animals are killed swiftly without undue suffering. Special exemptions would also be allowed for Canada’s Inuit community.

Dimas’s proposal recommends a certificate and labels be provided by countries exporting seal products, making clear that seal products they trade meet strict EU conditions.
But it remains unclear what constitutes a humane killing method.
‘‘It’s very difficult to define what is humane,’’ Dimas told a news conference in Brussels, Belgium.
He said that question may be resolved by an independent authority.
Rob Cahill, executive director with the Canadian Fur Institute, said the lack of a definition is a glaring flaw in the legislation.
‘‘We certainly hope that Fisheries and Oceans or Foreign Affairs ... will pay very close attention to this and be prepared to act very strongly if we find that the European Union is not acting honourably,’’ Cahill said.

Federal Fisheries Minister Loyola Hearn was unavailable for comment, but in a statement he warned EU politicians not to ‘‘bow to misinformation and emotional rhetoric.’’
‘‘Our position remains that any ban on a humanely conducted hunt, such as Canada’s, is without cause,’’ he said.
Hearn said the federal government will review how the proposed legislation would apply to Canada.

Newfoundland’s acting fisheries minister, Trevor Taylor, called on Hearn to file a formal complaint to the World Trade Organization.
‘‘It’s time for the Canadian government to put its money where its mouth is,’’ Taylor said.
‘‘The people who are promoting this ban have lost contact with the harvest of animals. They forget where their beef comes from, they forget where their sheep come from, they forget where their orange duck comes from when they’re eating in their fancy restaurants.’’

news.dailygraphic@shawcable.com

(Bron: http://www.cpheraldleader.com/)
(Bron foto's: archief Kraaijer)

Tien honden in Best gedood door gif.....


Honden vergiftigd in Best

24-07-2008 Omroep Brabant


BEST - In Best zijn de afgelopen dagen tien honden vergiftigd. Twee honden zijn overleden. Het gebeurde bij het hondentoilet aan de Karel Doormanlaan.

De politie waarschuwt mensen die daar hun hond uitlaten om alert te zijn op vergif. Dat kan bijvoorbeeld in iets eetbaars zitten dat op de grond ligt. Honden die zijn vergiftigd gaan braken en krijgen diarree. Dankzij snel ingrijpen van een dierenarts hebben acht honden het vergif overleefd.

(Bron: http://www.omroepbrabant.nl/)

Aantal dierproeven voor cosmetica in Europa neemt af


Binnen EU minder dierproeven voor cosmetica!

24-07-2008 Proefdiervrij


Uit een rapport van de Europeese Unie blijkt dat er in 2005 en 2006 respectievelijk 2276 en 1329 dieren (muizen, ratten, cavia’s en konijnen) gebruikt zijn om ingrediënten voor cosmetica te testen.

Het verslag gaat in op de ontwikkeling, de validering en de wettelijke erkenning van alternatieve methoden ter vervanging van dierproeven op het gebied van cosmetica. Voor dit verslag hebben 26 lidstaten informatie ingediend.

In Nederland is het sinds 1997 verboden om dierproeven voor cosmetica te doen. De afgelopen jaren vonden de dierproeven plaats in Roemenië en Frankrijk. Ondanks diverse onderzoeken heeft Portugal geen gegevens voor dit verslag gegeven. Zweden ook niet, dit omdat er in dit land geen rechtsgrondslag is om gegevens hierover aan bedrijven te vragen. Het is dus moeilijk op deze manier een totaalbeeld te hebben van het aantal proeven. Wel staat vast dat het aantal flink is gedaald, in 2004 waren nog 8998 dieren het slachtoffer.

Alternatieven
Er moeten 13 testen worden uitgevoerd voor een nieuw cosmetica-ingrediënt. Voor 10 van de 13 testen moetenalternatieven testmethoden worden ontwikkeld, vanwege het Europese test- en handelsverbod dat in 2013 van kracht gaat. Dan mag cosmetica die getest is op dieren niet meer in Europa verhandeld worden. Er zijn inmiddels voor vier van de tien testen alternatieve testmethoden die door de commissie zijn geaccepteerd. Het is belangrijk dat dit aantal snel uitbreid voordat het handelsverbod ingaat. Er gaan geruchten dat dit streven moeilijk haalbaar zal zijn…

Proefdiervrij maakt zich hard, want het is tijd voor Proefdiervrije technieken!
Meer informatie over dierproeven voor cosmetica staan in het 'cosmeticadossier' op deze site. Of lees het hele rapport over de ontwikkeling van alternatieve methoden van de Europese commissie.

(Bron: http://www.proefdiervrij.nl/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)

Wetenschappers zoeken wegen om de noordkaper te behoeden voor botsingen met schepen bij Nova Scotia


Saving whales from deadly ship collisions

24-07-2008 By Marsha Walton CNN


(CNN) -- Drive past a car accident, everybody slows down to look. Tell a toddler, "Don't touch that," and of course he or she does. Well, North Atlantic right whales are the same way. Marine scientists say several right whales are struck and killed each year by commercial ships passing through their feeding grounds.

But when researchers blasted warning noises from ships to scare the whales away, the lumbering giants instead swam to the surface to see what was going on -- a response that put them in greater danger. Scientists found the animals are either so used to loud sounds, or so curious about them, that the noises apparently do the opposite of warning them.

"It's like living beside a train track. After a while you stop hearing the trains go by," said Angelia Vanderlaan, a doctoral candidate in oceanography at Dalhousie University in Nova Scotia. Since the whales were not budging, Vanderlaan and other marine mammal experts designed a plan to encourage cargo ships to take a short detour around them during certain months of the year.


A U.S. Coast Guard ship assists in a 2005 attempt
to disentangle a right whale from fishing gear.

Right whales, which can grow to 70 tons, were hunted to the brink of extinction until killing them was outlawed in 1935. Whaling crews dubbed them the "right" whales to kill because they moved slowly and stayed close to the surface. Today, ship strikes and entanglement in fishing gear are the biggest threats to the animal. See a photo gallery of right whales »

Because only about 350 right whales remain in the world, scientists have a pretty good idea where they hang out. In the summer, one primary feeding and socializing grounds is a 1,000-square-nautical-mile region known as the Roseway Basin, just south of Barrington, Nova Scotia. See a map of the whale feeding area »

Last year, the International Maritime Organization, the U.N. body that regulates shipping activities, adopted Canada's proposal that the Roseway Bay be designated an "Area to Be Avoided," or ATBA.
The plan took effect June 1, and each year from June through December -- when the whales aren't in warmer southern waters -- that area is to be skirted by ships 300 tons and larger. While it's a voluntary measure, some shipping companies already have ordered their vessels to modify their routes to bypass the safe zone.

Captain L.C. Chan, assistant general manager in the fleet management department of the Orient Overseas Container Line in Hong Kong, responded to CNN by e-mail on the impact of the plan to its ships in the region.
"The new 'Area to Be Avoided' increases the steaming distance between Halifax [Nova Scotia] and New York by 3-5 nautical miles," Chan said. "The impact of this additional distance over the complete voyage is negligible, as both the increased steaming time and bunker [fuel] consumption is minimal."
Vanderlaan estimates the average detour would only add about 8.6 minutes to a 16-hour voyage.

Navigation charts, satellite messages and an international automated communications service known as NAVTEX all have been used to alert shipping companies of the new safe zone for these whales. But nothing beats old-fashioned human observers.

"The two-man bridge team has one primary duty during the navigational watch -- to maintain a safe lookout at all times. That includes keeping a watch for whales that might be on a collision course with the ship," responded Chan. Managers for the Hong Kong container line report all their ships sailing through the area complied with the ATBA during its first month.

While the ATBA is a voluntary plan, the Dalhousie scientists can monitor on their computers which ships are complying and which ones are ignoring the zone. Through technology called the Automatic Identification System, ocean vessels transmit their speed, direction and type of ship every three seconds. The telecommunications company Bell Aliant donated and installed special equipment on cell towers near Cape Sable Island to help the researchers track activity in the ATBA.

That tracking has provided some hopeful results to the Dalhousie team. The researchers have some preliminary analyses of the first month of the safe zone. Their study is called the Vessel Avoidance & Conservation Area Transit Experiment, known as VACATE.
In monitoring ships that usually pass through the ATBA, Dalhousie researchers noted that 52 ships avoided the area in June, while 35 still traveled through it. Vanderlaan said it's encouraging that some vessels passed through the ATBA on one leg of their voyage but avoided the area on their return.

"Subsequent to 31 May 2008, we have very clear evidence that several vessels that used to transit the ATBA are now voluntarily avoiding the area. This is a very good sign," said Dalhousie oceanography professor Christopher Taggart.

The safe zone is not the first time commerce and science have worked together to protect the right whale. In 2003, after consultations with scientists, commercial shipping companies and government regulators, the International Maritime Organization shifted shipping lanes in the Bay of Fundy. The earlier routes had passed through a major right whale feeding and breeding grounds.

"It [the Bay of Fundy effort] has been a success story. It has reduced the risk by about 90 percent," said Dr. Moira Brown, senior scientist at the Canadian Whale Institute and the New England Aquarium's Edgerton Research Laboratory.
She said the re-routed shipping lanes are considered one of the most important marine mammal protection measures in Canada.
"And there's been an unanticipated benefit," Brown said. "Mariner awareness about this whale species is huge."

(Bron: http://edition.cnn.com/)
(Bron foto: CNN)

Jeugd in Urk mishandelt uit verveling eenden in wijk Het Ruim....


Urker jeugd mishandelt eendenfamilie

24-07-2008 Reformatorisch Dagblad


URK (ANP) – Urker jongeren die vissen in de wijk Het Ruim, mishandelen regelmatig een eendenfamilie die daar woont. De Dierenopvang Urk heeft daarom aan de gemeente toestemming gevraagd om de dertig beesten uit de vijver te evacueren. Dat heeft Anneke Ras van de Dierenopvang donderdag gemeld.

De jongeren bekogelen de gevederde dieren regelmatig met stenen, rijden ze met de fiets aan, schoppen ze, wikkelen ze in visdraad en voeren ze brood met daarin vishaken verstopt. De eenden hebben het zwaar te verduren, vertelt Ras. „Ik heb al heel wat dieren daar gewond vandaan gehaald".

Wat haar betreft is de maat vol. „Ik snap niet wat er in die jeugd is gevaren, dat ze zulke dingen doen". Vooral met mooi weer slaan de baldadige jongeren toe. „Dan vervelen ze zich of zo".
Als de Dierenopvang toestemming krijgt, wil Ras vrijdag beginnen met de verhuizing van de eendenfamilie.

(Bron: http://www.refdag.nl/)
(Bron foto: Reformatorisch Dagblad)

Veel afwijkingen bij gekloonde dieren


Veel dierenleed bij klonen

24-07-2008 Trouw


Gekloonde dieren hebben veel afwijkingen. Een aanzienlijk deel overleeft de eerste zes maanden niet. Dat stelde een EU-agentschap donderdag na een onderzoek naar het dierenwelzijn van gekloonde dieren.

Bij gekloonde runderen en varkens sterft 40 procent in het eerste halfjaar. Bij normaal geboren dieren is dat 10 procent, aldus professor Vittorio Silano van het EU-agentschap EFSA voor veilige voeding.

Het kantoor heeft geen indicatie dat melk en vlees van gekloonde dieren riskanter zijn dan melk en vlees van gewone dieren. „Maar die conclusie is gebaseerd op de veronderstelling dat melk en vlees afkomstig is van gezonde gekloonde dieren”, aldus het agentschap.

De EU gebruikt gekloonde dieren alleen voor onderzoek. De producten liggen niet in de winkel.

(Bron: http://www.trouw.nl/)

Veewagen met 560 biggen in Voorthuizen van de weg....


Veewagen met biggen van de weg geraakt

24-07-2008 De Stentor


VOORTHUIZEN (ANP) – In de Gelderse gemeente Voorthuizen is donderdag een veewagen met 560 biggen van de weg geraakt en tegen een paal gebotst. Politie en brandweer hebben uren nodig gehad alle ontsnapte dieren weer te vangen.

Het ongeluk gebeurde op de kruising Blotekamperweg/Brugveenseweg, maakte de politie bekend. De chauffeur van de vrachtwagen kwam met de schrik vrij.
Een deel van de biggen in de wagen kwam om, maar een groter deel ontsnapte. De beesten zijn afgevoerd, aldus de politie.
De rondlopende dieren leverden weinig hinder op. Het ongeval had plaats op een rustige plattelandsweg. Rond vier uur kon het verkeer de weg weer gebruiken.

(Bron: http://www.destentor.nl/)
(Bron foto's: Reformatorisch Dagblad)

Alle bewoners dorp bij Indonesisch natuurpark West Lampung moeten verhuizen - Twee Sumatraanse tijgers vrijgelaten voorzien van GPS


Tigers' release has locals packing up and moving

24-07-2008 Oyos Saroso H.N., The Jakarta Post, Bandarlampung, Indonesia


Villagers near a West Lampung national park have been living in fear since two tigers were released into the park Monday, and now their regent is urging the government to help relocate them.

West Lampung Regent Mukhlis Basri called on the Forestry Ministry on Wednesday to immediately resettle 164 families -- about 500 people -- from a village near a national park where two male Sumatran tigers were released back into the wild.

According to the regent, the Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA), which represented the ministry in releasing the wild animals, should take responsibility for the villagers' safety.
Villagers have been living in fear even though the tigers are fitted with a global positioning system (GPS) device, he said.

Pangekahan village, in Way Haru subdistrict, Bengkunat Belimbing district, borders part of the Kerinci Seblat National Park.
As of Wednesday, the ministry had yet to give approval for the villagers' relocation to adjacent Sumber Rejo district.

"I have talked to the minister directly and have also sent a letter asking for the relocation, but so far no response has been given," Mukhlis said.
He said the tigers' ability to travel as far as 5 kilometers per day meant they could soon reach the village.
The park comes under the regent's jurisdiction, but the minister has the authority to give permits for the conservation site.
"I'm glad that the conservation area was built there, but please, think about the safety of my people also," he said, stating the villagers were legal residents.

Sumber Rejo, which is about 50 kilometers from the national park, is believed to be safer to live in than Way Haru.

The two tigers, named Pangeran, 9, and Agam, 4, were released Monday by a team from the Safari Park Indonesia in Bogor, Our Tiger Forum, the South Bukit Barisan National Park, the Zoological Society of London and Artha Graha Peduli.

The tigers were released after one month of treatment at Tambling (Tampang and Belimbing) Wildlife Nature Conservation. Three other tigers in the conservation area are awaiting immediate release.

The facility, which belongs to businessman Tommy Winata, was built in 2003 on a 100-hectare plot of land in Belimbing, inside the national park.
Tommy reportedly spends Rp 500 million a month on wildlife conservation.
Apart from the five tigers brought from Aceh, the South Bukit Barisan National Park is reported to be home to around 40 tigers.
It is estimated there are only between 350 and 400 Sumatran tigers, an endangered species, across Sumatra.

(Bron: http://old.thejakartapost.com/)

Wetenschappers Massachusetts (VS) onderzoeken aangespoelde zeldzame lederrugschildpad - Dier afkomstig uit gebied rond Trinidad


As endangered turtles wash ashore, scientists

get a rare glimpse

24-07-2008 The Boston Globe, USA

CUTTYHUNK ISLAND - Seagulls, strangely absent from this quaint summer getaway, feasted Monday along the rocky shoreline, and Carrie DeArmond and her daughter, Jordan, knew something was amiss.

"There were five or six and then another and another," DeArmond said. "And then I said, 'Oh, my God, would you look at that.' "
Lying in a patch of mud-colored seaweed was one of the ocean's largest, most mysterious reptiles: the leatherback turtle.
"But she smelled," Jordan said. And it was dead, the third of the rare and endangered species to wash ashore in Massachusetts in the past three weeks. Researchers typically see one or two each year.

Jennifer Kiesling, a New England Aquarium biologist, marked the 500-pound leatherback turtle that washed up on Cuttyhunk Island. (BILL GREENE/GLOBE STAFF)

"You could be a marine biologist for a long time and not come in contact with a leatherback," said Tony LaCasse, a spokesman for the New England Aquarium. "And we could go another couple years without seeing another."
Word of the 500-pound turtle spread quickly through the island community and among scientists eager to study the carcass for clues about the life of the leatherback. New England Aquarium researchers headed to the island yesterday morning to examine the turtle.

Distinguished by its unusual shell, a soft, vinyl-like skin over laying tiny interlocking bones, with seven ridges running front to back, the leatherback has roamed the world's oceans for about one hundred million years.
Adults can measure as long as 6 1/2 feet and weigh up to 2,000 pounds, and are thought to live for more than 100 years. They spend much of their life close to the ocean surface, feeding on jellyfish, but have been spotted more than 4,000 feet underwater, LaCasse said.

Boat propellers, fishing lines, and beach development contributed to the leatherback's rapid decline between the 1950s and 1980s, LaCasse said. Only an estimated 34,500 females existed worldwide in 1996, according to a report last year by the National Marine Fisheries Service and US Fish and Wildlife Service. The most recent population estimate for the North Atlantic alone ranges between 34,000 and 94,000 adult leatherbacks, the study said.

More than 40 sightings have been recorded in the waters of Nantucket Sound and Vineyard Sound this year, said Connie Merigo, director of the Marine Animal Rescue program at New England Aquarium. But some of those may be the same turtle, Merigo said, and "we don't have an exact number."

This year's first dead turtle was spotted July 3 on Popponesset Beach in Mashpee. The second came ashore July 13 on Ricketson's Point in Dartmouth, and the latest washed up here earlier this week. Researchers say the turtle was probably killed by a boat propeller, but they don't know for sure.
Residents struggled to prevent full-moon tides from reclaiming the leatherback, DeArmond said, and it took seven people tugging at the turtle to keep it from washing away Monday night.
The turtle was eventually tied to an anchor about 20 feet inland and restrained with a small, green net.

The aquarium team had about an hour to analyze the turtle yesterday and collect samples before high tide made work impossible. The leatherback was significantly decayed: Its left side was split open, seagulls had pecked away the eyes, and much of the skin on its back had peeled away.
"It's in pretty bad shape in terms of what we can learn," said Sheila Sinclaire, an aquarium biologist. "We can't even tell for sure whether it's male or female."

Tags on the turtle's front flipper indicate the leatherback originated from the Caribbean, near Trinidad. It appeared to be a young adult, Sinclaire said, but an electronic tag found implanted in its muscle may lead to more information.
Leatherbacks live throughout the world, but this one probably nested in the tropics and followed migrating jellyfish up the US Eastern Seaboard, LaCasse said.

Unlike other cold-blooded animals whose internal temperature changes with their surroundings, the leatherback can moderate its heat and swim into colder waters. And had it not died, it would have returned south, possibly to the same beach where it was born, researchers speculate.
Instead, it landed on the shores of Cuttyhunk, and residents flocked to watch the team of scientists collect samples.

"I've seen sea turtles, but nothing like this," said Ben Snow, 11, who was sitting in a line of friends as biologist Adam Kennedy examined a flipper.
"There was a sense of protectiveness on the island about it," said Kathleen Patton, a summer resident from Milton who questioned researchers about what may have killed the turtle. "We almost wanted to have a little service for it."

(Bron: http://www.boston.com/)
(Bron foto: The Boston Globe)

(Noot Kraaijer: Op mijn weblog http://sranan-news.blogspot.com/ kunt u een aantal artikelen vinden over een lederrugschildpad, voorzien van een zender door het Wereld Natuur Fonds, die van de kust van Suriname (Galibi) naar de wateren voor de kust van het Britse Wales is gezwommen. Op dit moment is men de schildpad om onbekende redenen uit het oog verloren. U kunt de artikelen vinden door o.a. op de naam 'Aitkanti' te zoeken op mijn Surinaamse milieu weblog.)

woensdag 23 juli 2008

Britse Dierenbescherming wil einde dierproeven voor medische en cosmetische testen


RSPCA wants animal testing control

23-07-2008 Charities Aid Foundation, UK


The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) has called for scientists to avoid using animals for medical or cosmetics testing. Figures from the Home Office have shown that last year there were more tests carried out on animals in any time since 1991 - a sixth consecutive rise.

Barney Reed, RSPCA senior scientist, said the group was "dismayed" to see that the number of animals being used in experiments had not gone down.

He added: "Scientists and Government repeatedly state that animals are only used where absolutely necessary. Yet with the numbers going up yet again the public will quite rightly question this statement."

Genetically-modified animal use is also becoming more common, something which Mr Reed described as "excessive" and questioned whether it was "really necessary and justified".

Statistics showed there were more than three million animals used in testing last year including 5,648 dogs, 3,125 primates, 13,820 rabbits and 281 horses.

(Bron: http://www.cafonline.org/)
(Bron foto: Charities Aids Foundation)

Visserij-minister Canada vindt zeehondenjacht 'humaan' - Canada reageert op EU-voorstel tot importverbod zeehondproducten


Canada's fisheries minister warns EU against seal ban

23-07-2008 Agence France Presse


OTTAWA (AFP) — Canada's fisheries minister on Wednesday warned the European Union that its proposed ban on seal products should not target his country's "humanely conducted hunt."

"Once again, we would like to caution European decision-makers: adopting broad regulations to ban products from a responsible, sustainable and well-regulated hunt is a slippery slope," said Fisheries Minister Loyola Hearn.

"To bow to misinformation and emotional rhetoric in restricting the trade of humanely harvested animals would set a dangerous precedent for all wild hunts."
Although the ban is said to target Canada, Hearn insisted that Canada's annual slaughter of up to 275,000 seals is "a humanely conducted hunt," and a ban of Canadian seal products would be "without cause."

Canadian officials will be reviewing how the proposed regulations and any exemptions would apply to Canada, he added.

(Bron: http://afp.google.com/)
(Bron foto: AFP)

2000 Nertsen bevrijd uit nertsenfokkerij Schlesen bij Kiel (Duitsland)


2,000 Mink Freed - Dedicated To Austrian Prisoners


23-07-2008 anon, IndyMedia UK


Dedicated To Austrian Prisoners http://austriasolidarity.com 2,000 Mink Freed - Germany

anonymous communique (translation):
"We could smell the horrible stench long before we reached the fur farm in Schlesen near Kiel on the night of July 22, 2008! The animals were locked-up four to a cage! The whole farm was in terrible condition! There were many we could not help this night! But we released at least 2000 mink! We gave them a chance to escape. A chance is better because in a few months they will be killed by the farmer. These animals deserve freedom! This action is dedicated to the imprisoned Austrian animal activists!"

anon Homepage: http://directaction.info/

(Bron: http://www.indymedia.org.u/)

Artis zet homoseksuele dieren in het zonnetje....


Gay animals get focus at this year's Pride

23-07-2008 DutchNews, the Netherlands


Amsterdam’s Artis zoo is to give special tours focusing on homosexuality in animals to coincide with this year’s Gay Pride festivities in August, news agency ANP reports.
The zoo says that hundreds of different animals have homosexual tendencies. Animals focused on in the Gay Pride tour include cockatoos, apes, bulls, goats and elephants, ANP says.

Earlier it emerged that gay Dutch police officers will have their own boat in the Gay Pride canal parade.

(Bron: http://www.dutchnews.nl/)
(Bron foto: archief Kraaijer)

Tas met dode konijnen gedumpt in straat Raffles (Engela