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- Finns use virtual pets to fight alcoholism
-
- Agence France-Presse
- HELSINKI (October 31, 1997 08:34 a.m. EST)
-
- A clinic in Helsinki plans to use the Japanese virtual reality pet
- Tamagotchi to cure alcoholics by giving them a sense of purpose and
- responsibility.
-
- The hand-held, electronic Tamagotchi toys must be fed, played with,
- walked and put to sleep regularly or else they die.
-
- "Alcoholics are often very lonely people and their sense of
- responsibility is weakened. When they notice that providing care extends
- the Tamagotchi's life, they feel a sense of reward and purpose," the
- information officer for Finland's private A-Clinic Foundation, Teuvo
- Peltoniemi, told AFP.
-
- Peltoniemi came up with the idea himself after a visit to Japan last
- winter.
-
- "In Japan, Tamagotchis are also popular among adults. So I started to
- wonder if they couldn't be used as a little aid in the care of
- alcoholics. Cats and aquarium fish have previously been used for the
- same purpose," he said.
-
- A handful of patients have already been given the gadgets in the past
- week, and the project, funded by the European Union, the Finnish health
- ministry and the Finnish Slot Machines Association, will be evaluated at
- the end of the year.
-
- "In five years time, we think many people will be addicted to the
- virtual world, and this project is also a way of finding solutions to
- this," Peltoniemi said.
- Date: Fri, 31 Oct 1997 23:17:21 -0800
- From: Andrew Gach <UncleWolf@worldnet.att.net>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Duck meat pie kills nuns
- Message-ID: <345AD781.C11@worldnet.att.net>
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-
- Duck meat pie kills three nuns in Colombia
-
- Reuters
- BOGOTA (October 31, 1997 00:05 a.m. EST )
-
- Three Colombian nuns died and seven remained in critical condition
- Thursday after being stricken with severe food poisoning, authorities
- said.
-
- They fell ill after eating what local radio reports in the southwestern
- city of Cali described as a duck meat pie they had prepared over the
- weekend.
-
- Police quoted hospital officials as saying the Roman Catholic nuns were
- all over 60 and served in a Cali home for senior citizens.
- Date: Fri, 31 Oct 1997 23:51:50
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [ID] Apes slaughtered as they flee fires
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19971031235150.09b71938@dowco.com>
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-
- >From The Electronic Telegraph - Saturday, November 1st, 1997
-
- Apes slaughtered as they flee fires
- By Alex Spillius, South East Asia Correspondent
-
- INDONESIAN peasants have butchered orang-utans for food and sold their
- young for pets as the animals fled forest fires, according to the World
- Wide Fund for Nature.
-
- It is estimated that 1,000 of the apes have either been killed or captured
- since the fires began four months ago.
-
- "This is an absolute catastrophe for orang-utan conservation. The
- population was already in decline and this is the last thing it needed,"
- said Ed Matthew, a WWF spokesman.
-
- The numbers of orang-utan, one of the world's most endangered species which
- is found almost exclusively in Sumatra and Borneo, have fallen by 50 per
- cent in the last 10 years to about 30,000, chiefly because of oaching and
- destruction of habitat.
-
- WWF researchers have recorded several instances in Borneo's Kalimantan
- province where chainsaws were used to fell trees sheltering orang-utans and
- then turned on the animals.
-
- With many of their plantations destroyed by the fires that have raged out
- of control and polluted much of South East Asia, villagers are approaching
- famine and have also started eating the orang-utans.
-
- Mr Matthew said: "Orang-utan families are driven to the edge of the forest,
- and they come looking for fruit in village plantations, where they are
- extremely vulnerable."
-
- Some adults apes have been slaughtered by poachers intent on capturing
- their young. Infant orang-utans can fetch up to ú10,000 as exotic pets, and
- are favoured in Taiwan and South-East Asian countries and the United States.
-
- "They are very cute and adorable as babies but when they get bigger many
- owners just throw them on to the streets," Mr Matthew said.
-
- "The fires and these killings will have massive repercussions for the
- orangutan communities. Trees which supply their food will take eight or
- nine years to mature again. With mothers dying and groups broken up, their
- breeding patterns will be badly upset."
-
- A rescue centre in Kalimantan is full with 120 orang-utans, many of them
- treated for knife and axe wounds.
-
-
-
- ⌐ Copyright Telegraph Group Limited 1997.
-
- Date: Sat, 01 Nov 1997 17:01:26 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Letter to National Zoo, Washington (US)
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.32.19971101170126.007be120@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- National Zoological Park
- 3001 Connecticut Avenue NW
- Washington DC 20008
- U.S.A.
- Attn: Benjamin B. Beck, Associate Director for Biological Programs
- Tuesday, October 21, 1997.
-
- Dear Mr Beck,
-
- I thank you for your prompt reply, dated 15th August. I apologise for the
- delay in my reply but I have been doing a lot of travelling.
-
- I have to make it clear that I am unequivocally opposed to the underlying
- moral values and ethical order assumed by the global zoo industry. However,
- I believe the worst incidents of neglect and abuse must be corrected
- immediately - this is why I gave specific examples in my initial letter -
- and I shall respond below to the points raised in your reply. But my
- primary goal lies far beyond merely having problem areas "fixed", having
- larger cages, richer environment, etc. Making these improvements is
- very important, but it cannot be an end in itself. My mission is to expose
- the fundamental flaw and cruelty in keeping wild animals in captivity, and
- I am guided by a vision of a world that truly respects nature and wildlife.
- I am therefore seeking to change the ground rules, the so-called
- "standards' followed blindly by due-paying members of national and
- international zoo organisations. I have to challenge the status quo so
- carefully maintained by zoos' PR departments. To accomplish that, I will
- not hesitate to make use of every opportunity to educate the public, to
- inform the press and media, to persuade governments and elected public
- officials.
-
- The only artificial animal collection that I have seen that comes anywhere
- near an acceptable standard is the San Diego Wild Animal Park. Even there
- the size of the enclosures and the amount of cover and other natural
- attributes is insufficient. But it is much more like what is needed. I
- cannot see how there can be any place in an ethical world for overcrowded
- urban zoos of the traditional menagerie type like the National.
-
- Now to deal with your specific points. Unfortunately there seems to be a
- wide gulf between my perception of the conditions of the animals and yours.
- But please allow me to go through the points you made - I hope that we may
- narrow the gap for the sake of your inmates. Realistically I fear there is
- little hope that the National will close its doors in the near future -
- therefore these animals are likely to be incarcerated for their whole lives
- and I would like to see their conditions improved. I shall put your
- comments in italics and quotation marks and follow them with my replies.
-
- "You may not have seen the large outdoor grassy yard to which the giant
- panda has access all day. On Washington summer days, he often chooses to
- come into his air-conditioned indoor enclosure. It is indeed designed to be
- thoroughly cleanable to reduce the likelihood of bacterial infection."
- Does this not sound more like a prison cell with an exercise yard than an
- attempt to create an enriched living space?
-
- "The 0-Line was not intended to be naturalistic in appearance, only in
- function. This allows the orang utans to use their natural arboreal
- locomotor abilities, and provides choices and social opportunities
- available at no other zoo in the world. In these ways, the 0-Line is a
- functional replication of the natural environment."
- I was not there long enough to observe the usage of this apparatus. I would
- hazard a guess that the Orang utans do not derive much benefit from it -
- but I should be very interested to learn if they do indeed find use or
- enjoyment in it.
-
- "All of the enclosures in our Small Mammal House meet the space
- requirements of the United States Animal Welfare Act; I would be interested
- in the standard you use to judge them as `tiny" and `grossly inadequate".
- I am rather shocked that you should consider minimum federal standards to
- be adequate for a first class zoo. The standard I try to use is based on
- my observations of the behaviour of the animals. Many books have been
- written on animal behaviour - you have probably read as many as I - but in
- the end one has to use a subjective assessment. Many of the animals in
- your Small Mammal House were clearly in distress - when I say "clearly", I
- mean clear to anyone with any compassion or empathy who stops for longer
- than a minute in front of the cells.
-
- "I was unaware of the armadillo circling, and will stop in today to check
- on this situation."
- Thank you. I hope your visit results in an improvement in this animal's
- circumstances. Did you also visit the depressed Colobus?
-
- "Despite being a frequent visitor to zoos, you seem to believe that no
- zoo environment can be suitable for wild animals."
- I do indeed believe this. My main purpose in visiting the National Zoo was
- to prove myself wrong. I had been hoping that here would be a zoo that had
- succeeded in providing adequate habitats. This hope unfortunately proved
- false.
-
- "We would agree that it is hard to truly replicate natural environments,
- but we would not agree that a well-designed zoo environment is inadequate."
- In theory it should be possible. But considerations of viewability of the
- exhibits and financial constraints make adequate artificial habitat a
- rarity. As I said above, conditions such as at the San Diego Wild Animal
- Park are the minimum that I could consider "adequate".
-
- "We offer as evidence that in nearly all cases zoo animals live longer
- than their wild counterparts, and are free of food shortages, environmental
- extremes, predation, untreated injuries and illnesses, and territorial
- pressure from conspecifics. Most zoo animals now reproduce so well that
- they have to be contracepted to prevent overcrowding."
- Are you trying to tell me that length of life and ability to reproduce are
- evidence of an adequate environment? Try telling that to the lifers in the
- penitentiaries!
-
- "We would like you to know that the National Zoo, like most major zoos,
- has extensive involvement in in situ conservation programs, such as the
- reintroduction of golden lion tamarins in Brazil and helping to protect
- wild giant pandas in China."
- So many zoos claim the tamarin story as their own! I am sure you did play
- a small part - but how can that justify the misery of so many other
- species? Please tell me what part National Zoo has played in the
- preservation of the natural habitat of the giant panda.
-
- "We are proud to be a place to help "save endangered species,"
- I agree that there is a need for breeding establishments to help endangered
- species - but such animals should not be exposed to the public as exhibits.
-
- "......... to educate"
- What do you think the children learn from a visit to a zoo? They learn
- what they see, not what is written on the sign boards. What they see is
- man's subjugation of the wild beast and that animals are in this world for
- man to do with as he pleases. (Please do not quote the Bible on this one
- until you have looked up the real meaning of the word "dominion".) They
- learn as much about animals as a foreigner would learn about American
- Society by touring San Quentin.
-
- "......... and to provide family fun",
- This is where we really part company. The average family spends only a few
- seconds in front of each cage. And for that the animal has to endure a
- lifetime of imprisonment. How can it be right for us to pursue "fun" in
- this way?
-
- "......... and believe that we can demonstrate efficacy on those fronts."
- No - your contribution to the survival of species is negligible if not
- negative. The children come away with the impression that animals and the
- environment are there for their enjoyment. I will have to concede that
- you do provide fun but the fun derived from looking at incarcerated
- creatures is sick. And most of the fun for the kids is in the ice-cream,
- soda pop and hamburger concessions - again a poor message for their future.
-
- "We also have premier research programs, all relevant to the conservation
- of biodiversity."
- I do not doubt the value of your research programmes. But I do doubt the
- necessity for conducting them in the midst of so many imprisoned animals.
-
- "And I can assure you that were we to follow your recommendation to close
- our gates, there would be howls of protest from the 2.5 million visitors
- who enjoy and support our programs without having to spend a penny."
- Unfortunately you are correct. But the public needs to be educated. It is
- tragic that you choose to follow the public whim rather than lead.
-
- I regret that I must repeat what I said in my last letter.
- When will you face up to the fact that the words you use are primarily for
- public relations purposes? A genuine concern for animal protection and the
- environment does not and cannot entail keeping, breeding, and displaying
- captive wild animals; neither can a few isolated "conservation programs"
- save endangered species. When will the National Zoo and the global zoo
- industry recognise that the future of wildlife depends not on putting
- animals on exhibit but upon preserving their true habitat and concentrating
- on conservation in the wild?
-
- I hope you will consider deeply what I have said. I may be before my time
- - but I know I am right. Thank you for your attention.
-
- Yours sincerely,
- Dr John Wedderburn.
-
- CC:
- Mr. Syd Butler
- Executive Director
- American Association of Zoological Parks and Aquariums
- 7970D Old Georgetown Road
- Bethesda MD 20814
-
- Mr. Clinton A. Fields
- Executive Director
- Friends of the National Zoo
- 3001 Connecticut Avenue NW
- Washington DC 20008
-
- Visitors' Department
- Washington DC Conventions and Visitors' Association
- 1212 New York Avenue NW, Suite 600
- Washington DC 20005
-
- Mr. William Norman
- President
- Travel Industry Association of America
- 1100 New York Avenue NW, #450W
- Washington DC 20005-3934
-
- Date: Sat, 01 Nov 1997 16:42:38 +0000
- From: jwed <jwed@hkstar.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Anger at dolphin loan plan (HK)
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.32.19971101164238.007bb310@pop.hkstar.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- South China Morning Post - Thursday 30th October 1997 - by OLIVER POOLE
-
- Ocean Park hopes to lend dolphins to aquariums on the mainland if a new
- breeding scheme is successful, sparking outrage from animal rights
- activists.
-
- Six wild bottlenose dolphins are due to arrive from Indonesia by the end
- of
- the year to help create a self-sustaining breeding programme at the
- attraction.
-
- If targets are achieved, dolphins could be transferred from the SAR to
- help
- stock the growing number of new aquariums being built on the mainland.
-
- Exact figures are not available, but developers are building several new
- aquariums on the mainland and there would be fierce competition for the
- crowd-pulling exhibits.
-
- Yesterday, Ocean Park's chief vet, Dr Reimi Kinoshita, said the
- aquarium,
- if approached, would also be keen to train keepers to work for the
- mainland
- aquariums.
-
- "If the facilities were well looked after then there is no reason not
- to,"
- she said.
-
- Co-operation would only be given if the new parks were properly
- maintained
- and posed no threat to the dolphins.
-
- However, International Fund for Animal Welfare China director Jill
- Robinson
- said any proposal to send dolphins to the mainland was "totally
- inappropriate".
-
- "It is the old story of dolphinariums being exported to the east as they
- die down in the west as people realise how cruel it is to keep this
- intelligent species in these conditions," she said.
-
- Ocean Park's six new female dolphins will join the existing eight male
- and
- four female dolphins.
-
- They were caught by Jakarta's Jaya Ancol oceanarium several months ago.
- Ocean Park said none were available from aquarium-bred stocks anywhere
- in
- the world.
-
-
-
-
- Date: Fri, 31 Oct 1997 20:35:59 -0800
- From: Barry Kent MacKay <mimus@sympatico.ca>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Plans for Snow Goose slaughter.
- Message-ID: <345AB1AF.49E@sympatico.ca>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
-
- The Arctic Goose Habitat Wildlife Group wants to instigate a series of
- changes in hunting regulations that will lead to a massive increase in
- the killing of snow geese in the U.S. and Canada. This will include
- opening closed parts of refuges to hunting; use of electronic calling
- devices; increased or no bag limits; extended hunting seasons and so
- on. There are also rumours of calls for introducing biological
- controls; providing free ammunition to native hunters on the breeding
- grounds of the geese and having a year-round, no bag limit open season.
-
- The concern is that the geese are destroying important wildlife habitat,
- but it appears that the basic data are flawed...or intentionally
- misrepresented. For an article about this planned slaughter (even the
- once endangered Ross's Goose is to be included), go to
- <http://www.api4animals.org/Column.htm>. I will keep you posted if
- write ins are needed, but it is best if you are informed on the issue.
-
- Barry Kent MacKay
- Animal Protection Institute (Canadian Office)
-
-
- Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 10:09:31 EST
- From: JanaWilson <JanaWilson@aol.com>
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Okla. Hunters Set for Big Weekend
- Message-ID: <b6fc0e73.345b45fe@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- A/w local Okla. city hunting news:
-
- This will be a big weekend for hunters with today marking the
- opening of several important seasons:
- Opening for the first time on Nov. 1 instead of Nov. 20, quail season
- continues thru Jan. 31 and the daily limit is 10. Hunters in this
- field this weekend must wear either a head cover or upper body
- garment of blaze orange because of the muzzleloader deer season.
- Fall turkey season also opens today and runs thru Nov. 21. It is
- an either sex hunt and not all counties are open for fall turkeys.
- Check the regulations. The blaze orange requirments for turkey
- hunters are the same as those for the quail hunt until the black
- powder deer hunt ends.
- The Zone 2 duck season which includes most of the state begins
- today, and the first half runs until Dec. 7 and the second half of the
- season reopens on Dec. 13 and continues thru Jan. 18. The 74-day
- season is two weeks longer than last year's 60-day hunt.
- The daily bag limit is six ducks and can include no more than five
- mallards (two of which may be hens), three pintails, two wood ducks,
- two redheads, one canvasback.
- The season for dark and light geese also begins today. The 85-day
- hunt for Canadas and whitefronts continues thru Jan. 25. The bag
- limit is two. For light geese (Snow, Blue, and Ross) the first part
- of the split season runs until Jan. 25 and than reopens Feb. 7 and
- continues thru Feb. 27. The bag limit is 10. Both state and federal
- waterfowl stamps are required to hunt ducks and geese.
- This weekend also affords black powder deer hunters the
- opportunity to bag an antlerless deer in addition to a buck. Does
- will be legal both Saturday and Sunday. However, hunters must
- have a separate $16.75 tag for an antlerless animal. A doe cannot
- be killed on an unfilled buck tag. The black powder deer hunt
- ends Sunday.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 10:09:38 EST
- From: JanaWilson <JanaWilson@aol.com>
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Sequoyah Refuge Hunt
- Message-ID: <a20090f3.345b4606@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- A/w local Okla. City hunting news:
-
- Ninety-eight deer were harvested by 94 hunters during three special
- muzzleloader hunts this fall at the Sequoyah Wildlife Refuge near
- Vian, Okla. Each hunter selected for the hunt was allowed to take
- two antlerless deer, but no bucks.
- Mr. Steve Berendzen, refuge manager, said "Three areas of the
- refuge were hunted this year. All of these areas have had severe
- habitat and crop damages in the past from the growing deer herds."
- The objective of this hunt remains the same as last year to provide
- active managment of the deer herd to reduce the over-populated
- condition."
- The population of the deer on the eastern Oklahoma refuge remains
- above the capacity of the habitat so the refuge expects to continue
- conducting these hunts in future years, he added.
- Annual spotlight surveys are conducted in the early fall to track
- any changes in the refuge deer population. Buck hunting was
- not permitted and is not planned for the hunts as long as the buck-to-
- doe ratio on the refuge remains above the optimum level of 3 to 4
- does per buck. Refuge biologists anticipate as many as four
- muzzleloader hunts in the future. All applications for future hunts
- will be handled by the Okla. Wildlife Dept.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 10:25:05 EST
- From: JanaWilson <JanaWilson@aol.com>
- To: AR-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Oklahoma Environmental Workshop
- Message-ID: <a77d1c9.345b49a4@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
-
- A/w local Oklahoma outdoor news:
-
- Oklahoma educators interested in the environment and outdoors
- have an opportunity to attend one of two upcoming environmental
- workshops around the state. These workshops offer an introduction
- to the Leopold Education Project, a critical learning curriculum
- designed to "establish a postive conservation ethic by instilling
- respect, love and admiration of the land."
- The classic literary work, A Sand County Almanac by Aldo
- Leopard, the father of wildlife management, is the basis of the workshop.
- A basic one-day workshop will be held today at Mid-America
- Bible College here in Okla. City. The workshop costs $30.
- And a second workshop will be held Feb. 14-15 at Cameron Univ.
- in Lawton, Okla. The cost is $95 and also is available for college
- credit.
- The Leopold Education Project curriculum is targeted for grades
- 6 thru 12. The curriculum fits into such classroom topics as
- English, natural resource management, sustainable agriculture,
- forestry, land use and wildlife conservation.
- For more information please contact the Okla. Wildlife Dept.
- at 1801 N. Lincoln, Okla. City, Okla. 73105 or call (405)
- 521-4633.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 10:59:40 -0500 (EST)
- From: JanaWilson@aol.com
- To: Ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Deer Management Book
- Message-ID: <971101105344_715713434@mrin44.mail.aol.com>
-
-
- This review is from a science news magazine:
-
- Heart and Blood: Living with Deer in America by Mr. Richard Nelson.
-
- The overpopulation of deer and its impact on people in both rural
- and suburban areas of the US are a growing concern. The author's
- fascination with deer intensified when he lived in a small village in
- the northern Pacific Coast and took up subsistence hunting of
- deer with his Eskimo and Indian peers. They believe that one
- must have a keen sense of the animal and its habits if one is to
- hunt successfully. That curiosity and quest for knowledge led
- Mr. Nelson to various parts of the country to study deer and how
- people, including the farmers, ranchers and suburbanites, can live
- with and control these creatures. The fruits of his labor are laid
- out in this study, as is a look at the history of deer and humans.
-
- The hardcopy book is published by Knopf, 1997, 389 pages, black
- and white illus. Cost is $27.50.
-
- For the Animals,
-
- Jana, OKC
- Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 13:01:53 EST
- From: MINKLIB <MINKLIB@aol.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: Re: Nordstrom fur policy
- Message-ID: <657b4bde.345b6e64@aol.com>
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Nordstroms operates 12 fur salons, and sells a lot of fur trim. It isn't
- surprising that a sales rep lied over the phone, as they aren't liable for
- those statements. Anytime a sales rep makes such a statement ask them to put
- it in writing.
-
- JP
- CAFT
- Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 11:16:35 -0800 (PST)
- From: Twilight <twilight13@rocketmail.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) Endangered Species Act Alert
- Message-ID: <19971101191635.2017.rocketmail@web2.rocketmail.com>
- MIME-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
-
- CRITICAL TIME FOR THE ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT'S
- FUTURE--By attorney Michael J. Bean, head of EDF's Wildlife
- program.
-
- After nearly six years of stalemate, Congress may finally be
- moving toward consensus on the future of the Endangered Species
- Act. On September 30, by a vote of 15-3, and with the support of
- the Clinton Administration, the Senate Environment and Public
- Works Committee approved a bill to reauthorize the Act. The bill
- (S. 1180) is the result of months of negotiations among
- Committee Chairman John Chafee (R-RI), Democrats Max Baucus (MT)
- and Harry Reid (NV), Republican Dirk Kempthorne (ID), and
- Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt. A more far-reaching bill
- introduced in the House by Rep. George Miller (D-CA) has
- improved prospects for House action as well.
- The Senate is likely to act on its bill first. Rather than
- radically overhauling the existing law, the Senate bill leaves
- in place the law's key requirements: (1) Federal agencies must
- still ensure that their actions neither jeopardize the continued
- existence of endangered species nor destroy critical habitat,
- and (2) private landowners must still refrain from harming
- endangered species by destroying habitat or by other means. The
- bill makes other changes, however, that could be problematic
- unless the concerns below are addressed.
- The bill authorizes significant new programs to provide
- incentives--in the form of cost-sharing assistance--to private
- landowners who agree to carry out management practices to help
- endangered species. This may be the bill's most positive
- feature, but--as EDF stressed in testimony before the
- committee--the potential benefits of these new provisions will
- only be realized if the programs are assured of substantial
- funding.
- The bill focuses mainly on the recovery planning process. Its
- intent is to make recovery plans more influential in guiding the
- actions of Federal agencies and others in furthering the
- conservation of imperiled species. To do so, the bill requires
- that plans identify the Federal agencies that could contribute
- most to species recovery and the actions needed from them.
- Today, Federal agencies often ignore recovery plans, since
- nothing obliges them to implement such plans. S. 1180 would, for
- the first time, require relevant Federal agencies to enter into
- formal "implementation agreements" that commit them to carry out
- specific actions in recovery plans. States and private
- landowners may do so as well, and cost-sharing aid to private
- landowners who commit to help carry out recovery programs is one
- of the new incentives created by the bill. A serious concern is
- that the new planning procedures are unduly complex and costly.
- EDF has urged that they be significantly streamlined.
- The bill makes less substantial changes in "habitat
- conservation plans," the main means of accommodating both
- endangered species conservation and development interests on
- private land. The most significant change is that the bill
- raises the standard for approval of plans that encompass both
- listed and unlisted species (typically plans that cover large
- geographic areas). This desirable change would make it less
- likely that the long-term assurances given to landowners who
- enter into such plans will put species at risk. Nevertheless,
- EDF has vigorously pressed the Senate to add, as a further
- backstop against such risk, a generous "insurance fund" from
- which the Secretary of Interior could draw if he needed to step
- in and correct an inadequate conservation plan. The Miller bill
- in the House also gives assurances to plan participants, but
- limits the impact by imposing bonding requirements on
- participating landowners.
- The Senate bill also codifies the government's authority to
- enter into "safe harbor" agreements with private landowners.
- EDF, with the generous support of the National Fish and Wildlife
- Foundation, pioneered the safe harbor concept as a means of
- overcoming private landowners' reluctance to create, restore, or
- enhance habitat for endangered species. The bill also authorizes
- cost-sharing assistance to landowners who enter into such
- agreements. The active management needed by many endangered
- species is expensive; cost-sharing will help landowners who
- might otherwise be unable to bear alone the costs of carrying
- out essential actions for improving the well-being of endangered
- species.
- The House is likely to await Senate action--which could come
- very quickly--before it begins a serious reauthorization effort.
- None of the House conservatives who in the last Congress backed
- a radical overhaul--indeed, a virtual repeal--of the Endangered
- Species Act has yet shown any inclination to follow the lead of
- their Senate counterparts who have moved toward the middle in an
- effort to find consensus. If the Senate passes its bill, it will
- likely put pressure on House members not to let the issue die,
- as it has done in each of the last three Congresses.
- Ending the six-year impasse over the future of the Endangered
- Species Act is critically important. The status quo, in which
- the great majority of imperiled species are not making clear
- progress toward recovery, is simply not adequate.
-
- EDF Action Alert
- Senate action is likely in the very near future. You can
- help by urging your Senators now to (1) add an assured source
- of substantial funding to S. 1180 so that the proposed new
- landowner incentives programs (and the habitat conservation plan
- insurance fund) can accomplish their full potential benefits,
- and (2) reduce the cost and complexity of the new recovery
- planning procedures.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- _____________________________________________________________________
- Sent by RocketMail. Get your free e-mail at http://www.rocketmail.com
-
- Date: Sat, 01 Nov 1997 19:13:15
- From: Dirk Anton Boeckx <dab34@cornell.edu>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (US) deer hunting approved by Cornell Univ.
- Message-ID: <3.0.2.16.19971101191315.3737b4d8@postoffice2.mail.cornell.edu>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- from Dirk Boeckx
-
- ITHACA, NY, Nov. 1.
-
- In an unprecedented move, Cornell University has decided to allow hunting
- in McLean Bog, one of the natural areas managed by Cornell Plantations.
- According to Nancy Ostman, program director of Natural Areas, "Previous
- prohibitions against hunting in the 100 acre site in Tompkins County have
- encouraged artificially high numbers of deer to congregate there during
- hunting season and to overgraze vegetation." Twelve hunt permits have been
- issued to hunt white-tailed deer between Nov. 1 and December 31. The
- decision was kept secret until Oct. 22, when it was announced to faculty of
- the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences who conduct research at McLean
- Bog.
- In formulating its plan, Cornell Plantations was advised by, and is
- co-operating with, the NY State Department of Environmental Conservation,
- which frequently resorts to hunting as a strategy to tackle deer
- overpopulation.
- The decision of Cornell Plantations has upset animal rights activists.
- Last Friday, Cornell Students for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (CSETA)
- launched a petition on campus to stop the hunt, and to explore alternatives
- for protecting the endangered plants. They also wrote to other student
- organisations to gather support. CSETA fears that Cornell's decision will
- create a precedent. It maintains that if Cornell Plantations will conclude
- in Spring that the plants at McLean Bog will have been preserved thanks to
- the hunting, more hunting permits will be issued in the next few years, and
- the policy may be extended to other Natural Areas.
- The Animal Defense League held a candlelight vigil at the entrance of
- Mclean Bog at 6 a.m. this morning to protest the start of the bow hunting
- season. Its spokesman Bryan Pease was quoted in the Ithaca Journal (Nov. 1)
- as saying "This is a thinly veiled attempt on the part of the Department of
- Environmental Conservation to expand their armed takeover of our forests
- and wildlands."
- CSETA and the Animal Defense League request you to write to Donald Rakow,
- director of Cornell Plantations, to ask him to stop the hunting and look
- into alternatives. Rakow can be reached by email at dr14@cornell.edu, or at
- (607) 255-6139 (phone) or (607) 255-2404 (fax).
-
-
- Date: Sun, 2 Nov 1997 11:18:43 +0800
- From: bunny <rabbit@wantree.com.au>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (AFR)PLAGUE, BUBONIC - MALAWI
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.16.19971102111107.2a67137a@wantree.com.au>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- PLAGUE, BUBONIC - MALAWI
- *****************************
-
- Plague, bubonic - Malawi
-
-
- Source: Item(s) published on World Wide Web
-
-
-
- 30 October 1997
-
- The Ministry of Health has reported an outbreak of plague in Nsanje
- District in the Southern Region of the country. The first case was
- reported on 29 September in Madani Village, Ndamera Traditional Authority
- Area. A total of 43 cases (17 of which are seropositive) have been
- reported up to 23 October. Two other areas have also been affected. Over
- 60% of cases are children under 5 years. No deaths have been reported.
-
- Control measures being taken include spraying of houses [presumably for
- fleas, ES], treatment of patients and health education through
- dissemination of health messages at the local level. The Ministry of
- Health will strengthen active surveillance and investigation of cases and
- will inform WHO if technical assistance is required. Plague was previously
- reported in Nsanje District in 1994 when 9 cases occurred in Mozambican
- refugees in Mankhokwe refugee camp and surrounding villages.
-
-
- ===========================================
-
- Rabbit Information Service,
- P.O.Box 30,
- Riverton,
- Western Australia 6148
-
- Email> rabbit@wantree.com.au
-
- http://www.wantree.com.au/~rabbit/rabbit.htm
- (Rabbit Information Service website updated frequently)
-
- /`\ /`\
- (/\ \-/ /\)
- )6 6(
- >{= Y =}<
- /'-^-'\
- (_) (_)
- | . |
- | |}
- jgs \_/^\_/
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Date: Sat, 01 Nov 1997 23:32:33 -0400
- From: Ty Savoy <ty@north.nsis.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: (Ca) Fur in Fashion Again
- Message-ID: <1.5.4.32.19971102033233.00697640@north.nsis.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- FUR IN FASHION AGAIN
-
- (Oct31/97) Winnipeg (CP) -- Fur trappers in Manitoba are poised to benefit
- this season from an upswing in demand for fur, especially from the fashion
- design world.
-
- Super-model Naomi Cambell, who once posed for an ad saying: "I'd rather go
- naked than wear fur," was last seen strutting down the runway in a
- sable-lined coat.
-
- The shift in public opinion about fur seems to be boosting prices and demand
- in Manitoba. A Winnipeg fur auction house fetched more than its asking price
- for Manitoba pelts at a recent Toronto sale.
-
- Dave Bewick, manager of North American Fur Auctions, says he has hardly any
- furs left from last season.
-
- "There's an absolute demand for fur and there's more money available to buy
- now," Bewick said, adding 80 buyers were at the sale from North America,
- China and Greece. "A lot of the big designer names are starting to use fur
- now. People have heard enough from (anti-fur protesters). They've heard our
- side of the story and people are making choices to wear fur."
-
- There are currently about 5,500 trappers in Manitoba, and more people are
- signing up for trapper training classes. Grant Armstrong, president of the
- Manitoba Trappers' Association, said that's because the industry is on an
- upswing.
-
- Statistics Canada reported a 45 per cent increase in Canadian fur garment
- exports in 1996 to $122 million.
-
- Nationally, the fur industry employs more than 80,000 people from trappers
- to manufacturers and is worth $800 million a year.
-
- Armstrong has been trapping beaver, muskrat, fox, coyote, mink, squirrel and
- weasel in southwestern Manitoba for 35 years. He said price fluctuations in
- the market happen in cycles and now prices are on the rise.
-
- He earned $36 to $37 per beaver pelt last year. Eight years ago the same
- pelt sold for $12 to $13.
-
- "The demand has steadily increased as it has over the past few years," said
- Armstrong, adding cooler winters have helped demand. "It seems to make
- people want to wear furs more."
-
- This fall's fashion magazines such as Elle, Vogue, Essence, Harper's Bazaar
- and W all have large advertising inserts about Canadian fur.
-
-
- Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 20:35:31 -0800 (PST)
- From: civillib@cwnet.com
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: APE ARMY COMMANDER ARRESTED - TWICE (US)
- Message-ID: <199711020435.UAA07016@smtp.cwnet.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- VERY URGENT NEWS ADVISORY
- November 1, 1997
-
-
-
-
-
- æAPE ARMY' COMMANDER ARRESTED AGAIN; SUNDAY PROTEST STILL SET
-
- DAVIS, Ca. û Despite attempts by State Police to cut short a presence
- Saturday by animal rights activists by making 2 arrests within 11 hours --
- of the same person -- a major rally is planned at the California Regional
- Primate Center at the University of California, Davis Sunday at Noon.
-
- Police have threatened to arrest anti-cruelty activists, who are expected
- to come to Davis from Oregon and throughout Northern California. Similar
- protests are going on at primate labs in Harvard and the Univ. of Wisconsin
- Sunday.
-
- Police made good on the arrest threat Saturday, jailing "Ape Army"
- commander Rick Bogle at 5 a.m. when he setup a table with literature and his
- "Ape Army" -- more than 100 stuffed toy monkeys -- across the street from
- the primate lab. He was released 6 hours later, but was re-arrested for
- trespassing at 4 p.m. when he returned to the campus.
-
- If released prior to the rally Sunday, Bogle û a sixth grade teacher from
- Oregon û said he may risk arrest again. He has toured the nation in a
- cramped pickup truck for the past 3 months holding vigils in front of
- primate research centers û there are 7 in the U.S. -- in Washington,
- Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Louisiana, Oregon and now California. He was never
- arrested, and labs let him distribute literature and even camp in front of them.
-
- Not so at UC Davis. Witnesses to the arrests claim that Bogle was not
- breaking any laws, and was simply preparing to conduct a peaceful vigil û
- one that he has done in 5 other states since July with no arrests or trouble
- û in front of the UCD facility.
-
- "This is another example of UC Davis refusing to allow freedom of speech.
- All he wants to do is express his views, and however unpopular they may be
- at UC Davis, Mr. Bogle should be free to express them," said Crescenzo
- Vellucci of the Activist Civil Liberties Committee, a legal aide project
- based in Sacramento. In April, 32 activists were arrested, and several were
- injured û one was hospitalized û at a primate center protest.
- -30-
- Contact: ACLC (916) 452-7179
-
-
- Activist Civil Liberties Committee
- A Legal Aide Project
- PO Box 19515, Sacramento, CA 95819 (916)452-7179 Fax: (916) 454-6150
- "PEACE AT LAST"
-
- Date: Sat, 01 Nov 1997 23:46:14 -0500
- From: allen schubert <ar-admin@envirolink.org>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: AR-News Admin Note
- Message-ID: <3.0.1.32.19971101234614.006872f0@envirolink.org>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- Routine post...
-
- Please do not post commentary or personal opinions to AR-News. Such posts
- are not appropriate to AR-News. Appropriate postings to AR-News include:
- posting a news item, requesting information on some event, or responding to
- a request for information. Discussions on AR-News will NOT be allowed and
- we ask that any
- commentary either be taken to AR-Views or to private E-mail.
-
- Continued postings of inappropriate material may result in suspension of
- the poster's subscription to AR-News.
-
- Here is subscription info for AR-Views:
-
- Send e-mail to: listproc@envirolink.org
-
- In text/body of e-mail: subscribe ar-views firstname lastname
-
- Also...here are some websites with info on internet resources for Veg and
- AR interests:
-
- The Global Directory (IVU)
- http://www.ivu.org/global
-
-
-
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