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Animalsos's updates & stories saving the world one paw, fin, feather & leaf at a time

Monday, November 09, 2009 

Teka jumped up and down on her owner's chest after he collapsed in a glass factory and saved his life in the process.

One dog went above and beyond the call of duty after she witnessed her owner collapse at work.
Jim Touzeau was in his glass factory in Tinana, Australia, when he suffered a heart attack and collapsed on the floor. Upon seeing this, his cattle dog Teka ran over to him and began to jump up and down on his chest with her two front paws.
She also reportedly barked in his face, which caused Touzeau to wake up.
In recognition of Teka's real life story of heroism, the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA) will bestow upon the canine its animal achievement award.
"I'm sure, as Jim says, he doesn't know for certain and neither [do] the doctors, whether or not Teka jumping up and down on his chest actually kick-started his chest," said RSPCA spokesman Michael Beatty. "But if he had not woken up, he would have been dead."
Beatty added that Teka's award will come with a "very impressive bone."
Sunday, September 27, 2009 
Hi all,

I attended the Koala Rally last week, friday 25 September, I have attached some photos I took for you all to see. it was a pretty good turnout. 5 little dead koalas in coffins, were driven to Parliment in a herse, lined with stuffed toy koalas, it was very upsetting to see them brought out to the front of the rally.

If anyone else went to the rally, please feel free to pop up your photos as well. An article regarding the rally has been posted below the photos if you'd like to know more.













yahoo.news.com.au
By Darren Cartwright, AAP

Conservationists have delivered five dead koalas to Queensland's Parliament House, saying the marsupials are on the brink of extinction in urban Australia. A hearse on Friday delivered five coffins each bearing a dead koala, with protesters placing the open caskets on the footpath outside parliament in Brisbane. The dead marsupials were collected by Vanda Grabowski in the Moreton Bay region of southern Queensland. She said the frozen bodies were brought to Brisbane to emphasise the plight of the koalas in southeast Queensland and in other parts of Australia. "I have a permit through Queensland Park and Wildlife Service (QPWS) who threatened me with arrest should I do this (display them in public)," Ms Grabowski told AAP. "These are koalas that have have been hit by cars, starved, diseased or attacked by dogs.
"I keep them in my freezer when I pick them up because by law we have to hand them over (to QPWS) and if they're handed over they are hidden from view." Rally spokeswoman Carolyn Beaton said there had been 25,000 recorded koala deaths in southeast Queensland - the fastest growing region in Australia - over the past decade.
Ms Beaton said rapid development in other parts of the country, particularly along the east coast, was also threatening koala habitat. "This rally will show our politicians and indeed the world that Australia does care about its wildlife and we, as Australians, will not stand by and let the rest of our koalas be wiped out," she said in a statement. Meanwhile, the Queensland government on Friday announced it would protect 5.6 hectares of state-owned koala habitat at Alexandra Hills. State Climate Change Minister Kate Jones said the land, located on Windemere Road and of high commercial value, would be handed over to Redland City Council. The government is currently drafting a state planning policy aimed at protecting koalas to halt their declining numbers and recently completed a koala mapping project.
Sunday, September 13, 2009 


11 Sep 09 www.abc.net.au

Decades of inbreeding is causing immense suffering for pedigree dogs, who are plagued by painful and deadly genetic diseases as a result of breeding for appearance, a UK investigation has found.

The BBC documentary Pedigree Dogs Exposed, aired on ABC1 on Thursday, shows boxers suffering from epilepsy and spaniels with brains far too big for their skulls.
Other painful disabilities and deformities, including poor gait and severe heart and respiratory problems, plague purebreds like west highland terriers, golden retrievers and german shepherds.
"We are in effect breeding them to death," dog historian David Hancock said.
University College London professor of genetics Steven Jones says some breeds are paying a terrible price because of inbreeding.
"People are carrying out breeding which would be, first of all, entirely illegal in humans, and secondly is absolutely insane from the point of view of the health of the animals," he said.
The governing body of dogs in the UK, the Kennel Club, sets out breeding standards that require physical traits like short faces, wrinkling, screw-tails and dwarfism, but such traits are causing severe health problems.
Australian National Kennel Council (ANKC) is affiliated with the Kennel Club, and has hired a PR specialist to deal with the fallout from the BBC documentary being aired in Australia.
The ANKC has not yet announced a ban on inbreeding.
The program, which caused a huge public reaction when it was shown in the UK, shows a cavalier king charles spaniel in agony due to syringomyelia, a condition caused by the dog's skull being too small as a result of deliberate inbreeding.
Veterinary neurologist Clare Rusbridge describes the spaniel's brain as a "size 10 foot that's been shoved into a size 6 shoe", which results in neurological damage.
"There are thousands of cavaliers in pain across the world, even at a conservative estimate," she said.
"It's described in humans as one of the most painful conditions you can have; a burning pain, a piston-type headache, abnormal sensations even to the light touch ... even a collar, for example, can induce discomfort for these animals."
The RSPCA points the finger of blame for the high levels of deformities at top dog shows.
Despite the poor health of such dogs, the two-year investigation found affected dogs are are not stopped from competing in prestigious dog shows and the dogs have even gone on to win top "best in breed" prizes.
The program also exposes the common practice of the deliberate mating of dogs which are close related.
After the show was aired in the UK, the Kennel Club banned the practice.
But the ANKC still registers dogs bred from mother-to-son and brother-to-sister matings.

Public reaction

Pedigree Dogs Exposed's airing in Britain last year caused public outrage, and a similar reaction is being anticipated in Australia.
As a result of the program, the BBC walked away from its contract for coverage of Crufts, the Kennel Club's most prestigious dog show.
Both the RSPCA and the ANKC have been vocal in the lead-up to the documentary's broadcast in Australia.
The council said it had hired public relations officer Dr Peter Higgins "for a four-month contract leading up to and after the screening of the program, with the intent of reducing the impact of any fallout".
The council also published the ANKC Vision for the Health and Welfare of Pedigree Dogs in May 2009, which forms the basis for their defence against the program.
The RSPCA welcomes the program's airing in Australia, and says it wants breeders to focus on health, welfare and functionality of dogs, instead of breeding for appearance.
RSPCA chief scientist Dr Bidda Jones says Australia is not immune from the issues highlighted in Pedigree Dogs Exposed.
"Despite all the evidence against inbreeding, the Australian National Kennel Council is still operating a closed studbook system and registering first and second degree matings (mothers with sons, grandfathers with granddaughters), increasing the chances of inherited disorders and making the puppies less resistant to infectious and genetic diseases," Dr Jones said.
A report on pedigree dog breeding in Australia by Jonica Newby will be aired on Catalyst on September 17 at 8.00pm.



Friday, September 11, 2009 
telegraph.co.uk 10 Sep 2009

The father of Steve Irwin, the late Australian conservationist, has urged Chinese consumers not to eat kangaroo meat, saying proposed exports could wipe out large numbers of the beloved marsupials.


"We wouldn't eat your pandas, so please don't eat our kangaroos. Come and see them," Bob Irwin said.
Mr Irwin, whose "Crocodile Hunter" son was killed in a freak stingray accident in 2006, made his plea after Australia's kangaroo meat industry began courting the giant Asian market in the wake of Russia's move to bar imports.
Mr Irwin said kangaroos held more value as a tourist attraction than as meat.
"The Chinese are one of our biggest visitors and kangaroos are one of their favourite attractions. If they were to start eating kangaroos, we predict that within a few years there won't be any left in the wild for them to see," Mr Irwin said.
Australia's kangaroo population is estimated at 25 million animals.
Exports to China were expected to start in the first half of next year, John Kelly, the executive officer of the Kangaroo Industry Association of Australia, said.
Russia, a major export market, barred kangaroo meat from August 1, along with meat products from a host of other countries, citing sanitary concerns.
"They're slow breeders and the numbers are critical at the moment so we're terrified at what happens if China opens their door to it," said Nikki Sutterby, a coordinator for the Australia Society for Kangaroos.
"We're trying to get the buying public and the international community to boycott it like they have done with seals and other barbaric trades."
Ms Sutterby said kangaroos often suffer painful deaths as they are hunted in the wild rather than farmed.

Photo: ALAMY
Friday, September 11, 2009 
By Richard Savill
telegraph.co.uk 11 Sep 2009



The insect was found by 11-year-old Daniel Tate who thought it was a flower until he saw it jump and then he realised it was a grasshopper.
The insect was later identified by wildlife officers as an adult female common green grasshopper, which has been born pink.

Daniel, who attended the wildlife event at Seaton Marshes, near Sidmouth, Devon, with his great grandfather, said: "I was looking for grasshoppers when I saw something pink.
"I thought it was a flower but I saw it moving, so I tried to catch it. It jumped and then I knew it was a grasshopper."
He added: “I was really excited to hear that no one else had found a pink grasshopper at that place before.”
Fraser Rush, nature reserves officer for East Devon District Council, said: “There are millions of common green grasshoppers but I have never seen a pink one. The female comes in a variety of colours, normally different shades of green and brown. Occasionally it tends towards purple, but this is a leap beyond that to pink.”
He added: “Pink grasshoppers are unusual but not unheard of. However the intensity of the pink in this case must make it highly unusual.”
Mr Rush said the pink grasshopper was “a natural variety of the species, albeit a rare one. It has not been caused by any mutation, or any environmental effects.”
He added: “There is a chance it will have bred already and will pass on its pink gene.”
After being studied the grasshopper was released back into the reserve.

Friday, September 11, 2009 
Fri Sep 11 2009 By Petrina Berry

Authorities are removing more than 200 dogs from a breeder's property in one of Queensland's biggest animal welfare operations.
Biosecurity Queensland deputy chief veterinarian Dr Rick Symons said the dogs were living in cramped, filthy and substandard conditions on the property at South Burnett, northwest of Brisbane.
Several dead dogs have been found at the property near Wondai, and some are pregnant.
Dr Symons said the owners, who are dog breeders, have failed to improve the dogs' accommodation, which had "faeces all over the place", despite contact with authorities in the past six months.
He said the RSPCA had seized around 230 dogs, mostly poodle crosses, cavalier King Charles spaniels, samoyeds and beagles.
"It's not a usual (number of dogs) for breeders to have but it does occur," Dr Symons told reporters on Friday.
"It highlights the problem of taking care of lots of animals. The resources required to clean up, take them for walks, is huge."
No charges have been laid to date but the maximum fine for animal cruelty is $30,000 or one year in jail.
Dr Symons said Biosecurity Queensland was paying for the upkeep of the animals up until any court proceedings were finalised.
"Each animal is being identified and checked (by vets)," he said.
"It costs about $12 a day to keep a dog, and you can imagine 200-odd dogs every day is quite a significant impost on Biosecurity Queensland."
He said if the animals were forfeited to the state through the courts the RSPCA would try to find them new homes.
The breeders are believed to have sold dogs through the internet or local arrangements.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009 

Current mood:  disgusted
news.ninemsn.com.au

A teenager suspected of kicking a cat to death in Sydney's inner west has been released without charge, although police say he now faces possible drugs charges.
The 19-year-old was arrested after two ambulance officers saw him kicking the animal at 1.30am (AEST) on Saturday at the intersection of Liverpool Road and Thomas Street, Ashfield.
Police also arrested an 18-year-old man after canvassing the area. The men said the cat, believed to be a stray, had been killed by a car before they found it in a gutter.
Ashfield Police duty officer Inspector Peter Bowtell told The Sun-Herald that tests by a vet were consistent with the cat being hit by a motor vehicle.
"It looks like they are just obnoxious people who came across a dead cat in the gutter and decided to play football with it," he said.
He said police were seeking a court notice in relation to drugs charges after officers allegedly found cannabis on the pair.



Whether they found the cat dead or alive, it is equally as sick, and shows these teenagers have no respect for animals...
Wednesday, August 26, 2009 
Tue Aug 25 2009
By ninemsn staff

The mayor of Taiji in Japan says it is hard to believe Broome Shire Council has suspended ties with his town over its annual slaughter of dolphins.
The Australian reports that mayor Shinichi Ryono is yet to receive official word from Broome that the 100-year relationship between the towns is over.
On Saturday the Broome Council voted to suspend sister-city relations after councillors decided Taiji's dolphin cull was barbaric.
The traditional dolphin slaughter, in which the marine mammals are herded into a cove and then killed in the water, has been widely condemned by animal rights activists in recent years.
In 2007 Australian actress Isabel Lucas took part in a protest against the cull, paddling out to the dolphins on a surfboard.
The move prompted Japanese police to issue a warrant for her and other's arrest.
The Taiji fishing practice has been under increased pressure following the release of documentary film The Cove.
"Taiji and Broome have a long relationship going back more than 100 years since men from here started going there to dive for pearls," Mayor Ryono told The Australian.
He said that claims the Taiji fishermen killed 23,000 dolphins a year were grossly inflated.
According to the Broome Shire Council, the suspension of relations hinges on the method of killing the dolphins and the fact that their meat contains high levels of mercury.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009 
www.savejapandolphins.org

7pm project had a short segment about an organisation called Save Japan Dolphins lastnight, and I thought I would share it with all of you. The organisations website is above, and it looks like a cause that definately needs support.

I have posted facts below, from their website about the dolphin slaughter, please don't forget to spread the word and check out their 'how to help' section.

Thank you everyone :)


Quick Facts


• About 23,000 dolphins, porpoises and other small whales are killed in Japan every year, making it the largest scale slaughter of cetaceans in the world.

• About 2,500 dolphins and other small whales are killed in the so-called dolphin drive hunt that takes place six months out of the year.The rest are killed with handheld harpoons out at sea.

• In the small fishing village of Taiji, Wakayama prefecture, the dolphin drive hunt is carried out by about 26 fishermen from September 1st though March.

• Operating with 13 motorized boats, the fishermen go out to sea at early sunrise and look for migrating dolphins. Banging on metal pipes submerged into the water, they terrorize the dolphins with a "wall of sound," causing the dolphins to panic.

• Terrorizing the dolphins with underwater sound, the fishermen herd the dolphins into a secret killing cove close to Taiji Town.

• Often times, dolphins die during the chase that can last eight hours or more.

• The Taiji fishermen claim that dolphins eat too much fish and therefore must be exterminated.

• Operating with a permit from their government, the Taiji fishermen have referred to the dolphin hunt as "pest control."

• The majority of people in Japan have no knowledge about the annual dolphin blood bath.

• The fishermen kill the dolphins with spears, fishermen's hooks and knives. Trashing about in their own blood, the dolphins emit high-pitched screams during the massacre.

• The slaughtered dolphins are processed into meat and distributed to supermarkets throughout Japan for human consumption.

• Dolphin meat from drive hunts in Taiji proved to be highly contaminated with toxic chemicals such as mercury, methyl mercury and PCBs.

• Repeated chemical analyses have shown that the level of mercury in dolphin meat is much higher than the maximum allowable level set by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare of Japan.

• Some of the dolphin meat is given to children as part of their school lunch program.

• The Japanese government and the supermarkets issue no warning that dolphin meat is mercury-contaminated.

• The fishermen of Taiji have told us that the Japanese people have no right to know about the dolphin hunt or the high levels of mercury found in the meat.

• Concealing this information from the public is a violation of Article 21 of the Japanese Constitution.

• Some members of the international aquarium and zoo industry are strongly connected to the Japanese dolphin slaughter, in that they pay top dollar for dolphins deemed suitable for commercial exploitation in dolphin shows and captive dolphin swim programs.

• Dolphinariums throughout the world, including Japan, repeatedly make the claim that captivity of dolphins promotes dolphin conservation and protection.

• Several of the hundreds of captive dolphins in Japan's 50 dolphinariums were obtained through the dolphin drive hunts; yet the dolphinariums do nothing to educate the public to the hunt.

• The World Association for Zoos and Aquariums (WAZA) is the world's largest network of zoos and aquariums around the world.

• Dolphinariums that have conducted business with the dolphin killers of Japan have been welcomed into WAZA's network, although the trade in these dolphins clearly violates WAZA's Code of Ethics.

• The dolphins that are purchased by members of the dolphin captivity industry represent a much higher commercial value to the Japanese dolphin hunters than the ones that are slaughtered for meat.

• Live dolphins captured in a Taiji dolphin drive hunt recently sold for $154,000 per dolphin.

• The Japanese dolphin hunt will continue for as long as members of the international dolphinarium industry continue to reward the hunters for show quality dolphins, thereby making the hunt tremendously profitable.

• The most sought after dolphin species for public display are bottlenose dolphins, orcas, white sided dolphins, Risso's dolphins, pilot whales and Pseudo orcas, all of which have been targeted in the Japanese dolphin drive hunt.


Wednesday, August 19, 2009 

Current mood:  disgusted
A man who cooked his pet dog in a barbecue in Auckland cannot be prosecuted because it was killed humanely, says New Zealand's Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA).
South Auckland man Paea Taufa was found roasting his pitbull terrier-cross in an umu pit at his home in Mangere, the Sunday News reports.
The dog had been skinned and gutted and was partially charred when SPCA inspectors arrived.
Taufa says he was surprised when the inspectors arrived because dog is a delicacy in Tonga.
"I didn't know I couldn't cook the dog. In Tonga, any time there I cook the dog and it is OK. Dog is good food."
He had decided to cook the dog because it was too skinny and had become unmanageable. He rendered the dog unconscious with a blow to the head before slitting its throat, which is regarded as humane.
Under the Animal Welfare Act it is legal to kill a dog in New Zealand if the animal is slaughtered swiftly and painlessly.
But SPCA Auckland chief executive Garth Halliday said Taufa's actions were unacceptable.
"Although we appreciate the difference of cultures that exist in a place like New Zealand, the SPCA finds this sort of treatment of any animal to be totally unacceptable," he said.
"Even though the law says you can humanely kill an animal, you should not be treating any animal like this."
SPCA inspectors said there was evidence that killing and eating dogs was becoming more common in New Zealand.
Taufa said he would not cook another dog.
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Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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