Feline Predicts Elderly Deaths
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Oscar the cat seems to have an uncanny knack for predicting when
nursing home patients are going to die, curling up next to them
during their final hours.
Stew Milne/Associated Press
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Oscar, a 2-year-old cat living at the Steere House
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Providence, R.I., has an unusual
ability: he can predict when its residents are about to die. The cat has
correctly identified 25 patients in their final hours, curling up on their
beds when they generally have fewer than four hours to live. Recently
awarded a wall plaque commending his work, Oscar has been said to be
better than the center’s employees at making these predictions. Families
are grateful for the ability to say goodbye to their loved ones before it
is too late, reports a recent New England Journal of Medicine article on
the still-unexplained phenomenon.
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Sharks in the Atlantic Ocean
May Get a Chance to Recover
The National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) is
considering a proposal to limit shark fishing in the Atlantic Ocean and
the Gulf of Mexico. It gives special attention to porbeagle and sandbar
sharks, common victims of wasteful and cruel finning—whereby fins are
sliced from the live animals, who are then tossed back into the sea to
die. The measure would severely restrict the taking of sandbar sharks,
overfished for their large, valuable fins.
Shark carcasses are often brought to shore with
their fins cut from their bodies. Despite the enactment of the Shark
Finning Prohibition Act in 2000, some fins continue to be taken from
protected species, and/or fins on board fishing vessels do not correspond
with the carcasses. Species valued for their fins differ from species
valued for their meat. Enforcement is complicated, as it can be hard to
identify the species merely by looking at the fins.
By mandating that all sharks arrive on shore with
their fins attached, the proposal would help stop shark finning in the
region and improve the enforcement of the law. However, while this
initiative may give Atlantic sharks an opportunity to recover from years
of depletion, the NMFS should extend the same protections to sharks in the
Pacific Ocean.
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Cockfighting to Stop in
Louisiana
The last state to allow cockfighting has finally
approved new legislation to stop the bloodsport in August 2008. In the
meantime, another newly enacted Louisiana law bans the practice of
gambling at cockfights, intending to stop it from drawing spectators and
making money. The Animal Welfare Institute hopes that in light of the
recent dog fighting case involving football star Michael Vick, people will
open their eyes to the cruelty associated with forcing animals to attack
each other.
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Lovesick Elephants Elope
In August, Savitri, a female circus elephant in
the West Bengal state of India, ran away to a nearby jungle with a wild
bull elephant who had broken into her enclosure. Three other female
elephants attempted to follow the duo, but they were led back by circus
workers. Savitri spent more than a week with the bull, who wildlife
officials believe was in a period of musth and seeking to mate. The circus
contemplated ways to lure the elephant back to captivity, but perhaps due
to hunger, Savitri returned on her own.
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Endangered Wildlife Skin
Smuggling Case Uncovered
Following a three-year undercover operation by the
US Fish and Wildlife Service, famed boot maker Martin Villegas has been
charged with money laundering and conspiring to illegally smuggle
protected animal skins into the United States to make exotic footwear.
With two other Mexican nationals and two residents
of the United States, he has allegedly made 25 shipments of skins since
2005 that were prohibited by the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.
Villegas, who is currently being held in a
Colorado jail, has fashioned boots for world leaders such as President
Bush and former Mexican President Vicente Fox—who may be connected to the
operation. Prior to his arrest, a raid of Villegas’s warehouse revealed
goods made from endangered species including sea turtles, crocodiles,
lizards and cobras.
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Pets and Planes
The loss, injury or death of a companion animal
used to be reported to the US Department of Transportation (DoT) as
“mishandled baggage.” Though Congress told airlines to start filing
separate reports for this live cargo in 2000, it took five years before
the DoT issued regulations to enforce the requirement and airlines finally
started complying. A review of the incidents documented since that time
reveals dogs and cats who have been left sitting on the tarmac for hours
and even days. They have been abandoned in dangerous cargo areas, put on
the wrong flight or no flight at all, and escaped, never to be recovered.
The DoT gives its Air Travel Consumer Report,
containing the information provided by the airlines, to the US Department
of Agriculture (USDA)—the agency charged with enforcing the federal Animal
Welfare Act (AWA). The AWA stipulates handling and care requirements for
live animals transported by air. Clearly, the USDA oversight does not
prevent animals from suffering, getting lost or dying at some point after
their human companions have left them in the hands of the airline
industry.
We strongly advise against flying with your dog or
cat unless he or she is small enough to be placed under your seat in a
carrier. If your pet must be placed in the cargo hold, please ensure the
animal is healthy enough to endure the stressful conditions and is checked
on during the trip. An animal should never be shipped unaccompanied. Take
your companion animal to a vet immediately if you have any doubts about
his or her condition after a flight. If seriously injured or killed during
air transport, your animal must be returned to you, so that you (and not
the airline) can seek out treatment or a necropsy. If necessary, file a
complaint with the airline as soon as possible, and contact us so that we
may ask the USDA to investigate the matter.
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Breaking the “Bird Brain”
Stereotype
A 31-year-old African grey parrot named Alex (an
acronym for Avian Learning EXperiment) died on Sept. 6. As the subject of
a 30-year experiment by animal psychologist Irene Pepperberg, he proved
birds are intelligent animals capable of reasoning and using words
creatively. Alex could identify 50 different objects, as well as seven
colors and five shapes. His vocabulary contained about 150 words, and he
was particularly talented at showing an understanding of the things he
said, instead of merely mimicking. African greys typically live to the age
of 50 years; Alex’s premature death was unexpected, and its cause is still
unknown.