Eleven easy ways to get killed in the woods

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

• An unidentified 12-year-old shotgunned
bowhunter Joseph P. Bordelon on October 5 in the Bogue
Chitto National Wildlife Refuge, near Slidell, Louisiana
––mistaking Bordelon, who survived, for a wild pig.
• On October 8, Todd Mercer, 24, of Lewiston,
Maine, tried to eject a shell from his duck gun and instead
killed hunting buddy Kevin MacDonald, 22, of Bath.
• Portland-area residents Kevin Lynn Gregory, 18,
David Allen Cook, 19, and Cory Alan Lewis, 18, were
arrested in early October and charged with two counts each of
aggravated murder. They are accused of taking fellow hunters
Ronald Cary Dunwoody, 36, and James William Boyles,
48, of Portland, to a Larch Mountain target shooting area and
using them for the targets.

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Legal pitfalls & political traps

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

ST. LOUIS––Legal otter trapping
for pelts commenced in Missouri
for the first time since 1937 on
November 20, 11 days after Judge
Robert H. Dierker of the 22nd Circuit
Court rejected the argument of state residents
Cecily Westerman, Ed Leonard,
Stan Slaughter, and the Animal Legal
Defense Fund that the otter season was
improperly authorized.
Dierker agreed that as
Missouri taxpayers, the three named
plaintiffs had standing to challenge the
regulation that established an otter season.
He also rejected Missouri
Conservation Commission arguments
that trapping is required to control the
otter population and prevent property
damage. “The record seems clear,”
Dierker wrote, “that the Commission
concluded in 1995 that there were
enough otters to accommodate commercial
trapping interests, and other reasons
to have a trapping season were at
best ancillary factors.”

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101 sealers hit for killing pups

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

ST. JOHN’S, Newfoundland––Canadian Sealers
Association president Mark Small, of Wild Cove, Newfoundland,
was among 101 individuals indicted on November 21 for
allegedly illegally killing and selling the remains of hooded seal
pups, called bluecoats, during the heavily subsidized resumption
last spring of the annual offshore hunt that was an early
focus of the animal rights movement.
Small was charged with selling 152 bluecoats to the
Carino Co. Ltd. in three batches last March.
Apparently beginning on April 4, several weeks
before the killing ended, the Canadian Department of Fisheries
and Oceans repeatedly raided the Carino seal carcass processing
plant in South Dildo, Newfoundland, seizing more than 25,000
pelts––nearly 10% of the official kill quota of 250,000 harp
seals and 8,000 hooded seals. The slaughter was briefly interrupted
when the DFO discovered that the sealers had actually
killed more than 16,000 hooded seals, but resumed with the goahead
to kill another 60,000 harp seals.

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Herpetology

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

Norris Simpson, 88, of Charles County, Maryland, was
killed on October 22 along with all 16 of his grandson’s pets when an iguana
upset a heat lamp, starting a housefire. The fire was at least the fourth
in Maryland caused by an iguana upsetting a heat lamp since 1993. The
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warn that iguanas are not suitable
pets in classrooms or homes with small children for a different reason:
about 90% carry salmonella, which tends to hit children harder and faster
than adults, and can kill or cause permanent disability even before parents
recognize that the children are seriously ill. The U.S. pet industry imported
under 28,000 iguanas per year a decade ago, but brought in 800,000 in
1993, and total sales, including of iguanas bred in the U.S., now exceed a
million a year.
A colony of about 130 Blanding’s turtles has survived in the
marshes of Kejimkujik National Park, Nova Scotia, since the ocean receded
5,000 years ago to isolate them from the main populations now located
in Maine and Ontario, says Blanding’s Turtle Recovery Project chief Tom
Herman, of Acadia University. Cold weather, predation, and nest flooding
have inhibited their reproduction, but since they live up to 70 years,
Herman hopes to have time to insure that some young do survive.

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Tales from the cryptozoologists

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

Louisiana State University researcher
Bruce Whitney in the November edition of The
Wilson Bulletin, an ornithological journal,
announced the identification of a previously
unknown bird species, the pink-legged graveteiro,
an acrobatic insectivore first noticed in November
1994. Unlike other birds found recently in Brazil,
the pink-legged graveteiro turned up not in the
Amazon rainforest, but rather in the treetops above
a major highway. As the pink-legged graveteiro
normally doesn’t descend to the ground and apparently
dwells only over cocoa plantations, a disturbed
if rich habitat, it had escaped notice despite
apparently dwelling in close proximity to humans
for as long as 300 years. European settlers brought
cocoa to Brazil in 1746. Whitney and collegues
counted 131 of the birds’ nests, found at 53 different
sites. The pink-legged graveteiro belongs to
the 230-odd-member ovenbird family, a group
who build domed nests of hardened clay and saliva.
Thai biologist Paiboon Naiyaner in late
November announced his discovery of a previously
unidentified “elegant mountain crab.” The tiny
nocturnal freshwater crab is colored brown, blue,
white, red, and purple.
Ireland is the only member of the
European Union which has not yet ratified the
Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species, but that may soon be rectified, under
E.U. pressure, with the adoption of a long-awaited
Irish endangered species law. The E.U. has also
asked Britain, Germany, Greece, Portugal, and
Italy to expedite their pace of identifying critical
habitat for endangered species.
Zoologist Mike Tyler, of Adelaide
U n i v e r s i t y, told the Australia/New Zealand
Academy of Science on October 3 that heroic
efforts to save endangered species may be misguided
until the full inventory of species is known. “I
don’t think that we can make any rational decisions
or value judgements about what should be kept and
what shouldn’t until the cataloguing process is a
good deal farther along,” Tyler argued. Tyler and
colleagues have identified 38 new frog species in
northwestern Australia since 1974, but estimate
that at the present pace, fully cataloguing
Australian wildlife could take 1,000 more years.
The staff of the Field Museum in
Chicago may lead the world in discovering previously
unidentified mammal species, led by Philip
Hershkovitz, 87, who is credited with finding 75
species over the past half century in South
America––including one in Brazil just four years
ago. Among Hershkovitz’ discoveries are primates,
marsupials, rodents, and a tapir.
Lawrence Heany has found 13 new species since
finding his first, a yellow-spotted Philippine bat,
in 1981. Bruce Patterson claimed a shrew opossum
in Ecuador, Ronald Pine identified a sucker-footed
bat in Peru, and Bill Stanley and Julian Kerbis discovered
new shrew species in Africa. Mammal
discoveries typically lead to finding unique insect
parasites, as well. The Field team estimates that
while about 1.4 million species of plants, animals,
and microorganisms are now formally known to
science, from 10 million to 100 million remain to
be identified. Large species turn up these days
only in the most remote parts of Asia, the thickest
rainforest, or the ocean depths––but of the 459
mammal species discovered between the 1982 and
1992 editions of Mammal Species of the World,
says Patterson, about two-thirds were found in
museums and DNA laboratories, often by more
closely inspecting specimens collected decades or
even centuries ago. The down side of finding new
animals, says Heany, is that they “are often on the
verge of extinction just as they are discovered.”
Canadian environment Minister
Sergio Marchi on November 1 introduced a proposed
national endangered species act, in hopes of
having it in place by spring––which would require
balancing competing provincial interests and opposition
from resource-based industries, including
hunting, fishing, mining, and trapping. Canadian
species are now protected––if at all––one by one,
province by province. Federal protection is extended
only to species on the CITES Appendixes I and
II, or covered by treaty with the United States.
As initially tabled, the Marchi bill provides fines
of up to $1 million plus five years imprisonment
for killing, capturing, or selling threatened
species, yet does not even try to designate or protect
critical habitat, as that would be generally
taken as encroaching on a provincial prerogative.
The Species Survival
Commission of the World Conservation
U n i o n, which began the first global
endangered species list in 1960 with a
card file on 34 animals, in October published
a new edition of its now authoritative
Red List, using new criteria for
assessing endangerment, supplied by
more than 7,000 scientists––and reported
that 1,096 mammals and 1,108 birds are
either threatened or endangered, about
25% of the known mammal species and
11% of the known bird species. The complete
Red List also includes 253 reptiles
(20%), 124 amphibians (25%), 734 fish
(34%), and 1,891 invertebrates, with the
cautionary note that the status of most of
the animals in these taxonomic groups has
not been thoroughly studied. The actual
rate of endangerment may therefore be
either higher or lower. Indonesia, with
128 threatened mammal species, and
India and China, with 75 each, have the
most mammals at risk, while Indonesia,
Brazil, and China have the most birds at
risk: 104, 103, and 90. Often particular
members of a taxonomic group are in desperate
trouble while others are thriving.
Of the primates, for instance, about half
are on the Red List, but humans are obviously
abundant, and of the 18 species of
hooved mammals, 11 are at risk but
domestic cattle and horses are thriving. In
addition, some of the taxonomic groups
with the most species at risk are as a
whole quite healthy––but happen to be
exceptionally diverse, e.g. rodents,
including 330 species at risk; bats, with
231 species at risk; and shrews and
moles, with 152 species at risk. The
World Conservation Union was formerly
known as the International Union for the
Conservation of Nature.

Editorial: Biological xenophobia

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

Our friend Bob Plumb, of the Promoting Animal Welfare Society, in Paradise,
California, recently became aware of a feral cat problem at a park in nearby Chico. A large
colony was accused of killing songbirds, and slated for destruction by animal control.
Plumb, a retired physics teacher, combines his longtime philanthropic interest in
humane work with applied math skills. He especially likes to solve problems through modeling,
projecting the outcome of various strategies based on known statistical parameters
––and over the years, he’s become rather good at it.
When Plumb worked out the numbers pertaining to the park in Chico, he found
that the popular approach, trying to catch and kill all the cats, wouldn’t work. Catch-andkill
capture efficiency, in that habitat, stood little chance of exceeding the reproduction
rate. In effect, using catch-and-kill would amount to farming cats, sending each season’s
“crop” off to slaughter just in time to open hunting territory to the next round of kittens.
The benefit to birds would be nil.
Plumb also modeled neuter/release, which he calls TTAVR, short for trap/treat
(for treatable medical conditions)/alter/vaccinate/release, to cover all steps. Adoptable cats
would be put up for adoption; seriously ill or injured cats would be euthanized.
The first-year costs, he found, would be far greater, since neutering a cat costs
about five times as much as killing the cat and disposing of the remains. Over a three-year
period, however, the costs would be the same, as the neutered park cats ceased breeding.

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No safety in shells or Southern Oceans

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

MOSCOW, OSLO, TOKYO,
WASHINGTON D.C.––Emboldened by
the re-election of U.S. President Bill Clinton
and Vice President Albert Gore, who
showed little inclination to defend whales
and sea turtles during their first term, and
by the re-enfranchisement of wise-use
Republicans in control of key Congressional
committees, turtle-killers and whalers are
whetting their weapons.
Most brazenly, with the election
results barely two weeks old, Louisiana
Republicans Bob Livingston, Billy Tauzin,
and John Breaux on November 21 forced the
National Marine Fisheries Service to withdraw
turtle excluder device regulations
intended to protect endangered sea turtles,
just three days after they were ostensibly
sent to the Federal Register for publication.

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How animals won in five states

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, December 1996:

WASHINGTON D.C.––Captive-duck shooter Bill
Clinton and trophy hunting advocate Albert Gore remain in the
White House, but Congressional script on animal issues may be
quite a bit different in the 105th Congress, not only because
foes of the Endangered Species Act took a beating on November
5, but also because the results of five state initiative campaigns
show animal protection voting clout, just beginning to be organized,
ignored by the Democrats, reviled by wise-use
Republicans, but acknowledged by Speaker of the House Newt
Gingrich.
• Massachusetts voted 64% to 36% to ban leghold or
body-gripping traps and snares, ban hunting bears and bobcats
with dogs, and restructure the state Fisheries and Wildlife
Board, ending a requirement that a majority of members be
licensed hunters, fishers, or trappers.

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Playing possum

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, November 1996:

Sometimes an animal’s best
defense could be his worst enemy.
Take the example of the
opossum who nearly became as dead as
he pretended to be.
I was driving down a back
street in Lorain County, Ohio, near my
home when I spotted a dead opossum
lying on his side in the center of the
road. I slowed down to avoid the carcass,
but as I passed it, something registered:
there was no blood. I stopped
for a closer look. He lay still as death,
not even breathing as near as I could
tell. Despite the lack of bloody evidence
of a crash, I figured he must
have been dead.

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