"About the Animals" is published by Noah's Animal Figurines to promote the safety and well-being of animals. Articles posted here discuss issues related to animal shelters, animal abuse news, animals in danger of extinction, and other topics intended to increase awareness of how people's choices affect animals, both positively and negatively.

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Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Pets May Soon Be Part Of Hurricane Evacuation Plans

(CBS) SOUTH ORANGE Shiloh, Jennifer, Mojo and Little Pup are four dogs who have one thing in common.

They were all abandoned by their owners during Hurricane Katrina because pets weren't included in evacuation plans.

“I saw dead dogs, dogs that had starved to death,” said Leah Jacobson, who helped rescue animals during Hurricane Katrina.

Sharon Wilkenson was also a rescue worker. She ended up adopting Little Pup, who was found with a gunshot wound to her head.

“She was brought into the triage area and I saw her and fell in love with her,” Wilkenson said.

Another dog named Wishbone was rescued from a house filled with water. Her new owner said she survived for a month without food.

We asked Maryann Kot, a Secaucus resident, if she would leave behind her dog.

“Definitely not, she would come with us. She's part of the family,” she said.

U.S. Sen. Frank Lautenberg said he's co-sponsoring a bill that would require local and state emergency officials to come up with pet evacuation plans in order to qualify for FEMA funding.

“We're not choosing between a human and an animal, the humans come first,” Lautenberg said.

Kim Saunders helped reunite 3,000 Katrina victims with their pets.

“It's really important for people to not have to make that choice to stay behind in a dangerous situation,” she said.

A dangerous choice she said made by 40 percent of the people who chose to stay behind during Katrina.


Vietnam detects illegal imports of 5.5 tons wild animals' horns

Vietnamese police have just discovered a container containing some 5.5 tons of wild animals' horns illegally imported into the country, the Vietnam News Agency reported Wednesday.

The horns, thought to be wild oxen horns, were detected on Tuesday. According to initial investigation, the 20-feet container originated from Nigeria and transported to Vietnam's northern Ha Phong port on May 19 has been ordered by a local handicraft company in Ho Chi Minh City.

The case is under investigation, said local police.

Source: Xinhua


Heather Mills Persuades Paris Hilton to Stop Wearing Fur

PARIS HILTON has abandoned her fur-wearing ways after SIR PAUL MCCARTNEY's estranged wife HEATHER MILLS made her watch horrific footage of animal cruelty. The hotel heiress was previously pelted with flour by members of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) after sporting real fur at this year's (FEB06) London Fashion Week. But it was animal rights campaigner Mills who managed to persuade Hilton to turn her back on wearing animal skins for good. She says, "I am not going to be wearing fur anymore. "I met up with (Mills) and she showed me videos of how badly the animals are treated. It is just disgusting. I am an animal lover."


Wednesday, May 03, 2006

Monk Parakeets: Pets or Pests? Should they be allowed to live?

by Jayasudha Joseph, www.emagazine.com

Mostly green with yellow bellies and bright blue feathers in their wings and tail, these birds are believed to have first appeared in U.S. skies in the 1960s. Their native homeland ranged from central Bolivia to southern Brazil, Uruguay and southern and central Argentina. Today, these birds can be found in more than a dozen states, including Alabama, Florida, South Carolina, Louisiana, Texas, Illinois, Oregon, California and much of the Northeast.

According to biologist Stephen Pruett-Jones of the University of Chicago, who has been studying monk parakeets at Illinois’ Hyde Park for more than a decade, there may be as many as 200,000 of these birds nationwide.

There are various explanations as to how the monk parakeets got here. Some believe people bought these birds as pets in the 1960s and later released them because they tired of their constant squawking, which can be ear splitting. Others believe that a crate carrying these exotic birds broke open at New York’s JFK airport, releasing pioneer individuals. In any case, a few states, including California, now have laws outlawing ownership of monk parakeets as pets.

As to how a tropical bird can survive and breed in the harsh climates of the Midwest and Northeast, ornithologists explain that even in its native habitats the animal often traditionally makes its home in mountainous regions. Another explanation is suggested in a 1995 Birder’s Digest article entitled “Monk Parakeets, Why Here?” The article points out that the intelligent birds weave dense, intricate nests from branches, which form chambers that give surprisingly good protection from blustery weather.

In much of their native range, monk parakeets are maligned by farmers, who claim they damage their crops. In Florida, longan tree growers complain that the recent arrivals threaten their orchards, which yield a profitable fruit related to the lychee and originally imported from Southeast Asia. However, parakeet supporters say there is little reliable evidence directly linking the birds with measurable crop damage.

Priscilla Feral, president of the Darien, Connecticut-based group Friends of Animals, adds, “As a solution, Florida longan growers can use nets to protect trees, or they can remove parakeet nests in late March, before eggs have been laid but after the cold of winter.”

In fact, it is actually the impressive communal nests of the bird (one in Connecticut was measured at five feet by nine feet) that have recently landed monk parakeets in the greatest danger. Utilities charge that the large nests damage power lines and transformers, interrupting service and causing fires. In several states, including Illinois and Florida, power companies have therefore justified removing nests and killing the birds.

In southern Connecticut, sparks flew between United Illuminating (UI) and local activists after the former launched a $125,000 effort to destroy monk parakeet nests it found on its lines. The company also began capturing the birds, which it turned over to the Department of Agriculture for asphyxiation with carbon dioxide.

“We are very concerned and respectful of everyone’s opinions and beliefs, but we also have to be concerned with public health and safety and UI’s ability to provide reliable electricity,” explained UI spokesperson Albert Carbone. A Florida utility reports that deterrence efforts, using repellents, noisemakers and other techniques, have proven ineffective at preventing monk parakeets from nesting in company equipment.

According to Feral of Friends of Animals, “This $125,000 killing project is senseless, immoral and unwarranted.” Feral adds, “The reputation of these parakeets has been over exaggerated: they do not have nests as huge as some claim they are, there have been no fires that have been definitively attributed to these birds, and their nests help support about 70 other bird species.” She says power companies in New York, reacting to public outcry, have had some success in deterring the birds from nesting in power lines by systematically trimming, and in some cases removing, nests.

Feral also adds that some Connecticut residents have begun providing alternative nesting platforms. Some hope the birds will eventually stop nesting in power lines. Further, responding to another common charge against monk parakeets, Feral says, “There is no evidence that someone has caught a disease transmitted by these birds.”

In December, United Illuminating agreed to temporarily cease killing monk parakeets, although the company said it would still remove nests from its lines. Activists in Connecticut and New Jersey are now lobbying to have the bird removed from their respective state invasive species lists, which would pave the way to greater protections and a ban on the killing.

Feral concludes, “The species that needs to change their attitude is Homo sapiens, who is always looking to blame someone or something else for any wrong. In this case, that means helpless, beautiful birds who have not done anything devastatingly wrong as compared to any other living species.”


Cheetah Cubs are New at Animal Ark

Becky Bosshart (Bonanza News Service)

RENO, NEVADA - New cheetah cubs Moyo and Jamar are penned up on the other side of their enclosure as a group of visiting school children climb over each other to get a closer look.

The two half-grown cubs were born in captivity at the De Wildt Cheetah Centre in South Africa. They were donated to the Animal Ark. In return, the sanctuary will assist in the organization's cheetah conservation fund, said Animal Ark co-owner Diane Hiibel. Cheetahs are threatened in the wild by ranchers when grazing animals encroach on hunting territory.

After about 40 hours of travel in crates, Moyo and Jamar arrived at the sanctuary on April 11.


Lotta Luv: New group helping pets find homes

LIMA, OHIO — Sandy McVeigh, with friends Debbie Helser and Pat Rumer, has started A Lotta Luv pet rescue, a group dedicated to caring for pets other organizations are unable to help.

"We try to help the ones that fall in the cracks. A lot of them are injured or ill. We get them to a vet, get them treated and, hopefully, find them a forever home," McVeigh said.

The three women decided to start the new group after leaving Angels for Animals over "political issues," McVeigh said. Now they have made themselves available day and night to pick up injured animals and get them to a vet. They also help pay to board sick or injured animals with local veterinarians.

"That’s why we have such a big vet bill," McVeigh said. "In middle of the night someone calls and says they have an injured dog, or the dog warden will call with a cat and they don’t do anything with cats."

In some cases the group will help out an owner who can’t afford to feed his cats. And they help volunteer Marie Daley with her Cat Haven, home to more than 150 cats.

Of the 15 dogs they currently care for, some have been placed in the prison training program at Oakwood Correctional Institution. The rest are kept in foster homes, families that keep and care for the dogs while the group works to find them a permanent home.

The group is trying to pay some of the bills with a May 20th fundraiser, The Canine Carnival and Dog Walk at Faurot Park. McVeigh said she hopes to raise enough money to pay for their nonprofit registration and help them continue the work they started.

"I know there’s a home out there for every animal somewhere. You just have to keep working and wait until you get that match."