Thursday, November 30, 2006

Rare White Lions Need Your Protection

An Urgent Plea from the
Global White Lion Protection Trust

CONTACT:
Linda Tucker. lindaat@iafrica.com


By Meg Jordan, Global Health Media
With reporting from Jenny Gardy and Linda Tucker

(San Francisco, CA -- ) A world without White Lions is not just a tragedy of reckless greed, but a serious omen for the world’s survival. That dire warning is part of an ancient legend among African shamans and the Shangaan tribe about White Lions born exclusively to one place on earth—the Timbavati region neighboring the Kruger National Park. The word Timbavati means “the place where Star Lions came down,” and the majestic creatures are said to be descendants of celestial beings that gave rise to a sacred lineage of noble African kings.

Just as the Camelot legend insisted that the land would only flourish when the once-and-future king returned, the Timbavati legend holds that the earth itself will shift to a higher consciousness once the White Lions return to their natural kingdom. But the purchase of more habitats is critical for their survival.

Whether or not you believe the prophecy, the rescue and protection of these rare animals is a noble undertaking that not only safeguards their future but also restores the Sacred Lands and natural habitats.

For decades, the White Lions were artificially removed from their natural habitat, shot or held in captivity in trophy hunting camps in South Africa, and zoos and circuses around the globe. Because of their forced removals, they have been extinct in the wild since 1993.

But now, through the heroic efforts of Linda Tucker (author of The Mystery of the White Lions) and her Global White Lion Protection Trust, the pride of Africa was saved from the brink of extinction. The trophy hunting industry would have shot every last White Lion if Tucker hadn’t worked with African elders and rescued a famous white lioness called Marah and her three cubs. They were the first White Lions to set paw back in the land that is their birthright, after more than a decade of extinction in the wilds.
According to Tucker, “Against tremendous odds, we have initiated a world-first reintroduction program of the White Lions back to their endemic range. Using careful long-term scientific monitoring, and boma-bonding methods, the first phase of this is now completed. The White Lions’ success in their natural environment has exceeded our wildest expectations.”
In order to safeguard their long-term future, the White Lion Trust needs several million dollars to reclaim the neighboring lands. Lions require territorial balance and large tracts of land in order to assure that re-introduction efforts are successful. The Trust is securing a deposit of 500,000 Rand (R7 - $1 USD) in time for an auction next week, but the larger sum is required or the efforts to date may be fruitless due to the actions of a competing reserve, which is not what most international citizens think of as a “reserve” but rather a money-making venture promoting the hunting of lions as trophies.
Tucker’s plea is being echoed by conservation groups the world over, and all interested parties are asked to reach her at The Global White Lion Protection Trust, Linda Tucker. lindaat@iafrica.com


The White Lions have been featured on CBS specials and Animal Planet International.

# # #

Dr. Meg Jordan
Global Health Media
mail@megjordan.com
(constjohn@aol.com)
St. John Group
1750 Montgomery Street
San Francisco, CA 94111
Phone : 415-454-2243
Fax : 415-459-3165

http://www.expertclick.com/NewsReleaseWire/default.cfm?
Action=ReleaseDetail&ID=14620

Check on exotic animals brings pot-growing arrest in FL

Check on exotic animals brings pot-growing arrest

 

By Mike Bowdoin

 

 

A check by a wildlife officer on some exotic animals owned by a Chiefland area man resulted in his arrest on Sunday for growing marijuana as well as violations of wildlife regulations for the exotic, dangerous animals he had on his property.

 

According to the Levy County Sheriff's Office, Ken Holmes of the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission was at the residence at 6351 N.W. County Road 336 doing some inspections on exotic animals that were being kept there, when he noticed a very bright light inside the residence. He thought it might be for reptiles in cages, but got a surprise when he looked through the window. 

 

“In looking in there, he gazed into the room and saw marijuana plants growing,” LCSO spokesman Capt. Chuck Bastak said.

 

Holmes then backed away and called Levy County authorities, and members of the county's Drug Task Force joined the investigation, helping to acquire a search warrant from Judge Joseph Smith that was served at 4:50 p.m. on Nov. 26.

 

When they got there, officers saw lights on in the house but no one came to the door when they knocked and identified themselves, so they entered . Once inside, they saw an indoor hydroponic growing operation that turned out to contain 102 marijuana plants varying from three to 12 inches in length.

 

They also encountered a serval cat - a spotted cat similar in size to a cheetah but with a head that resembles a domestic cat - that was walking around unsecured in the house.

 

 

Performing a search of the property, the officers also found a cougar, a leopard, three crocodiles, an alligator, a Bard owl, a great horned owl, a skunk, a hedgehog, exotic birds and a number of water monitor lizards.

 

“There was also a quote-unquote gopher tortoise habitat with an undetermined amount of gopher tortoises,” Bastak said.

 

The officers arrested John P. Jones, 33, on charges of cultivation of marijuana, possession of marijuana and possession of a firearm in commission of a felony. Jones is also charged with possession of wildlife in an unlicensed facility, improperly caring for wildlife, and unlawful possession of gopher tortoises, according to reports. Besides seizing the plants, officers also seized hydroponic growing equipment, several computers, one 9 mm handgun, and two .357 revolvers.

 

Bastak said Jones said he would take responsibility for everything in the house, but the officers also filed a sworn complaint against Jennifer W. Jones, 25, in the case as well. Bastak said FWC was looking for homes for some of the exotic animals.

 

http://www.chieflandcitizen.com/articles/2006/11/30/news/local_news/news04.txt

 

For the cats,

 

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an Educational Sanctuary home

to more than 100 big cats

12802 Easy Street Tampa, FL  33625

813.493.4564 fax 885.4457

http://www.BigCatRescue.org MakeADifference@BigCatRescue.org

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Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Colorado women rehab bobcats, cougars

Silt wildlife rehabilitation center works with bobcats, bears and other troubled critters

Scott Condon
November 28, 2006

SILT - Tucked out of sight in one of the numerous cages in Nanci Limbach's sprawling barnyard is a young bobcat licking his wounds after getting struck by a car earlier this fall near Meeker.

Plenty of bed rest will help the cat recover from a fractured pelvis. The bigger problem is teaching him how to survive in the wild.

That's the daily challenge facing Limbach, who started the Western Colorado Wildlife Rehabilitation Center 23 years ago. Wild animals that are injured, orphaned and sometimes both are brought to her for care and eventual return to the wild.

Limbach's unique operation is the second-oldest of its kind in the state and one of only a handful that exist. She has nursed hundreds of animals and given others a chance to survive in their native habitat.

It's not a zoo. Limbach and her friend and volunteer helper Natalie Hert don't cuddle the animals or come up with cute names for them. The center is closed to the public and visitation is by appointment only.

Limbach and Hert feed babies with puppets so they don't learn to trust humans. The irony of their job is they need their patients to mistrust and even hate them, even though they are providing life-saving care.

"This one hated our guts, but I think it was in pain," Limbach said of the bobcat kitten. "He hisses and spits at ya, which is good."

The young cat wouldn't have survived if a concerned passer-by hadn't brought him to Limbach's wildlife rehab center near Silt. But bringing him in meant separating him from his mom, who would have kept him for about a full year and taught him to hunt.

So Limbach and Hert do their best as surrogates. The kitten has healed to the point he can move better and try to kill prey. Like other young predators, he will receive a steady diet of live chickens, pigeons and mice to help him get used to the kill. The plan is to have him ready for release by spring.


Only a few nuisance bears
Limbach undertakes the same sort of effort with numerous wild species, both predators and prey.

Last year, two mountain lion orphans and one sickly cub were reintroduced into the wild.

This year, two black bear cubs became residents when their mom was killed after breaking into numerous homes in Vail to pilfer food. The cubs learned bad habits from their mom, but they were put under Limbach's watch until it was time for hibernation.

Colorado Division of Wildlife biologist John Broderick relocated them to an extremely secluded spot, where he hopes they will feed on natural foods and forget associating civilization with food.

All animals that go through Limbach's Western Colorado Wildlife Rehabilitation Education Centers get special ear tags when they leave. That lets wildlife officers like Broderick track the success rate after re-entry into the wild. Fewer than 5 percent of the scores of bears that have gone thorough the center became "nuisance" bears, Broderick said. "And we've never had any problems with mountain lions."

Limbach estimated she prepares five bears cubs for the wild each year, on average. In years when berry and acorn crops are spared from a late frost or a drought, she might not end up with any cubs.


150-pound housecats
In years when there is a natural crop failure, moms and cubs might go to desperate measures to find food.

Raiding trash bins and even homes can lead to situations where the sow is killed under the state's two-strike policy. When that happens and orphaned cubs are caught, they are brought to Limbach.

"We get a lot of bears when it's a 'bad bear' year," she said. "We had 25 cubs one year."

Other animals Limbach has aided include coyotes, deer, elk, rabbits, owls, hawks and eagles. Her license requires either release or euthanasia for the wild animals .

She has a separate permit to care for wild animals that were bred in captivity. Therefore, she cares for a couple of wolves, foxes, bobcats and a pair of cougars that are essentially 150-pound housecats.

In nearly all the cases, the captive-bred animals were taken from people who owned them illegally or owned them legally but couldn't care for them properly. They probably would have perished if Limbach hadn't adopted them.


$68,000 feed bill
Providing the service is a labor of love for Limbach. Her nonprofit foundation depends on private donations and an occasional grant. She scrapes by from year to year.

"It's expensive to feed all of them," Limbach said. The feed bill was $68,000 last year. That's her single biggest annual expense. Veterinarians donate their time and often provide supplies and medicine at cost.

The state wildlife division doesn't support Limbach financially even though she provides "an invaluable service," Broderick said. State regulations hamper the agency's ability to provide funding.

Veterinarian Cindy Wallis is one of Limbach's biggest fans and supporters. She occasionally sends wild animals to Limbach when someone contacts her for help.

"There's nobody like her," Wallis said. "There's no one else doing what she's doing. If we lose her, there's no place else we can send these animals."

If you want to help
Contributions can be made to the Western Colorado Wildlife Rehabilitation Center or more information requested by writing Nanci Limbach, Western Colorado Wildlife Rehabilitation Education Centers, 5945 County Road 346, Silt, CO 81652.


http://www.vaildaily.com/article/20061128/NEWS/111270049

Texas county postpones wild animal ban

Zeke MacCormack
Express-News Staff Writer
Web Posted: 11/28/2006 01:12 AM CST

BOERNE — Kendall County commissioners delayed voting Monday on long-debated revisions to regulations on keeping wild animals after being told the proposal was misguided.

Though some at a public hearing supported the rules, others saw them as an infringement on property rights that could stifle the intellectual curiosity of youngsters.

Much of the talk was about what animals made the "wild" list.

County officials conceded they lacked expertise in the field, and they welcomed suggestions on what animals should be regulated.

"We just took lists from the state and pared down from that," County Judge Eddie J. Vogt said of the 62 animals slated for prohibition, ranging from rare species to common zoo stock.

But commissioners didn't back off the move to update current rules, adopted in 2002. A vote on the new rules could occur Dec. 10.

County Attorney Don Allee called the existing rules a confusing blend of local government and public health and safety codes.

Birds and non-poisonous, non-native snakes recently were struck from the list. But that didn't assuage Susan Anderson, who raises parrots.

"I enjoy being able to raise and do what I want," she said, calling the rules an attack on property owners' rights.

Ron Tremper, who raises and sells reptiles, called the list of barred animals "a little strange."

"I guarantee you, our game warden couldn't identify half the animals on this list," he said.

Dave Barker, a professional biologist who raises snakes, said the rules should include criteria for the "dangerous" designation.

Farm animals are as hazardous as some slated to be banned, and, Barker said, "Most of these animals (listed) are not in captivity anywhere in the world."

Allee said he'd consider any proposals to improve the rules, which went under the microscope in 2004 after neighbors of the Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation center in Kendalia expressed concerns about lions and other animals kept there.

"We're not experts on animals. We don't claim to be," Allee said. "We depended on volunteers to give us that list. Maybe we depended on the wrong volunteers."

## What it could do ##
The list of wild animals to be regulated in Kendall County remains under debate, but proposed revisions to regulations on keeping such creatures would require:

* All animals designated as wild to be kept in escape-proof cages.

* Animal handlers to be properly trained.

* Proper disposal of animal carcasses and waste.

* County permission for the release of wild animals.

* A veterinary inspection of subject animals upon arrival in the county.

* The revisions can be seen online at www.co.kendall.tx.us

zeke@express-news.net

http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/metro/stories/MYSA112806.03B. kendall_animals.2f62136.html

Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Chinese city steps up wild animal safeguards

Zhang Liuhao
2006-11-28

SHANGHAI is working to provide better protection for wild animals, city government spokeswoman Jiao Yang told Shanghai Daily yesterday, noting that municipal officials ordered a halt to the "Animal Olympics" at the Shanghai Wild Animal Park early this month.

Following complaints about kangaroo boxing, bear bicycle racing and other events involving animal contestants, the city immediately sent officials to the Nanhui District park and ordered it to promptly "rectify the problems," Jiao said.

The games, held every two years, began in late September and were originally scheduled to run until the end of this month. They drew widespread complaints this year from city residents and animal lovers around the world.

Following a city inspection early this month, the Shanghai Wild Animal Park adopted "prompt measures for rectification," Jiao said.

The park shut down the games about three weeks ago, and it also halted its practice of allowing people to pose for photos with small animals.

Jiao said Shanghai has always paid close attention to the protection of wild animals.

Following national and city regulations, local authorities adopted a series of animal protective measures over recent years. The efforts included improvements in the monitoring and restoration of habitats for wild animals.

Jiao said the city has also carried out campaigns against wild animal breeding. Facilities that failed to meet regulations have been ordered to stop operation.

In addition, the city has boosted cooperation with non-governmental organizations to promote public awareness about the need to protect wild animals, she said.

http://www.shanghaidaily.com/art/2006/11/28/298334/ City_steps_up_wild_animal_safeguards.htm

Exotic pets, little disease screening: Disaster in the making?

By Margaret Ebrahim and John Solomon
Associated Press — Nov. 27, 2006

WASHINGTON — Exotic animals captured in the wild are streaming into the U.S. by the millions with little or no screening for disease, leaving Americans vulnerable to a virulent outbreak that could rival a terrorist act.

Demand for such wildlife is booming as parents try to get their kids the latest pets fancied by Hollywood stars and zoos and research scientists seek to fill their cages.

More than 650 million critters — from kangaroos and kinkajous to iguanas and tropical fish — were imported legally into the United States in the past three years, according to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service documents obtained by The Associated Press under the Freedom of Information Act.

That's more than two for every American.

Countless more pets — along with animal parts and meats — are smuggled across the borders as part of a $10 billion-a-year international black market, second only to illegal drugs.

Most wildlife arrive in the United States with no quarantine and minimal screening for disease. The government employs just 120 full-time inspectors to record and inspect arriving wildlife. There is no requirement they be trained to detect diseases.

"A wild animal will be in the bush, and in less than a week it's in a little girl's bedroom," said Darin Carroll, a disease hunter with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While exotic pets from Africa, Asia and South America can be cute and fashionable, scientists fear that bacteria and viruses they carry can jump to humans and native animals. Recent statistics raise the alarm.

From exotic animals to humans

Zoonotic diseases — those that jump to humans — account for three quarters of all emerging infectious threats, the CDC says. Five of the six diseases the agency regards as top threats to national security are zoonotic, and the CDC recently opened a center to better prepare and monitor such diseases.

The Journal of Internal Medicine this month estimated that 50 million people worldwide have been infected with zoonotic diseases since 2000 and as many as 78,000 have died.

U.S. experts don't have complete totals for Americans, but partial numbers paint a serious picture:

* Hantavirus, which is carried by rodents and can cause acute respiratory problems or death, has sickened at least 317 Americans and killed at least 93 since 1996.

* More than 770 people have been sickened since 2000 with tularemia, a virulent disease that can be contracted from rabbits, hamsters and other rodents. At least three people have died. The plague, another animal-born disease, has sickened at least 22 Americans and killed at least one.

* Three transplant patients in New England died last year after receiving organs from a human donor who had been infected with the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus from a pet hamster. There have been 34 U.S. cases since 1993.

* More than 210,000 Americans were sickened between 2000 and 2004 with salmonella, and at least 89 died. Most infections come from contaminated food — but up to 5 percent have been linked to pets, especially such reptiles as iguanas and turtles. And last year, at least 30 people in 10 states were sickened with a drug-resistant form linked to hamsters and other rodent "pocket pets."


Some of the scariest diseases to emerge since 2001 also have been tied to exotic animals: One of the first times the deadly Asian bird flu reached the West was in eagles smuggled aboard a plane to Europe. Likewise, severe acute respiratory syndrome, or SARS, is believed to have jumped to people from caged civet cats in a Chinese market. The cats are believed to have gotten the virus from bats.


Paris Hilton's bite, other recent threats

Carroll, the disease hunter, knows the dangers well. For the past three years, he has traveled the globe tracing the origins of a monkeypox outbreak in 2003 that sickened dozens of adults and children in the U.S. Midwest.

That disease, related to smallpox, is believed to have spread to people from rodents imported from Africa as pets. While no victims died, scientists are eager to understand the disease so they can stop a future outbreak.

Another newly discovered threat involves a current rage among exotic pet owners: a small carnivorous mammal with sharp teeth called a kinkajou. The nocturnal, tree-dwelling animals originally from Central and South America's rain forests have a dangerous bite — as Paris Hilton recently learned.

The actress used to carry her pet kinkajou named "Baby Luv" on her shoulder as she partied. This summer, Hilton landed in an emergency room when Baby Luv bit her on the arm.

The concern about a bite is real.

In 2005, a kinkajou bit a zookeeper in England on the wrist. The keeper's hand became infected, and she almost lost her fingers, said Dr. Paul Lawson, a University of Oklahoma microbiologist who first identified a new bacterium specific to kinkajous.

The first antibiotics doctors prescribed didn't work, so a combination of several was used to stop the aggressive infection.

Scientists worry that most Americans are ignorant of the threats, and the government's defenses are limited.

The scope of the problem

Though such diseases can spread to humans in many ways, the exotic pet trade is a growing concern because of its lack of government oversight and its reliance on animals caught in the wild.

The legal wildlife trade in the United States has more than doubled in the past 15 years, the Fish and Wildlife Service said.

Last year alone, there were more than 210 million animals imported to the United States for zoos, exhibitions, food, research, game ranches and pets. The imports included 203 million fish, 5.1 million amphibians, nearly 1.3 million reptiles, 259,000 birds and 87,991 mammals.

Imported mammals caught in the wild range from macaque monkeys and chinchillas to wallabies and kangaroos.

Only wild birds, primates and some cud-chewing wild animals are required to be quarantined upon arriving in the United States. The rest slip through with no disease screening, except for occasional Agriculture Department checks for ticks.

"Taking an animal from the wild and putting it in your child's bedroom is just not a good idea," said Paul Arguin, a CDC expert on exotic animal imports. "We just don't know a lot about the diseases these animals carry."

The potential diseases

The known diseases that can jump from exotic pets to humans are many:

Rodents can carry hantavirus as well as Bolivian hemorrhagic fever, which causes high fever, muscle pain and severe bleeding in humans and can lead to death.

Quarantines in 1989 and 1990 helped lead to the discovery of a new strain of the hemorrhagic disease Ebola in some primates. The primates either died or were killed.

Then there are the mystery diseases, which scientists have yet to understand.

During the 1990s, desert jumping rodents called jerboas were imported to Texas from Egypt as pets, according to Alan Green, a wildlife expert. Many new owners fell ill with a strange rash that defied treatment.


Loopholes in screening of legal pets

Loopholes abound with legal imports, even when screening and quarantine occurs.

For instance, the thousands of monkeys that are imported each year for research from countries like China, Indonesia and Vietnam are quarantined for at least 31 days. While the monkeys are checked for tuberculosis, they aren't tested for other diseases unless they show signs of sickness.

However, monkeys can carry dangerous viruses and bacteria that don't make them sick but can harm people. For example, herpes B virus is a pathogen carried by 80 to 90 percent of adult macaques. The virus may not harm the macaques, but humans can be infected and suffer severe neurological damage or death.

In 1997, a 22-year-old researcher at Emory University's Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta died from herpes B virus weeks after a caged monkey splashed something in her eye.

Though the CDC has prohibited importation of most monkeys as pets since 1975, some macaques imported for research are now being sold on the open market.

"Whatever researchers are using and importing in great numbers is what we see in the pet trade," said April Truitt of the Primate Rescue Center in Nicholasville, Ky.

The government acknowledges it doesn't track where animals go after quarantine.


The challenge posed by illegal smuggling

Illegal trade presents another challenge. "If you can think of it, you can get it," said Mira Leslie, a disease expert in Washington state.

Smugglers have been known to tape small tubes filled with birds on their legs to smuggle them through airports or to cut deep boxes into car seats filled with exotic wildlife to drive across the Mexican border.

Inspectors have been on heightened alert looking for smuggled birds since a man in 2004 smuggled two Crested Hawk-Eagles on a flight from Bangkok, Thailand, to Brussels, Belgium. He had wrapped them in white cloth and stuffed them into handmade, wicker tubes that he carried in a handbag.

Officials later learned that a well-known bird collector ordered the eagles for thousands of dollars. When the birds were tested, they were found to be infected with a strain of the H5N1 bird flu virus. Fortunately, no human was infected.


A bureaucratic mess

America's defenses are a bureaucratic nightmare. Laws are outdated and no single agency is responsible for pre-empting the next outbreak.

* The CDC is in charge of human health and the quarantine of imported monkeys.

* The Agriculture Department has primary responsibility for livestock health and the quarantining of wild bird imports and wild cud-chewing animals.

* The Fish and Wildlife Service is charged with stopping smuggled wildlife and enforcing laws that protect exotic and endangered species.


"The three agencies don't work together," said Cathy Johnson-Delaney, a veterinarian who advised the Agriculture Department during the early 1990s. "We should be screening all critters coming into the U.S. We aren't doing this."

The CDC's Arguin acknowledges oversight of wildlife imports is reactive at best, noting that civet cats were banned from sale only after the SARS outbreak and the increased screening of birds occurred only after H5N1 started sweeping through Asia.


No agreement on future solutions

Jasen Shaw, president of U.S. Global Exotics, one of the largest American wildlife dealers, opposes banning exotic animal imports but acknowledges, "It doesn't do the industry any good to have diseases slip through."

Quarantine for all mammal imports — which are more likely to carry diseases that jump to humans — could be a solution.

Shaw said, however, that the industry would be wary of regulations that were too restrictive. Mass quarantining would be very expensive, he added.

Marshall Meyers, of the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, which represents the $30-billion-a-year pet industry, advocates a risk-based system. Disease threats posed to humans by other mammals is far greater than those posed by fish, he explained, so tighter regulation on certain species might be warranted.

The CDC convened a meeting this spring to examine the lack of oversight, exploring options but making no recommendations. With no government action imminent, some support a private solution.

"We should shift the burden to importers to prove that the animal imports are safe," said William Karesh, a zoonotic disease expert who works with the Wildlife Conservation Society. He suggests exotic importers take out insurance to foot the bill if their animals cause an outbreak.

"Why should you and I bear the cost of an outbreak when the industry makes all the money off this trade?"

## What to do with an unwanted wild animal ##
Associated Press

- Most animal experts strongly urge Americans not to purchase exotic wildlife as pets. If you've already taken the plunge and are now worried about diseases or other dangers, here are some tips:

- Don't release your pet into the wild. Most exotic pets hail from other continents and can carry diseases that can devastate native wildlife, threaten humans or proliferate and become a nuisance.

- Always wash your hands after any contact with the pets and never put them close to your face. Dangerous germs can be transmitted by air or skin contact. Other good pet practices can be found at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Healthy Pet Web site.

- Have your pet regularly checked by a veterinarian, even if it appears healthy. Vets can screen for viruses or bacteria even when symptoms don't appear. Every six months is a good rule. Vets also can help find new, safe homes for unwanted pets.

- Many local humane society offices have wildlife departments that can advise you about unwanted pets.

- Most local zoos are already overburdened and can't accommodate your pet snake when it outgrows your living room.

- There are many reputable wildlife sanctuaries that will care for unwanted exotic pets. The best way to locate an accredited sanctuary is through the Association of Sanctuaries, the American Sanctuary Association or the Captive Wild Animal Protection Coalition.

http://sports.espn.go.com/outdoors/general/news/story?id=2677956

South Korea to kill cats, dogs to try to prevent bird flu spread

Tigers and snow leopards in a Thailand zoo died in 2003 and 2004 after being fed infected chicken carcasses.

South Korea Plans to Kill Cats and Dogs to Try to Prevent the Spread of Bird Flu

By BO-MI LIM Associated Press Writer
The Associated Press

SEOUL, South Korea - South Korea plans to kill cats and dogs to try to prevent the spread of bird flu after an outbreak of the deadly H5N1 virus at a chicken farm last week, officials said Monday.

Animal health experts, however, suggested it was "a bit of an extreme measure" when there was no scientific evidence to suggest that cats or dogs could pass the virus to humans.

Quarantine officials have already killed 125,000 chickens within a 1,650-foot radius of the outbreak site in Iksan, about 155 miles south of Seoul, the Agriculture Ministry said. Officials began slaughtering poultry on Sunday, a day after they confirmed that the outbreak was caused by the H5N1 strain.

They plan to slaughter a total of 236,000 poultry, as well as other animals, including pigs, and all dogs and cats in the area by Thursday, the ministry said. About 6 million eggs also will be destroyed, it said. The ministry did not say how many dogs, cats and other animals would be killed.

Slaughtering cats and dogs near an area infected with bird flu would be highly unusual in Asia. Indonesia has killed pigs in the past, but most countries concentrate solely on destroying poultry.

However, it would not be the first time for South Korea to kill cats and dogs due bird flu concerns. An official at the Agriculture Ministry said South Korea slaughtered cats and dogs along with 5.3 million birds during the last outbreak of bird flu in 2003.

The official declined to be named, saying he was not authorized to talk to media.

Dogs specially bred for eating are slaughtered for consumption in South Korea, where many people enjoy dog meat as a delicacy.

Another ministry official, Kim Chang-sup, insisted killing cats and dogs to curtail the spread of bird flu was not unusual.

"Other countries do it. They just don't talk about it," Kim said, adding that all mammals are potentially subject to the virus. He declined further comment.

But animal experts disputed the validity of killing cats and dogs.

"It's highly unusual, and it's not a science-based decision," said Peter Roeder, a Rome-based animal health expert with the U.N.'s Food and Agricultural Organization or FAO, who published research about cats and bird flu earlier this year in the journal Nature. "We've got absolutely no reason to believe they're important," he told The Associated Press.

Dr. Jeff Gilbert, an animal health expert at the FAO in Vietnam, described South Korea's plan as "a bit of an extreme measure."

He said dogs and cats occasionally become infected, but pose little risk to people.

Tigers and snow leopards in a Thailand zoo died in 2003 and 2004 after being fed infected chicken carcasses. Earlier this year, a few domestic cats tested positive for the virus in Europe.

The H5N1 virus began ravaging Asian poultry stocks in late 2003 and has killed at least 153 people worldwide.

So far, the disease remains hard for people to catch, and most human cases have been traced to contact with infected birds. But experts fear it will mutate into a form that is easily spread among people, possibly creating a pandemic that could kill millions.

AP Medical Writer Margie Mason in Hanoi, Vietnam, contributed to this report.

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/wireStory?id=2681519

India: Leopard caught after 12-hour struggle, taken to zoo

Allahabad, Nov. 27 (PTI): A leopard, that had entered a canteen in the cantonment area here, was caught today after a nearly 12-hours struggle by army and forest department personnel.

The leopard, which was spotted by some people in the area last evening, entered the canteen after an alarm was raised, officials said.

Defence personnel rushed to the spot and cordoned off the area to prevent the animal from coming out and causing any harm to nearby residents.

Forest department officials arrived to catch the leopard but were unable to do so for want of tranquilizers which were brought from Lucknow.

People of the adjoining area spent a sleepless night even as the canteen was guarded by the defence personnel.

The tranquilizers arrived at around 4 am and the animal was knocked out after being shot at with a tranquilizer gun. It was later taken to Lucknow Zoo.

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/002200611271651.htm

Monday, November 27, 2006

Ugandan center gives unwanted lions, servals a home

By CHARLES J. HANLEY
AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT
Saturday, November 25, 2006 - Last updated 2:48 p.m. PT

ENTEBBE, Uganda -- A baby chimpanzee found alone, helpless, in the forest. An African rock python caged and taunted by villagers until it cracks its skull on the metal bars. A rare shoebill crane, a tall, gray-feathered beauty, discovered in the trunk of a smuggler's car.

Dozens of animals like these are being rescued, nursed back to health and given a home at the Uganda Wildlife Education Center, a kind of halfway house for animals in trouble - wildlife under pressure on a continent where human encroachment and poachers' greed are pushing many species toward oblivion.

"We give them a second chance," says the center's executive director, Andrew G. Seguya.

Some are released back into the wild, while those at greater risk are given a home here for life.

By encouraging visitors to its site, which recreates Uganda's grassland savanna, its wetlands and forests, the center hopes to inform Ugandans about the need to conserve their wildlife resources by showing them the variety and uniqueness of what they have to protect.

There's the story of Sarah, for example, a 4-year-old chimp being used for witchcraft when a trafficker's go-between bought her for a few dollars. Probably bound for Europe or the Middle East, Sarah raised such a ruckus as she was carried away in a bag that police intervened. She's now been accepted by the center's 11-member chimp colony.

Each of the site's 35 shelters has such sad stories with happy endings, as illustrated in these portraits by Associated Press photographer Kirsty Wigglesworth.

"We want to change the way people perceive wildlife," Seguya said.

http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/1501AP_Animals_in_ Trouble.html?source=rss

Bengal Cat craze hits India

Vrinda Gopinath

New Delhi, November 26: If a thing’s trendy in Los Angeles, can Delhi be far behind?

The latest fashion accessory is not a Maybach or Gulfstream, but exotic pets: from trinket snakes (its real name) to miniature monkeys from the Amazon rainforest (the movie Gremlins was inspired by these primates). Both can adorn your neck. The snake is non-venomous and rarely grows longer than 4 ft.

The newest craze is the Bengal Cat.

For the uninitiated, this is a pocket edition of the Big Cat, cross between an Asian Leopard Cat (from the Far East actually) and a domestic cat.

Pet agents in the city can’t get enough of queries about the Bengal Cat. Devotees exult about its beauty and style — this feline, with its striking bold spots not only reminds one of its bigger cousins it has also the very same sleek, muscular body and the wild grace. “Its pelt has the rich smooth feel of satin or silk,’’ says a city-based exotic pet shop owner. The animals can weigh upto 50 pounds and grow a foot high and two feet in length.

“It’s like having a small leopard in the house and despite its wild cat appearance, it is pretty domesticated,’’ he added.

Bengal Cats have been in the global market since the ’90s, when they first appeared in the US, where the species was first bred. But even after more than a decade, a pure-bred Bengal Cat is still hard to get even in London’s Harrods and global websites. Every place has got a long waiting list.

Naturally, they don’t come cheap. “In Delhi, this cat could cost up to $3000, with international agents to freight charges to quarantine papers. I have already got a dozen enquiries, but yet to get any confirmation,’’ says an exotic pet importer.

Pet trends, by all accounts, come and go like ringtones. If it was the Iguana a year ago, says an exotic pet importer, today it is Chihuahua and the Shihtzu, the pocket size pedigree dogs.

In fact, “the Iguana has had its day,’’ he offers helpfully, “it was a hot favourite with some farmhouse owners once. Today, it’s the designer itsy-bitsy dogs that fit perfectly into Prada handbags or a jacket pocket.’’

Chihuahuas are prized for their stocky round faces and come at a princely Rs 50,000. Other exotica include amphibians like the Albino Bull Frog, Asia Greenbacks, Russian and Leapord Tortoises, Box turtles, Timor and Burmese pythons, corn snakes and the magnificient birds of paradise in full plume — from cockatoos, macaws, conures, lovebirds, amazons, African Grey, parakeets — you name it.

According to punters in the trade, quality animals born in captivity and farm bred are legal and can be imported. “However, all Indian species are banned for domesticity and cannot be kept as pets,’’ explains one importer. Though importers assure that no trade in endangered species is carried on, undercover agents in many countries have netted trappers of exotic animals.

Pet trendies in India are, however, squeamish about the latest Western fashion accessories: dangerous reptiles — slithery snakes and lizards — and vicious fish and cats like piranhas and the Russian Lynx (it takes a vet long hours to de-claw its razor-like paws).

“Afficionados are divided into two kinds here — serious animal lovers and fanatically fashion-conscious owners,’’ says a dealer. “But they are willing to spend enormous amounts of money to get their heart’s desire.’’

Birds from aviaries abroad range from Rs 15,000 to Rs 4 lakh - cockatoos from the islands of South Pacific of Indonesia, Solomon Islands, New Zealand, New Guinea; beautifully-plumed parrots from Brazil to Africa; blue, gold, red macaws from Australia and Costa Rica, pheasants from Britain... the list is endless.

http://cities.expressindia.com/fullstory.php?newsid=210988

Indian film: "Keeper of mystical tiger"

Keeper of mystical tiger

By MUMTAJ BEGUM
Monday November 27, 2006

Shuhaimi Baba told actress Azean Irdawaty the story of Waris Jari Hantu when she was directing the latter in the film, Layar Lara, back in 1997. Shuhaimi has been biding time since then – when all parties are able to accept storylines bordering on mysticism and spirituality – before she started on the script.

Not too long ago, the censorship board relaxed its ruling and allowed horror films such as Pontianak Harum Sundal Malam, Mistik and Gong to be made.

Waris Jari Hantu revolves around an ageing Tok Wan (Azean Irdawaty) living in the small village of Mendekar. She also happens to be the custodian of a mystical tiger, which she keeps to protect her family members. She is trying to find an heir to be the next generation’s keeper of the spirit. However, nobody in Tok Wan’s immediate clan is willing to shoulder the heavy responsibility.

Jari Hantu also looks at the relationship between two very different individuals, Tina (Maya Karin) and Ari (Rusdi Ramli).

The title of the film refers to the middle finger that Tok Wan wears her ring, which holds the key to the spirit.

During a press conference to launch the official website of Waris Jari Hantu (www.warisjarihantu.com), Shuhaimi said: “I know some folks who are custodians of these spiritual tigers (saka harimau) and I myself a Minang descent have heard of such stories from family members. I wrote this particular story on behalf of a friend who asked me to make a movie based on it.”

According to her, Waris is a mix of various genre – besides the supernatural element, the film touches on family and love.

“The film shows that love can make a person strong and face all kinds of obstacles. It also looks at the youth of today who have a very different way of life from their elders. They may not necessarily want to follow in the footsteps of their elders.”

Researching for the material proved to be difficult as the stories of these animals’ spirits are told by word of mouth. Her research, however, led her to talk to the older generation and younger custodians. Admittedly, Shuhaimi exercised her creative licence to fill in the blanks.

For the role, Azean learned to speak like a Minang from the locals and watched documentaries on tigers to observe their movements and behaviour.

She would then try to imitate the tigers at home when everyone is asleep. By the time cameras rolled, she was ready for action. Nonetheless, near the end of the shoot, Azean was taken ill and had to be hospitalised.

Azean also found out from custodians of various animal spirits on what to feed these spirits, the proper way to feed them the verses needed to call them.

Azean said: “A long time ago, people were responsible for their own safety. Many family members had to find a way to protect their family and their property from all sorts of danger. Tiger is just one of the spirits called to protect the family.

“My character in the film is dying so it is crucial she finds an heir to be the keeper of the spirit. Since my character keeps a female spirit, the heir must also be a female and she must also agree to be the new custodian for the transfer to happen.”

Azean was not the only one who was challenged in this film. The hardest thing for actor Rusdi was playing an effeminate man. Although he has tackled such a role in a drama series, the thought of being in character during rehearsal and shooting of the film proved to be quite daunting. So much so, he jokingly told the crew to punch him if he behaved the same way after the film had wrapped.

“I hesitated only because I was worried that my little son would be confused when he sees me in this film. But I have known feminine men all my life as a lot of my mother’s friends and my friends are such,” said Rusdi who had Fatimah Abu Bakar as his acting coach.

Shuhaimi added: “We didn’t allow him to watch other films with effeminate characters as we didn’t want him to merely copy their mannerisms. We wanted him to find Ari on his own as the film takes a lot of the actor’s emotions.”

Various locations served as backdrops to the film, including Bahau in Negri Sembilan, Kuala Lumpur, Selangor and Perak.

Although the film features a well-known cast that worked well together, the “actors” that were difficult to work with were the four tigers from Perak’s wildlife sanctuary.

“We had to wait around for them to ‘act’,” quipped Shuhaimi.

These tigers were filmed for the purpose of special effects whereby their faces will be superimposed on the actors’ faces. Waris is budgeted at a modest RM1.6mil and is set for release in April next year.

http://www.star-ecentral.com/news/story.asp?file=/2006/11/27/movies/16046540&sec=movies

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Oprah's magazine does piece on big cat sanctuaries

WHERE THE WILD THINGS GO
by Susan Heeger

Shambala, one of several wildlife sanctuaries across the United States, shelters some 70 big cats that have been abused, abandoned, or simply given up by owners unable to handle them.

Once a month, to defray costs, the preserve gives tours to educate the public about the needs and dangers of such captive-bred animals.

Like Shambala, a few other animal sanctuaries across the United States that shelter homeless big cats sometimes open to the public for educational tours. These tours are usually by appointment, because these facilities focus on helping animals, not entertaining people. These are accredited by the American Sanctuary Association, which sets care standards and helps find homes for unwanted animals.


Acton, California
Besides the monthly schedule of reservation-only "safaris," the center offers weekly school tours, private tours, and an Adopt a Wild One program, which allows monthly visits to sponsored animals.
661-268-0380
www.shambala.org

Japatul, California
Bengal tigers, bobcats, a leopard and a serval live on this 93-acre reserve in rural eastern San Diego County. All visits are exclusively for members.
619-659-8078
www.lionstigersnbears.org

Zolfo Springs, Florida
This 90-acre compound shelters a range of cats, in addition to bears, monkeys, wolves, bats, and bison. Call or write to arrange a tour.
863-735-0804
www.peaceriverrefuge.org

Scottsdale, Arizona
Rescuing and rehabilitating injured or orphaned wildlife of the southwestern United States is the specialty of this 10-acre desert center, which offers field trips by reservation. Featured local cats include mountain lions and bobcats.
480-471-9109
www.southwestwildlife.org

Tampa, Florida
Sixteen species and subspecies of wild cats—including snow leopards, lynx and caracals—live on this 45-acre preserve, which gives a variety of tours, some of which don't require reservations. Children are permitted at certain scheduled times, and there are night tours.
813-920-4130
www.bigcatrescue.org

http://www.oprah.com/omagazine/200612/ omag_200612_shambala.jhtml

Gift will expand snow leopard exhibit at Michigan zoo

By Nick Schirripa
Special to the State Journal
Published November 25, 2006

BATTLE CREEK - Binder Park Zoo is growing, thanks to a gift from brothers and Battle Creek natives Jeff and Doug Smith.

Their $500,000 donation to honor their parents will fund a new home for the zoo's two snow leopards and a new amphitheater, both of which are expected to debut in the 2008 season.

"This is a significant contribution to the zoo's conservation efforts," said zoo marketing manager Kari Parker. "Being a nonprofit organization, we rely heavily on donors' generosity to satisfy our mission to nurture empathy, understanding and conservation of nature."

The current snow leopard exhibit was built 21 years ago to house Siberian lynx and was modified in 1997 when the snow leopards arrived. The 12-year-old male and 9-year-old female snow leopards' new exhibit will be several times larger than the current exhibit.

It will feature rock piles, trees and more roaming space to more closely replicate their natural habitat in Central Asia mountains. Among the shadows of overhanging branches, a large temperature-controlled boulder will be positioned close to viewing areas to provide guests with more visibility of the snow leopards, Parker said.

Children will be able to crawl their way through logs to get a closer look from a protected glassed area inside the exhibit.

Also as part of the Smiths' gift, the zoo is set to build a new theater, Parker said. The new Smith Wildlife Discovery Amphitheater will seat 300 people, about three times the seating in the existing amphitheater.

The new theater will be closer to the children's zoo, Parker said. It will feature new sound and lighting systems, as well as an animal holding and support building to house the animals that participate in the programs.

Parker said construction is expected to begin this winter on the new Smith Snow Leopard Exhibit and the Smith Wildlife Discovery Amphitheater.

Jeff and Doug Smith both are Battle Creek Central High School graduates. Their parents, Wendell "Pete" and Leona Smith, have been involved in several community boards and agencies.

Contact Nick Schirripa of the Battle Creek Enquirer at (269) 966-0692 or nschirrip@battlecr.gannett.com.

http://www.battlecreekenquirer.com/apps/pbcs.dll/ article?AID=/20061125/NEWS01/611250309

Wales: Police warn of 'big cat' in hills

Police are warning people to be on their guard after receiving several reports and photographs of a big cat in hills above a mid Wales village.

Dyfed-Powys Police said seven different people had reported seeing a large cat-like animal in recent weeks in the Talybont area, near Aberystwyth.

Pc Pat Jalloal of Dyfed-Powys Police in Aberystwyth said the pictures of the big cat were inconclusive.

But he said there had been a "huge jump" in reported sightings.

In Wales, big cat sightings are investigated by the Welsh Assembly Government, in the form of the wildlife management unit based at Aberystwyth.

"From the police's point of view, we have had a huge jump in reported cases in the past few weeks and we want people in the area to be aware of this," said Pc Jalloal.

"Images received by the police look very similar to a big cat so we are asking people to stay vigilant."

PC Jalloal also warned people not to hunt and shoot the animal.

In March, a radio producer said his own research into sightings of big cats in the Welsh countryside appeared to be backed up by findings from the British Big Cat Society (BBCS).

Wales is fourth on the list of big cat "hotspots" in the society's UK survey.

BBC programme maker Aled Jones collated more than 100 sightings in north and mid Wales over an 18-month period.

The BBCS study said it found sightings increasing across the UK.

Almost 60% of sightings were of black cats, and 32% sandy

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/wales/mid_/6180080.stm

Oregon Zoo's ocelot kitten will make public debut in December

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

PORTLAND - The debut of the Oregon Zoo's endangered ocelot kitten is happening sooner than expected. The baby boy will make his first public appearance in mid-December instead of January. That's the good news. The bad news is that he's still nameless.

Keepers have chosen their three favorite names and are now seeking the public's help in making the final decision. The three names they have chosen for the online vote are (drum roll, please):

Rio (meaning river or laugh in Spanish or Portuguese).

Mo (short for monkey, because the kitten lives in the zoo's Primate Building, which has been expanded to include species in South America and the Amazon).

Bonito ( meaning beautiful or pretty in Spanish).

To cast your vote for your favorite name, please go to http://www.oregonzoo.org/Voter/vote_form.cfm. All votes must be submitted by Monday, Dec. 18.

The ocelot was born Sept. 9 and continues to be nurtured by his mother, Alice. She and her mate, Ralph, came to the zoo on April 22.

Alice and Ralph were born in 1993 at zoos located in S?Paulo, Brazil. Ralph made his debut in August and Alice stayed in an off-exhibit holding space specially designed for expectant mothers. When the baby was born, Alice kept him out of sight in her birthing den.

"Mom continues to be very protective of her baby," said Tony Vecchio, zoo director. "The little guy is becoming bolder every day. I know our visitors will absolutely love seeing him play with his mother. He's an absolute charmer. His antics will be great fun to watch."

Ralph, Alice and the kitten belong to the southern Brazilian species, Leopardus pardalis mitis, which inhabits the tropical and subtropical forests of southern Brazil, Paraguay and Argentina.

Since 2002, the Oregon Zoo has been working with the Association of Zoos and Aquariums' Brazilian Ocelot Consortium and the government of Brazil to play a role in the ocelot's survival. It was determined several years ago that North American zoos' ocelot population should be replaced by a genetically defined subspecies -- the Brazilian ocelot. The Oregon Zoo is one of 10 U.S. zoos involved with the consortium.

For centuries, ocelots have been hunted for their fur. During the 1960s and '70s, more than 200,000 of the cats were taken each year. Ocelots were placed on the endangered species list in 1982. It is now illegal to hunt them in the United States. Ocelots are normally associated with South America, but can also be found in Texas and Arizona.

Ocelots weigh approximately 20 pounds and are known to climb trees and even swim well. However, they spend most of their time hunting on the ground.

"Our new baby is a charismatic ambassador for his species," said Vecchio. "He's educating people about the importance of saving these rare cats -- and their ever-shrinking habitats."

The zoo is a service of Metro and is dedicated to its mission to inspire the community to create a better future for wildlife. Committed to conservation, the zoo is currently working to save endangered California condors, Oregon silverspot butterflies, western pond turtles and Kincaid's lupine. Other projects include studies on black rhinos, Asian elephants, polar bears and bats.

The zoo opens at 9 a.m. daily and is located five minutes from downtown Portland, just off Highway 26. The zoo is also accessible by MAX light rail line. Zoo visitors are encouraged to ride MAX or take TriMet bus No. 63 to the Oregon Zoo. Visitors who take the bus or MAX receive 50 cents off zoo admission. Call TriMet Customer Service, 503-238-RIDE (7433), or visit www.trimet.org for fare and route information.

General admission is $9.50 (12-64), seniors $8 (65+), children $6.50 (3-11), and infants 2 and under are free. A parking fee of $1 per car is also required. Additional information is available at www.oregonzoo.org or by calling 503-226-1561.

http://www.oregonlive.com/news/argus/index.ssf?/ base/news/1164227677132720.xml&coll=6

Saturday, November 25, 2006

India: Tiger killer escapes from high security jail

Posted by admin on 2006/11/24 5:30:40

Hyderabad, Nov 24 (IANS) A man charged with the sensational killing of a tigress in a zoo six years ago escaped from a high security jail here early Friday, but another prisoner was caught trying to make a getaway.

Salahuddin, who is alleged to have brutally killed the Royal Bengal tigress Sakhi and skinned her, escaped from the Cherlapally jail on the city outskirts.

But fellow prisoner Chandrasekhar Gupta, who could not climb down from the security tower, was re-arrested with the help of fire fighting personnel.

The prisoners reportedly broke the ventilators in a bathroom in their barrack and climbed the tower. While Salahuddin escaped with the help of a rope, Gupta could not climb down.

Police has been alerted and a high level probe ordered into the incident. Jail authorities did not rule out the possibility of security personnel colluding with the prisoners.

Salahuddin, 26, was arrested in February last year and released on bail in December. He was rearrested in February this year in connection with a series of burglaries.

When presented before media, he had threatened to commit suicide if the police failed to file chargesheets on time in his cases.

It was on the night of Oct 5, 2000 that Salahuddin and two others had barged into the zoo and committed the bone-chilling crime of killing 13-month-old Sakhi in front of eight other tigers in a cage.

Salahuddin had confessed that he lassoed the animal and cut its jugular vein with a knife after dragging it out. He later skinned the animal.

His escape has raised questions about security in the biggest jail in the state. In February last year, a mobile phone was seized in the jail premises. Two sentry constables and a warder were arrested in connection with the incident.

http://www.teluguportal.net/modules/news/ article.php?storyid=22614

Friday, November 24, 2006

English exotic pet refuge plans expansion

PLANS are under way for a massive extension at a sanctuary for rare and endangered animals.

The team at the Exotic Pet Refuge, in Deeping St James, near Market Deeping, is calling for the public to support their Key To The Future Campaign, which aims to raise £200,000.

This will pay for a new 29-acre site, which would enable the four-acre refuge to spread its wings and provide more space for the 400 animals currently being cared for.

In addition, it would enable the centre to cope with the influx of animals expected to need a new home following the introduction of the new Animal Welfare Act next year. The act will tighten its controls on care for exotic species.

The refuge, in Station Road, has been running for almost 30 years, and provides a home for abandoned, abused and unwanted exotic animals, including monkeys, snakes, raccoons and a lynx.

Room is rapidly running out, so now the refuge team is desperate to raise the funds to buy the neighbouring land.

Darren Mansfield, whose mother, Pam, founded the refuge, along with her late husband, Mel, said: "We want to secure the future of the refuge.

"We want to expand our enclosures so that we can endeavour to give the animals as near to naturalistic surroundings as possible.

"We've been going for 30 years already, and we want to make sure we can keep going. We need the extra land and we need the public's support to help us expand.

"We now have the opportunity to buy 29 acres of land on the opposite side of the road to the refuge, which is likely to cost about £200,000."

The refuge moved from a smaller site in Etton, near Peterborough, 10 years ago, and it costs about £45,000 a year to run.

The work is entirely funded by charitable donations and support from dedicated volunteers.

Now people are being asked to dig deep and support the centre by attending an open day on Sunday, December 3, when the campaign will be launched.

The charity's new patron, BBC Really Wild Show presenter Steve Backshall, will be giving guided tours to visitors on the day.

The event runs from 10.30am until 4pm and costs £3.50 for adults and £2.50 for children.

Anyone interested in donating to the Key To The Future Campaign should call 01778 345923.

Article by: Chief reporter, Rachel Devlin,

23 November 2006

http://www.peterboroughtoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx? SectionID=845&ArticleID=1893890

PA animal facility prepares for winter

By LAURI LEBO
Daily Record/Sunday News
Article Launched:11/22/2006 09:32:08 PM EST

Nov 23, 2006 — The bear snoozes, already denned up for the season. And the paying customers won't be back until the leaves on the swamp maple's bare branches return.
But on Jack Mountain, chores remain.

Belle, the macaque, needs to have her home heated. The alligator has yet to be taken inside from the pond.

At the East Coast Exotic Animal Rescue, $500 would provide warmth for the animals through the winter.

Suzanne and Gary Murray run the rescue, a nonprofit in Fairfield, Adams County. They provide a home to lions, tigers, coatimundi, monkeys, apes, a bear, elk, antelope, parakeets, macaws, an alligator and other unwanted creatures cast off by pet owners once the animals have grown too big or by researchers once they have grown too old.

The rescue struggles financially, but there is never a shortage of people who call, wanting to know if the Murrays can take in just one more unwanted animal.

But what the Murrays need is money.

East Coast would use the money to buy 50 bales of straw and hay to insulate the big cats' shelters. The Murrays pack the structures so tightly with the bedding material that it's hard to imagine the lions and tigers could fit inside.

But the cats push their way in there, wiggle around and pack the straw and hay the way they like it, until they've got a snuggly home.

How would the Murrays pay for the bedding without the donation?

"It's called a credit card," Suzanne Murray said. "It would be nice to see a $500 balance in the bank to rely on, but that never works because there's always something you need."

Reach Lauri Lebo at 771-2092 or llebo@ydr.com.

http://www.ydr.com/giving/ci_4707954

Australia: White lion cub litter unveiled

By Sebastian Hassett
23nov06

BEING white, cute and rare, these lion cubs are guaranteed crowd pleasers.

And New South Wales south coast tourism operators hope they'll be a drawcard for their home at Mogo Zoo, just south of Bateman's Bay, which caters for endangered species.

The nine-week-old cubs are only the second litter of their kind to be bred in Australia, coming just three months after the first, also born at Mogo Zoo.

Recently thought to be extinct after 12 years without a sighting in the wild, the white lions, whose colour stems from a recessive gene, are now the focus of a global program to save the species.

A public competition has been announced to name the new additions.

The first cubs were named Perr and Jo in honour of the Peugeot car company, which has financially assisted the zoo and whose brand carries the lion logo.

Tourism Minister Sandra Nori, speaking during a visit to Sydney by the lion cubs today, said they would prove a big attraction for tourists on the south coast.

“Mogo Zoo has bred four white lions in three months; they've now got a pride of seven and I've seen the pride and they are beautiful,” Ms Nori told reporters at Luna Park today.

“These cubs are originally from the Timbavati region of Africa and they're rarer than the snow leopards of the Himalayas.”

Ms Nori said the Government was looking to increase tourist numbers to the south coast and a holiday planner tailored to the area would help guide visitors on what to do.

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/ 0,20867,20808584-29277,00.html

Lion among 18 animals removed from Ontario home

by: Kate Dubinski, London Free Press

Eighteen animals, including a lion, were removed last night from a home near here that bills itself as a wildlife education centre.

Officers with the Ontario Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals also removed eight dogs, six cats, two cockatoos and one turtle from the Kerwood Wildlife Education Centre after receiving complaints about animals in distress.

"There was a concern about lack of proper care and animals in distress, about them living in a confined space with inadequate ventilation," said Darren Grandel, a senior OSPCA inspector. "The lion was housed in a very restrictive pen, and we were also concerned he wasn't getting proper food and water."

The centre, about 15 kilo-metres northwest of Strathroy, is open year-round and offers private and group tours, as well as photo opportunities with the exotic animals.

Locals who didn't want their names used said they hadn't seen many customers lately, but school groups had toured the place in the past.

"The (lion's) pen was built into the wall," Grandel said. "He was in his own filth and there were free-roaming dogs running near the cage. You can imagine how stressful that is for the lion, especially if he's hungry."

The lion, which weighed 41 kilograms, was going to be walked out of the home by officials, but was too distressed. He was put in a special cage and carried out instead.

The OSPCA officials, with the help of the Ontario Provincial Police, arrived at the home yesterday afternoon, said Const. Doug Graham. A veterinarian with knowledge of exotic animals was also called to check on the animals to determine which should be removed.

Twenty-three wolves, coyotes and wolf-dog hybrids were to stay on the farm overnight because a handler who lives on the property was there to feed and care for them. Also left on the property were chickens, geese, goats, cattle, deer, a horse and a donkey.

"The dogs will likely require medical attention," Grandel said. "Now we start the process of medicating them, giving them food and water."

It's not clear who called animal welfare officials.

"There were some dead animals in the home, but they were being used for the feeding of the others," Grandel said. The stench of dead flesh could be smelled from the road, more than 30 metres from the home.

"The Kerwood Wildlife Education Centre is not a zoo but rather an educational facility dedicated to the preservation and conservation of wolves, other indigenous species and big cats such as tigers worldwide," according to the facility's website. The site also includes pictures of foxes and tigers.

Calls to the facility were not returned last night.

The domestic animals taken from the home were taken to shelters. The lion was taken to a location in central Ontario equipped to handle it.

The owners of the facility can be charged with cruelty to animals under the criminal code.

The centre is located at Langan Drive and Highway 6 in Middlesex County. It used to be called the Wolf Education Centre, according to its website.

The facility, says its website, is licensed and inspected by the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources under the Wildlife in Captivity Regulation within the Fish & Wildlife Conservation Act. OSPCA officials are looking into that claim.

That applies to animals native to Ontario. There is no legislation that covers exotic animals such as lions and tigers, something animal rights and welfare officials have been trying to change for years.

http://www.zoocheck.com/news/?articleId=305

New Zealand’s biggest and newest tiger enclosure

November 23, 2006
Press Release: Word of Mouth Media

NZ’s biggest and newest tiger enclosure to open at Orana Wildlife Park in Christchurch next week

One of the biggest and newest tiger enclosures in Australasia will open to the public at Orana Wildlife Park in Christchurch next week.

The $500,000 state of the art tiger area features two critically-endangered Sumatran tigers from the Western Plains Zoo in Dubbo, Australia.

Keeper Graeme Petrie spent time getting to know the tiger brothers Sendiri and Dumai before flying to Christchurch.

Tigers have been at the top of Orana’s wish list since 1999 when the last ones died of old age. Their visitor surveys have found tigers are the number one animal people want to see.

"Although the tigers are housed in large natural enclosures, we have incorporated a number of innovative features that will help visitors meet the animals up-close," chief executive Lynn Anderson said today.

"Research has shown our visitors like an immersing experience with animals and we have designed viewing opportunities in the tiger area that our visitors will really enjoy."

Orana is New Zealand’s only open range zoo and is sited on a large land space – 80 ha. It is home to over 400 animals from more than 70 different species.

Anderson said it was great tigers had returned to Orana after a seven year break.

"They are stunning animals and our team just loves working with them. The new tiger habitat contains three separate night dens and day exhibits, two massive water pools (holding 700,000 litres), a dramatic central viewing pavilion and two raised viewing platforms.

"This tiger project is the most ambitious project the park has embarked on for years."

The new facility was only possible following a substantial bequest from the estate of Leio Wilfrid Timperley through the Christchurch City Council and a grant from the Josef Langer Charitable Trust.

The tiger brothers are from a subspecies which are critically endangered and there are less than 500 Sumatran Tigers roaming in the wild.

Orana Wildlife Park is part of a campaign to help increase their numbers globally.

The tigers have been placed opposite the lions and they will add a significant new dimension to the visitor experience.

“It is just brilliant that in Orana’s 30th year of operation we have completed such an important develop