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Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Oh no! An opossum!

Last night, when I went out to feed my outdoor kitties, I decided to stay outside and see who came to eat.  I heard some crunching of leaves and waited to see who it was.  I was sitting there and saw a grey tabby kitten come to the top of a slope to the parking area. The kitten looked to be about 4 months old, judging only by it's size, of course.  I watched the kitten standing there making sure the "coast was clear" and I heard more leaf crunching.  I waited, expecting to see one of the cats I was familiar with but to my horror a huge (and I mean huge!) opposum walk in front of the kitten.  The kitten and opossum seemed to not even notice each other.  I saw the opossum walk right past the kitten and straight to the food.

I watched very anxiously not knowing what to do as the kitten walked past the opossum and went to another plate.

I went upstairs to my apartment and worried about what to do.

Tonight, I walked outside and saw a large grey tom cat staring right at me.  I walked down the stairs and tried to approach him (I am just guessing it is a male because of his size but that might not be a good idea to guess gender by size).  He kept his distance.  So, I figured, I better just back off and not try to push it.  So, I sat down and about 5 minutes later, put some food down and walked a short distance away and sat down to watch who else might come to eat.

About a minute after I sat down (about 20 feet away), the large tom cat came up to eat and about a minute later, the kitten came up.  The kitten ate with no problems but the large cat was distracted by me and kept glancing at me then going back to his food.

I have to decide what to do about the food situation.  I also need to decide if I am going to trap that kitten out there.  

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Tell San Francisco Art Institute to Stop Promoting Animal Snuff Video (Animal is killed on video!)

The San Francisco Art Institute is running an exhibit now through May 31st made up of video images of six different animals -- a doe, a goat, a horse, an ox, a pig, and a sheep -- being bludgeoned to death with a large sledgehammer by someone calling himself an "artist." Entitled "Don't Trust Me," this sick exhibit is nothing more than a disgusting attempt to pass off the brutal abuse and killing of animals as legitimate art. Please Take Action to urge the Institute to remove this deplorable exhibit immediately, and implement a policy explicitly prohibiting exhibits for which animals were exploited or killed.

Link to exhibit.

Below is an excerpt of how the "Institute" describes this terrible "art".
Don’t Trust Me portrays six animals—a sheep, a horse, an ox, a pig, a goat, and a doe—being struck and killed by a hammer. Each killing occurs so quickly that it’s difficult to determine definitively what has happened. Do these incidents represent slaughter or sacrifice? What are their social, cultural, moral, and political implications? Or are such questions now verging on irrelevance, as if something else altogether were taking place (or about to), something wholly other, unforeseen, unexpected?


Related Information
Contact: Walter & McBean Galleries
415.749.4563

San Francisco Art Institute
800 Chestnut St
San Francisco, CA 94133

A sample letter and opportunity to send a form email is available by clicking 'more' below.

More...



Thursday, February 21, 2008

Scientists testing oral contraceptives for wild animals

If you’re a land owner and animals such as coyotes or wild pigs are driving you hog wild, help may soon be on the way to control their numbers in a humane way – in the form of a birth control pill for animals being developed at Texas A&M University’s College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences. The concept would be to get it to wild animals through baited food, researchers say.

Researchers are testing oral contraceptives – used in much the same way as in humans – and the results are promising, says Duane Kraemer, a professor in veterinary physiology and pharmacology and a world leader in embryo transfer who has been involved in cloning four different species in recent years.
Kraemer, one of the pill’s creators, and other members of the research team are testing the contraceptive for use on wild animals, but the applications could most likely be used in pets, he believes.

“No one method will be useful in all situations,” he stresses.

“This approach inhibits maturation of the egg and therefore prevents fertilization. The animals continue to cycle, so it will not yet be ideal for many pet owners. But there is an advantage for use in wild and feral animals.”

Kraemer says the research team has recently started tests on domestic models for predators – animals such as feral pigs and cougars – but if successful, it could be used on a wide variety of animals, including dogs and cats, he explains. The team also has submitted grant applications for similar projects on coyotes and deer.

“A spinoff of this contraceptive could probably be used on many different species,” he adds.

The $90,000 project is being funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and private donations.

The pill works by inhibiting the maturation of the egg, not the entire cycle, Kraemer says. The technical name for the drug is called a phosphodiesterase 3 inhibitor, and it is one member of a family of drugs being tested.

Similar compounds have been tested in laboratories elsewhere in mice and monkeys, and similar results have been obtained by in vitro (in laboratory) methods in cattle and humans.

The compound can be mixed with animal feed and must be eaten daily during the critical time. It may also be encapsulated to decrease the frequency it has to be consumed, Kraemer says.

“We believe we are the first to test this compound for this specific purpose,” Kraemer notes. “We’re trying new uses for this previously approved compound.”

When perfected, the pill could eventually be used as an oral contraceptive for pets, but that may be a bit in the future, Kraemer says. In dogs, for example, the ovulation process is especially complex, but researchers are confident such a birth control pill can one day be successfully developed.

The need is apparent: According to the American Humane Society, about 7 million dogs and cats are euthanized each year at animal shelters. One female cat can lead to the production of 420,000 offspring in her lifetime.

In Texas, feral hogs have become a severe nuisance to farmers and ranchers, and the state has an estimated 3-4 million feral hogs, by far the most in the country. Deer are also becoming a problem to more communities each year because of overpopulation of deer herds.

Other species such as coyotes and even wild horses also need sufficient management control, experts note.

“The need for such an animal contraceptive is certainly there,” Kraemer adds.

“We are confident we can develop this pill in the not too distant future, but we still have plenty of tests to complete. It’s an exciting and much-needed project, but more funds will be needed, especially since deer and wild pigs are consumed by humans. One of the more interesting challenges will be to develop methods for feeding it to the target animals without affecting other species.”

Source: Texas A&M University

Monday, January 21, 2008

Sign a petition to end Whaling


Welcome to Whales Revenge, an ambitious campaign to gather 1 million signatures for a petition to stop whaling.

Every year thousands of precious mammals are slaughtered in the name of so-called 'scientific research'.

Add your voice by signing this campaign then forwarding it everyone you know. Please help us stop the killing.