Is leukemia still #1 disease threat to cats?

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

Shelter          Cats Screened             Cats FeLV+              %
Americ an SPCA (NY) 20,000+ 400/500 >2.5%
Anti-Cruel ty Society (Chicago, IL) 3,600 “few”
Bennington County Humane Society (VT) (“we want adoptors to take cats to a vet)
Bloomington Animal Control (MN) (“costs too much”)
Knoxville County Humane Society (TN) 30 0 0
Mari n Humane Society (CA) 1,500 30/40 >2.5%
North Shore Animal League (NY) 20,000 400/500 >2.5%
Progressive Animal Welfare Society (WA) 1,125/1,500 25/30 >2.0%

Read more

ANIMAL HEALTH

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

A mystery hantavirus that killed 26 peopleear-
lier this year could spread across the U.S., the November 5
issue of Science warned. The Pulmonary Syndrome
Hantavirus, as it is now called, PSH for short, was traced
to deer mice after killing 19 people near the junction of
Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, and Colorado––and deer
mice range over most of North America. Cases have now
been confirmed as far north as Montana and the Dakotas,
as far west as coastal California, and as far east as
Louisiana. The southwestern outbreak may have occurred
as result of heavy rains in early 1992 that produced a
bumper crop of pinon nuts and grasshoppers, both staple
foods for deer mice, whose population exploded. The
Centers for Disease Control suspects the outbreak was
detected only because so many cases appeared at once.

Read more

Hunter harassment bill clears Senate

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:
A last-minute deal between
Senate Judiciary Committee chair Joe
Biden (D-Del.) and senior minority mem-
ber Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) inserted a fed-
eral hunter harassment statute into the
anti-crime bill passed by the Senate, 95-
4, in mid-November. The amendment
states it is illegal for a person to
“obstruct, impede or otherwise interfere”
with hunting on federal land. It was nei-
ther mentioned nor voted upon during the
anti-crime bill debate, apparently pass-
ing unnoticed.

Read more

HUNTING

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

To fight deer overpopulation,
the Ohio Division of Wildlife intends to
seek legalized bowhunting in suburbs;
legalized Sunday gun hunting; a longer
deer season; increased deer quotas; hunt-
ing access to state parks; and the repeal of
suburban hunting bans. Until last year,
Division policy was to boost deer numbers
to create more targets.
The odds a hunter will kill a
person by accident are 279.5 times
greater than the odds a deer/car collision
will. A record 118 people were killed in
deer/car collisions last year, while 130
people were killed in hunting accidents––a
record low. But the 165 million drivers in
the U.S. drive an average of at least once
a day, while the 14 million hunters hunt
an average of 17 days apiece, according to
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Read more

WAR

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

While other bloodbaths have
diverted concern from Saddam
Hussein’s purge of Shiites from
Southern Iraq, an effect of the killing
may soon be evident throughout
Europe, Asia, and
northern Africa, when waterfowl
numbers crash as result of the
drainage of about half the 6,000
square miles of wetland between the
Tigris and Euphrates rivers. The
wetland is perhaps the most impor-
tant feeding, resting, and breeding
area for migratory birds in the
Middle East. Saddam ordered the
the rivers diverted in August 1992,
ostensibly for irrigation but more
plausibly to drive the Shiites, who
oppose his regime, into Shiite-con-
trolled Iran. The wetlands are the
traditional Shiite stronghold.

Read more

Birds

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

The last four of the first
eight California condors to be
returned to the wild were recap-
tured November 9 for relocation
from the Sespe Condor Sanctuary
to the Los Padres National Forest,
far to the north. Three condors
released at Sespe since January
1992 were killed in collisions with
power lines, while a fourth was
poisoned by drinking antifreeze.
Racing Stockcar Assoc-
iates Inc. is attempting to build a
dirt racetrack in a former sand quar-
ry beneath Bake Oven Knob,
Pennsylvania, site of one of North
America’s longest maintained rap-
tor obervatories.

Read more

Wildlife

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

A study of the efficacy of the Endangered
Species Act by wildlife biologists with the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service and the University of Idaho at Moscow
reported November 12 in Science that, “Few species have
actually recovered,” because population goals are set too
low in 60% of the cases where vertebrate populations can
be counted. “Even if population goals were achieved”
they added, “60% of the ESA’s threatened or endangered
vertebrate species would remain in peril, with roughly a
20% probability of extinction within 20 years or 10 gener-
ations, whichever is longer.”
The wild population of bonobo apes, or
pygmy chimpanzees, who are the closest relatives of
humans after the common chimpanzee, has fallen from
50,000 to under 10,000 in two decades; extinction is pro-
jected within seven years. Native to Zaire, bonobos are
threatened by habitat loss, meat poachers, and pet traders
who traffic in the orphaned infants. Young bonobos typi-
cally die within days when apart from their mothers. The
usual customers are visiting non-Africans, who buy
bonobo babies in misguided hopes of saving them, says to
primatologist Jo Thompson. But this encourages the
poachers to capture more. The human and bonobo DNA
sequences differ by only 2-3%.

Read more

Guest column: Attacks on Sea Shepherd are unfair

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

by Captain Paul Watson
Much criticism of the Sea
Shepherd Conservation Society has come
recently from elements in the animal rights
movement who accuse us of selling out the
effort to free captive dolphins.
I would like to set the record
straight and clear up any misunderstanding
concerning the objectives of Sea Shepherd.
I founded Sea Shepherd in 1977 specifically
to pursue the investigation, documentation
and enforcement of laws against activities
that threaten the survival of wild marine
life. Sea Shepherd is an ecological organi-
zation. Our mandate is the conservation of
endangered marine species and ecosystems.

Read more

Marine mammals

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1993:

The Japanese whaler Nisshin Maru sailed from
Yokosuka November 12 on a five-month “research” mission.
The vessel killed 330 whales last year, also for
“research”––but most of the whales’ meat was sold. Just two
days earlier, Swedish authorities intercepted 3.5 tons of whale
meat in an illegal air cargo shipment from Norway to South
Korea, apparently for resale to Japan. Norway killed 226
whales this year, including 157 under a self-assigned 160-
whale commercial quota, of which 56% were females and 69%
of those were pregnant. “These animals are larger than the
males and therefore produce more meat per catch,” explained
Chris Stroud of the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society.
“That the Norwegians seem to be killing the elements responsi-
ble for the recovery of the population does not seem to be a
consideration. Their only thought is to maximize commercial
advantage.”

Read more

1 2 3 4