Intel shared among US allies indicates virus outbreak more likely came from market, not a Chinese lab

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Washington (CNN)Intelligence shared among Five Eyes nations indicates it is “highly unlikely” that the coronavirus outbreak was spread as a result of an accident in a laboratory but rather originated in a Chinese market, according to two Western officials who cited an intelligence assessment that appears to contradict claims by President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

“We think it’s highly unlikely it was an accident,” a Western diplomatic official with knowledge of the intelligence said. “It is highly likely it was naturally occurring and that the human infection was from natural human and animal interaction.” The countries in the Five Eyes intelligence-sharing coalition are coalescing around this assessment, the official said, and a second official, from…

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Mobile man charged in hunting accident that left 11-year-old boy dead

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(Source: WBMA – Scene photo from May 1, 2020) Mobile man charged in hunting accident that left 11-year-old boy dead

The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office issued an arrest warrant Tuesday in connection to a hunting accident that left 11-year-old Troy Ellis of Trussville dead last week.

Ellis and his father were members of a turkey hunting party that went into the woods on Friday, May 1.

During the hunt, the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said 35-year-old Joshua Stewart Burks of Mobile, shot and killed Troy Ellis.

The shot also caused a minor injury to Ellis’ father who was treated at the scene by first responders.

Burks was a teacher in Mobile as of 2012 and listed as a baseball coach at Davidson High School in Mobile. It’s not clear if he’s still employed by the Mobile County School…

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Terrifying ‘murder hornets’ invade US

The wasps might have hitched a ride to the Pacific Coast in a container ship, but also could have been imported intentionally as an ingredient for a folk recipe for wasp venom in alcohol, made popular by Internet bodybuilders, entomologists think.

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Invasive Asian giant hornets, a honeybee-killing wasp with a dangerous sting, have been discovered in Washington. (Washington State Department of Agriculture)

DENVER, May 2 (UPI) — Washington agriculture authorities are asking residents to be on the lookout for an invasive giant wasp with an “excruciating” sting that attacks honeybee colonies, leaving thousands of bees without heads.

“The Asian giant hornet been called the most venomous, intimidating insect in the world, and it even scares away other hornets,” said Timothy Lawrence, director of the Island County extension office at Washington State University.

Asian giant hornets…

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Healthy Pigs Killed, Thrown Away As Farms Face Slaughterhouse Backlogs

Officials estimate about 700,000 pigs nationwide being killed each week, disposed of in landfills or composted.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — After spending two decades raising pigs to send to slaughterhouses, Dean Meyer now faces the mentally draining, physically difficult task of killing them even before they leave his northwest Iowa farm.

Meyer said he and other farmers across the Midwest have been devastated by the prospect of euthanizing hundreds of thousands of hogs after the temporary closure of giant pork production plants due to the coronavirus.

The unprecedented dilemma for the U.S. pork industry has forced farmers to figure out how to kill healthy hogs and dispose of carcasses weighing up to 300 pounds (136 kilograms) in landfills, or by composting them on farms for fertilizer.

Meyer, who has already killed baby pigs to reduce his herd size, said it’s awful but necessary.

“Believe me, we’re double-stocking barns. We’re putting pigs in pens that we never had pigs in before just trying to hold them. We’re feeding them diets that have low energy just to try to stall their growth and just to maintain,” said Meyer, who also grows corn and soybeans on his family’s farm near Rock Rapids.

It’s all a result of colliding forces as plants that normally process up to 20,000 hogs a day are closing because of ill workers, leaving few options for farmers raising millions of hogs. Experts describe the pork industry as similar to an escalator that efficiently supplies the nation with food only as long as it never stops.

More than 60,000 farmers normally send about 115 million pigs a year to slaughter in the U.S. A little less than a quarter of those hogs are raised in Iowa, by far the biggest pork-producing state.

Officials estimate that about 700,000 pigs across the nation can’t be processed each week and must be euthanized. Most of the hogs are being killed at farms, but up to 13,000 a day also may be euthanized at the JBS pork plant in Worthington, Minnesota.

U.S. Rep. Collin Peterson, a Minnesota Democrat who chairs the House Agriculture Committee, went to the plant Wednesday, in part to thank JBS officials for agreeing to kill the hogs at his request.

“The only thing they wanted out of me was for me to come down here and say I’m the one who asked for this, not them. … Blame me if you don’t like it,” he said.

It all means that meat can’t be delivered to grocery stores, restaurants that now are beginning to reopen or food banks that are seeing record demand from people suddenly out of work. Some of that demand is being met by high levels of meat in cold storage, but analysts say that supply will quickly dwindle, likely causing people to soon see higher prices and less selection.

To help farmers, the USDA already has set up a center that can supply the tools needed to euthanize hogs. That includes captive bolt guns and cartridges that can be shot into the heads of larger animals as well as chutes, trailers and personal protective equipment.

Iowa officials have asked that federal aid include funding for mental health services available to farmers and the veterinarians who help them.

Meyer said euthanizing healthy animals is a difficult decision for a farmer.

“It is a tough one,” he said. “We got keep our heads up and try to be resourceful and if we can make it through this cloud, I think there will be good opportunities if we’re left standing yet.”

The USDA has a program designed to connect farmers with local meat lockers and small processors that can slaughter some hogs and donate the meat to food banks. However, that effort has been hindered by the fact that small processors already were overwhelmed with customers who have turned away from mass-produced meat and instead bought a hog or cow to be processed locally.

Chuck Ryherd, owner of State Center Locker in State Center, Iowa, said he’s almost completely booked through the end of the year and has been turning away customers.

Chris Young, the executive director for the American Association of Meat Processors, a trade group for about 1,500 smaller meat lockers, said that while some local processors in Indiana, Illinois and Wisconsin have been able to take a few extra hogs, the shortage is being felt nationwide.

“When the pandemic started, all across the country, a lot of these small processing plants with a retail store in the front were just overrun,” he said. “They’re still crazy busy. It hasn’t really backed off.”

On Wednesday, President Donald Trump used the Defense Production Act to order that large meat processors remain open, giving hog farmers hope the situation could improve.

However, Howard Roth, a Wisconsin farmer and president of the National Pork Producers Council, said farmers will need to keep euthanizing pigs as the slaughterhouses struggle to resume their full production. Farmers will definitely need federal help to keep them afloat.

“We are going to need indemnity money for these farmers,” he said. “This situation is unprecedented.”

Peterson also said he’ll seek a change in the law so that the USDA can retroactively compensate farmers for euthanizing healthy animals in such emergencies. He said the USDA told him it doesn’t have the authority at the moment to do that for healthy animals, just diseased animals, as it did during for chickens and turkeys in the bird flu outbreak.

“It’s going to be in there, I’ll guarantee you,” he said.

___

Associated Press Writer Steve Karnowski contributed to this report from Minneapolis.

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BEFORE YOU GO

Ensnared in controversy

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Posted 

The Wyoming Game and Fish Commission has denied a petition to develop trap-free zones in the state. But April’s meeting in Cheyenne won‘t be the last time the commission hears testimony about the controversial issue, leaving the door open for possible compromise later this year.

Emotions were running high last month, as commissioners heard testimony for and against a proposal to ban traps from several popular recreation areas in Wyoming. Those against trapping find it cruel and indiscriminate and will likely never change their opinion. At the same time, trappers love their form of outdoor pursuit and, after years under attack, are quick to defend their rights. Trapping regulation…

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W.Va. Natural Resources Police say multiple people cited for turkey hunting violations

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West Virginia Natural Resources Police say they have been busy rounding up people illegally hunting turkeys. (WCHS/WVAH)<p>{/p}

West Virginia Natural Resources Police said they have been busy rounding up people illegally hunting turkeys.

The agency said in a Facebook post Saturday that two officers charged multiple individuals in the Doddridge, Ritchie, Pleasants and Tyler county areas with hunting turkey over bait. Other people were charged with hunting without a license.

An adult also was caught hunting on youth day with an illegal firearm, police said.

Police said the people at the bait sites were removed from their blinds before they could kill a turkey.

Meanwhile, two officers cited six people in Wood, Wirt and Jackson counties for hunting over baited sites and one for hunting without a license.

Two people were caught hunting over bait on youth day in northern Roane…

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Colorado bans all wildlife killing contests targeting coyotes, swift foxes and other species as more western states consider similar measures

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from HSUS.org    May 05, 2020

Colorado has closed a loophole in its law to end all wildlife killing contests of furbearing animals, including coyotes, bobcats, swift foxes and prairie dogs.

Although the state had already banned most such contests in 1997, a regulatory loophole permitted some events that limited the numbers of animals killed to continue. This meant that contests like the “High Desert Coyote Classic,” the “Song Dog Coyote Hunt,” a youth-centered “Prairie Dog Shoot” and the “Four Corners Predator Callers Predator Hunt,” which allowed the killing of five animals per person, could go on.

The Humane Society of the United States has made it our mission to end all…

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To cull or not to cull wolf populations in the Northwest Territories

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A one-year pilot project is underway in an effort to protect threatened caribou populations in the territory, but some conservation groups say wolf culls miss the bigger picture
  • Tundra wolf fall colours

    A single wolf can eat up to 29 caribou a year, putting vulnerable populations at risk. (Photo: Tim Haan/Can Geo Photo Club

The Northwest Territories government plans to remove up to 80 per cent of its wolf population with a 20-day aerial cull — a controversial move that echoes a similar program adopted by British Columbia in 2015.

The plan is part of an attempt to save threatened caribou herds in the Bathurst and Bluenose-East regions. One wolf can eat up to 29 caribou a year.

The territorial government worked with the Tłı̨chǫ Government to finalize the plan through a series of community meetings and planning committees, although the Wek’èezhìı Renewable Resources Board (WRRB) — a co-management authority…

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Humboldt County Agrees to Prioritize Nonlethal Solutions to Urban Wildlife Conflict

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For Immediate Release: May 5, 2020

Contact: 
Camilla Fox, cfox@projectcoyote.org, (415) 690-0338
media@aldf.org, (707) 364-8387
Tom Wheeler, tom@wildcalifornia.org, (707) 822-7711
Collette Adkins, cadkins@biologicaldiversity.org, (651) 955-3821
Marjorie Fishman, margie@awionline.org, (202) 446-2128
Lindsay Larris, llarris@wildearthguardians.org, (310) 923-1465
Debra Chase, dchase@mountainlion.org, (916) 442-2666

Humboldt County Agrees to Prioritize
Nonlethal Solutions to Urban Wildlife Conflict

Reforms emphasize coexistence with coyotes and other wildlife

EUREKA, Calif. – In response to advocacy by a coalition of animal protection and conservation groups, Humboldt County today approved a new contract with the federal wildlife killing program, Wildlife Services, that will result in far fewer native species being killed. The contract requires that Wildlife Services implement numerous reforms to reduce its killing of wildlife involved in conflicts by — among other reforms — prioritizing non-lethal mitigation measures in urban and suburban areas and prohibiting killing of beavers.

Advocates began working with county officials after notifying the county that its existing…

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