Tag Archives: animals

Facebook Game Rescues Virtual Chickens, and Real Ones Too

Image credit: Farm Rescue From unborn chicks injected with antibiotics , to the horrors of a commercial chicken hatchery , the life of a factory farmed chicken is pretty brutish from the outset. And we haven’t even gotten into the potential health hazards posed by meat unfit for KFC being served to our kids . … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Facebook Game Rescues Virtual Chickens, and Real Ones Too

Scientists Discover New Bearded Monkey

Photo by Javier García Scientists Thomas Defler, Marta Bueno and Javier García have discovered a new species of monkey in the Caquetá region of southern Colombia. The region, which is part of the Amazon rainforest, had been inaccessible for years due to a violent insurgence. The violence subsided three year… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Scientists Discover New Bearded Monkey

Speeding Driver Kills Nearly an Entire Flock of Sheep

Photo via mon2009 Pastoral life has long been emblematic of a harmonious relationship between man and nature — but that was all shattered recently in a horrific accident that killed nearly an entire flock of sheep . The incident took place on a roadway in Macedonia after a speeding… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Speeding Driver Kills Nearly an Entire Flock of Sheep

Massive Growth in UK Solar Jobs

Image credit: Solarcentury It seems like the UK solar industry is on fire right now. No sooner was the renewables feed-in tariff approved , than solar installers were inundated with inquiries from would-be customers , and we’ve even seen plans announced for the country’s first utility-scale solar plants . Now there’s further evidence … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Massive Growth in UK Solar Jobs

Ocean’s Tiny Carbon "Vacuum Cleaners" More Important to Carbon Capture Than We Thought

Image via Wikipedia If you’re a beach goer, you might recognize those little crystal- clear blobs that often wash up on the sand in the mornings as salps. While often mistaken for jellyfish, they’re actually the ocean’s “vacuum cleaners,” sucking up all kinds of particles as food and excreting carbon-rich pellets that sink to the sea floor. Researchers know that the fairly benign creatures are actually quite important for carbon capture and storage in the oceans , but recent discoveries on what they eat show … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Ocean’s Tiny Carbon "Vacuum Cleaners" More Important to Carbon Capture Than We Thought

Haiti’s Earthquake-Injured Animals Are That Country’s Lowest Priority | 8 Deeply Touching Photos… Accompanied by Some Hope

Haiti's injured animals lowest priority More than six months since Haiti's earthquake, family dogs and pigs search for food in the rubble. “Animal welfare is a new concept in Haiti,” said Max Millien, director of animal health at the Haiti Ministry of Agriculture. _____ First aid groups treat Haiti's injured animals By Daphne Sashin, for CNN August 9, 2010 10:44 p.m. EDT STORY HIGHLIGHTS * Groups say animals are lowest priority in aftermath of Haiti's earthquake * For the first time, the nation has non-profit animal welfare organizations * They have treated tens of thousands of animals since the January disaster * One group plans to build an animal care and veterinary training center (CNN) — More than six months since the earthquake in Haiti, family dogs and pigs paw through garbage and rubble in search of food, putting them at risk of infections, abscesses and parasites, according to animal welfare groups. Owners want to help their pets and livestock, but they have little to give. With 1.5 million people still living in tents and the nation in the middle of hurricane season, animals are the lowest priority, animal rescue groups say. Despite this, tens of thousands of animals have been treated while a public service campaign features a Creole-speaking dog telling families to include their animals in evacuation plans. “The animal situation is only a reflection of the people's situation,” Gerardo Huertas, of the UK-based World Society for the Protection of Animals, told CNN from Costa Rica. “They live together. Until the whole shelter situation resolves, all you can do is help them with little veterinary support that we can provide,” added Huertas, the society's Director of Disaster Management for the Americas. But animal welfare groups are hopeful that in time they can actually give the nation and its people something it didn't have before the earthquake — equipment, training and an awareness that animal welfare is critical to their own survival. “Often in disasters we try and only deal with the problems caused by the disaster and not the underlying problems … but Haiti was a special case,” said Ian Robinson, Emergency Relief Program Director for the International Fund for Animal Welfare, based in Massachusetts. The animal situation is only a reflection of the people's situation –Gerardo Huertas, World Society for the Protection of Animals “To put it back like it was before the earthquake wasn't good enough.” There wasn't a single animal welfare organization in Haiti before the earthquake. The government was focused on preventing the spread of animal-to-human diseases like anthrax, rabies and classical swine fever. “Animal welfare is a new concept in Haiti,” said Max Millien, Director of Animal Health at the Haiti Ministry of Agriculture. “The children have to start to understand … if you treat the animals well, that's a way to protect yourself.” Robinson and Millien recently presented their observations at the annual American Veterinary Medical Association conference, in Atlanta, Georgia. The earthquake damaged the buildings that held vaccines for rabies, heartworm and other diseases. Vets lacked supplies. International volunteers struggled to get around the country. As for the animals themselves, hundreds were injured. Some of them had wounds caused by the quake or from having to find food in dumps. Others had infections and needed immediate treatment. Days after the earthquake, the two non-profits created The Animal Relief Coalition for Haiti (ARCH), with a dozen other animal rescue groups to provide more than $1.1 million in aid to the Haitian government over the next year, including: • A team of Haitian vets to reach the hardest hit areas with antibiotics, vaccinations and other treatments for animals that in many cases had never been seen by a doctor. Since January, the ARCH mobile clinic has treated 30,000 pigs, goats, dogs, cats and other animals. • Solar-powered freezers and refrigerators to store temperature-sensitive vaccines in rural areas without electricity, along with coolers that will fit on the back of motorcycles, horses or bicycles for mobile veterinarians. • Haiti's first census of dogs and cats to determine the level of care they are receiving, people's attitudes toward companion animals and the risk of rabies and other diseases to humans. • A public awareness campaign to educate families about disaster planning. Last month, public-service announcements began airing a speaking dog telling families to take them along if they have to evacuate. “Any emergency plan is better than no plan,” Huertas said. “We're just asking them to include their pets.” Separately, The Christian Veterinary Mission has promised laptops and projectors for mobile veterinarians to give presentations on animal care. In addition, Humane Society International has spent $400,000 in Haiti and pledged more than $1 million over the next five years. It has begun planning an animal care and veterinary training center in Croix-des-Bouquets and is also working to establish spay-neuter and vaccine clinics. “I do consider the earthquake as an opportunity,” Millien said. “We have a lot of promises … I hope the situation will be better than before.” Click here to see photos of our voiceless friends… http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americas/08/06/haiti.animals/index.html?hpt=C1 added by: EthicalVegan

4,500 Animals Killed in BP Spill … And Counting

Photo via CenCOOS As BP moves to permanently seal the blown-out well that unleashed 5 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the focus is turning to the toll of the disaster. It should be said that the true and total toll will not be known for some time, until scientists have had a chance to properly investigate the extent of the damage above and below the sea. But there are some things we can start looking at now: Like the direct numb… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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4,500 Animals Killed in BP Spill … And Counting

Green Turtles Return to Malaysia But Face An Uncertain Future

Photo by syntheticaperture Green turtles have been battling habitat loss, the dangers of fishermen , and pollution in a loosing battle for decades, and in Malaysia they’ve faced a take-over of their beaches by tourists and egg-plunderers. Still, there’s been a shift in their luck, albeit a precarious one. Green turtles are returning to Malaysia in the hundreds, but experts say that if the destruction of their habitat isn’t stopped im… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Green Turtles Return to Malaysia But Face An Uncertain Future

It’s Not Time to Scale Back the Gulf Coast Cleanup, Is It?

Image via Boston With the flow of oil from the BP well in the Gulf of Mexico capped and most of the spilled oil skimmed from the water’s surface, incoming CEO Robert Dudley said last weekend that it was time for BP to “scaleback” its cleanup efforts, the AP reported . E… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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It’s Not Time to Scale Back the Gulf Coast Cleanup, Is It?

Turkey and Syria Bond Over Saving the Bald Ibis

A Northern bald ibis in the Vienna Zoo. Photo by Roberto Verzo via Flickr. It’s got an awfully ugly mug to have inspired any kind of romantic association, but our guide at the bird sanctuary in Birecik, on the Euphrates River in southeastern Turkey, waxed poetic about how the bald ibises resident there mate for life and return after their annual migration on

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Turkey and Syria Bond Over Saving the Bald Ibis