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- from CNN web page:
- --------------------------------
- Volunteers go to extremes for baby bobcats
-
- May 16, 1997
- Web posted at: 11:24 p.m. EDT (0324 GMT)
-
- MORGAN HILL, California (CNN) -- Derryn
- Murchison
- spends a lot of her time in a tacky-looking cat
- costume, but fashion is not the point.
-
- She's trying to look as much like a bobcat as
- she
- can while she plays mother to a pair of baby
- bobcats. It's less important that she look
- exactly
- like an adult bobcat than it is that she not
- look
- like an adult human being. Or any kind of human
- being, for that matter.
-
- The idea is that the bobcats were born wild
- animals, and when they're old enough they'll be
- released into the wild again.
-
- They were brought to the Wildlife Center in
- Morgan
- Hill, where volunteers take great pains -- even
- if
- it means getting down on all fours -- to raise
- the
- cubs as their mother would.
-
- What the volunteers at the center don't
- want is for the bobcats to get
- accustomed to humans. The fear is that if they
- do,
- they will be unable to survive in the wild.
-
- They're getting pretty good at this at the
- center.
- A veterinarian who donates his time gives
- check-ups to the new arrivals, but he is careful
- not to befriend them.
-
- Then people like Murchison put on the cat
- outfit,
- even rubbing herbs on it to disguise the human
- smell. Then they feed the cubs and play with
- them
- until that day when they are deemed ready to
- return to their native habitat.
-
- Two years ago, a bobcat named Bobby was released
- after spending 10 months in the center. He
- hasn't
- been seen since.
-
- At the Wildlife Center, that's considered a
- success story.
-
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 01:31:24 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: VCR Alert & Print: NRA at Crossroads (N. America)
- Message-ID:
- <Pine.BSF.3.95.970517012304.24686L-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII
-
-
- FOX News Sunday, May 18, 9:00 AM EST
-
- FOX will be covering the NRA this Sunday morn. Based upon the recent
- article I saw in this month's National Review, I suspect it's about
- the
- power-struggle going on in the NRA, and the potential problems. Good
- tactical food for thought.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 01:42:17 -0400
- >From: allen schubert <alathome@clark.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: RFI: Animal Rights Group on Okinawa, Japan??????
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970517014215.006d3b80@clark.net>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- posted for--and send responses to--"Karen I. Busmire"
- <busmire@sunnynet.or.jp>
- -------------------------------------
- I am currently living in Okinawa, Japan and have witnessed horrible
- animal
- abuse and neglect. Can you put me in contact with any animal rights
- group
- on the island?
- I've already gone to the local animal shelter. They could do nothing
- or
- provide me with any info.
-
- Sincerely,
- Karen
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 10:39:55 -0400
- >From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net>
- To: "Animal Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: Yellowstone Bison Body Count Climbs
- Message-ID: <199705171441.KAA29602@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
- boundary="----=_NextPart_000_01BC62AE.A8950020"
-
- U.S. Department of the
- Interior
-
- Office of the Secretary
-
- Contact: Mike Gauldin 202/208-6416
-
- For Immediate Release: March 14, 1997
-
- Yellowstone Bison Body Count Continues to Climb
-
-
- Harsh winter, shooting by Montana state
- riflemen claim almost two-thirds of nation s last wild
- bison herd
-
-
- Nearly half of the bison herd that roamed Yellowstone National Park have died
- so far as a result of the twin onslaughts of a harsh winter and the state of
- Montana s controversial policy of shooting bison which venture out of the park
- searching for food.
-
-
- The Yellowstone Herd included an estimated 3200-3500 animals at the beginning
- of the winter season, but this week only an estimated 1300-1500 surviving bison
- could be accounted for based on an aerial survey earlier this week of the park
- and adjacent National Forest land. So far this winter 1,059 bison, about a third
- of the original herd, has been sent to slaughterhouses or shot by Montana state
- riflemen.
-
-
- Montana has reported killing about 100 bison on public and private land since
- February 26, when Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt sent the Governor of Montana
- a letter urging him to stop the killing and work together to identify immediate
- solutions aimed at saving the bison.
-
-
- This needless and unnecessary shooting of Yellowstone bison must stop now,
- said Babbitt. The continued killing of bison by the State of Montana is
- threatening the future of America s free roaming wild herd.
-
-
- The bison at Yellowstone is the last remnant of the free-roaming wild
- herd of the American west, a national symbol of the nation s commitment to
- conservation. The unusually severe winter has driven a number of bison outside
- the boundary of Yellowstone in search of food. When bison roam outside of the
- park area, they are ordered shot by the State of Montana.
-
-
- The unacceptable killing of bison must stop. Between the ice and snow and
- what s left of the harsh winter weather yet to come, and the continued killing
- by Montana, there is cause for serious concerns of just how many bison will
- survive, said Babbitt.
-
-
- To date there are no documented findings or cases of cattle contracting
- brucellosis from bison in the wild. Although elk and bison both can carry
- brucellosis, Montana allows elk to roam free.
-
-
- -DOI-
-
-
-
-
- NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENTISTS PROPOSED
- STATEMENT
- OF TASK
-
-
-
- The NAS, an independent advisor to the government, will determine:
-
-
- I. What are the factors that determine the risk of
- transmission of the bacteria Brucella abortus
- to cattle from bison in Yellowstone National Park and Grand Teton National
- Park?
-
-
- What is the state of scientific understanding for the
- transmission of Brucella between wildlife species and between wildlife
- and cattle?
-
-
- Does Brucella affect the reproductive potential in bison
- generally, and specifically bison in the Greater Yellowstone
- Area?
-
-
- Does Brucella pose a risk of transmission when it occurs
- in bison but is not present in the reproductive system? What risk is
- associated with infected males? (Is it dynamic?)
-
-
- What is the relationship among serology, culture test
- results, and likelihood of infectiousness? Can serology results be used
- as a reliable predictor of infectiousness?
-
-
- What is the true prevalence of Brucella abortus in GYA
- bison and elk? What information is available regarding the prevalence of
- Brucella in other mammals in the GYA?
-
-
- What is the risk of direct or indirect (via aborted fetus,
- placenta, body fluids deposited on the ground, etc.) transmission of
- Brucella abortus from bison to cattle, from elk to cattle, and from elk
- to bison or vice versa? What is known about the prevalence of Brucella in GYA
- wildlife other than bison or elk and risk of transmission to
- cattle?
-
-
- In the event that Brucella is removed from bison but not
- simultaneously from elk, what is the risk that elk will serve as a
- reinfection pathway for bison?
-
-
- What is the known risk of Brucella transmission compared
- with other disease?
-
-
- What is the state of scientific understanding of the
- safety and effectiveness of exiting vaccines to control brucellosis? Why
- are these vaccines less effective in bison than in cattle?
-
-
- If a vaccination program specific to bison were
- undertaken, would the outcome have a high likelihood of success given the
- presence of Brucella in elk and other wildlife?
-
-
-
-
-
- II. Based solely on scientific considerations, what is known
- about the relative risk reduction potentials of the various optional
- approaches to reducing the risk of transmission of Brucella from wildlife
- to cattle? Such approaches include:
-
-
- Vaccinating bison
-
-
- Vaccinating cattle
-
-
- Separating cattle and bison during the bison abortion season or
- through the entire birthing season
-
-
- Limiting cattle on the proximity of the park borders to steers
- only
-
-
- III. What is the role of vaccine development for bison and
- elk? Can Brucella be eliminated totally from the GYA by development and
- use of a vaccine? What would be the theoretical tradeoffs between a
- vaccine-only approach and a vaccination approach combined with a test and
- slaughter program?
-
-
- [Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt has requested the National Academy of
- Sciences complete its study by Oct. 1, 1997]
-
-
- ###
-
-
-
-
- BISON & BRUCELLOSIS IN THE GREATER YELLOWSTONE
- AREA
-
-
-
- Scientific Background
-
-
- Bison Fundamentals: More than 30 million wild and freeranging
- bison (Bison bison) once roamed the West. Yet by 1902 only a
- remnant population of 23 wild bison remained in Yellowstone National Park. That
- year, bison were translocated from domesticated herds in Montana and Texas to
- Yellowstone. These and the remaining animals formed the foundation for the
- current wild bison population found in the United States.
-
-
- Yellowstone National Park is a harsh winter environment for bison. Cold is
- not a major concern because bison thermoregulate. In addition, hot springs and
- other thermal features aid their survival. However, one of the most significant
- challenges for bison in Yellowstone is deep snow. Bison have saved their energy
- by using plowed roads and compacted snowmobile trails that facilitate their
- travels especially to winter range. These energy savings and easier access to
- winter range, over the past seventeen years, are factors contributing to bison
- population increases.
-
-
- The 19961997 winter in Yellowstone National Park has delivered dense,
- compacted, rockhard snow that has made the traditional bison feeding areas
- unavailable. This situation has set the stage for natural population
- adjustments. The 1996 summer bison herd of roughly 3500, approximately a quarter
- occupying the northern range, were confronted with the winter of 1997.
-
-
- Wild, free ranging bison do not recognize political boundaries. In search of
- scarce food resources in the19961997 winter, bison move along the energy
- efficient snowmobile trails and groomed roads that lead the bison to their
- traditional winter range found at lower elevations. To date, more than 1,000
- bison have been shot or sent to slaughter during the winter of 1997. Additional
- animals have died due to the harsh winter weather and other natural processes.
- Based on recent aerial surveys, the bison population is currently about
- 1,300.
-
-
- Brucellosis Fundamentals: Brucellosis is a contagious
- bacterial disease caused by various species of the bacteria Brucella
- which infects domestic animals, wildlife, and humans worldwide. In North America
- the primary livestock hosts of Brucella are cattle, goats, swine, and
- sheep. The principal North American wildlife hosts are bison, elk, caribou,
- reindeer, and feral and exotic swine. Brucellosis may also occur in carnivores,
- including members of the dog family.
-
-
- Brucellosis in Yellowstone National Park bison was first reported in 1917 and
- an endemic infection has persisted since that time. Approximately 45 percent of
- the current bison herd tests seropositive for the antibody to Brucella.
- However, not all seropositive animals are currently infected with the bacterium.
- The original source of infection is unknown; however, Brucella abortus
- was introduced to North America with imported cattle. Therefore, the bacteria
- probably was transmitted from domestic livestock to bison. Many elk residing in
- the Greater Yellowstone Area also test serologically positive for brucellosis.
- The percentage of animals testing positive varies from location to location
- within the Greater Yellowstone Area and may be related in part to the
- concentration of animals on winter feed grounds.
-
-
- Brucellosis is typically transmitted through ingestion. The Brucella
- bacteria are transmitted in aborted tissues, reproductive tissues and
- discharges, especially just prior to, during, or soon after abortion or live
- birth. The bacterium may also be shed in milk for variable lengths of time.
- Although transmission has been shown to occur between and among cattle, bison,
- and elk under experimental conditions, the risk of transmission of brucellosis
- between bison and cattle in the wild has not been determined. There is
- disagreement over the primary means of brucellosis transmission among bison and
- current data are insufficient to resolve this issue.
-
-
- Brucellosis in cattle is characterized by abortion, infertility, reduced milk
- production, and other reproductive problems. Although on occasion abortion may
- occur in wild bison herds, brucellosis does not prevent the growth of the
- Yellowstone bison herd.
-
-
- In humans, brucellosis was formerly known as undulant fever, a disease that
- is rarely fatal. Livestock and slaughter industry workers, veterinarians, and
- consumers of unpasteurized milk and products made from it have the highest risk
- of contracting the disease. If properly cooked, meat from infected animals is
- not a health risk. There have been two documented transmissions of brucellosis
- to humans from elk in Montana. The transmission arose from individuals handling
- elk fetuses and membranes.
-
-
- There is no effective treatment or cure for animals infected with
- Brucella. However, a preventative brucellosis vaccine (Strain 19) has
- been developed for use in cattle. Its primary use is to increase herd immunity.
- On average it is 65 to 70 percent effective in cattle. The effectiveness of
- Strain 19 on captive bison is less than that for cattle. Two other vaccines,
- B. Neotomae and strain RB51, are currently under study. Strain RB51 has
- been licensed for use in cattle calves only. Initial trials of RB51 in captive,
- pregnant bison caused some bison to abort when given a dose via an inoculation
- route that had been proven safe in pregnant cattle. However, additional tests of
- the safety and effectiveness of RB51 on bison are underway. Methods for
- brucellosis prevention in wildlife including bison, using techniques currently
- employed on cattle have not proven to be effective. Currently, domestic cattle
- can beeffectively inoculated against brucellosisbison can not.
-
-
- Knowledge Required: Combating brucellosis in wildlife
- populations such as the bison of Yellowstone National Park requires policies
- that are built upon a solid foundation of science. The National Academy of
- Sciences has agreed to undertake an independent study of the scientific issues
- associated with the brucellosis problem. Key elements of the study will
- address:
-
-
- o The transmission of Brucella among cattle, bison, elk, and other
- wildlife species;
-
-
- o The relationship, if any, between the bison population dynamics and
- brucellosis;
-
-
- o The ability of serology testing to estimate true infectiousness;
-
-
- o The efficacy and safety of existing vaccines for target and nontarget
- species and the need for new (including bisonspecific) vaccines;
-
-
- o The nature, and likely success or limitations, of a wild animal vaccination
- program; and
-
-
- o Optimal approaches to reducing the risk of transmission to cattle and among
- wildlife.
-
-
- Secretary Bruce Babbitt has requested The National Academy of Sciences
- complete its study by October 1, 1997.
-
-
- ###
-
-
-
-
- Bison Fundamentals
-
-
-
- The Yellowstone bison herd is the largest freeroaming bison herd and a
- national symbol of the nation s commitment to conservation. The National Park
- Service brought the last 23 wild bison back from the brink of extinction to
- return them to their place in the ecosystem of Yellowstone.
-
-
- The NPS estimates that about 1300 bison remain in Yellowstone National Park
- and adjacent National Forest land. Instead of an overpopulation of bison, at
- this point the NPS is concerned that the bison population may drop to critical
- levels if continued shooting adds to the expected winter mortality.
-
-
- An unusually harsh winter has forced bison out of the sanctuary of
- Yellowstone National Park and on to surrounding lands that historically served
- as their winter range. Snowpack in the park is 200% above normal. National
- Forest lands around the park, where bison are being shot, were established in
- part to protect winter range for the wildlife of the park.
-
-
- 1059 bison have been killed so far to protect cattle from an undefined risk
- of infection that might be present if cattle were to come into close contact
- with bison. There is currently no imminent threat of cattle coming in contact
- with bison. Under the Interim Bison Management Plan, Montana has slaughtered 504
- bison (including 464 captured by the National Park Service). Montana has shot
- 548 bison. NPS has destroyed 7 bison due to injuries sustained during capture or
- shooting operations.
-
-
- Since January 30, the National Park Service, with USDA s Forest Service and
- the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS), has asked Montana to
- stopthe killing of bison around Yellowstone National Park on National Forest
- lands, and to minimize Montana s killing of bison on private land around the
- Park. NPS, APHIS and Forest Service asked Montana to allow bison to roam free on
- National Forest lands because bison need to disperse over a wider area while
- their winter range in the Park is largely covered with ice and snow.
-
-
- Though elk and bison both carry brucellosis, Montana allows elk to roam
- free, and supports public hunting on public lands to control their numbers.
- Wyoming supports public hunting of bison on National Forest land adjacent to
- Yellowstone.
-
-
- Although transmission of brucellosis has been shown to occur between and
- among cattle, bison, and elk under experimental conditions, the risk of
- transmission between bison and cattle in the wild has not been determined.
-
-
- Montana has shot over 135 bison on public lands in the West Yellowstone
- area since January 30, when APHIS informed Montana that such shooting was not
- necessary to protect the State s brucellosisfree cattle rating. Montana is not
- caught between conflicting federal agencies; USDA and DOI are committed to
- reasonable contingency proposals and longterm solutions.
-
-
- Contrary to Montana s public statements that they are being selective in
- their shooting of bison in the West Yellowstone area, Montana has shot bulls and
- calves without knowing whether they were diseasefree or not.
-
-
- If APHIS and NPS contingency proposals are not adopted by Montana, the
- Interim Plan would allow Montana to continue shooting most, if not all, bison in
- the West Yellowstone area of the Gallatin National Forest.
-
-
- The National Park Service has not removed bison, by shooting or slaughter,
- since February 13, 1997. Because NPS is doing all it can to protect the
- remaining bison herd, NPS will only shoot bison for humanitarian reasons (i.e.,
- injury) or to protect against imminent harm to life or property.
-
-
- There are no cattle in the West Yellowstone area and cattle will not be
- returned to the area before summer. Any potential conflicts with cattle can be
- resolved by ensuring that cattle are managed to provide a sufficient time
- interval after the return of bison to the Park to avoid a significant risk of
- contact between bison and domestic cattle.
-
-
- There is no safe and effective vaccine for brucellosis in bison. Use of
- cattle vaccines in bison causes bison to abort their calves.
-
-
- Management of the freeroaming bison and the 2.2 million acres of
- Yellowstone National Park cannot be validly compared to other parks. Wind Cave
- (28,295 acres) and Theodore Roosevelt (69,701 acres) manage their
- bisonpopulations within specific ranges established for each park. The Wind Cave
- population range is 300400 animals and Theodore Roosevelt's range is 300750
- animals. These parks do not mange their bison as free ranging bison in part
- because the parks have been fenced and are surrounded by private land.
-
-
- The conflict with bison is one aspect of the development and use pressures
- near or up to the park boundaries that Yellowstone National Park has never
- before experienced.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 10:41:58 -0400
- >From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net>
- To: "Animal Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org>
- Subject: U.S. FWS - INT'L MIGRATORY BIRD DAY
- Message-ID: <199705171443.KAA29857@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
- boundary="----=_NextPart_000_01BC62AE.F2131660"
-
-
- News Release
-
- Hugh Vickery 202-208-5634
-
- HELPING PEOPLE HELP BIRDS IS THEME
- OF INTERNATIONAL MIGRATORY BIRD DAY ON MAY 10
- Much has improved in the 35 years since former U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist Rachel
- Carson awakened America to the problem of pesticides with her book Silent Spring. The Nation's
- air and water are cleaner. Harmful chemicals such as DDT have been banned and the bald eagle,
- peregrine falcon, and other species have rebounded as a result.
- But unfortunately, many of the Nation's 800 migratory bird species are still in peril because of
- loss of habitat and misuse of common pesticides that can be found at any hardware store.
- Populations of some species are declining as fast as 2 percent to 4 percent per year.
- "Join the Flock . . . Be Part of the Solution" is the theme of the fifth annual International
- Migratory Bird Day to be observed this year on Saturday, May 10. IMBD is a celebration of
- spring migration and the return of millions of birds to their nesting areas. IMBD features bird
- walks, family activities, bird banding demonstrations, and other events throughout the United
- States and the Western Hemisphere. These events will be held at many national wildlife refuges,
- city and state parks, national forests, national parks, National Audubon sanctuaries and other
- nature reserves.
- "People will have an opportunity not only to enjoy watching and photographing wild birds but
- also to learn what they can do to conserve them," said Service Acting Director John Rogers.
- "Average citizens can play an important role in stopping the decline of some bird populations,"
- Rogers said. "Something as simple as learning the appropriate time and way to apply pesticides to
- your lawn or garden can make a big difference. Many people are inadvertently poisoning birds by
- misusing these chemicals or applying them when birds are especially vulnerable, such as when
- they are nesting."
- The deaths of 20,000 Swainson's hawks in Argentina last year highlighted the problem of
- pesticides killing birds. The Service, working with the Argentine government, received a
- commitment from a major chemical company, Ciba-Geigy, to limit use of the pesticide
- responsible for the deaths and to expand education and training efforts among Argentine farmers.
- Pesticides are still a domestic concern. Every year, 4 million tons of pesticides are applied across
- the United States everywhere from farm fields to homes and gardens. In addition, well over
- 100,000 tons of pesticides no longer permitted to be used in the United States are shipped to
- developing countries where migratory birds spend the winter.
- Loss and fragmentation of habitat also is a major reason for the decline of many bird species. For
- example, the United States has lost more than half its wetlands, nearly all its tallgrass prairie and
- virgin forest, and 75 percent of its shortgrass prairie. Similar destruction and degradation of
- native habitat is ongoing in many other countries along migration routes.
- Last year on International Migratory Bird Day, the Service unveiled a national strategy to better
- conserve bird habitat by coordinating conservation efforts at the local, state, and national levels.
- The plan was developed by Partners in Flight, a partnership of 16 Federal agencies, 60 state and
- provincial fish and wildlife agencies, and more than 100 businesses and conservation
- organizations.
- Under the strategy, dubbed the "Flight Plan," teams of biologists are identifying and ranking bird
- species most in need of conservation and then setting population and habitat objectives for each
- species. They are also designating geographic areas critical to birds and developing a
- conservation blueprint for each species.
- By the end of 1998, the Service and its partners expect to complete 50 regional conservation
- plans. These plans will help landowners who voluntarily conserve birds coordinate their efforts
- with their neighbors.
- "Regardless of much or how little property they own, landowners can become part of a larger
- voluntary effort to conserve birds," Rogers said. "They can get together with a local bird or
- garden club, or coordinate land management or landscaping activities with neighbors and nearby
- parks or refuges. By combining our efforts, we can help ensure future generations will not have
- to face a silent spring."
- Migratory bird conservation also has significant benefits for the economy, Rogers said. The 65
- million adults who watch birds spend up to $9 billion a year on everything from bird seed to
- birding trips, according to a 1995 study commissioned by the Service.
- One of the easiest and most effective things Americans can do for birds is to purchase a
- Migratory Bird Conservation Stamp, commonly known as the "Duck Stamp," available for $15
- from post offices and national wildlife refuges around the country. Ninety-eight cents of every
- dollar raised by Duck Stamp sales is used to buy wetland habitat, which benefits migratory
- waterfowl and a host of other species of birds and wildlife.
- "Our birds are not only a priceless treasure enjoyed by old and young alike but they are also
- significant to our economy, supporting hundreds of thousands of jobs," Rogers said.
- -FWS- Press Releases National News Releases Visit the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Home
- Page
- Keywords: Bird, Migratory, International, Pesticides, Hawks, Partners in Flight Date: Sat, 17
- May 1997 10:43:38 -0400 >From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net> To: "Animal
- Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org> Subject: FISH & WILDLIFE IN ALASKA Message-ID:
- <199705171444.KAA00144@mail.mia.bellsouth.net> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type:
- multipart/alternative; boundary="----=_NextPart_000_01BC62AF.2D7E9300"< x-html>
- U.S. Department of the Interior
- OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
- Stephanie Hanna (O) 202/208-6416 Dan Sakura (O) 202/208-4678
- SECRETARY BABBITT SIGNS AGREEMENT TO PROMOTE ECONOMIC
- DEVELOPMENT FOR ALASKA NATIVES AND TO PROTECT THE KENAI RIVER
- Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt today announced the successful implementation of bipartisan
- legislation to benefit the Kenai Natives Association, Inc., an Alaska Native urban corporation,
- and to protect the Kenai River through the use of settlement funds from the Exxon Valdez oil
- spill.
- Upon signing an agreement with the Kenai Natives Association (KNA) to implement the
- legislation, Secretary Babbitt said, This agreement will both protect fish and wildlife habitat on
- the Kenai River and provide Alaska Natives with significant new opportunities for economic
- development on the Kenai Peninsula.
- This is a great day for Alaska Natives, wildlife, the Kenai River and the Bureau of Land
- Management. I commend Chairman Don Young and Congressman George Miller for their
- successful work to pass this important bipartisan legislation, he continued.
- As part of the Omnibus Parks and Public Lands Management Act of 1996, Congress passed the
- Kenai Natives Association Equity Act Amendments of 1996, which authorized the KNA land
- exchange. KNA is an Alaska Native urban corporation based in Kenai, Alaska, established in
- accordance with the Alaska Natives Claim Settlement Act of 1971.
- In addition to resolving a long-standing land management issue involving the Kenai National
- Wildlife Refuge, the legislation authorizes the creation of the Lake Todatonten Special
- Management Area to protect fish and wildlife habitat and subsistence activities on lands
- administered by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM). In accordance with the legislation,
- Secretary Babbitt today directed the BLM to begin planning to establish the 37,000 acre Special
- Management Area, immediately adjacent to the Kanuti National Wildlife Refuge, in the interior of
- Alaska, northwest of Fairbanks.
- In 1980, Congress established the 1.4 million acre Kanuti Refuge to conserve fish and wildlife
- populations and to provide habitat for white-fronted geese, other waterfowl, migratory birds,
- moose, caribou and other species.
- According to Diana Zirul, President of KNA, the legislation will allow KNA greater flexibility to
- use our lands and will provide additional lands, including the Fish and Wildlife Service
- headquarters site in old town Kenai, important subsurface interests, and the necessary funding
- topromote the economic development of KNA s resources, while still respecting and preserving
- our heritage.
- The agreement was reached in full partnership with the State of Alaska, with the support of
- Governor Tony Knowles. Protecting the Kenai River is important to all Alaskans, Knowles said.
- This is one of a series of gains to protect the Kenai River. A partnership of federal, state and local
- governments, along with the Kenai Natives Association, sport fishing groups, commercial fishing
- groups, businesses and private landowners has come together and, by putting the river first, we
- all benefit.
- The agreement marks the conclusion of almost twenty years of discussions and negotiations
- between KNA and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), the federal agency responsible for
- managing the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge. President Franklin D. Roosevelt set aside 1.7
- million acres of land on the Kenai Peninsula to establish the Kenai National Moose Range in
- 1941. In 1980, Congress expanded the Moose Range to nearly 2 million acres and renamed it the
- Kenai National Wildlife Refuge.
- In Alaska, the BLM manages 89 million acres of federal public land, including the White
- Mountains National Recreation Area and the Steese National Conservation Area, as well as 952
- river miles protected under the National Wild and Scenic Rivers Act.
- Congress passed bi-partisan legislation in 1992 directing Secretary of the Interior to enter into
- expedited negotiations with KNA to reach an agreement to provide for the exchange or
- acquisition of lands. Negotiations conducted in accordance with the 1992 legislation led to the
- agreement that was codified in the 1996 legislation.
- Under the terms of the 1996 legislation:
- oThe U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service would acquire 3,254 acres of land on the Kenai River and
- the Moose River, for inclusion in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, for $4.4 million. As part of
- the EVOS small parcel habitat protection process, the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council
- has agreed to provide $4.0 million from the civil settlement fund. The three federal trustee
- agencies provided the balance of funding from the federal restitution fund.
- oThe land acquisition package includes the Stephanka Tract, an 803 acre tract which was ranked
- among the highest value small parcels for the benefit of species injured by the 1989 Exxon
- Valdez Oil Spill. To protect the important archeological and cultural values of the Stephanka
- Tract, the legislation directs the Interior Department to nominate the tract to the National
- Register of Historic Places.
- oTo provide KNA with additional opportunities for economic development, Congress authorized
- the federal government to convey to KNA a five acre refuge headquarters site from the FWS in
- old town Kenai as well as important subsurface rights, with the exception of coal, oil and gas
- rights, beneath KNA s retained lands. The legislation also authorizes the Secretary of the Interior
- to amend the Kenai Refuge boundary to exclude privately-owned KNA lands from the Refuge
- and to lift development restrictions, whichwere imposed by the Alaska Natives Claims Settlement
- Act, from KNA s lands. KNA will retain a significant land base of approximately 20,000 acres
- following the implementation of the agreement.
- oTo compensate for the removal of restrictions on the private land currently in the refuge,
- Secretary Babbitt today directed the BLM to begin the initial planning for the new Lake
- Todatonten Special Management area and to establish an eleven-member committee. The
- committee will include individuals from the villages of Alatna, Allakaket, Hughes and Tanana, as
- well as representatives from the Doyon Corporation, the Tanana Chiefs Conference and the
- State of Alaska.
- -DOI-
-
- You can get to the Department of the Interior from here
- You can also view the index of press releases
- U.S. Department of the Interior, Washington, DC, USA
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 10:45:30 -0400 >From: "radioactive" <radioactive@bellsouth.net> To:
- "Animal Rights" <ar-news@envirolink.org> Subject: MASSACHUSETTS MAN SENTENCED
- FOR ILLEGAL HUNTING Message-ID: <199705171446.KAA00447@mail.mia.bellsouth.net>
- MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
- boundary="----=_NextPart_000_01BC62AF.70838E80"< x-html> News Release
- For further information, contact
- Diana Weaver (413) 253-8329
- Christopher Dowd (617) 424-5750
-
-
- Massachusetts Man Sentenced for Illegal Alaska Hunting
- A Massachusetts man who hunted illegally in Alaska will pay nearly $30,000 in fines and
- restitution and will not be able to hunt during his two-year probation as punishment for violating
- federal wildlife protection laws. Because of the felony conviction, he will never again be able to
- own a firearm.
- In a week-long trial last autumn in a Springfield, Mass., courtroom filled with life-size mounted
- game animals, a federal jury convicted Lawrence J. Romano, 50, of Mount Washington, Mass.,
- of six felony charges for hunting without a valid license in Alaska and then transporting the
- illegally taken game across state lines. Those actions violated the Lacey Act, a federal statute
- regulating the sale and purchase of wildlife in interstate commerce. Romano operates several
- tatoo parlors in the Northeast.
- During the March 27 sentencing, U.S. District Court Judge Michael A. Ponsor fined Romano
- $20,000. In addition, Judge Ponsor ordered Romano to pay the State of Alaska $9,994 in
- restitution of lost hunting license revenue and placed him on supervised probation for two years.
- As a condition of his probation, Romano will not be allowed to hunt or to be in the company of
- people engaged in hunting anywhere in the world during his probation.
- The judge also ordered that firearms would not be allowed in the Romano residence during the
- probationary period and advised Romano that, as a convicted felon, he would never be
- authorized to possess a firearm for the rest of his life.
- Judge Ponsor also approved a forfeiture order for six big game mounts that wildlife agents seized
- from Romano's home in February 1995. These mounts included Dall sheep, moose and caribou
- that had been killed illegally in Alaska. A life-size brown bear mount, seized from the Romano
- residence, was previously forfeited to the government as part of a civil action.
- During the criminal trial, the prosecution presented evidence that Romano illegally hunted in
- Alaska from 1990 through 1994 without a valid Alaska hunting license and then transported the
- illegally killed animals to Massachusetts. The prosecution provided documentation showing that
- Romano falsely claimed to be an Alaska resident on his application for an Alaska hunting license,
- thereby saving thousands of dollars in hunting and licensing fees. Because Romano purchased the
- services of Alaska guides during the course of his illegal hunting activities and then transported
- the unlawfully taken wildlife across state lines, his conduct violated the felony section of the
- Lacey Act.
- While searching the Romano residence, state and federal wildlife agents discovered a live black
- bear in a cage behind his house and a live copperhead snake, which is an endangered species in
- Massachusetts, in the cellar. Both animals were possessed in violation of state law and were
- seized by the Massachusetts Environmental Police, with the assistance of officers of the Animal
- Rescue League of Boston. Romano paid a $5,000 fine in state court stemming from these
- violations.
- This case was investigated by special agents of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from Boston,
- New York and Anchorage, Alaska; the Massachusetts Environmental Police; the Massachusetts
- State Police; and investigators from the Alaska State Troopers Fish and Wildlife Protection. The
- case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Nadine Pellegrini of the Major Crimes Unit and
- Trial Attorney Charles W. Brooks of the Justice Department's Environmental Division.
-
- : Sat, 17 May 1997 12:03:28 -0400 >From: allen schubert
- <alathome@clark.net> To: ar-news@envirolink.org Cc:
- radioactive@bellsouth.net Subject: Admin Note: HTML files
- Message-ID: <3.0.32.19970517120324.006d050c@clark.net> Mime-Version:
- 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Do not post Embedded
- HTML files to AR-News! Either copy/paste as text in e-mail or save
- the file in text (.txt) format then edit it in your word processor,
- then copy/paste into e-mail as text. Many subscribers do not have
- sophisticated software and hardware to handle such e-mail. For many
- subscribers, this creates e-mail with HTML throughout the e-mail,
- forcing them to "read around" the HTML tags. This is even more of a
- problem for those on the Digest version of AR-News, as this slows
- downloading time. Remember--just because your computer can handle it,
- doesn't mean that everyone else's computer can do so. Many people
- are still using "shell" programs to access the internet. allen
- ******** "We are either part of the problem or part of the solution.
- Walk your talk and no one will be in doubt of where you stand." --
- Howard F. Lyman Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 09:40:07 -0700 >From: Andrew
- Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net> To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject:
- Canadian fur industry wages PR campaign Message-ID:
- <337DDF67.2B42@worldnet.att.net> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type:
- text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
- Canada's embattled fur industry fine-tunes traps to avoid ban
- Copyright 1997 The Associated Press VEGREVILLE, Alberta (May 17,
- 1997 11:43 a.m. EDT) -- Their mission sounds like an oxymoron:
- devising traps to kill animals as humanely as possible. Using
- high-tech methods approved by a national council of veterinarians, a
- research team in thissmall prairie town is testing a variety of
- lethally named contraptions. For example, there's the C-120 Magnum, a
- "single-strike rotating jaw trap with pitchfork trigger."
- Animal-rights militants denounce the work as ghastly. They also
- oppose it because it is a crucial part of the strategy employed by
- Canada's government and fur industry in the global battle over the
- fur trade. Canada is playing a pivotal role in a long-running dispute
- between the European Union and the major trapping nations. The EU has
- been threatening for years to ban fur imports from Canada, Russia and
- the United States unless they outlaw all leg-hold traps, which many
- animal-rights groups consider barbaric. Canada has negotiated a
- compromise it hopes will be ratified by the EU in June. It has agreed
- to phase out steel leg-hold traps over the next four years, but would
- allow trappers to continue using padded leg-hold traps while
- international standards are developed for improved trapping methods.
- Those standards would be based in large measure on the research being
- done in Vegreville, 65 miles east of Edmonton, at a government
- complex housing various agricultural, wildlife and environmental
- programs. Since 1985, the Trap Effectiveness Project has spent more
- than $8 million on developing "humane trapping systems." Larry Roy,
- the project director, said countering an EU ban is one of the top
- priorities of his 11-member team. The team tests its traps in a
- five-acre compound where coyotes, martens and other fur-bearing
- animals are kept in large pens that try to simulate natural
- conditions. Human contact is kept to a minimum, and infrared video
- monitoring is used to observe the animals' interaction with the
- traps. "There's nothing else like this in the world," Roy said.
- "We've done more work than anybody." The researchers try to minimize
- the number of live animals killed in testing. One new technique is to
- use a simulated trap on a computer. Roy showed a visitor a
- computer-generated animation in which a marten's neck is broken when
- it nibbles at a baited trap attached to a log leaned against a tree.
- Traps are tested for practicality and effectiveness. Those designed
- to kill an animal must consistently hit vital spots -- the head, neck
- or chest -- and should render 70 percent of animals insensible to
- pain in less than five minutes. Current so-called kill traps mostly
- wound animals, which can linger for hours or days in great pain
- before dying. A different standard is being worked out for
- restraining traps, which hold a live animal until the trapper
- returns. Researchers are seeking to measure the trauma a trapped
- animal suffers, and develop traps that can keep the trauma below an
- acceptable level. An animal-care council that includes veterinarians
- monitors the methods used by the trap-testing team, but animal-rights
- activists still criticize the Vegreville project. "These are pretty
- ghoulish kinds of experiments," said Ainslie Willock of the Animal
- Alliance of Canada. At the center of the dispute is the leg-hold
- trap, which in the past clamped tight on an animal's leg with toothed
- metal jaws. Canada has outlawed the toothed models for many years,
- but animal rights groups still display them at rallies and in
- advertisements. Non-toothed leg-hold traps are still used in Canada
- for a few larger species like lynx and fox. But a large majority of
- the 1 million animals trapped annually for fur in Canada are caught
- in killing traps, said Alison Beal, executive director of the Fur
- Institute of Canada. "The animal welfare people have an emotional
- allergy to leg-hold traps that's bred out of ignorance," she said.
- The tentative agreement between Canada and the EU would set
- international standards for acceptable trapping methods, species by
- species. The Vegreville team has approved traps for eight species,
- including an underwater model that catches and drowns beavers. A
- restraining trap has been developed for red foxes that has neoprene
- padding on the metal jaws and a shock-absorbing spring in the trap's
- chain to prevent ligament injury once a fox is caught. The research
- is part of an aggressive, well-financed campaign by Canada's fur
- industry to head off an EU import ban. One of its best weapons has
- been lobbying in Europe by Inuit and Indian leaders who note that
- half of Canada's 80,000 trappers are indigenous peoples and would be
- devastated by a ban. Native delegations, including one led by World
- War II veterans, toured Europe to denounce the ban as a potential
- violation of a U.N. covenant protecting the livelihoods of aboriginal
- peoples. "We helped liberate the European countries when they were
- really in need," said Gilbert MacLeod, an Indian from Saskatchewan
- who fought in Belgium and France. "Now we are in need, and we're
- coming to them to ask them to consider our cause." The Canadian
- government and fur industry believe they are making headway in the
- battle for public opinion, depicting trapping as a time-honored way
- of managing wildlife populations and using a renewable resource.
- "Trappers have to get a license," said Beal, the trade group
- director. "They are not people blundering about without a clue of
- what they're doing, just sort of killing things," Beal expressed
- appreciation for the government's efforts on behalf of trappers,
- saying lessons had been learned after lobbying by animal rights
- groups nearly crushed the Canadian sealing industry in the 1980s.
- "From the prime minister on down, Canadian officials are doing a
- masterful job keeping our trade open," she said. Complicating the
- dispute is a division within the European Union. EU environment
- ministers, who deal closely with animal-rights groups, favor barring
- fur imports. But trade ministers support the compromise that would
- allow continued use of some leg-hold traps. Both Canada and the
- United States, which hasn't yet endorsed the compromise, have
- threatened to lodge a complaint with the World Trade Organization if
- a ban is imposed. Willock, of the Animal Alliance of Canada, is
- optimistic the European Parliament will demand that the compromise be
- scrapped in favor of a tougher line on leg-held traps. "The fur
- industry is worried sick about Europe," she said. "If the ban is put
- into place, it sends the message that all fur is cruel." Willock said
- the anti-fur movement is worried the fur market might boom in Russia
- and China, but believes its heyday in the West is over. "This is an
- industry that doesn't have a future," she said. "It has lost its
- market niche." The fur industry says export figures show otherwise.
- After a bleak period in the late 1980s and early '90s, exports have
- surged back. Canada's exports of fur garments rose 45 percent last
- year to $90 million, and exports of raw furs were up 36 percent to
- $100 million, the Canadian Fur Council says. Alan Herscovici, the
- council's director of strategic development, attributed the upsurge
- to better global economic conditions and innovation by fur designers.
- "A ban would be a serious blow for everybody," Herscovici said. "If
- we're going to get into arbitrary trade bans based on pseudo-science,
- then our whole world trading system is in trouble." By DAVID CRARY,
- The Associated Press Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 10:16:35 -0800 >From:
- j_abbott@portal.ca (Jennifer Abbott) To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (CA) 1986 Farm Census Message-ID:
- <v01530500afa3a253ac29@[204.174.36.165]> Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" Sales, diversification
- both increase: Farm census presents a faily bright picture by Eric
- Beauchesne, Southam Newspapers The Vancouver Sun, May 15, 1997, Page
- D6 OTTAWA--Farms are still disppearing but at the slowest pace in 44
- years, whicle the size of their sales has grown dramatically over the
- past 15 years. Wheat remains the king crop, beef cattle are in
- fashion and being shipped out in growing numbers, and dairy cows are
- down in number but those that remain are more productive. That's part
- of the picture that emerges from the first of what will be three
- snapshots of farms and farmers taken by Statistics Canada's 1996
- census of agriculture. It was conducted last spring, which was "one
- of the worst on record in may growing areas in Canada because of
- cold, wet conditions." Nonetheless, the picture released Wednesday, a
- year to the day after the farm census was taken, was relatively
- bright. It found that free trade, the growing importance of exports,
- the changing tastes of Canadian consumers and the spread of
- technology are altering the face of agriculture in Canada, prompting
- farmers to diversify their production to match demand. This has led
- to the introduction or expanded production of non-traditional crops
- and livestock, leaving the rural landscape dotted with ginseng and
- garlic, and bison, elk and goats -- even llamas and their cousins
- Alpacas, which protect and provide companionship for sheep as well as
- providing cloth fibre. But traditional crops continued to dominate
- the landscape. "As expected wheat remained Canada's largest crop in
- 1996," Statistics Canada noted. "However, even with more tha 30.7
- million acres, it commanded a substantially smaller proportion of
- total field crop area than in any time in the past 20 years." The
- decline was due to farmers diversifying into other crops, such as hay
- and fodder to feed their growing beef herds, and soybeans to take
- advantage of increasing global demand and prices. Leading the shift
- to non-traditional crops was high-value ginseng, a staple in
- traditional Chinese medicine that flourishes in sandy loam soils. The
- acreage devoted to garlic, which has long had both culinary and
- medicinal uses, and to spelt, an ancient Ethipian grain both surged
- as well. Not all the growth in farming was talking place outdoors, as
- the greenhouse industry made "impressive gains" producing cut
- flowers, bedding and potting plants, and vegetables and seedlings.
- Later census snapshots that look at farmers will be released this
- fall and next spring. Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 13:26:22 -0400 (EDT)
- >From: LMANHEIM@aol.com To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: Fwd:
- European Union, Canada, and trapping. Message-ID:
- <970517132148_-631455167@emout06.mail.aol.com> In a message dated
- 97-05-17 11:15:30 EDT, AOL News writes: << Subj:Traps Work To Kill
- Animals Humanely Date:97-05-17 11:15:30 EDT From:AOL News
- BCC:LMANHEIM .c The Associated Press By DAVID CRARY
- VEGREVILLE, Alberta (AP) - Their mission sounds like an oxymoron:
- devising traps to kill animals as humanely as possible. Using
- high-tech methods approved by a national council of veterinarians, a
- research team in this small prairie town is testing a variety of
- lethally named contraptions. For example, there's the C-120 Magnum, a
- ``single-strike rotating jaw trap with pitchfork trigger.''
- Animal-rights militants denounce the work as ghastly. They also
- oppose it because it is a crucial part of the strategy employed by
- Canada's government and fur industry in the global battle over the
- fur trade. Canada is playing a pivotal role in a long-running
- dispute between the European Union and the major trapping nations.
- The EU has been threatening for years to ban fur imports from Canada,
- Russia and the United States unless they outlaw all leg-hold traps,
- which many animal-rights groups consider barbaric. Canada has
- negotiated a compromise it hopes will be ratified by the EU in June.
- It has agreed to phase out steel leg-hold traps over the next four
- years, but would allow trappers to continue using padded leg-hold
- traps while international standards are developed for improved
- trapping methods. Those standards would be based in large
- measure on the research being done in Vegreville, 65 miles east of
- Edmonton, at a government complex housing various agricultural,
- wildlife and environmental programs. Since 1985, the Trap
- Effectiveness Project has spent more than $8 million on developing
- ``humane trapping systems.'' Larry Roy, the project director,
- said countering an EU ban is one of the top priorities of his
- 11-member team. The team tests its traps in a five-acre
- compound where coyotes, martens and other fur-bearing animals are
- kept in large pens that try to simulate natural conditions. Human
- contact is kept to a minimum, and infrared video monitoring is used
- to observe the animals' interaction with the traps. ``There's
- nothing else like this in the world,'' Roy said. ``We've done more
- work than anybody.'' The researchers try to minimize the number
- of live animals killed in testing. One new technique is to use a
- simulated trap on a computer. Roy showed a visitor a
- computer-generated animation in which a marten's neck is broken when
- it nibbles at a baited trap attached to a log leaned against a tree.
- Traps are tested for practicality and effectiveness. Those
- designed to kill an animal must consistently hit vital spots - the
- head, neck or chest - and should render 70 percent of animals
- insensible to pain in less than five minutes. Current so-called kill
- traps mostly wound animals, which can linger for hours or days in
- great pain before dying. A different standard is being worked
- out for restraining traps, which hold a live animal until the trapper
- returns. Researchers are seeking to measure the trauma a trapped
- animal suffers, and develop traps that can keep the trauma below an
- acceptable level. An animal-care council that includes
- veterinarians monitors the methods used by the trap-testing team, but
- animal-rights activists still criticize the Vegreville project.
- ``These are pretty ghoulish kinds of experiments,'' said Ainslie
- Willock of the Animal Alliance of Canada. At the center of the
- dispute is the leg-hold trap, which in the past clamped tight on an
- animal's leg with toothed metal jaws. Canada has outlawed the toothed
- models for many years, but animal rights groups still display them at
- rallies and in advertisements. Non-toothed leg-hold traps are
- still used in Canada for a few larger species like lynx and fox. But
- a large majority of the 1 million animals trapped annually for fur in
- Canada are caught in killing traps, said Alison Beal, executive
- director of the Fur Institute of Canada. ``The animal welfare
- people have an emotional allergy to leg-hold traps that's bred out of
- ignorance,'' she said. The tentative agreement between Canada
- and the EU would set international standards for acceptable trapping
- methods, species by species. The Vegreville team has approved
- traps for eight species, including an underwater model that catches
- and drowns beavers. A restraining trap has been developed for red
- foxes that has neoprene padding on the metal jaws and a
- shock-absorbing spring in the trap's chain to prevent ligament injury
- once a fox is caught. The research is part of an aggressive,
- well-financed campaign by Canada's fur industry to head off an EU
- import ban. One of its best weapons has been lobbying in Europe by
- Inuit and Indian leaders who note that half of Canada's 80,000
- trappers are indigenous peoples and would be devastated by a ban.
- Native delegations, including one led by World War II veterans,
- toured Europe to denounce the ban as a potential violation of a U.N.
- covenant protecting the livelihoods of aboriginal peoples. ``We
- helped liberate the European countries when they were really in
- need,'' said Gilbert MacLeod, an Indian from Saskatchewan who fought
- in Belgium and France. ``Now we are in need, and we're coming to them
- to ask them to consider our cause.'' The Canadian government
- and fur industry believe they are making headway in the battle for
- public opinion, depicting trapping as a time-honored way of managing
- wildlife populations and using a renewable resource. ``Trappers
- have to get a license,'' said Beal, the trade group director. ``They
- are not people blundering about without a clue of what they're doing,
- just sort of killing things,'' Beal expressed appreciation for
- the government's efforts on behalf of trappers, saying lessons had
- been learned after lobbying by animal rights groups nearly crushed
- the Canadian sealing industry in the 1980s. ``From the prime
- minister on down, Canadian officials are doing a masterful job
- keeping our trade open,'' she said. Complicating the dispute is
- a division within the European Union. EU environment ministers, who
- deal closely with animal-rights groups, favor barring fur imports.
- But trade ministers support the compromise that would allow continued
- use of some leg-hold traps. Both Canada and the United States,
- which hasn't yet endorsed the compromise, have threatened to lodge a
- complaint with the World Trade Organization if a ban is imposed.
- Willock, of the Animal Alliance of Canada, is optimistic the European
- Parliament will demand that the compromise be scrapped in favor of a
- tougher line on leg-held traps. ``The fur industry is worried
- sick about Europe,'' she said. ``If the ban is put into place, it
- sends the message that all fur is cruel.'' Willock said the
- anti-fur movement is worried the fur market might boom in Russia and
- China, but believes its heyday in the West is over. ``This is
- an industry that doesn't have a future,'' she said. ``It has lost its
- market niche.'' The fur industry says export figures show
- otherwise. After a bleak period in the late 1980s and early '90s,
- exports have surged back. Canada's exports of fur garments rose 45
- percent last year to $90 million, and exports of raw furs were up 36
- percent to $100 million, the Canadian Fur Council says. Alan
- Herscovici, the council's director of strategic development,
- attributed the upsurge to better global economic conditions and
- innovation by fur designers. ``A ban would be a serious blow
- for everybody,'' Herscovici said. ``If we're going to get into
- arbitrary trade bans based on pseudo-science, then our whole world
- trading system is in trouble.'' AP-NY-05-17-97 1103EDT >>
- --------------------- Forwarded message: Subj: Traps Work To Kill
- Animals Humanely Date: 97-05-17 11:15:30 EDT >From: AOL News
- .c The Associated Press
- By DAVID CRARY VEGREVILLE, Alberta (AP) - Their mission sounds like an oxymoron:
- devising traps to kill animals as humanely as possible. Using high-tech methods approved by a
- national council of veterinarians, a research team in this small prairie town is testing a variety of
- lethally named contraptions. For example, there's the C-120 Magnum, a ``single-strike rotating
- jaw trap with pitchfork trigger.'' Animal-rights militants denounce the work as ghastly. They
- also oppose it because it is a crucial part of the strategy employed by Canada's government and
- fur industry in the global battle over the fur trade. Canada is playing a pivotal role in a
- long-running dispute between the European Union and the major trapping nations. The EU has
- been threatening for years to ban fur imports from Canada, Russia and the United States unless
- they outlaw all leg-hold traps, which many animal-rights groups consider barbaric. Canada has
- negotiated a compromise it hopes will be ratified by the EU in June. It has agreed to phase out
- steel leg-hold traps over the next four years, but would allow trappers to continue using padded
- leg-hold traps while international standards are developed for improved trapping methods.
- Those standards would be based in large measure on the research being done in Vegreville, 65
- miles east of Edmonton, at a government complex housing various agricultural, wildlife and
- environmental programs. Since 1985, the Trap Effectiveness Project has spent more than $8
- million on developing ``humane trapping systems.'' Larry Roy, the project director, said
- countering an EU ban is one of the top priorities of his 11-member team. The team tests its
- traps in a five-acre compound where coyotes, martens and other fur-bearing animals are kept in
- large pens that try to simulate natural conditions. Human contact is kept to a minimum, and
- infrared video monitoring is used to observe the animals' interaction with the traps. ``There's
- nothing else like this in the world,'' Roy said. ``We've done more work than anybody.'' The
- researchers try to minimize the number of live animals killed in testing. One new technique is to
- use a simulated trap on a computer. Roy showed a visitor a computer-generated animation in
- which a marten's neck is broken when it nibbles at a baited trap attached to a log leaned against a
- tree. Traps are tested for practicality and effectiveness. Those designed to kill an animal must
- consistently hit vital spots - the head, neck or chest - and should render 70 percent of animals
- insensible to pain in less than five minutes. Current so-called kill traps mostly wound animals,
- which can linger for hours or days in great pain before dying. A different standard is being
- worked out for restraining traps, which hold a live animal until the trapper returns. Researchers
- are seeking to measure the trauma a trapped animal suffers, and develop traps that can keep the
- trauma below an acceptable level. An animal-care council that includes veterinarians monitors
- the methods used by the trap-testing team, but animal-rights activists still criticize the Vegreville
- project. ``These are pretty ghoulish kinds of experiments,'' said Ainslie Willock of the Animal
- Alliance of Canada. At the center of the dispute is the leg-hold trap, which in the past clamped
- tight on an animal's leg with toothed metal jaws. Canada has outlawed the toothed models for
- many years, but animal rights groups still display them at rallies and in advertisements.
- Non-toothed leg-hold traps are still used in Canada for a few larger species like lynx and fox. But
- a large majority of the 1 million animals trapped annually for fur in Canada are caught in killing
- traps, said Alison Beal, executive director of the Fur Institute of Canada. ``The animal welfare
- people have an emotional allergy to leg-hold traps that's bred out of ignorance,'' she said. The
- tentative agreement between Canada and the EU would set international standards for acceptable
- trapping methods, species by species. The Vegreville team has approved traps for eight
- species, including an underwater model that catches and drowns beavers. A restraining trap has
- been developed for red foxes that has neoprene padding on the metal jaws and a shock-absorbing
- spring in the trap's chain to prevent ligament injury once a fox is caught. The research is part
- of an aggressive, well-financed campaign by Canada's fur industry to head off an EU import ban.
- One of its best weapons has been lobbying in Europe by Inuit and Indian leaders who note that
- half of Canada's 80,000 trappers are indigenous peoples and would be devastated by a ban.
- Native delegations, including one led by World War II veterans, toured Europe to denounce the
- ban as a potential violation of a U.N. covenant protecting the livelihoods of aboriginal peoples.
- ``We helped liberate the European countries when they were really in need,'' said Gilbert
- MacLeod, an Indian from Saskatchewan who fought in Belgium and France. ``Now we are in
- need, and we're coming to them to ask them to consider our cause.'' The Canadian government
- and fur industry believe they are making headway in the battle for public opinion, depicting
- trapping as a time-honored way of managing wildlife populations and using a renewable resource.
- ``Trappers have to get a license,'' said Beal, the trade group director. ``They are not people
- blundering about without a clue of what they're doing, just sort of killing things,'' Beal
- expressed appreciation for the government's efforts on behalf of trappers, saying lessons had been
- learned after lobbying by animal rights groups nearly crushed the Canadian sealing industry in the
- 1980s. ``From the prime minister on down, Canadian officials are doing a masterful job
- keeping our trade open,'' she said. Complicating the dispute is a division within the European
- Union. EU environment ministers, who deal closely with animal-rights groups, favor barring fur
- imports. But trade ministers support the compromise that would allow continued use of some
- leg-hold traps. Both Canada and the United States, which hasn't yet endorsed the compromise,
- have threatened to lodge a complaint with the World Trade Organization if a ban is imposed.
- Willock, of the Animal Alliance of Canada, is optimistic the European Parliament will demand that
- the compromise be scrapped in favor of a tougher line on leg-held traps. ``The fur industry is
- worried sick about Europe,'' she said. ``If the ban is put into place, it sends the message that all fur
- is cruel.'' Willock said the anti-fur movement is worried the fur market might boom in Russia
- and China, but believes its heyday in the West is over. ``This is an industry that doesn't have a
- future,'' she said. ``It has lost its market niche.'' The fur industry says export figures show
- otherwise. After a bleak period in the late 1980s and early '90s, exports have surged back.
- Canada's exports of fur garments rose 45 percent last year to $90 million, and exports of raw furs
- were up 36 percent to $100 million, the Canadian Fur Council says. Alan Herscovici, the
- council's director of strategic development, attributed the upsurge to better global economic
- conditions and innovation by fur designers. ``A ban would be a serious blow for everybody,''
- Herscovici said. ``If we're going to get into arbitrary trade bans based on pseudo-science, then our
- whole world trading system is in trouble.'' AP-NY-05-17-97 1103EDT
- Copyright 1997 The
- Associated Press. The information
- contained in the AP news report may not be published,
- broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without
- prior written authority of The Associated Press.
-
- To edit your profile, go to keyword NewsProfiles. For all of today's news, go to keyword News.
- Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 14:06:49 -0400 (EDT) >From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu> To:
- ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: AR/Veg McCartney Stuff Online Saturday/CPEA Message-ID:
- <Pine.BSF.3.95.970517135714.1770B-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu> MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII CPEA helped VH1 diagnose the problems
- with their McCartney CG1 software, and extracted a commitment that the AR/Veg related
- questions would be passed along to McCartney. And as you can see, he's covering animal rights,
- biomass coversion and cloning. Alas, the JAVA requirement for chat at 2PM (http:// vh1.com or
- flamingpie.com) was not revealed till this morning, and the registration software was flawed,
- meaning unix Lynx users may not be able to get in to chat w/Paul at 2PM. This means CPEA
- may be unable to participate. CPEA would like to remind activists to go to those sites and join
- the chat. It will be an opportunity to expose millions to the McCartneys' AR/Veg views. Pat Fish
- Computer Professionals for Earth & Animals Date: Sat, 17 May 1997 13:50:42 -0700 >From:
- Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net> To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject: Government
- panel on cloning Message-ID: <337E1A22.2E6B@worldnet.att.net> MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Clinton advisers want
- voluntary cloning ban for private researchers The Associated Press WASHINGTON (May 17,
- 1997 3:37 p.m. EDT) -- A ban on financing human cloning experiments with federal money
- should continue, and private researchers should voluntarily comply with the moratorium, a panel
- working on recommendations to President Clinton suggested Saturday. The National Bioethics
- Advisory Commission is scheduled to send Clinton a final set of recommendations for government
- policy on human cloning by May 27. No final decisions have been made, but the panel met
- Saturday to discuss proposed recommendations and work on refining them. Clinton formed the
- 18-member commission to study implications of human cloning after Scottish scientists unveiled
- Dolly the sheep in February, the first known clone of an adult mammal. The current moratorium
- pertains to federally funded human cloning experimentation, although Clinton has suggested
- extending the ban to private studies. The panel's chairman Harold Shapiro, president of Princeton
- University, wants the panel to meet again -- before May 27 -- to complete its recommendations
- but was uncertain whether that would happen. Shapiro raised the possibility of delaying the final
- report until after the panel's next scheduled meeting on June 7. "If we have to do that, we will
- certainly be in contact with the White House to see if that's acceptable or not acceptable," he said.
- The panel also is considering whether to recommend federal legislation to extend scientific
- oversight to private clinics now experimenting with in vitro fertilization and other test-tube
- research. Federally funded research comes under such regulations now. Human subjects already
- are protected by Food and Drug Administration rules when substances are administered to them
- in private or government research. But some panel members worry that the proposed
- recommendation as now worded might not achieve its intended purpose. It says scientific controls
- should be extended to "all research settings whether in the public or private sector." The
- proposal's lack of specifications for what constitutes research will provide a loophole, some
- members said. "Our concern here is that an in vitro fertilization doctor will say 'I'm not doing
- research, but using an innovative technique to help a couple with severe infertility,"' said panel
- member Bernard Lo, director of medical ethics at the University of California, San Francisco.
- Historically, in vitro fertilization doctors have used this argument to avoid scientific oversight, Lo
- said. Another proposed recommendation would recommend carefully crafted, narrowly tailored
- federal legislation to ban the use of human cloning techniques to create offspring. While the goal
- of the recommendation was roundly supported, some panel members said they worry that the
- legislative process could, perhaps unintentionally, restrict other kinds of research. "I'm generically
- uncomfortable with federal legislation as a first-line approach," said panel member R. Alta Charo,
- a law professor at the University of Wisconsin. The panel also is considering recommendations
- reaffirming the acceptability of research in animal cloning. "This is a very important foundation"
- to modern biomedical research, said Shapiro. Such research is said to be important for animal
- breeding and for research into new ways to fight human genetic diseases such as cystic fibrosis.
- Given the ethical, scientific and policy ramifications of human cloning, the panel also is
- considering a recommendation that the federal government educate and inform the public about
- science and cloning. By JEANNINE AVERSA, The Associated Press Date: Sat, 17 May 1997
- 17:17:14 -0400 (EDT) >From: Pat Fish <pfish@fang.cs.sunyit.edu> To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: AR/Cloning/Veg Great PR on VH1 McCartney Answer-Session Message-ID:
- <Pine.BSF.3.95.970517170350.2496C-100000@fang.cs.sunyit.edu> MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII During VH1's Live Answer-Session with
- knighted Beatle Paul McCartney, the issue of animal rights and vegetarianism came up *several*
- times. (Success!) A record breaking 3 Million questions were sent, and the "Town Hall" meeting
- also broke internet records for the most e-mail ever sent. Approximately 16 minutes into the
- show, McCartney is asked how he would change the world, if he could. He said he'd like to see
- an end to violence, which included, of course, violence to animals, a switch to vegetarianism and
- support for animal rights. About 30 minutes into the show, a woman on the street asks why he
- went vegetarian and if his dogs are vegetarian. Paul explains that it's an issue of compassion and
- retells the well-known lamb story. Paul explains how with Earth's growing population he thinks
- going "veggie" will be very important in the next century, citing that you can feed 20 people on a
- vegetarian diet with same resources consumed by one person on a meat diet. He never gets to the
- dog question. About 4 minutes later a woman in the audience asked what political sentiments
- would be on the new "Flaming Pie" album besides animal rights. Paul talks about war, etc.
- Nearly 58 minutes into the hour-long show, Paul is asked, as an animal rights activist, about his
- position on the recently cloned sheep. Paul says he's scared about where this is all going, and
- thinks that traditional reproductive systems are just dandy thank you very much. See the below
- listing to catch this great program (all times are US-EST). For complete Schedule see earlier
- VH1/McCartney message or goto VH1.com Pat Fish Computer Profesionals for Earth & Animals
- Saturday, May 17th 9:00 -10:00 PM McCartney's Town Hall Meeting Live from London
- (repeat) Sunday, May 18th 3:00 - 4:00 PM McCartney's Town Hall Meeting Live from London
- (repeat) 4:00 - 5:30 PM Paul McCartney and the World Tonight (Includes a bit on
- the cartoon "Tropic Island Hum" which has anti-hunting leanings.) Evening 7:00
- - 8:00 PM McCartney's Town Hall Meeting Live from London (repeat) Date: Sun, 18 May 1997
- 11:00:03 +0800 (SST) >From: Vadivu Govind <kuma@cyberway.com.sg> To:
- ar-news@envirolink.org, veg-news@envirolink.org Subject: WHO on quality of life and longevity
- Message-ID: <199705180300.LAA27520@eastgate.cyberway.com.sg> Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii" >Daily News Sunday 18, May 1997 Longevity
- without quality of life an empty prize - WHO By E. Weerapperuma THE DRAMATIC increase in
- life expectancy in recent decades without quality of life is an empty prize, says the World Health
- Organisation (WHO) report for 1997 under the headline "Conquering, Suffering, Enriching
- Humanity''. "In celebrating out extra years, we must recognise that increased longevity without
- quality of life is an empty prize, that is, that health expectancy is more important than life
- expectancy'', the Director - General of the WHO Dr. Hiroshi Nakajima has remarked in his
- observation in the 1997, World Report on Health. Dr. Nakajima says "the outlook is a crisis of
- suffering on global scale'' and adds that "there is an urgent need to improve our ability to prevent,
- treat and where possible, to cure these diseases, and to care for those who cannot be cured''. "In
- the battle for health in the 21 century, infectious diseases and chronic diseases are twin enemies
- that have to be fought simultaneously on a global scale. We dare not turn our backs on infectious
- diseases for they will return with a vengeance if we do'', Dr. Nakajima states. "But neither can we
- ignore the growing burden in ill-health and disability imposed by non-communicable diseases. This
- too is the plight of hundreds of millions,'' he stated in his report. The report warns that cancer,
- heart disease and other chronic conditions which already kill more than 24 m people a year will
- impose increasing burdens of suffering and disability on hundreds of millions of others. Heart
- disease and stroke - the leading causes of death in richer nations will become much more than
- double by the year 2025, says the 1997 World Health Report. The report has pointed out that
- tobacco-related deaths, primarily from lung cancer and circulatory disease, already amounts to
- three million or 6 percent of total deaths an year. The WHO report for 1997 has observed that
- smoking accounts for one in seven cancer cases around the world. The WHO report says that the
- number of cancer cases is expected to double in most countries during the next 25 years. There
- will be a 33 per cent rise in lung cancers in women and a 40 per cent increase in prostate cancers
- in men in European Union countries alone, by 2005. The incidence of some other cancers is also
- rising rapidly in the developing countries in particular, the report said. The report shows that at
- present: Circulatory diseases such as heart attacks and stroke together kill 15.3 m people a year'
- Cancer in all its forms kills 6.3 m people a year; Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease kills 2.9 m
- people a year and these add up to 24.5 m deaths, or 47 per cent of the annual global total of
- deaths from all causes. According to the report by the year 2020, at least 15 million people in the
- world would develop cancer in comparison to the ten million people developing cancer annually at
- present. The doubling of the new cases will occur in the developing countries with about 40
- percent increase in the industrial countries. "Between 1995 to 2025, the number of people in the
- world with diabetes is expected to rise from about 135 million to 300 million the report said.
- >From the population around the world deaths due to infectious and parasitic diseases account for
- 17.3 million, or 33 percent; deaths due to perinatal and neonatal causes account for 3.5 million.
- There are 585,000 maternal deaths and six million deaths from other and unknown causes,
- including accidents, violence, homicide and suicide, the report said. Date: Sun, 18 May 1997
- 11:36:55 +0800 >From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au> To: ar-news@envirolink.org Subject:
- Slaughter-lambs left to die [West Australia] Message-ID:
- <1.5.4.16.19970518112821.2ecf52e6@wantree.com.au> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type:
- text/plain; charset="us-ascii" SLAUGHTER (Front Page feature:Includes picture of RSPCA
- officer holding up a baby lamb) Lambs left to die. By Monica Videnieks (Sunday Times,Western
- Australia) 18th May 1997 NEWBORN lambs are being slaughtered or left to die at the Midland
- livestock saleyards because farmers are ignoring bans on the sale of pregnant ewes. Up to 30
- lambs have been born each week in the urine and faeces infested saleyard pens or on crowded
- trucks travelling to yards. The RSPCA, which struggles to find homes for them, predicts the
- problem will get worse during the next two months of the lambling season. Both the RSPCA, and
- the Meat Industry Authority, which manages the salesyards, bans the transport and sale of
- pregnant ewes. Many sheep and other disabled and stressed animals which cannot be sold or
- fostered to volunteer carers are destroyed by RSPCA inspectors or saleyard workers. RSPCA
- senior inspector Les Savill said sending pregnant ewes to the yards was cruel. "It is blatently
- obvious when a ewe is pregnant and once sheep leave the farm they become our problem not the
- farmers," he said. "I don't care what the farmers and saleyard workers think of me. I come from a
- farming background and I know it is not necessary to treat your animals like this." Up to 30,000
- sheep are transported to the saleyards in an average week from around WA, some travelling from
- as far away as the Kimberley. But this week, because of the start of the lambing season, 90,000
- sheep arrived and many newborn lambs and pregnant,crippled and blind sheep were left behind by
- truck drivers who refuse to transport the animals. Meat Industry Authority chief executive Mike
- Donnelly said the authority and the RSPCA were left to resolve the problems caused by
- irresponsible farmers. "We are always telling the producers not to send their pregnant ewes here.
- They are not fit for transport in the first place and it is not pleasant for them if they lamb while on
- the truck,"Mr Dommelly said. "In the case of pregnant ewes being brought to the yards, we are
- dealing with the symptoms rather than the disease. "Farmers who manage their focks properly
- might allow the odd pregnant sheep on the truck accidentally. However, when we get whole
- truckloads that are pregnant, as has happened before, that is outrageous." Farmers who sent
- pregnant sheep to the saleyards risked prosecution. Helena Valley volunteer animal carer Shirley
- Meggeson said emaciated and pregnant ewes were regularly taken to the saleyards. WA Farmers
- Federation meat section vice-president Jim Alexander said the federation did not believe the
- problem was as serious as the RSPCA suggested. "The industry has codes of practice on the way
- and is aware of its animal welfare responsibilities.If there is a member doing this then we don't
- want him associating with us," he said. End.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Kia hora te marino, kia
- whakapapa pounamu te moana, kia tere ai te karohirohi i mua tonu i o koutou huarahi.
- -Maori Prayer (May the calm be widespread, may the sea be as the smooth surface of the
- greenstone and may the rays of sunshine forever dance along your pathway)
- ("\''/").___..--''"`-._ `9_ 9 ) `-. ( ).`-.__.`) (_Y_.)' ._ ) `._ `.
- ``-..-' _..`--'_..-_/ /--'_.' .' (il).-'' ((i).' ((!.-'
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