Pet python kills child

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

ST. LOUIS; ORLANDO–– State intervention came too
late for Jessie Altom, age 3, of Centralia, Illinois, suffocated on
August 29 by his parents’ seven-and-a-half-foot rock python as he
slept on the floor of their home with his aunt and uncle. Jessie
Altom’s parents, Robert and Melissa Altom, ages 26 and 21,
were charged immediately after the boy’s September 2 funeral
with feloniously endangering the life of a child and unlawful possession
of a dangerous animal.
Jessie Altom was killed four days after Florida
Department of Children and Families spokesperson Mary O’Quinn
disclosed that child welfare officials had removed Nickolas
Graham, age 18 months, from his family’s home in Tavares.

Read more

Ireland fights EU over animal welfare

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

DUBLIN––Scientists warned
Ireland in August that by mid-year it
had already exceeded the national
“greenhouse gas” emission limits set by
the European Union and United Nations
under the 1997 Kyoto Agreement to
limit global warming––despite special
dispensation allowing Ireland a 13%
increase in emissions by 2010.
Since nearly half of all Irish
“greenhouse gas” comes from cattle,
the warning meant in effect that Irish
farmers must find a way to reduce
bovine flatulence. Or else.

Read more

HOW THE ALEUTIAN GEESE WERE GUNNED––FEDS BLAMED FOXES

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

WASHINGTON D.C. – –
There was a story behind the story,
mentioned only in passing, when U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service on July 30
proposed dropping Aleutian Canada
geese from Endangered Species Act
protection, as recovered, with a population
now estimated at 32,000.
As USFWS told media, trappers
and fur farmers introduced foxes
to the 190 islands of the Aleutians
where the Canada goose subspecies
nests, beginning in 1750. The most
vigorous epoch of fox introduction was
1915-1930. By 1938 the Aleutian
goose had vanished, though closely
related species survived in Siberia.

Read more

FAIR WAS FOUL IN UPSTATE N.Y.

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

GREENWICH (N.Y.)– – Animal
manure polluting a well is blamed for cultivating
the verotoxin-producing e-coli bacteria
strain (VTEC) that killed two visitors to the
Washington County Fair in upstate New York
in early September. Another 611 fell ill.
Fifty-eight people were hospitalized
––nine on dialysis––due to potentially fatal
hemolytic uremic syndrome caused by VTEC.
The week-long fair closed on
August 29, 1999. Rachel Aldrich, age three,
died on September 4. Her two-year-old sister
Kaylea survived on dialysis. Most victims
were reportedly between ages three and 14,
but the second to die, on September 10, was
Ernest Wester, 79, of Albany.

Read more

Angst over beta-agonists in meat

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

 

BANGKOK, KUALA LUM-PUR,
HONG KONG––A Thai FDA crackdown on
the use of beta-agonist stimulants in pork production
sounded like late response to old news
when announced in June 1999.
It wasn’t. Hong Kong is a key market
for Thai pork, and six Hong Kong residents
were ill from ingesting beta-agonist
residues with pork offal.
In 1998 Hong Kong banned the sale
of pig offal for four months after 17 people
suffered beta-agonist poisoning.
Beta-agonist traces were found then
in nine out of 14 pigs’ lungs originating from
four farms in Hong Kong and two farms in
Guangdong, on the Chinese mainland. Thai
pork was apparently free of beta-agonists––
and that’s how Bangkok wants to keep it.

Read more

Let me tell you about the bats and the birds and the beetles and the turds…

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

LONDON––Trying to bring a rare
bird called the clough back to Cornwall, the
National Trust on advice of English Nature in
1996 banned the use of avermectin-class vermicides,
including Ivermectin, in cattle who
graze NT pastures. Residues from the wormkillers
were believed to be inhibiting the reproduction
of dung beetles, the clough’s chief
food source. About 100 farms were affected.
There are still no cloughs in Cornwall
––but the rare greater horseshoe bat has become
more numerous within the 100-farm area than
anywhere else in England, and the even scarcer
hornet robber fly has appeared as well.
Even with the Cornwall bat boom,
there are still fewer than 4,000 greater horseshoe
bats in Britain, among just a handful of
colonies. English Nature and The Bat
Conservation Trust hope to persuade other
farmers to forgo the use of avermectins.
“And I thought the new highly efficient
parasiticides only eradicated parasitologists,”
said World Health Organization epidemiologist
Martin Hugh-Jones.

Smithsonian ducks

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

WASHINGTON D.C.––PETA scored a rare victory
over the foie gras industry on August 23 when the
Smithsonian Institution cancelled a scheduled September 21
book-signing party for Michael Ginor, owner of Hudson
Valley Foie Gras, whose volume Foie Gras…A Passion was
to be published by Wylie Inc. in mid-September.
The cancellation, heavily covered by both The New
York Times and The Washington Post, brought unprecedented
public attention to how foie gras is made: by either pouring
grain or pumping a pureed mash directly into the stomachs of
restrained ducks and geese, through a plastic or metal tube
thrust down their throats. The force-feeding causes the ducks
and geese to rapidly develop abnormally fat-laden livers.
After the birds are killed, their livers are blended into a paste.

Read more

Wildlife trafficking busts in China bring record seizures

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

HONG KONG––Banning imports of turtles for
meat after verotoxin-producing e – c o l i bacteria turned up in a
cargo of live freshwater turtles brought from Thailand via
Hong Kong, officials in Shenzhen, China proved they meant
business on September 8, seizing 6.6 metric tons of live Thai
softshelled turtles from a Hong Kong-registered fishing boat
off Sha Chau.
The turtles reportedly would have brought about
$400,000 if delivered to market. Vessel master Kwan Lamwa,
31, and a 28-year-old crew member were arrested.
Just a year ago the Sha Chau bust would have been
the biggest ever made by Chinese authorities. In 1999,
though, it wasn’t even the biggest of the summer.

Read more

Wildlife Report

From ANIMAL PEOPLE, October 1999:

Bird habitat
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service credits killing
thousands of nest-parasitizing cowbirds since 1991 with bringing
the least Bell’s vireo up from just 268 known pairs in 1991
to more than 2,000 in 1999. “Just as important,” explained Los
Angeles Times reporter Gary Polakovic, “the vireo’s comeback
may prove that habitat along streams in Southern
California is recovering––a critical indicator of environmental
health in a state that has lost 97% of its riparian woodlands,
more than any other.” As Illinois Natural History Survey
scientist Scott Robinson observed in 1995, after examining the
relationship between vanishing songbirds and cowbirds,
“Small nature preserves, which work fine for preserving plants,
don’t work for migratory birds,” whose nesting sites become
vulnerable to cowbirds when deforestation removes their cover.
“The [British] Royal Society for the Protection of
Birds are completely barking,” Game Conservancy Trust
head of grouse research David Baines recently told Daily
Telegraph environment editor Charles Clover, because after
five years of intensively killing crows and foxes to protect a
rare grouse called the capercaillie, the RSPB has experimented
since 1995 with not killing predators. The capercaillie population
is down from 2,200 in 1995 to about 1,000. But the RSPB
says the main reasons for the drop have been bad weather at
nesting season and, wrote Clover, “the death of up to a third of
its capercallie by flying into deer fences put up to allow the
regeneration of native pines.”

Read more

1 442 443 444 445 446 720