Bird flu kills sea lions and thousands of pelicans in Peru’s protected areas

Reuters

Bird flu kills sea lions and thousands of pelicans in Peru’s protected areas

Reuters

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Bird flu kills sea lions in Peru’s protected areas

Feb 21 (Reuters) – Bird flu has killed tens of thousands of birds, mostly pelicans, and at least 716 sea lions in protected areas across Peru, the authorities said, as the H5N1 strain spreads throughout the region.

Peru recorded its first case of the virus in November in birds in the north of the country. Since then it has killed 63,000 birds, according to government data.

“We have also recorded since mid-January the unusual death of many sea lions, so far we have about 716 dead sea lions in seven protected natural areas of the coast,” said Roberto Gutierrez, head of surveillance of the National Service of Natural Protected Areas.

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Since the beginning of 2021, bird flu has ravaged the world, killing more than 200 million birds due to disease or mass culling, the World Organization for Animal Health has said.

Bird flu kills sea lions and thousands of pelicans in Peru's protected areas

[1/6] A sick pelican sits next to a dead one, on the shores of the river Camana after Peruvian authorities recorded first cases of bird flu in November 2022, in Camana, Peru, December 2, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian CastanedaRead more12345

In South America, bird flu cases have been detected in Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and recently in Argentina and Uruguay. In Brazil, the world’s largest poultry exporter, there are still no confirmed cases.

In Chile, health authorities last week detected the first positive case in marine mammal, a sea lion on a beach in the north of the country.

Latest Updates

The population of sea lions numbered about 110,000 in Peru in 2020, mainly in the coastal region of Ica and the Paracas nature reserve, according to Oceana, an international organization dedicated to protecting oceans.

In recent weeks, crews from Peru’s National Forestry and Wildlife Service, in protective plastic suits, gloves and masks, have collected and buried hundreds of sea lions from several beaches along Peru’s central coast.

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“What we remember initially started with pelicans last year is now affecting these marine mammals,” Javier Jara, a veterinarian with the service, said.

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Bird flu kills sea lions in Peru’s protected areas

Feb 21 (Reuters) – Bird flu has killed tens of thousands of birds, mostly pelicans, and at least 716 sea lions in protected areas across Peru, the authorities said, as the H5N1 strain spreads throughout the region.

Peru recorded its first case of the virus in November in birds in the north of the country. Since then it has killed 63,000 birds, according to government data.

“We have also recorded since mid-January the unusual death of many sea lions, so far we have about 716 dead sea lions in seven protected natural areas of the coast,” said Roberto Gutierrez, head of surveillance of the National Service of Natural Protected Areas.

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Since the beginning of 2021, bird flu has ravaged the world, killing more than 200 million birds due to disease or mass culling, the World Organization for Animal Health has said.

Bird flu kills sea lions and thousands of pelicans in Peru's protected areas

[1/6] A sick pelican sits next to a dead one, on the shores of the river Camana after Peruvian authorities recorded first cases of bird flu in November 2022, in Camana, Peru, December 2, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian CastanedaRead more12345

In South America, bird flu cases have been detected in Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay and recently in Argentina and Uruguay. In Brazil, the world’s largest poultry exporter, there are still no confirmed cases.

In Chile, health authorities last week detected the first positive case in marine mammal, a sea lion on a beach in the north of the country.

Latest Updates

The population of sea lions numbered about 110,000 in Peru in 2020, mainly in the coastal region of Ica and the Paracas nature reserve, according to Oceana, an international organization dedicated to protecting oceans.

In recent weeks, crews from Peru’s National Forestry and Wildlife Service, in protective plastic suits, gloves and masks, have collected and buried hundreds of sea lions from several beaches along Peru’s central coast.

Advertisement · Scroll to continue

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“What we remember initially started with pelicans last year is now affecting these marine mammals,” Javier Jara, a veterinarian with the service, said.

Wires have melted. Heads have burned. So, about 12,000 hunter’s headlamps got recalled

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

DAVID J. NEAL

February 19, 2023, 6:29 AM

https://www.aol.com/news/wires-melted-heads-burned-12-142921167.html

A lamp on the head meant to help hunters shoot animals might burn their heads instead. That’s why AllPredatorcalls.com recalled about 12,000Wicked Lights ScanPro Night Hunting Headlamps.

As the recall notice by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission explained, “A short in the wire on the light can cause the wire to heat up and melt, posing a burn hazard.”

https://jac.yahoosandbox.com/1.6.0/safeframe.html

The alert says Allpredatorcalls.com “has received 14 reports of the wire heating up and melting, including two burn injuries to the hunters.”

Allpredatorcall.com’s Wicked Lights ScanPro Night Hunting Headlamp
Allpredatorcall.com’s Wicked Lights ScanPro Night Hunting Headlamp

This covers models ScanPro iC Gen 1, Gen 1.5 and Gen 2 that don’t have a style code in the battery compartment that ends with an “F.” Contact AllPredatorcalls.com for a free replacement battery compartment with a safety power circuit.

For the replacement or to ask questions about this…

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Why a bird flu outbreak at a mink farm is reigniting public health concerns

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

Avian influenza in Bolivia

By —

Mike Stobbe, Associated PressLeave your feedbackShare

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/health/why-a-bird-flu-outbreak-at-a-mink-farm-is-reigniting-public-health-concerns

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Why a bird flu outbreak at a mink farm is reigniting public health concerns

HealthFeb 18, 2023 1:16 PM EST

NEW YORK (AP) — A recent bird flu outbreak at a mink farm in Spain has reignited worries about the virus spreading more broadly to people.

Scientists have been keeping tabs on this bird flu virus since the 1950s, though it wasn’t deemed a threat to people until a 1997 outbreak in Hong Kong among visitors to live poultry markets.

As bird flu hits more and varied animals, like at the mink farm, the fear is that the virus could evolve to spread more easily between people, and potentially trigger a pandemic.

Scientist say another kind of bird flu was likely behind the devastating 1918-1919 flu pandemic, and avian viruses played roles…

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No end in sight for bird flu outbreak causing sky-high egg prices

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

by:The Associated Press

Posted:Feb 19, 2023 / 04:39 PM EST

Updated:Feb 19, 2023 / 04:39 PM EST

SHARE https://phl17.com/nmw/no-end-in-sight-for-bird-flu-outbreak-causing-sky-high-egg-prices/

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — The ongoing bird flu outbreak has cost the government roughly $661 million and added to consumers’ pain at the grocery store after more than 58 million birds wereslaughteredto limit the spread of the virus.

In addition to the cost of the government response that the USDA tallied up and rising prices for eggs, chicken and turkey, farmers who raise those animals have easily lost more than $1 billion, said an agricultural economist, though no one has calculated the total cost to the industry yet.

The bad news is that with the outbreak entering its second year and the spring migratory season looming, there is no end in sight. And there is littlefarmerscan do beyondthe steps they have already takento try…

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Trapping reconnects some Yellowknife inmates with a life they left

Published: February 18, 2023 at 7:22amCAITRIN PILKINGTONLAST MODIFIED: FEBRUARY 18, 2023 AT 9:20AM


Organizers are celebrating the opening year of a program that pairs Yellowknife’s jail with the NWT’s Department of Environment and Natural Resources to teach inmates trapping skills.

Staff at the North Slave Correctional Complex say interest in the workshops continues to grow. Trapping sessions for inmates now run every two weeks in six-week cycles.

“One year ago, things were really different,” said participant Kristijan Bradaric. “It was just the leisure room and the gym. But this was the program that started to change things. There’s more activities available now.”

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Carl Williams, the program’s instructor, has been trapping since he was 10 years old. His father worked for the Hudson’s Bay Company. He raves about the support that’s offered through ENR for trappers like him, and said the Genuine Mackenzie Valley Fur Program is the only one of its kind in North America.

“I was born in the Yukon, but we moved here in ’71 because of this program,” Williams said. “Whether you’re making a living off it, whether it’s a hobby, you’re learning a tradition that’s been passed on.”

As part of the day’s session, Williams offers tips to enhance each pelt’s success at auction, such as brushing out the fur and pinning back the animal’s ears.

“This is a city fox, so it’s fatty – it ate well,” said Williams. “It also doesn’t have guard hairs in its fur. Was probably living someplace warmer, like under a building.”

Without guard hairs, the pelt will look flat and fetch less on the market. Williams said these tricks of the trade aren’t always taught by ENR, and must be passed on from trapper to trapper.

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A lynx intended for the program didn’t defrost in time, so organizers pivoted to squirrels for the hands-on part of the session. It quickly becomes clear that several participants haven’t shown up to learn, but to put existing skills to use. When handed a knife and a squirrel, some begin skinning expertly, giving pointers to the beginners.

A lynx snared near Behchokǫ̀ ended up being too frozen to skin. Caitrin Pilkington/Cabin Radio

“The last thing I skinned was a polar bear,” said one participant with a grin. “So this is an adjustment. But it turns out you skin squirrels the same way, just a lot smaller.”

For Vincent Casey, program founder and public education coordinator for NSCC, giving inmates an opportunity to show off their expertise is part of the program’s success.

He said that while it can be difficult for organizers to figure out which programs are going to connect with inmates, within a few months of running the Trapper Training program, it was clear the sessions were resonating with participants.

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“Over the summer, we did a fish prep session and it was more than just the instructor teaching,” said Casey. “The inmates, or the participants, were getting up and sharing their knowledge of how they do different things.”

He describes participants learning that people cut up the same fish differently in the Beaufort Delta than they do in Fort Smith, and connections forming over shared memories of fishing with family.

“They weren’t just sitting and watching, they were confident enough to speak up and to share their experiences, which is what I had really hoped would happen.”

Reminders and reconnection

Casey said he was motivated to create the program after comments made in the NWT legislature by Kam Lake MLA Caitlin Cleveland, who called for more cultural programming in correctional centres in 2021.

According to the most recent annual report by the territory’s Department of Justice, while Indigenous residents make up 50 percent of the population, 83 percent of incarcerated men in NWT prisons are Indigenous. This is the same percentage Cabin Radio reported in 2020, the year Canada’s correctional investigator found that Indigenous adults make up more than 30 percent of the country’s prison population.

Austin Corbett, a criminal lawyer practising in Alberta and the NWT, told Cabin Radio in 2022 that many sentencing options aren’t being adequately used, calling jail “the bluntest hammer” to deal with many social issues. 

But until courts take a different approach, prison programs try to minimize the damage done when Indigenous inmates are separated from family, friends and culture.

“We work very closely with a traditional counsellor here, and he’s constantly hearing good things from inmates about the program and how it’s impacted them,” said Casey. “A lot of the comments are about how this program reminds them of youth, or becoming reconnected with a part of themselves they hadn’t felt for a while.”

For many participants, the most significant barrier to hunting and trapping is not a lack of skill and experience, but the 12-foot barbed-wire fence that surrounds the correctional centre.

Two participants roast bannock over the fire at NSCC. Caitrin Pilkington/Cabin Radio

The second half of the workshop takes place just inside it, where inmates who have volunteered to help run the program have built a fire for the others. Before long, people have gathered to cook bannock and tease each other over technique.

“This is nice,” said one participant with a smile. “I haven’t been outside in a long time.”

Ondo pastor hunting antelope shoots self to death

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

METRO

By John Ogunsemore 

https://www.herald.ng/ondo-pastor-hunting-antelope-shoots-self-to-death/

Ondo - George Olusanya Omoolorun

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A pastor, George Olusanya Omoolorun, has died in a suspected hunting accident in Ondo State.

Omoolorun, a 60-year-old pastor of the Christ Apostolic Church (CAC), Oke Idahun, Oba-Ile, Akure, reportedly shot himself while hunting an antelope.

It was learnt that on sighting the antelope, the victim took aim and fired his gun, which backfired and hit him in the stomach, causing his death.

It was further gathered that Omoolorun of Apeju Street, Oba-Ile, Akure North Local Government Area, left his house in his car and headed to his farm.

Read Also:I had a very good laugh” – Oshiomhole reacts as Obaseki orders his arrest

However, his wife raised the alarm after he failed to return home and the family mobilised a search party to the farm.

“By the…

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Nearly 30 dangerous feedback loops could permanently shift the Earth’s climate, scientists say

Exposing the Big Game's avatarThe Extinction Chronicles

By Laura Paddison, CNN

https://www.cnn.com/2023/02/17/world/climate-feedback-loops-tipping-points-arctic-ice-intl/index.html

Published 11:00 AM EST, Fri February 17, 2023

Wildfires in Sakha, Russia, in August 2021. Losing forests is one feedback loop in a complex web of changes that can accelerate the impacts of the climate crisis.

Wildfires in Sakha, Russia, in August 2021. Losing forests is one feedback loop in a complex web of changes that can accelerate the impacts of the climate crisis.Ivan Nikiforov/Anadolu Agency/Getty ImagesCNN—

Dangerous climate feedback loops areincreasing global warmingand risk causing a permanent shift away from the Earth’s current climate, according to a new study.

Climate feedback loops are cyclical chain reactions that happen when one change triggers further changes, in a process that keeps on repeating itself. Some of these feedback loops drive down warming, but others amplify it.

Take Arctic ice, for example. Warming temperaturescause sea ice to melt, revealing the dark ocean water beneath. As dark surfaces absorb more heat than reflective surfaces like ice, the ocean warms and more ice melts.

A group of international scientists from institutions including Oregon State…

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Hunters caught in moose closure now face fines, possible jail time

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

Written by Judy Peters Friday, Feb 17 2023, 3:34 PM

https://steinbachonline.com/articles/hunters-caught-in-moose-closure-now-face-fines-possible-jail-time

Manitoba Conservation has now released some information regarding an investigation involving two people from Landmark and Winnipeg.

On Oct. 29, 2022, the two individualswere found hunting moose along the Steeprock Road in the Porcupine Provincial Forest, which isclosed to all moose hunting.

Charges of hunting moose within the moose closure were laid.

If convicted, a person can be fined up to $25,000 or receive up to six months in jail, or both.

Manitoba Natural Resources and Northern Development advises conservation officers are continuing enforcement to protect Manitoba’s natural resources through a variety of enforcement activities across the province including roadside check stops in key locations to ensure compliance with natural resource and public safety legislation.

The enforcement report issued on Friday included details about other investigations across the province.

On Nov. 25, 2022, an off-duty conservation officer from…

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Two Lake Charles hunters accused of deer hunting violations

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

By Patrick Deaville

https://www.kplctv.com/2023/02/16/two-lake-charles-hunters-accused-deer-hunting-violations/

Published:Feb. 16, 2023 at 6:22 AM PST

Sulphur, LA (KPLC) -Two Lake Charles hunters have been accused and cited of deer hunting violations in Calcasieu Parish, according to the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries (LDWF).

Agents with LWDF say they cited Michael Joseph Spell, 33, on Feb. 11 for four counts of failing to tag deer, four counts of failing to validate deer harvest and taking over the seasonal limit of deer.

A citation was also issued to Brittany Pratt, 26, on Feb. 15 for failing to tag deer, failing to validate deer, and not possessing basic hunting and deer hunting licenses.

LWDF says their agents began investigating the incident after learning about subjects illegally trespassing on private property while hunting deer near Sulphur.

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Agents say their investigation showed that Spell harvested three antlered deer during the 2022/23 deer hunting season and did not…

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Feral Cows in New Mexico Will Be Shot From Helicopter

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

Feds approve controversial Gila Wilderness plan

https://www.newser.com/story/331708/officials-issue-kill-order-for-new-mexico-feral-cows.html

By Newser Editors and Wire ServicesPosted Feb 17, 2023 3:20 AM CST

Officials Issue Kill Order for New Mexico Feral Cows
In this photo provided by Robin Silver, a feral bull is seen along the Gila River in the Gila Wilderness in southwestern New Mexico, on July 25, 2020. (?Robin Silver/Center for Biological Diversity via AP)

A helicopter with a shooter will fly over a portion of the vast Gila Wilderness in southwestern New Mexico next week, searching for feral cows to kill. US Forest Service managers approved the plan Thursday to protect sensitive spots in the nation’s first designated wilderness area. The move sets the stage for legal challenges over how to handle unbranded livestock and other stray cows as drought deepens in the West, theAPreports. The Gila National Forest issued the decision amid pressure from environmental groups who raised concerns about nearly 150 cattle whose hooves and mouths…

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