STRANGERS IN A STRANGE LAND: THE CASE AGAINST TRAPPING AND RELOCATING

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Out of sight, out of mind? Relocating wildlife may seem like a compassionate solution to conflicts, but it’s often anything but.
Image of groundhog at Mount Auburn Cemetery
Groundhogs are particularly vulnerable to human misunderstanding. Rather than removing them, learn about ways to coexist. (Featured image: Nancy Lawson; above: John Harrison)

It starts out mildly enough: Heading to work on the subway, you realize you forgot your wallet. No big deal, you think. I’ll borrow money to get home.

Soon the lights go out and the train hurtles toward the sky, speeding through the atmosphere. Time passes—it’s hard to tell how long. The subway is grounded, the doors swing open, and unfolding before you is a city you don’t recognize.

A few things are familiar—the Starbucks on every block, the cars, the English phrases on signs. But it’s cold, you’re hungry, you’re penniless and the sun is setting. You think of your children who will be…

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Community fund will honor teen killed in hunting accident

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

By Emily Matesic |
 

FOND DU LAC, Wis. (WBAY) – The tragic 2018 hunting accident death of a Fond du Lac County high school student brought out extraordinary compassion from the community. Now, Trent Schueffner’s family says “thank you” while giving back in his name.

Trent Schueffner (photo provided)

Before his death in a hunting accident in October of 2018, 16-year-old Trent Schueffner was your typical teenager, living his best life. As a student at St. Mary’s Springs Academy he played football, loved the outdoors, and was a friend to many. Those people all reached out to the Schueffners in their time of need, and now the family is prepared to give back in Trent’s name by establishing a donor-advised fund through the Fond…

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Eyewitness account plus scavenged elk carcass indicates likely presence of multiple wolves in northwest Colorado

1/8/2020

https://cpw.state.co.us/aboutus/Pages/News-Release-Details.aspx?NewsID=7209

 



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Gray wolf (Photo/USFWS)
Mike Porras
CPW NW Region PIO
970-255-6162
Eyewitness account plus scavenged elk carcass indicates likely presence of multiple wolves in northwest Colorado

MOFFAT COUNTY, Colo. – Colorado Parks and Wildlife officials say an eyewitness report of six large canids traveling together in the far northwest corner of the state last October, in conjunction with last week’s discovery of a thoroughly scavenged elk carcass near Irish Canyon – a few miles from the location of the sighting – strongly suggests a pack of gray wolves may now be residing in Colorado.

According to the eyewitness, he and his hunting party observed the wolves near the Wyoming and Utah borders. One of the party caught two of the six animals on video.

“The sighting marks the first time in recent history CPW has received a report of multiple wolves traveling together,” said CPW Northwest Regional Manager JT Romatzke. “In addition, in the days prior, the eyewitness says he heard distinct howls coming from different animals. In my opinion, this is a very credible report.”

After learning about the scavenged elk carcass, CPW initiated an investigation which is still ongoing. At the site, the officers observed several large canid tracks from multiple animals surrounding the carcass. According to CPW wildlife managers, the tracks are consistent with those made by wolves. In addition, the condition of the carcass is consistent with known wolf predation. (Photos below)

“The latest sightings add to other credible reports of wolf activity in Colorado over the past several years,” said Romatzke. “In addition to tracks, howls, photos and videos, the presence of one wolf was confirmed by DNA testing a few years ago, and in a recent case, we have photos and continue to track a wolf with a collar from Wyoming’s Snake River pack.

Romatzke says from the evidence, there is only one logical conclusion CPW officials can make.

“It is inevitable, based on known wolf behavior, that they would travel here from states where their populations are well-established,” he said. “We have no doubt that they are here, and the most recent sighting of what appears to be wolves traveling together in what can be best described as a pack is further evidence of the presence of wolves in Colorado.”
Romatzke adds CPW will continue to operate under the agency’s current management direction.

“We will not take direct action and we want to remind the public that wolves are federally endangered species and fall under the jurisdiction of the US Fish and Wildlife Service. As wolves move into the state on their own, we will work with our federal partners to manage the species,” he said.

The public is urged to contact CPW immediately if they see or hear wolves or find evidence of any wolf activity.  The Wolf Sighting Form can be found on the CPW website.

For more information about wolves, visit the CPW website.

Letter to a Young Climate Activist on the First Day of the New Decade

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Rebecca Solnit on Finding Hope and Resolve for the Future


January 1, 2020

Dear Galicia,

Climate chaos is the worst thing human beings have brought upon themselves and the earth, and we are just beginning to see its impact, in heartbreaking phenomena from melting ice to starving whales to burning forests. If you’re sad, you’re not alone. If you’re scared, you’re not alone. Those of you who are young have every reason to be furious that you were handed a world entering into an era of catastrophe and disruption. You did nothing to make this mess and most of us who are older didn’t do enough to avert it during the last 30 years that we have known we should act, the last 15 when we had the renewable-energy technology to leave the age of fossil fuel behind.

I would never question the rightness of that fury…

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Cranbrook’s war on Mule deer

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

By Barry Kent MacKay, Director

What a cruel, and bizarrely complicated, mess.   There are countless human endeavors that fit that characterization but I write those words as my desk is covered with documents, and a series of disturbing photos, all in reference to currently unfolding events in the community of Cranbrook, tucked in among snow-covered mountain ranges down in the southeast corner of British Columbia.  It close to the border with the Montana.  That’s important, as I’ll explain in a moment, but first the photos.

They show one of too many victims of Cranbrook’s war on Mule Deer.  The antlers of this animal are entangled in the mesh of a trap, set to catch and hold deer alive.  That is at the behest of the Cranbrook’s municipal council.

The trap itself, known as a Clover trap (pictured below) after its design was published by the California Department of Fish…

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Two rangers killed by poachers in ZImbabwe

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

https://www.newzimbabwe.com/missing-zimparks-ranger-found-dead-body-retrieve
d-from-lake-kariba/

Missing Zimparks ranger found dead, body retrieved from Lake Kariba 7th
January 2020 By Leopold Munhende

THE body of one of two male Zimbabwe National Parks and Wildlife Management
Authority (ZimParks) rangers who went missing while on patrol in Lake Kariba
on New Year’s Eve has been found with stab wounds by Police’s Sub Aqua Unit.

National police spokesperson, Senior Assistant Commissioner Paul Nyathi
confirmed the development.

The body was retrieved by police between Spurwing and Long islands in Lake
Kariba.

Said Nyathi, “As police, we can confirm the retrieval of the body of one of
the rangers this (Tuesday) morning in the lake after nearly a week of
searching.

“We are treating this as a murder case and investigations are still in
progress,”

The two rangers are said to have been overpowered by some Zambian poachers
who believably disarmed, killed and threw them into the lake that…

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Is it wrong to be hopeful about climate change?

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

CLIMATE EMOTIONS

ENVIRONMENT

In 201https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200109-is-it-wrong-to-be-hopeful-about-climate-change

8, a 30-minute documentary was premiered in San José, Costa Rica’s capital and my hometown. The film followed the early efforts of a handful of marine biologists who are fighting coral bleaching. They grow tiny bits of coral in underwater nurseries and once they’re big enough move them back to the reef, hoping to restore it.

Their pace is slow, possibly too slow to keep up with bleaching due to climate change. Warming waters swipe entire reefs in a matter of weeks. The biologists need months to nurture enough corals to restore a couple of square meters. Reef restoration seems like an impossible task, but they are relentless. It must be…

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Australia urges a quarter of a million to flee as winds fan massive bushfires

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

KEY POINTS
  • Australia urged nearly a quarter of a million people to evacuate their homes on Friday and prepared military backup as authorities said the next few hours could be “very, very challenging.”
  • Defense personnel stood ready to move to bushfire grounds if conditions became extreme.
  • Since October, 27 people have been killed and thousands subjected to repeat evacuations as monster fires scorched more than 25.5 million acres of land, or an area the size of South Korea.
VIDEO01:52
Australia urges over 240,000 people to evacuate as raging bushfires intensify

Australia urged nearly a quarter of a million people to evacuate their homes on Friday and prepared military backup as authorities said the next few hours could be “very, very challenging” even as rain poured down in some parts.

Defense personnel stood ready to move to bushfire grounds if conditions became extreme, Prime Minister Scott Morrison…

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Giant Chinese paddlefish declared extinct after surviving 150 million years

Beijing — Scientists say a giant fish species that managed to survive at least 150 million years has been completely wiped out by human activity. Research published in the Science of The Total Environment this week says the giant Chinese paddlefish, also known as the Chinese swordfish, is officially extinct.

The monster fish, one of the largest freshwater species in the world with lengths up to 23 feet, was once common in China’s Yangtze River. Due to its speed it was commonly referred to in China as the “water tiger.”

giant-chinese-paddlefish.jpg
A model of a giant Chinese paddlefish is seen on display in Chongqing, China.CCTV/REUTERS

Study leader Qiwei Wei of the Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences called it “a reprehensible and an irreparable loss.”

Zeb Hogan, a fish expert at the University of Nevada, Reno, told National Geographic that it was “very sad” to see the “definitive loss of a very unique and extraordinary animal, with no hope of recovery.”

According to the researchers, no giant paddlefish have been sighted in the Yangtze since 2003, and there are none in captivity. They estimate that the last of the fish likely died between 2005 and 2010.

paddlefish-china-graphic.jpg
A graphic provided by the Science of The Total Environment report in January 2020 shows a timeline depicting the depletion of the giant Chinese paddlefish species in the Yangtze River.SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT

The species had been deemed “functionally extinct,” or unable to reproduce enough to maintain itself, since 1993.

The main causes of the ancient species’ demise have been listed as over-fishing and the construction of a major dam in 1981 that split the Yangtze, and the Chinese paddlefish population along with it, in two.

The 3,900 mile Yangtze River ecosystem has seen half of the 175 species unique to its waters go extinct, according to Chinese media.

Two other species native to the river have also been declared functionally extinct: the reeves shad and the Yangtze dolphin.

Last week China announced a 10-year fishing ban on some areas of the Yangtze in a bid to protect its beleaguered biodiversity.

Challenging a Fundraising Tradition Reveals True Intentions of Community Hunters

Exposing the Big Game's avatarCommittee to Abolish Sport Hunting Blog

In December of 2019, Animal Rights activists in the Capital Region of NY caught wind of a local Fire Department’s plans for a Coyote hunt fundraiser intended for Mid January 2020. Alarmed not only for the animals but for the poor example set by an organization whose mission is to save people’s lives, a petition was circulated and numerous activists wrote letters, made phone calls and posted on social media asking the Hancock NY Volunteer Fire Department to reconsider.

Some, like myself, offered to make donations to the FD if they would change their strategy and ensure no animals are harmed. The correlation between violence toward animals and other forms of violence including child abuse and domestic violence has been established repeatedly.

While one could make the claim that this is different, it is cultural or that it is intended as a way…

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