Patricia Randolph’s Madravenspeak: Deer hunting is cruelty in the name of sport

dvoight09's avatarWisconsin Wildlife Ethic-Vote Our Wildlife

Apologies for the delay in getting this column posted.

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“How about if wildlife managers had not created artificial unnatural populations for hunters? …What should be culled are wildlife mis-managers.” ~ Marion Ambler

 Deer deserve us to be better than this.

The annual “traditional” nine-day deer kill Nov. 22-30 is a gruesome celebration of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resource’s killing business. Children and women killing our wildlife are prominently featured on the website. New in the past few years: the rise of the crossbow and the addition of the Sept. 13 – Jan. 4 period to the kill. An upbeat “enjoy the bloodlust” message from Scott Walker and his cheerleader appointee Secretary Cathy Stepp adds to the macabre “tradition.”

Wisconsin’s deer strategy is similar to New York’s, which is explained by New York big game state wildlife biologist Jeremy Hurst. “When we want to manipulate the population, we…

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Giving Tuesday –A message from Queen’s Brian May‏

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    Brian-May-Video-Title
Dear Friend of Wildlife,

I’m probably best known to many of you as a founding member and guitarist of the rock group Queen.

Today, on Giving Tuesday I am reaching out to you as the founder of the Save Me campaign to protect British wildlife. We work year-round with concerned citizens to save badgers and foxes from being killed for sport and from being slaughtered as part of ill-advised wildlife ‘control’.

When I learned what Project Coyote was doing, I asked Camilla Fox how I could help. I’m now proud to announce that I have been appointed a Project Coyote Ambassador.

Will you join me in making a year-end donation to Project Coyote? Every dollar that you give will make a difference to the wild animals with whom we share this planet. With your support, we can make a better world for our grandchildren to inherit.

Please watch my video message and make a gift to Project Coyote today. Together we can move from killing toward coexistence.

Wildlife-killing Contests Targeting Nongame Animals Banned by CA

Jim Robertson-wolf-copyright

For Immediate Release, December 3, 2014

Contact:  Amaroq Weiss, (707) 779-9613

Wildlife-killing Contests Targeting Nongame Animals Banned by
California Fish and Game Commission

VAN NUYS, Calif.— In response to overwhelming public support for banning wildlife-killing contests, the California Fish and Game Commission voted today to adopt regulations prohibiting hunting “derbies” targeting species such as coyotes, raccoons and badgers. The ban came after thousands of Californians expressed opposition to the killing competitions.

“We’re grateful that the commissioners responded to the public’s call for science-based, ethical and ecologically sound stewardship of California’s wildlife,” said Amaroq Weiss, the Center’s West Coast wolf organizer. “Banning contests that reward people, including children, for killing animals is the right thing to do.”

Few Californians knew that existing state law allowed wildlife-killing contests. That changed in early 2013 after wildlife conservation groups pushed to increase public awareness of an annual “coyote-drive” killing contest held in Northern California. While wildlife-hunting contests occur throughout the state, the location of the coyote-killing competition sparked additional attention because it was held in Northern California counties frequented by OR-7, the dispersing Oregon wolf who became California’s first confirmed wild wolf in 87 years.

Outrage over the antiquated killing contests, including the threat to dispersing wolves like OR-7, resulted in public outcry for a statewide ban.

Under California law species such as coyotes, raccoons, badgers and others are designated as “nongame mammals” or “furbearers” — both of which can be killed in any number without limit. The commission’s decision to ban competitions targeting those two categories of animals was based, in part, on its recognition that subjecting the species to contest hunts does not reflect good sportsmanship. The commission’s vote does not ban contest hunts of species that are designated as game mammals, such as deer and elk.

“Today’s vote adds a measure of restraint and respect for species that are highly persecuted by some members of society and revered and loved by others,” said Weiss.  “The commission and the state wildlife agency it oversees are required by state law to manage our natural resources, including wildlife, according to ecosystem-based management based on credible science, and these contests don’t come close to meeting those standards.”

Additional efforts across the country to end wildlife contest-hunts are meeting with success. In response to a lawsuit filed by the Center and allies, the U.S. Bureau of Land Management decided last week to withdraw a permit it had issued to a private party for a predator-killing contest in Idaho. Earlier this year a coyote-killing contest in Oregon was shut down after public outcry, and Washington residents spoke out at a commission hearing against similar contests.

The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit conservation organization with more than 800,000 members and online activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places.

Poll: Should NYC Horse-Drawn Carriages Be Banned?

Wild horse photo copyright Jim Roberson

Wild horse photo copyright Jim Roberson

Most New York City Council members remain largely undecided about a possible ban of the horse-drawn carriages of Central Park.

While New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio is pushing ahead with his campaign promise to ban the carriages, the move also pits him against the labor unions that helped propel him to office.

The issue is a highly contested one. The mayor has supporters in animal-rights groups on one side, and on the other are the city’s unions, which have expressed concerns about job losses if the horses are banned.

About 350 workers are employed by the carriage industry, which is represented by the Teamsters Local 553.

What’s your take on horse-drawn carriages in Central Park? Vote for the horses here:

http://blogs.wsj.com/metropolis/2014/12/03/poll-should-horse-drawn-carriages-be-banned/

Painful truth or comforting lies – it’s up to us.

Stacey's avatarOur Compass

Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Commons

SourceThere’s an Elephant in the Room blog

There is absolutely no morally relevant difference between human beings and those nonhuman beings upon whom we prey. We are all self aware. We form family and social bonds and share relationships with others. The mother and child bond is particularly strong and evident across all species. We communicate; we are capable of experiencing pleasure; we are capable of experiencing suffering; and we are all capable of feeling fear. Every single one of us will seek to avoid pain. We value our lives; they matter to us. In short, we all share the quality of sentience.

Painful truth

There is absolutely no way for humans to obtain the body parts and secretions of others without causing unspeakable suffering, exploiting their reproductive systems, mutilating and confining them, killing their children and taking from them every single thing that we would define as the things that make our own human…

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Climate: Logging leads to long-term release of carbon from soils in Northeastern hardwood forests

Bob Berwyn's avatarSummit County Citizens Voice

Findings challenge carbon-balance assumptions of woody biomass energy boosters

dsgf A forest health logging site on Swan Mountain near Dillon, Colorado. bberwyn photo.

Staff Report

FRISCO — Logging forests may have a more significant impact on carbon storage in soils than previously believed, Dartmouth College researchers found after taking a close look at at how timber harvesting affects mineral soil carbon over 100 years.

The study found that, while logging  doesn’t immediately release carbon stored in a forest’s mineral soils into the atmosphere, it triggers a gradual release that may contribute to climate change over decades.

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Climate: Can ringed seals survive the Arctic meltdown?

Bob Berwyn's avatarSummit County Citizens Voice

Ringed seals face an uncertain future in the rapidly warming Arctic. Photo courtesy NOAA. Ringed seals face an uncertain future in the rapidly warming Arctic. Photo courtesy NOAA.

Feds propose 226 million acres of critical habitat

Staff Report

FRISCO — One of the largest-ever critical habitat proposals won’t do anything to slow the decline of Arctic sea ice or halt the buildup of greenhouse gases, but it may give ice-dependent ringed seals a fighting chance to survive the Arctic meltdown.

Ringed seals were listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act in 2012 in response to a petition from the Center for Biological Diversity. This week, the National Marine Fisheries Service proposed designating 226 million acres (350,000 square miles) of critical habitat in the Bering, Chukchi and Beaufort seas. Read more about the proposed protections.

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Animal Rights Activists Kept Out of Zoo Elephant Meeting

Animal activists, media kept out of zoo meeting

http://www.komonews.com/news/local/Activists-want-zoo-elephants-sent-to-sanctuary-284568571.html

SEATTLE — The elephant program at Seattle’s Woodland Park Zoo is closing.

Animal rights advocates want those elephants sent to a sanctuary instead of another zoo, and they gathered Tuesday night to voice that opinion at the Board of Directors public comment period during its scheduled meeting.

But the media and most of those who came to speak never got inside.

“They wouldn’t allow the press in, which I find appalling,” said Lisa Cane. “It is a public meeting. I don’t know how they could lawfully exclude the press and other witnesses for the rest of the community who would wish to be there.”

People were puzzled by the fact that access was limited even though the zoo is partially funded by public dollars. According to the zoo’s website, “public funding sources provide 30 percent of the zoo’s support, including City of Seattle and King County Parks Levy.”

The public was told seating was maxed out, but the media was originally told they were just not allowed in.

“I don’t understand when they put it out as a public meeting it’s not open to the public. It makes you wonder what they are hiding,” said Susan Hoppler.

Those who were allowed in told us they were stopped from recording and taking pictures.

When the board tried to leave by a side exit rather than the front door, none would talk or respond to our questions and some even covered their faces. Eventually we were allowed inside, where the board’s CEO spoke to us.

“It’s not a public meeting,” said Dr. Deborah Jensen. “It was not advertised as a public meeting”

But there was a public comment period on the agenda. She said it came down to seating and that even if there were seats, the media and the public are not allowed to record anything.

“It was actually a capacity issue,” Jensen said. “We don’t have a policy that keeps the media out of the room. We don’t allow filming in our meetings because it’s a private board meeting.”

The issue regarding the elephants was not on the agenda and no decision about where they will go has been made according to Jensen.

Avian flu outbreak hits 2 British Columbia farms

http://www.komonews.com/news/national/Avian-flu-outbreak-hits-2-British-Columbia-farms-284622091.html

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) – Two poultry farms where an outbreak of avian influenza was discovered in southwestern British Columbia are under quarantine and thousands of their turkeys and chickens that did not die from the illness will be euthanized, provincial and Canadian officials said Tuesday.

There are no reports of the disease being transmitted to humans.

Tests to determine the precise strain of the virus were conducted Sunday after bird deaths were reported at a turkey farm in Abbotsford and a chicken farm in Chilliwack. The farms are about 5 miles apart in the Fraser Valley east of Vancouver.

The Abbotsford farm housed 11,000 turkeys that were to be slaughtered for Christmas. Half died from the bird flu. The Chilliwack barn housed 7,000 chickens and about 1,000 of those had died.

The remaining birds will be euthanized using carbon dioxide and then composted inside their barns, said Jane Pritchard, British Columbia’s chief veterinary officer. The compost could be safely used on other farms, she said.

Test results will guide the response from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency, said Harpreet Kochhar, Canada’s chief veterinary officer.

The results expected Thursday should show whether the virus is the dangerous H5N1 strain or another variation, said Perry Kendall, British Columbia’s provincial health officer.

More poultry will be tested in surveillance zones 6 miles around the infected farms.

In 2004, health officials ordered 17 million chickens, turkeys and other domestic birds slaughtered to contain an outbreak of avian influenza at 42 poultry farms in the Fraser Valley. It cost the industry hundreds of millions of dollars and led to temporary trade restrictions on British Columbia poultry.

Avian influenza poses little risk to people who are consuming poultry meat if it is handled and cooked properly. In rare cases, the virus can transmit to people who have had close contact with the birds, health officials said.

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REBLOG: Wisconsin DNR Hints that Statewide Kill Quota Will Be Ignored and Season Will Not Close

dvoight09's avatarWisconsin Wildlife Ethic-Vote Our Wildlife

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Killing is not Conservation

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Posted on November 29, 2014

Courtesy: Joseph Ogrodnik

As we pointed out earlier this week something very fishy is going on with the Wisconsin DNR and our wolf population. The silence of the DNR told us that as usual something nefarious was going on behind the scenes and that indeed appears to be the case. When the Wisconsin DNR and their anti-wolf group stacked sham “Wolf Advisor Committee” met earlier this year a statewide kill quota of 150 wolves was agreed upon by a majority of the group. Suspiciously as of today the DNR report 146 wolves “legally” killed. This number does not include the vast number of wolves killed illegally. Now there comes word that the Wisconsin DNR and their real estate developer turned political appointee secretary, Cathy Stepp, may ignore the 150 kill quota and allow the kill season to continue far…

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