|
This Week In the News


Pit
bulls crawl out of the doghouse
Carla Hall
Los Angeles Times
Aug. 7, 2006 10:26 AM
LOS ANGELES
- The
bar is crowded, but Karen Dawn doesn't hesitate to enter with
her two dogs in tow. Paula sports a pink bandanna around her
neck; Buster, a camouflage kerchief.
Oblivious to the voices and music, Paula and Buster quietly
make their way through the tangle of patrons' feet, pausing to
bask in the massage of hands reaching down to pet them.
"They're usually on someone's lap," says Dawn, who
seeks out animal-friendly restaurants and bars like this one
in Venice.
Monica Paull, sitting nearby, gushes, "Your dogs are
amazing!" She pats the empty spot next to her and Paula
hops up.
At this moment, it's difficult to believe that Paula and
Buster share a heritage with dogs that have, this summer,
fatally mauled a man in San Bernardino County and seriously
wounded an 11-year-old girl in a school bathroom in the San
Fernando Valley and an 11-month-old girl in Santa Barbara.
But Paula, with her wide cheekbones and brown-and-white color,
is unmistakably a pit bull. Buster is a pit-bull mix.
So how is it that two dogs belonging to a breed that is
controversial, feared, banned by some cities and possessed of
the worst public relations in the canine world end up cuddling
with beach community hipsters?
Paula and Buster are evidence of a phenomenon that is emerging
in unexpected parts of the area: the well-socialized pit bull.
From the lofts of downtown to the streets of West Hollywood to
the bungalows of Venice, pit bulls increasingly can be seen
strolling with their people. Oscar winner Jamie Foxx has two
pit bulls. Britney Spears' husband, Kevin Federline, made
celebrity magazine news walking with a pit bull in Malibu.
And even television has offered up a trusty pit bull: The
young heroine of "Veronica Mars" has a canine
companion named Backup.
The City of Los Angeles issued licenses for 3,040 pit bulls in
the fiscal year that ended in June -- almost twice as many
(1,664) as the city gave out four years ago. Los Angeles
County, which licenses 265,000 dogs in the unincorporated
parts of the county as well as 49 cities, has registered
10,708 pit bulls. County statistics show that the biggest
concentrations of licensed pit bulls are in the cities of
Compton and Lancaster, not Malibu or Beverly Hills.But
trainers and animal shelter staffers and rescuers see a trend:
increasing adoptions by families, professionals and others
willing to attempt to raise a civilized pit bull.
"As far as I'm concerned, pit bulls are one of the most
popular breeds," said Shell Jones, a professional dog
walker of nine years. On a recent morning at the Laurel Canyon
Dog Park, she and her husband, Vance Floyd, were shepherding a
canine pack of about 20, including pit bulls Bernadette, Figgy,
Louis and Bridie.
"With pit bulls, (behavior) just has to do with who takes
care of the dog," she said.
At the city's West L.A. shelter, staffers promote the pit
bulls they believe are temperamentally agreeable.
"The best dogs," said Charla Fales, an animal-care
technician at the shelter, "are the female pits who've
had puppies. They mother everyone -- dogs, kids."
Many who own or rescue pit bulls want to rehabilitate the
image of a breed they believe has been unfairly maligned.
"I would say we're trying to restore the image,"
said Donna Reynolds, 44, who lives in Oakland, Calif. She and
her husband rescue pit bulls and run a Web site, http://www.badrap.org,
that seeks to dispel the belief that pit bulls are vicious and
unmanageable. Reynolds says a pit bull is "an exceptional
family pet ... People who tend to believe they're scary have
been educated by the media."
Anyone adopting a dog from Reynolds must sign a contract and
take classes.
"We find that home that can be an ambassador for the
breed," she said.
Cesar Millan, the "Dog Whisperer" who has his own
show on the National Geographic cable channel, says pit bulls,
like all the power breeds, can be trained through exercise and
discipline.
He keeps pit bulls in his resident pack at his South
L.A.-based Dog Psychology Center, which is part dog camp, part
rehab center.
"My kids are around pit bulls every day," said
Millan, who believes the dogs have been unfairly stigmatized.
"In the '70s they blame Dobermans, in the '80s they blame
German shepherds, in the '90s they blame the Rottweiler, now
they blame the pit bull."
But the pit bull story is more complicated than just a case of
bad spin.
The dogs are genetically predisposed to be aggressive toward
other dogs, having been bred centuries ago in England and
Ireland to bait bulls, among other animals. When that was
outlawed, they were bred to fight dogs in pits.
The term "pit bull" is a catch-all to describe
several related breeds descended from that combative stock.
The American pit bull terrier, the American Staffordshire
terrier and the Staffordshire bull terrier are all basically
pits.
The dogs were prized for their determination as fighters --
their "gameness" -- and their loyalty to their
handlers. A dog in a bloody battle with another dog would let
its human handler reach into a pit and pull it out with bare
hands. Today, every state outlaws dog fighting and most
classify it as a felony.
For most of the 20th century, pit bulls enjoyed a wholesome
image. Petey of "Our Gang" was a pit bull, and Helen
Keller kept one as a pet. A dignified pit bull graced an
American propaganda poster during World War I, and a pit
rescued in 1985 on the streets of South Los Angeles by County
Fire Station 14 was the station's beloved mascot for years.
But in recent decades, the dog has become a symbol of
savagery. With its broad, muscular build and powerful bite
capable of shredding dogs and humans alike, the pit bull
became the canine of choice for gangbangers, drug dealers and
other criminals protecting their turf. People who lived in
those same dangerous neighborhoods bought them for protection.
A flourishing underground for illegal dog-fighting in Los
Angeles started in the 1990s, said Phyllis Daugherty, director
of the L.A.-based advocacy group Animal Issues Movement. That
led to further breeding to make them as aggressive as
possible. When dogs weren't deemed good enough for fighting,
they were sold or given away and ended up abused and even more
antisocial.
The fatal mauling of a boy by his family's pit bull in San
Francisco last year prompted Mayor Gavin Newsom to consider
banning them in the city. That didn't happen, but at his
urging the California Legislature enacted a law -- it went
into effect this year -- allowing local jurisdictions to
regulate the neutering and spaying of specific breeds.
Marcia Mayeda, director of Los Angeles County's Department of
Animal Care and Control, says she sees the most ravaged of the
pit bulls -- some adoptable, some not.
"Everybody wants to romanticize this idea of the gentle
giant," she said. "There are those dogs, but it's
not every dog."
Many trainers, rescuers and veterinarians suggest that anyone
wishing to adopt a rescued pit bull put the dog through
temperament testing and obedience training, and have it spayed
or neutered.
There's no doubt these dogs require special handling. It's
hard out there for a pit and its owner. People cross the
street when they see them coming, even when the dogs are
leashed. Some dog walkers won't take pit bulls as clients. Not
all insurance companies offer liability coverage to their
owners.
Ron Cabrera, a 27-year-old student, and Sonny Izzo, 22, a
musician, arrived at Laurel Canyon Dog Park with their
muscular, unaltered pit bulls -- hoping that Cabrera's male,
Biggie, would take to Izzo's female, Kyra, and mate.
The friends watched as their pit bulls roughhoused
good-naturedly with other dogs. But when Biggie trampled a
yelping Jack Russell terrier -- who scampered off unharmed --
then started toward a frisky Tibetan terrier, his owner
grabbed him.
"No, you're too big to play with them," Cabrera said
firmly.
Still, as far as dog park etiquette went, the damage was done.
"No aggressive dog is supposed to be in here," dog
walker TerriAnne Phillips told the two men.
Phillips does not walk pit bulls. She held out her forearm.
"See this?" she said, pointing to a faint scar.
"Pit bull."

Associated
Press
Aug. 8, 2006 10:48 AM
BEIJING - Twin giant
pandas each gave birth to twin cubs this week as the number of
pandas born in captivity this year in China rose to six, state
media reported Tuesday.
The sisters, Qi Zhen and Qi Yuan, delivered their babies on
Sunday and Monday at the Chengdu Giant Panda Reproduction and
Research Center in Chengdu, the capital of southwest China's
Sichuan province, where they live, the official Xinhua News
Agency said.
A 7.7-ounce panda cub was born on Monday at the Wolong Giant
Panda Protection and Research Center, elsewhere in Sichuan, and
it became the heaviest cub in the history of China's artificial
breeding program, according to the report.
Its mother, Zhang Ka, also set a record for the longest delivery
after about 34 hours in labor, Xinhua said.
The first panda born in captivity this year was delivered at the
Wolong center on June 22.
Female pandas normally become sexually mature between 4 and 5
years old. They can get pregnant once a year and usually give
birth to one or two cubs at a time.
The panda is one of the world's rarest animals, with just 1,596
left in the wild, according to a 2002 government census.

Lawsuit
to protect mammals forces Navy to change exercises
Associated
Press
Jul. 5, 2006 08:20 AM
HONOLULU - The Navy
said it will rely on a different type of sonar during exercises off
of Hawaii after environmentalists won a temporary restraining order
stopping the service from using a high-intensity sonar that could
harm marine mammals.
U.S. District Judge Florence-Marie Cooper's order came after the
Defense Department granted the Navy a six-month exemption from the
federal Marine Mammal Protection Act to allow use of the
"mid-frequency active sonar."
Environmentalists had argued the exemption was aimed at
circumventing the lawsuit they filed last week to stop the Navy's
use of the sonar in the Rim of the Pacific 2006 exercise.
Government lawyers were reviewing the ruling, and the Navy will
probably respond soon, said Jon Yoshishige, a spokesman for the U.S.
Pacific Fleet in Hawaii.
Meanwhile, participants in the multinational exercise will search
for submarines using "passive sonar," which historically
has been used during such exercises, Vice Adm. Barry Costello,
commander of the U.S. 3rd Fleet, said in a statement late Monday.
Active sonar locates objects by analyzing sound bounced off them,
while passive sonar involves analyzing noises generated by the
objects.
Vice Adm. Barry Costello, commander of the U.S. 3rd Fleet, said
Tuesday that using active sonar to track submarines is a skill that
would deteriorate with a lack of practice.
"The threat for the future is diesel submarines and they are
proliferating in the western Pacific," Costello told The
Associated Press. "I know active sonar is the only effective
means today to track and target diesel submarines."
The Navy estimates Western Pacific nations own at least 140 diesel
submarines. The newer models are quieter and can travel longer
distances without surfacing, making them more difficult to detect.
Cooper, who based her Monday order on the National Environmental
Policy Act, wrote that the Navy's failure to prepare an
environmental impact statement or to take a "hard look" at
the potential environmental impact of war games amounted to an
"arbitrary and capricious" violation of that act.
The Natural Resources Defense Council, the environmental group
leading the lawsuit, points to the stranding of more than 150
disoriented melon-headed whales in Hanalei Bay two summers ago while
the U.S. Navy and its allies were using sonar in nearby exercises.
An April report by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration said naval sonar may have prompted the whales,
normally found in deep water, to seek refuge in the bay.
"Of course the Navy needs to train, and our lawsuit doesn't
seek to prevent them from training," said Joel Reynolds, the
council's senior attorney. "Our goal is simply to require them
to incorporate a series of common-sense measures."
The Navy said there is no conclusive evidence to blame sonar for the
incident. Even so, the service agreed to steps such as conducting
aerial surveys for marine mammals before and after ships turn on
their sonar and restricting sonar use to certain areas.
The Navy says it must practice hunting submarines near the Hawaiian
islands because they are in the type of environment where it most
likely will face an emerging threat of submarine warfare.
Forty ships from eight countries are participating in RIMPAC, the
world's largest international maritime war games.

Man
allegedly gets neighbor's cat euthanized
Associated
Press
Apr. 17, 2006 10:22 AM
WEST
ISLIP, N.Y. - A man who didn't get along with his neighbor
trapped her cat in his back yard and then took it to an animal
shelter to be euthanized, police said.
Regina Fagone searched the neighborhood for two days earlier this
month after her cat disappeared, and then went to the Town of Islip
Animal Shelter.
Employees there broke the news to her: Her cat, a Russian blue, had
been euthanized that day.
Richard DeSantis, 56, was arrested Saturday and was charged with
criminal mischief, criminal possession of stolen property and making
a punishable false written statement, police said. He was issued a
desk appearance ticket and will be arraigned June 5.
DeSantis, reached by telephone at his home Sunday, said there are
two sides to every story and then hung up.
Police said an investigation found DeSantis had captured the cat and
dropped it off at the shelter to be killed.
Vandals
leave shelter in desperate position
By
Leigh Jones
The Herald-Zeitung
Published
July 18, 2006
Cheryl Krueger
alternated between smiling expressions of gratitude and floods of
tears Monday as she stood in the reception area of the New Braunfels
Humane Society Animal Shelter.
The heart-felt “thank-you’s” were directed
to the citizens who brought car loads of pet food donations
throughout the day. The tears were for the animals killed and maimed
by vandals who broke in over the weekend and unleashed a torrent of
destruction.
“It’s so hard,” Krueger said, her voice
cracking under the strain of describing the situation. “I just
can’t understand why anyone would want to do this to the animals.
They basically destroyed the shelter.”
The suspects broke into the facility sometime
between 9 p.m. Saturday and 8 a.m. Sunday. Not content with hurting
the shelter’s four-legged residents, they also poisoned the food
supply, contaminated the store of cat litter and defaced the rest of
the shelter’s rooms and offices. Krueger, the facility’s
executive director, estimated 5,000 pounds of food and 1,200 pounds
of litter was destroyed.
Volunteers began cleaning up the mess first thing
Sunday, but the shelter is expected to remain closed through today.
“Every surface has to be wiped down — cages,
walls, floors, desks,” Krueger said. “And the remaining animals
have to be bathed again.”
New Braunfels police Detective Jesse Villarreal,
who is investigating the case, would not give any details as to the
number of animals killed or injured, the agent used to poison the
food or the nature of the damage done to the facility. He did verify
the building was quite a mess.
“When I walked up, I just prayed that it was
under construction or something. That’s how bad it was,” he
said.
Although volunteers have made progress in their
cleanup efforts, Krueger is asking for more volunteers today to give
any time they can to help clean and ready the shelter to open
Wednesday. In addition to manpower, the shelter needs donations of
dog, puppy, cat and kitten food and cat litter to replace the stores
staff members had to throw out. Cleaning supplies and cash donations
also are desperately needed.
“So many people helped us during the hurricane
evacuation situation. We just hope they’ll be generous again,”
Krueger said.
The loss of supplies comes at a difficult time
for the shelter. Every spare penny was being saved for their future
new location, a dream that somehow seemed farther away Monday.
Although the board of directors has discussed
potential new security measures, including an alarm system and video
surveillance, they have not made any firm decisions yet.
“We’ve just never had anything like this
happen before,” Krueger said. “It’s heart-wrenching. For
someone to come in and do what they did ... it’s just
unbelievable.”
HOW TO HELP
The New Braunfels Humane Society Animal Shelter
needs the following items to help recover from this weekend’s
vandalism:
Dog and cat food
Puppy and kitten food
Cat litter
Cleaning supplies
Cash donations
Volunteers willing to donate a few hours of
“elbow grease” to help clean the building today
Donations can be dropped off at the shelter,
located at 1920 Kuehler Ave., or at the Herald-Zeitung offices at
707 Landa St.
SOURCE: http://herald-zeitung.com/story.lasso?ewcd=26b759c23cb15068
Bird
shot with arrow avoids capture
Associated
Press
Jul. 11, 2006 02:57 PM
HOLLY HILL, Fla. - An
injured bird has confounded rescue workers for days by staying on
the move despite a two-foot arrow stuck through its body.
The young white ibis was first seen Thursday night. It was shot with
a dull arrow, which appears to have missed vital organs and muscles
but remains lodged in the bird.
"I have captured hundreds of birds," said Bob Hunt, a
volunteer with the Bird Rescue Center in New Smyrna Beach. "You
would think this would be one of the easier ones."
So far it hasn't been.
Hunt and partner Marilyn Camp spent hours Monday chasing the bird
from tree to tree. They threw fish on the ground to lure it down,
and twigs to rattle it off a perch. But the bird would simply climb
to a higher branch or flutter away as they advanced.
"We thought we would wear the little bird out," Camp said.
"Instead, he has worn us out."
Workers from the Marine Science Center and Holly Hill police have
also tried to no avail to rescue the ibis. Volunteers were trying
again Tuesday.
SOURCE:
http://www.azcentral.com/offbeat/0711bird-arrow-CR.html#


Wild
meerkats school their young
14
July 2006
University of Cambridge scientists
have discovered that older meerkats teach pups how to obtain food by
incrementally introducing dead, injured and then live prey. Although
learning per se wouldn’t be surprising, whether wild mammals teach
their young was still debated. The findings were published in this
week’s edition of the journal Science.
Meerkats
live in groups of three to 40 individuals in the arid regions of
southern Africa. Each group includes a dominant male and female who
produce over 80% of the pups. However, helpers (meerkats older than
90 days) and parents of both sexes aid in rearing the young.
Pups
(meerkats younger than 90 days of age) are initially incapable of
finding their own prey and therefore rely on provisions from other
members of the group by responding to their begging calls for food.
Meerkats typically feed on a range of unwieldy and often dangerous
prey (including scorpions).
The
Cambridge researchers discovered that in order for the helpers to
teach the pups how to handle food without putting them in harm’s
way, the older meerkats would kill or disable the prey before
providing it to the pups. In the case of the scorpions, they often
removed the sting. The helpers would then modify the frequency with
which they killed or disabled the prey according to the pups’ age,
recognized by their call, gradually introducing pups to live prey as
they became older.
Alex
Thornton, Department of Zoology, University of Cambridge, stated,
“A greater understanding of the evolution of teaching is essential
if we are to further our knowledge of human cultural evolution and
for us to examine the relations between culture in our own species
and cultural behavior in other animals.”
Like
any good teacher, the helpers would also monitor the pup after they
had provided it with food. If the pup was reluctant to handle the
prey, the older meerkat would nudge the item towards them to
encourage it. Additionally, if the prey wondered off the helper
would retrieve the item and return it to the pup, sometimes further
disabling it before returning it to the young meerkat.
The
researchers, Alex Thornton and Katherine McAuliffe, Department of
Zoology, University of Cambridge, are part of the Kalahari Meerkat
Project, located at the Kuruman River Reserve, South Africa. The
project is a decade-old initiative by Professor Tim Clutton-Brock
FRS in collaboration with the University of Pretoria. A study
earlier this year by Dr Andrew Young and Professor Clutton-Brock
reported that dominant female meerkats kill and eat their rival’s
young.
Source: http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/news/dp/2006071401

[Top]
[More
News] [Home]
|