| Cockfighting Bill Approved New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson signed a measure in March that will outlaw cockfighting in the state. The law takes effect on June 15, leaving Louisiana as the only state that continues to permit the cruel bloodsport. Animal protection advocates applauded Richardson’s decision as a major step in completely outlawing the barbaric practice. However, those who support cockfighting—in which two roosters fitted with sharp blades or gaffs on their legs are placed into a pit to fight until their deaths—say they plan on a legal challenge. |
![]() A sharp decline in smooth hammerheads and other shark species off the US eastern seaboard is causing larger problems for the marine ecosystem. Shark Species Discovered; Others in Decline Study co-author Dr. William White says the information is especially critical in Indonesia, since it is home to the largest shark and ray fishery in the world, with reported landings of over 100,000 tons a year. The country is also a major player in shark finning operations and the trade in shark parts, so it is crucial that these newly discovered species are protected from exploitation. Accurate species data is the best tool for preserving species diversity, because it allows researchers to gauge the effects of the fishing industry and develop successful fisheries management plans. Unfortunately, North American researchers write in Science that the overfishing of large shark species has upset the balance of marine life off the eastern seaboard of the United States by “chopping off the top of the food chain.” A report by US and Canadian scientists outlines the decline in big sharks over 35 years, as well as the corresponding explosion of the number of cownose rays in Chesapeake Bay. Reaching up to 40 million animals, the ray population has multiplied by 20 times over three decades and simultaneously decimated populations of bay scallops, oysters and clams. The population of scalloped hammerhead and tiger sharks has fallen at least 97 percent since 1970, and bull, dusky and smooth hammerhead shark populations have fallen by at least 99 percent. The species have been deemed “functionally extinct” because they cannot control middle predators in their ecosystems. These findings updated the results of a 2003 study, concluding that original estimates of declines in big shark populations were too conservative. |
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| Integrity-Free Monsanto In a not-so-surprising development, biotech multi-national giant Monsanto is moving aggressively against a group of dairies labeling their products “hormone free.” The agribusiness behemoth that manufactures the cow growth hormone rBGH claims that this type of labeling is damaging its business and has lodged a complaint with the US Food and Drug Administration and the Federal Trade Commission. Its objection flies in the face of what is known about bovine growth hormone—even Monsanto lists 16 possible health effects for cows on its packaging. Use of rBGH to increase milk production in cows is associated with an increase in painful conditions such as severe mastitis, digestive disorders and chronic lameness. |
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Celebrity Chef Speaks Out Famed Chef Wolfgang Puck has announced that he is changing suppliers of the egg and meat products served in his fine-dining restaurants, fast-casual eateries and catering venues, avoiding those that use some of the most egregious industry methods. Further, he has stated that he will no longer serve foie gras, a product produced by force-feeding ducks and geese. We applaud Puck’s decision and hope he will insist on a high welfare requirement for all species of animals raised for food that are supplied to his establishments. |
Consumption First? Wildlife Trade Policy in the United States
Bobcats: Protected Yet Persecuted
Behind the Wall: Smithfield and the Victory of Illusion, by Tom Garrett
Bird Flu: A Virus of Our Own Hatching
This Land is Their Land: How Corporate Farms Threaten the World
Legislators Support American Horses

The US Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) estimated in 2004 that there were 700,000 to 1.5 million adult bobcats living in the United States. Considering that only four states have even attempted to estimate the size of their bobcat populations, there is no evidence to validate this ballpark figure or to justify the agency’s belief that the population is even larger today. With significantly more bobcats being killed now than even five years ago, claims by most states and the FWS that these bobcat populations are stable or increasing are not credible. By contrast, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature’s 2006 Red List of Threatened Species indicates that bobcat populations are in decline. The bobcat is one of many species whose future may rest on the outcome of this summer’s Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora meeting, since its Appendix II protections are now at stake.
Photo by Susan C. Morse