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- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: Injured Animals Must Wait 48 Hours for Humane Care
- Message-ID: <199802090124.UAA07108@mail-out-3.tiac.net>
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- 1 Dead, 1 Missing in Calif. Storms
- .c The Associated Press
-
- by LOUINN LOTA
-
- LOS ANGELES (AP) - A car careened off a collapsed road, killing one man, and
- rescuers searched for a teen-age snowboarder on Sunday as Southern California
- continued to reel from the soggy weight of El Nino storms.
-
- While skies were clear, two days of rain left creeks in spate and mountains
- heavy with snow. Another storm was expected to hit the area by nightfall,
- bringing up to a half-inch of rain at lower elevations and an inch in the
- mountains, the National Weather Service said.
-
- A flash flood watch was in effect for Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles
- counties. A heavy surf advisory was in effect until Monday morning from San
- Luis Obispo County to the Mexican border for 7- to 11-foot waves that could
- reach 14 feet at times, the weather service said.
-
- In the Chatsworth area of the western San Fernando Valley, an unidentified man
- was killed when a car plummeted about 50 feet into a ravine from a private
- paved road that was undermined by storm saturation, authorities said.
-
- It was unclear whether the road gave way before or while the car was crossing.
- A man and a woman in their 60s survived the crash, crawling from the upside-
- down car and climbing the ravine to get help. They were airlifted to a
- hospital for observation. Both appeared to be in good condition.
-
- The accident on Santa Susana Pass Road was reported at about 7:30 a.m. but it
- was unclear when the car plunged off the bridge, city Fire Department
- spokesman Bob Collis said.
-
- In the Angeles National Forest west of Wrightwood, 120 people from specialized
- rescue units searched for a 14-year-old snowboarder missing since Saturday
- afternoon while snowboarding with an uncle.
-
- The boy, whose identity was withheld, was last seen at Mountain High West ski
- resort. Winds were gusting strongly when the teen slid out of resort
- boundaries into a canyon.
-
- The weather service said a new storm could bring another half-foot of snow
- above 6,000 feet in mountains in Ventura and Los Angeles counties.
-
- The storms didn't only affect humans.
-
- In recent weeks, more than 200 California sea lions have been rescued along
- the Southern California coast, with nearly half being cared for at Sea World
- in Mission Bay.
-
- Of the 88 sea lions rescued and brought to the park, 38 have died.
-
- ``We can only save what we can save,'' said biologist Joe Cordaro, who keeps
- track of the numbers for the National Marine Fisheries Service.
-
- The agency has set a 48-hour observation period before beached animals receive
- human care to help ensure contagious animals will not infect healthy ones at
- rescue centers.
-
- Meanwhile, Ventura County agriculture officials estimated that the storm
- damage to avocados, lemons, strawberries and other crops will top the previous
- estimate of $5.5 million.
-
- ``I wouldn't be surprised if the original estimate triples,'' Rex Laird,
- county Farm Bureau executive director, said Saturday. ``There's no way anyone
- in agriculture can experience anything but negative results from here on
- out.''
-
- AP-NY-02-08-98 1710EST
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Feb 1998 20:37:05 -0500
- From: Vegetarian Resource Center <vrc@tiac.net>
- To: AR-News@Envirolink.Org
- Subject: How low will we go in fishing for dinner?
- Message-ID: <199802090137.UAA08178@mail-out-3.tiac.net>
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-
-
- áá
- áá
- áá SCIENCE NEWS ONLINE
- áá
- ááá February 7, 1998ááá
- áá
- áá by J. Raloff
- áááá Though news accounts over the past decade have documented the crash
- áááá of one major fishery after another, many consumers have witnessed no
- áááá shortage of affordable fish. In large measure, that's because
- áááá different fish are being marketed. Indeed, species once viewed as
- áááá "trash" can now command $7 per pound or more.
- áááá
- áááá Many resource economists have interpreted this trend to mean that
- áááá while the most popular fish stocks are in jeopardy, a host of
- áááá attractive alternatives stands ready to fill in. A new study by
- áááá fisheries scientist Daniel Pauly of the University of British
- áááá Columbia in Vancouver and his colleagues now comes to a dramatically
- áááá different -- and more dire -- conclusion.
- áááá
- áááá Those substitutes, they find, have been coming from progressively
- áááá lower niches in the marine food web. With each successive drop,
- áááá dramatically more fish become available.
- áááá
- áááá Yet despite having made these shifts, and working harder, fishing
- áááá fleets have not increased their tonnage of palatable catch.
- áááá Moreover, the new data suggest that the food web's structure -- the
- áááá proportion of organisms at each level -- is shifting.
- áááá
- áááá "The ecological price we're paying for maintaining catch is getting
- áááá higher and higher," Pauly says. Indeed, the findings argue that
- áááá current world fishing rates are not sustainable, his team concludes
- áááá in the Feb. 6 Science.
- áááá
- áááá Ecologists measure an organism's niche in terms of its trophic
- áááá level. In the sea, the base level contains mainly seaweeds and
- áááá phytoplankton. These serve as food for level two organisms, whose
- áááá predators, in turn, make up level three. And so it goes up the
- áááá marine food web to its apex, killer whales at trophic level five.
- áááá
- áááá Owing to taste preferences, humans have traditionally fished
- áááá primarily from levels three and four, Pauly says. However, because
- áááá such fish may derive their diet from a range of trophic levels, most
- áááá commercial fish don't fall squarely into a single level. Rather,
- áááá they have an intermediate designation, such as 4.6 for snapper, 3.5
- áááá for cod, 3.1 for herring, and 2.5 for sardines.
- áááá
- áááá Pauly and his coworkers have now computed the annual average trophic
- áááá level of the world's fishing catch. They did this by tracking down
- áááá the trophic level of 220 fish and invertebrates and considering each
- áááá species' share of the tonnage of a given year's fishing haul, as
- áááá compiled by the United Nations, for 1950 through 1994. Their
- áááá calculations show about a 0.1 decrease in trophic level per
- áááá decade -- to a current global average of about 3.1.
- áááá
- áááá These data show that by overfishing the top predators, "we've
- áááá eliminated the marine equivalent of lions and wolves and are moving
- áááá towards the taking of rats, cockroaches, and dandelions," worries
- áááá Elliott A. Norse of the Marine Conservation Biology Institute in
- áááá Redmond, Wash. Moreover, he says, "by now moving to eliminate the
- áááá top predators' prey and the prey of their prey, we may be further
- áááá impeding [the top predators'] recovery."
- áááá
- áááá Both concerns are "implicit in our findings," Pauly believes. "If we
- áááá have fallen half a trophic level in 40 years or so, then we have
- áááá already hammered the useful part of the food web."
- áááá
- áááá The new study "is clever and meaningful . . . and I think that its
- áááá conclusions are robust," says marine ecologist Paul K. Dayton of the
- áááá Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, Calif.
- áááá
- áááá Gary Matlock, director of the National Marine Fisheries Service
- áááá Office of Sustainable Fisheries in Silver Spring, Md., also thinks
- áááá the new study's findings have a lot of merit. Clearly, he says, "the
- áááá overfishing that has occurred on the upper trophic levels needs to
- áááá be brought under control." According to the 1996 Sustainable
- áááá Fisheries Act, he notes, his agency must develop a strategy by
- áááá September to end such overfishing and to begin rebuilding affected
- áááá U.S. stocks.
- áááá
- áá
- áá
- áá References:
- áá
- áááá
- áááá
- áááá Pauly, D., et al. 1998. Fishing down marine food webs. Science
- áááá 279(Feb. 6).
- áááá
- áá
- áá
- áá Further Readings:
- áá
- áááá
- áááá
- áááá Dayton, P.K. 1998. Reversal of the burden of proof in fisheries
- áááá management. Science 279(Feb. 6):821.
- áááá
- áááá Raloff, J. 1997. Overfishing imperils cod reproduction. Science News
- áááá 151(Feb. 22):124.
- áááá
- áááá ______. 1996. Fishing for answers. Science News 150(Oct. 26):268.
- áááá
- áááá ______. 1995. Fishing: What we don't keep. Science News 148(Dec.
- áááá 16):415.
- áááá
- áááá ______. 1995. U.N. treaty to aid 'international' fish. Science News
- áááá 148(Dec. 9):389.
- áááá
- áá
- áá
- áá Sources:
- áá
- áááá
- áááá
- áááá International Year of the Ocean
- áááá United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
- áááá Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission
- áááá 1 rue Miollis
- áááá 75732 Paris Cedex 15
- áááá France
- áááá E-mail: [1]i.oliounine@unesco.org
- áááá Web site: [2]<http://ioc.unesco.org/iyo>http://ioc.unesco.org/iyo
- áááá
- áááá Daniel Pauly
- áááá University of British Columbia
- áááá Fisheries Center
- áááá 2204 Main Mall
- áááá Vancouver, British Columbia V6T 1Z4
- áááá Canada
- áááá
- áááá Sea Web
- áááá 1731 Connecticut Avenue, N.W., 4th Floor
- áááá Washington, DC 20009
- áááá E-mail: [3]seaweb@seaweb.org
- áááá Web site: [4]<http://www.seaweb.org/>http://www.seaweb.org
- áááá
-
- Date: Sun, 8 Feb 1998 22:36:39 EST
- From: LexAnima@aol.com
- To: AR-News@envirolink.org, Wisc-Eco@igc.org
- Subject: Some not-so-fond remembrances from the 104th Congress:
- Message-ID: <50f92bb5.34de79ce@aol.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
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-
- Endangered Species? Give them all a designated area and them blow it up. It
- sounds insane, but that's how insane the endagered species people are.
- Rep. Sonny Bono, (R-CA deceased).
-
- We had envisioned trying to protect, you know pigeons and things like that (in
- passing the ESA). We never thought about mussels and ferns and flowers and
- all these . . . subspecies of squirrles and birds.
- Rep. Don Young, chair House Natural Resources Committee
-
- Environmentalism is the new paganism, trees are worshipped and humans are
- sacrificed at its altar . . . It is evil . . . And we intend to destroy it.
- Ron Arnold, Center for the Defense of Free Enterprise
-
- ---[Boston Globe, Jan. 13, 1993].
-
- SO ARE __ YOU__ FIRED UP ENOUGH TO WRITE :
-
- 1) Your Senators and tell them to VOTE NO TO S. 1180;
-
- AND
-
- 2) Your CongressPerson and tell them to CO-SPONSOR H.R. 2351
-
- OR DO YOU WANT SOME MORE UN-FOND REMEMBRANCES OF THE 105th?
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Feb 1998 22:52:34 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US] "County shouldn't keep monkeys hanging" (WSJ, 2/4/98)
- Message-ID: <34DE8B92.2B7A146B@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- Source:
- "County shouldn't keep monkeys hanging"
- Editorial
- Wisconsin State Journal
- Madison, WI
- US
- Wednesday, February 4, 1998
- Page 9A
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- County shouldn't keep monkeys hanging
-
- This monkey business is getting to be serious.
-
- Last week, the Dane County Zoo Commission asked county officials to
- explore taking over the UW-Madison primate research center's monkey
- colony, which is kept at Vilas Park Zoo. The primate center can no
- longer spend federal money on the care and feeding of the monkeys, so UW
- officials are preparing to ship 100 rhesus monkeys to a Louisiana
- breeding center within two weeks and 50 stump-tail macaques back to
- their ancestral home of Thailand as early as March.
-
- On Tuesday, Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk said she would like 45
- days to explore keeping one of the two colonies, but not both. It's
- largely a question of money: A county study, criticized as overblown by
- some, has estimated it would take $280,000 in capital costs and $211,000
- in capital costs to keep the monkeys at Vilas.
-
- UW-Madison Graduate School Dean Virginia Hinshaw quickly responded to
- Falk that 45 days is too long to wait. Either decide within 30 days
- soon to keep the monkeys, Hinshaw said, or they will be packing their
- little suitcases for warmer climates.
-
- If Falk is inclined to keep any of the monkeys, which is questionable if
- the county must foot all of the bill, she should keep some of the
- rhesus.
-
- The Louisiana center wants the rhesus to breed, but if they don't, they
- will join research projects described as invasive by animal rights
- activists.
-
- The stump-tails, on the other hand, will be released in a Thai
- sanctuary, where they can romp around for the rest of their days.
- That's a fate far better than becoming part of some lipstick or perfume
- experiment, which is what could happen to some of the rhesus.
-
- The university is trying to be a good player, but it cannot keep the
- monkeys at Vilas for much longer. Falk and the county board should do
- their best to decide now, and resist the temptation to monkey around.
-
-
- WISCONSIN STATE JOURNAL
- Phil Blake, publisher Frank Denton, editor
- Thomas W. Still, associate editor
- Sunny Schubert, editorial editor
- Chuck Martin, editorial writer
-
- Opinions above are shaped by this board, independent of news coverage
- decisions elsewhere in the paper.
-
- -- End --
-
- Background info, including Resolution 241, related news
- articles, alerts, etc, can be found at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/#Issues
-
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Feb 1998 22:55:27 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US] "UW willing to work with county if it wants Vilas Zoo monkeys"
- (WSJ, 2/3/98)
- Message-ID: <34DE8C3F.E8CD25E@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- "UW willing to work with county if it wants Vilas Zoo monkeys"
- By John Welsh
- Wisconsin State Journal
- Madison, WI
- US
- Tuesday, February 3, 1998
- Page 3B
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- UW willing to work with county if it wants Vilas Zoo monkeys
-
- UW-Madison officials said Monday they are willing to sweeten the deal a
- bit if Dane County decides it wants to keep some of the school's Vilas
- Zoo monkeys.
-
- The move came just as Dane County Executive Kathleen Falk was expected
- to state her position - possibly as early as today - on whether the
- county wants the monkeys.
-
- Jonathan Barry, a member of the UW Board of Regents and former Dane
- County executive, said the university would likely be open to a number
- of alternatives to ease the turnover of the monkeys from the research
- center run by the school to the zoo run by the county.
-
- Among the possibilities is using the money that the University would
- spend in dismantling the monkey house to maintain part of the exhibit
- until the county is ready to take over.
-
- The university's Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center has been
- looking for a new home for the 150 monkeys it has kept at the zoo for
- the past 30 years. It plans to ship 100 rhesus monkeys to a research
- center in Louisiana by mid-February and 50 stump-tailed macaques to a
- Thailand sanctuary as early as next mouth.
-
- --John Welsh
-
- -- End --
-
- Background info, including Resolution 241, related news
- articles, alerts, etc, can be found at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/#Issues
-
-
- Date: Sun, 08 Feb 1998 22:56:36 -0600
- From: Steve Barney <AnimalLib@vaxa.cis.uwosh.edu>
- To: AR-News <AR-News@envirolink.org>
- Subject: [US] "UW-Madison officials approve delay in sending monkeys away"
- (WSJ, 2/4/98)
- Message-ID: <34DE8C84.722A4C78@uwosh.edu>
- MIME-version: 1.0
- Content-type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
- Content-transfer-encoding: 7bit
-
- "UW-Madison officials approve delay in sending monkeys away"
- By John Welsh
- Wisconsin State Journal
- Madison, WI
- US
- Wednesday, February 4, 1998
- Page 1C
-
- -- Beginning --
-
- UW-Madison officials approve delay in sending monkeys away
-
- By John Welsh
- Wisconsin State Journal
-
- UW-Madison officials agreed Tuesday to delay a planned shipment of Vilas
- Zoo monkeys next week to give Dane County officials more time to
- consider ways to keep them.
-
- County Executive Kathleen Falk requested a 45-day delay Tuesday in a
- letter sent to the university. Several hours later, the school replied
- in its own letter that she had until March 2.
-
- "We need a definite commitment," said Virginia Hinshaw. dean of the UW
- Graduate School. There's nothing to be gained if I keep delaying this
- if I can't get that commitment."
-
- The university's Wisconsin Regional Primate Research Center has spent
- several months searching for a new home for the 150 monkeys it keeps at
- the county-run zoo. The center had planned to ship 100 rhesus monkeys
- to a research center in Louisiana as early as next week and 50
- stump-tailed macaques to a sanctuary in their ancestral home of Thailand
- as early as next month.
-
- In her letter to the school, Falk said she needed more time to explore
- different types of partnerships that could provide the resources to keep
- at least one of the monkey colonies.
-
- "It will be financially difficult to achieve this goal," Falk said.
-
- She said that a tight county budget would prevent the county from adding
- zoo staff but that she hoped concerned community groups or foundations
- might come forward to help.
-
- In her letter, Hinshaw provided details on what the school would be
- willing to do to help. She said the university would agree to maintain
- up to 100 rhesus monkeys at the zoo until the end of the year if the
- county agrees to assume responsibility Jan. 1.
-
- She said the funding would come from the money the university would save
- by not having to tear down the monkey house.
-
- Falk's letter also raised the issue of a 1989 agreement between the zoo
- and the research center that barred using the monkeys for invasive
- research procedures. Falk requested that such prohibitions continue
- even if the monkeys are moved out of Vilas Zoo.
-
- Hinshaw said the 100 monkeys going to the Tulane Regional Primate
- Research Center would be used for breeding. She acknowledged that those
- unable to breed could end up in a research program, but she said the
- university was keeping to the spirit of the 1989 pact and that its
- arrangement with Tulane was likely the best it could get from any
- institution.
-
- -- End --
-
- Background info, including Resolution 241, related news
- articles, alerts, etc, can be found at:
-
- http://www.uwosh.edu/organizations/alag/#Issues
-
-
-
-
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