Bad dog food in Taiwan

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:
TAIPEI–Moldy corn imported from Pakistan and made into dog
food killed more than 1,000 dogs at animal shelters in four Taiwan
counties, the Taiwan Council of Agriculture disclosed on January 5,
2009.
The lethal ingredient was aflatoxin, a form of naturally
occurring mycotoxin, produced by fungi that grow on grain.
Aflatoxin is usually neutralized by cooking at high temperatures, a
normal part of pet food manufacturing, but since 2005 aflatoxin
incidents have also killed 17 dogs in New York state, 23 in Israel,
more than 600 in Venezuela, and an unknown number in China, where
the Shanghai Yidi Pet Company halted distribution of a contaminated
dog food line in early January 2009. Company spokespersons agreed
that the contaminated food was imported, but disagreed as to whether
the source was Taiwan or Australia.
The Taiwanese maker, Ji-Tai Forage, recalled and composted
29 metric tons of “Peter’s Kind-Hearted Dog Food,” produced only for
shelter consumption. About 20 metric tons appeared to have been
eaten by dogs without incident, and 1,450 metric tons of pig feed
made from the moldy corn contained no aflatoxin, according to spot
checks–but some dog food samples contained many times the known
lethal dose level.
Taiwanese public shelters were notorious in the 1990s for
refusing to kill impounded dogs, in keeping with Buddhist belief,
but allowing the dogs to starve instead. This was banned in 1998 as
part of a new national humane law, along with selling dogs to dog
meat restaurants, which was believed to the fate of up to a third of
all impounded dogs. The law banned selling dog meat altogether.
ANIMAL PEOPLE last received reports about Taiwanese shelters
violating these provisions of the 1998 law in 2002, but still
receives frequent complaints about overcrowding and lack of
veterinary care.

Catty the miracle dog caption

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, January/February 2009:
“Here is Catty the miracle dog,” writes Egyptian Society for
Mercy to Animals founder Mona Khalil from Cairo, Egypt. “Her
puppies were snatched from her and she was dropped in a busy street
so that she probably would get killed by cars. With her are the
three kittens we found nursing from her, as they too were snatched
from their mum and dropped in a box in the same area.” Discovered by
a gardener who feeds animals in the vicinity, Catty and the kittens,
five other abandoned kittens, and another dog were picked up from
amid the traffic by Khalil and her father. “They are all now at the
ESMA shelter,” Khalil said. “We will keep Catty and the kittens
together, and will look to get them adopted together too.”
Though rare, the case is not unprecedented: ANIMAL PEOPLE
has since 1992 collected 23 other authenticated accounts of dogs
cross-fostering kittens, plus five accounts of cats cross-fostering
puppies in similar rescue situations.

Alleged Mississippi puppy millers charged with felony child abuse & manslaughter

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2008:

 

NEW ALBANY, Miss.–Attorney Tony Farese of Ashland,
Mississippi, told Patsy R. Brumfield of the Northeast Mississ-ippi
Journal on November 10, 2008 that no plea bargain is imminent on
behalf of alleged puppy millers and accessories to manslaughter Janet
Lee Killough Barreto, 37, and Ramon Barreto, 31. But Farese,
representing the Barretos, “did not deny he was offered a deal” by
Union County assistant district attorney Kelly Luther, Brumfield
said.

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Companion animal welfare notes

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2008:
The 950-store PETCO chain on November 17, 2008 announced
that it is “phasing out rabbit sales in favor of adoptions.” Said
PETCO spokesperson Lisa Epstein, “PETCO already has strong
relationships with about 70 rabbit adoption groups, including the
Minnesota Companion Rabbit Society, the Oregon Humane Society, the
Animal Rescue League of Boston, the San Diego House Rabbit Society
and the Escondido Humane Society. PETCO is also communicating with
the national House Rabbit Society to build additional relationships
with local chapters and affiliates.”

The BBC, televising the Crufts dog exhibition since 1966,
“is considering ending its coverage of the Kennel Club’s showpiece
event,” reported Stephen Moss of The Guardian on December 5. In
August 2008, Moss explained, “BBC1 broadcast Jemima Harrison’s
disturbing film Pedigree Dogs Exposed, which argued that highly
selective breeding was damaging the health of many pedigree dogs and
undermining their genetic diversity. The Royal SPCA, the People’s
Dispensary for Sick Animals, and Dogs Trust responded by pulling out
of Crufts.” Sponsor Pedigree also withdrew, citing commercial
concerns. The Kennel Club announced in October 2008 that it is
redrafting the show standards for 209 breeds to eliminate rules that
favor dogs with extreme and unnatural characteristics which might
impair their he

The American SPCA has added former Louisiana SPCA chief
executive Laura Maloney as senior vice president for anti-cruelty
initiatives and has promoted attorney Stacy Wolf, with the ASPCA
since 1998, to vice president and chief legal counsel for humane law
enforcement.

“Doggie in the window” singer hopes to sing the swan song for puppy mills

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2008:
WASHINGTON D.C.– “At the time,” in 1952, “‘Doggie in the
Window’ seemed like a sweet and harmless message,” recalls singer
Patti Page. Selling more than a million copies in five months, the
song became Page’s fourth recording to top the charts in five
years–and became the unofficial anthem of the pet industry.
Opening with the question “How much is that doggie in the
window? I do hope that doggie is for sale,” the song helped to
popularize the concept of purchasing commercially bred puppies from
pet stores, at a time when the overwhelming majority of pet dogs in
the U.S. were mongrels and about 30% of the U.S. dog population were
street dogs, as in much of the developing world today.
Page recorded “Doggie in the Window” for a children’s album,
early in the “Baby Boom” that doubled the U.S. human population and
brought a trebling of the pet population within a generation of the
end of World War II. By the time the “Baby Boom” children began
raising families and acquiring pets of their own, the U.S. street
dog population had been eradicated by the combination of improved
sanitation, more vehicular traffic, and more aggressive animal
control. Nearly half the dogs in the U.S. were now purebreds, and
U.S. animal shelters were killing seven times as many dogs as in 1952.

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Pending White House dog adoption upstages Obama cabinet picks

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 2008:
WASHINGTON D.C.–Google searches on December 7, 2008 turned
up 703,000 web pages discussing U.S. President-elect Barack Obama’s
campaign pledge to adopt a dog for his daughters, compared with
533,000 discussing his cabinet picks.
Obama himself addressed selecting the future White House dog
first, in his initial post-election press conference.
“With respect to the dog,” Obama said, “this is a major
issue. I think it has generated more interest on our Web site than
just about anything. We have two criteria to be reconciled. One is
that Malia,” the elder Obama daughter, age 10, “is allergic, so
it has to be hypoallergenic. There are a number of breeds that are
hypoallergenic. On the other hand, our preference would be to get a
shelter dog, but obviously a lot of shelter dogs are mutts like me.
So whether we’re going to be able to balance those two things I think
is a pressing issue on the Obama household.”

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RSPCA & Dogs Trust convince the Kennel Club to revise breed norms

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2008:
(Actual publication date 11-5-08.)
LONDON The Kennel Club, the world s first and oldest purebred dog registry, is redrafting the show standards for 209 breeds to eliminate rules that favor dogs with extreme and unnatural characteristics which might impair their health.
The Kennel Club, founded in 1873 and regarded in the show dog world as the most prestigious guardian of pedigrees, quietly disclosed the revisions of rules barely six weeks after complaining to the Office of Communication, the British television regulatory agency, that it was unfairly treated by the producers of the British Broadcasting Corporation exposé Pedigree Dogs Exposed, aired in August 2008.
Among the dogs featured in the documentary were boxers with epilepsy, pugs with breathing problems, and bulldogs who were unable to mate or give birth unassisted, reported Associated Press writer Jill Lawless. After the show was broadcast, Lawless added, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and the Dogs Trust withdrew their support for Crufts, the annual Kennel Club show, begun in 1891.

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BOOKS: Puddles on the Floor

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2008:
(Actual publication date 11-5-08.)

Puddles on the Floor
by Lorena Estep
illustrated by
Tamara Ci Thayne
Crescent Renewal Resource (P.O. Box 23, Tipton, PA 16684), 2008.
22 pages, paperback. $15.95.
(Also sold as CD, $9.95.)

Puddles on the Floor is an exquisitely illustrated story for children about a beagle who is isolated outdoors on a chain after he is not properly house-trained. Artist Tamara Ci Thayne, known until mid-2008 as Tammy Grimes, founded the anti-chaining organization Dogs Deserve Better in 2001. Author Lorena Estep is her mother.
The book, a CD edition of the story, and several accessory items are sold with the dual purpose of educating children about dog care and raising funds and volunteer help for Dogs Deserve Better.

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Scams target adoptors & humane societies

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 2008:

MONROE, Louisiana The Better Business Bureau of Northeast Louisiana on November 2, 2008 issued a warning against e-mail and classified ad scams offering puppies or rescued dogs for adoption, if the recipient will pay transportation costs in advance.
The would-be dog adoptor may also be asked to fill out an adoption screening questionaire which requests information that can be used to access the victim s personal bank and credit card accounts.

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