Animal Protection - Tierschutz

Mittwoch, 10. Januar 2007

There aren't many of the majestic right whales left

January 07, 2007

The Wrong Stuff

There aren't many of the majestic right whales left

By DINAH VOYLES PULVER
Environment Writer

http://www.news-journalonline.com/NewsJournalOnline/News/Headlines/frtHEAD03010707.htm

Belly up and floating, the right whale found last weekend near Brunswick, Ga., died brutally, shredded by a propeller.

[foto] The Florida Times-Union/Bob Mack Biologists and others examine the head of a male right whale that was found dead off the Georgia coast near Jekyll Island on Dec. 30 and was towed to Fernandina Beach. Lacerations on the whale's head and lip suggest a boat propeller may have contributed to its death. Researchers who towed it to shore counted 20 deep cuts along its 41-foot-long body. They also found a skin pattern on its head that told them it was a calf they knew, born two years ago to a mother named Columbine. He was the fifth right whale in 2006 to die as a result of human contact.

Such deaths, scientists say, happen too often as the whales cope with increasing boat traffic in a busy Atlantic Ocean. The size and number of freighters and cruise boats has grown exponentially in 20 years.

The vessels are just one danger lurking in a changing ocean. The whales have plastic in their stomachs and contaminants like DDT in their blood. And they get tangled in fishing gear. Once researchers watched helplessly as a right whale mother tried to cradle her dying baby, ensnared in fishing gear, to keep it afloat.

ENCAPSULATING THE PROBLEM

"They sort of embody so many of the issues facing the ocean, just by all the things they're dealing with as individual animals," said Amy Knowlton, a research scientist with the New England Aquarium in Boston.

Right whale watchers have had their own frustrating experiences with whale deaths and entanglement in Volusia and Flagler counties, where the whales migrate offshore each winter. Two dead right whales have washed onto the beach in Flagler County since 1997, and last December rescuers tried to help a right whale spotted off Volusia with both flippers tangled in fishing gear.

For those who see live whales frolicking offshore, it's exciting, said Joy Hampp, coordinator of Marineland's volunteer right whale watching project, which reported 41 whale sightings in 2005.

But, Hampp said, it can be distressing to think, "Wow, I might be seeing one of the last of the species if we're not successful in conserving them."

For a while, it seemed the whales had a chance. Hunting was banned in
1935. But, the population has hovered at fewer than 400 and may be as low as 300. Scientists say the whales could be extinct within 100 to 200 years, less if struck with a catastrophic disease.

The future of the whales rests on a tiny fraction of the group: breeding females. Knowlton said saving just two a year could turn the population around.

DANGEROUS CROSSING

But a whale's migration might be compared to a pregnant woman trying to cross major highways on foot on her way to a delivery room. Seven of the country's 15 busiest ports are found along the migration route between Maine and Florida.

Nearly 70 whales have been killed by collisions or fishing gear since
1970. In 2005, the scientists begged the National Marine Fisheries Service to do something to stop the deaths. The fisheries service responded with proposed rules to slow freighters and expects to release a final rule in the spring, said spokeswoman Connie Barclay.

The shipping industry is protesting the proposal to slow boats over 65 feet to as low as 10 knots within 30 nautical miles of ports along the Eastern seaboard.

The World Shipping Council, in comments to the service, said it supports rerouting ships and tracking whales so ships can steer clear of the animals. But the council questioned why the Navy and boats less than 65 feet are exempt and said the service doesn't have evidence that slowing boats down would prevent whales from getting hit. The opposite may be true, the council wrote, because slower ships are harder to maneuver and not as noisy as a ship running at higher speeds.

The council estimates the rule could cost the industry more than $50 million a year.

Scientists like the proposed rules, although they wish the process would move faster and question why the Navy is exempt.

"The shipping companies and everyone concerned about the economic impact of slowing ships are complaining, but the fact of the matter is they are killing a couple of whales a year," said Scott Kraus, vice president of research at the New England Aquarium. "If you can slow the ships down, you can save the whales, as long as the reproduction doesn't fail."

LOW BIRTH RATES

Researchers find it difficult to single out one reason for the low reproduction. The lack of available food may be one cause, said whale expert Michael Moore with the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute in Massachusetts. Pollution, pesticides, fertilizers and even noise may contribute. The chemicals feed natural algae and bacteria that give off toxins that kill marine mammals.

Because they don't understand the causes, it's worrisome.

"If there's something we're doing that's creating the reproductive failure and we don't know what it is, we're going to continue to do it," Kraus said. "The whales may be the most visible charismatic consequence, but, if it's affecting right whales, it's affecting other things along the way, and that's what we should be paying attention to."

dinah.pulver @news-jrnl.com


Informant: binstock



http://freepage.twoday.net/search?q=whales

Freitag, 5. Januar 2007

Take Action for Circus Animals in 2007

http://www.care2.com/news/member/525884267/263480


A message from Pam

Mittwoch, 3. Januar 2007

Endangered Wildlife

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Beautiful video, Stacey! Thanks for using your talent as a voice for the voiceless. Be Forever Blessed.

Linda H.

Montag, 1. Januar 2007

ANIMAL SACRIFICES MAIM 1,400 IN TURKEY

Associated Press December 31, 2006
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20061231/D8MBUVG80.html


Informant: NHNE

Freitag, 29. Dezember 2006

Alaska's Wolves Need YOUR Help

From November 2005 to May 2006, more than 150 Alaskan wolves were killed in the brutal practice of aerial gunning. Now the Alaska Board of Game is gearing up for another winter of aerial gunning. With your help, we can stop them! Take action now to help save the wolves -- Sign our petition to urge the Bush Administration to put an end to aerial gunning in Alaska. Easy targets against fallen snow, wolves are gunned down from airplanes or chased to exhaustion, then shot at point blank range. State-licensed marksmen can target entire packs -- even pregnant mothers! Aerial gunners have killed more than 550 wolves over the past three winters. Worse, hundreds more wolves could be killed under “management” plans approved by the Alaska Board of Game in May 2006. That’s not wolf management. It’s a wolf massacre. Tell the Bush Administration to enforce the Federal Airborne Hunting Act, the federal law that could put an end to the killing. Wolves help the overall health of natural ecosystems. They help keep Alaska's moose and caribou populations healthy and strong. Wolves are also important to Alaska's billion-dollar tourism industry. Yet the state continues to allow aerial gunning. In fact, the Board of Game’s new proposals would expand the areas where aerial gunning is permitted, allow gunners on snow machines to harass and kill wolves and expand aerial gunning of bears. Please sign our petition right now http://savewolves.org and help us end aerial gunning in Alaska. Our wolves are a crucial part of the natural heritage that we’ll leave our children and grandchildren, and we have a real chance to end this terrible practice.


Informant: Scott Munson

Dienstag, 26. Dezember 2006

DEAF DOG NEEDS HELP

A message from Gwen

Original Message

ADORABLE DEAF DOG NEEDS HELP, SO VERY SAD. CROSSPOST TAKE A LOOK AT THIS THREAD.

http://www.care2.com/c2c/groups/disc.html?gpp=68&pst=588730

Samstag, 23. Dezember 2006

Unhappy feat: biologists baffled as millions of penguins vanish

IAN JOHNSTON ENVIRONMENT CORRESPONDENT
(ijohnston @scotsman.com)

http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/international.cfm?id=1905342006

HOLLYWOOD has turned them into the cartoon stars of the film Happy Feet, but the real life story of the rockhopper penguin is not such a happy tale, scientists have discovered.

Millions of the birds are disappearing in a "sinister and astonishing" phenomenon that is baffling biologists.

In just six years their numbers have fallen from 600,000 to 420,000 in the Falkland Islands - one of its few remaining strongholds - according to the latest survey by Falklands Conservation.

The decline equates to a drop of about 30 per cent, although the Falklands population is thought to have dipped by about 85 per cent since 1932, when there were more than 1.5 million birds.

It is thought that global warming may be behind its decline, as warmer seas are less productive and the penguins may not be able to find enough food to eat, but researchers admit they have not yet established the reasons.

Dr Geoff Hilton, an RSPB biologist who has studied the species, said: "It's actually quite rare in conservation that we don't know why a species is declining.

"All around the world from New Zealand to the Falklands there used to be all these huge colonies. Populations separated by 1,000km of sea are all crashing.

"It's an astonishing decline, the populations have just crashed over the last few decades and we really don't know why. It's quite sinister, we have got millions of penguins just disappearing."

He analysed rockhopper feathers dating back to the 19th century from stuffed animals in museums and discovered in warm years the penguins feed "lower" on the food chain, on krill and squid rather than fish. This less nutritious food might be the reason they are suffering. In several years, rockhoppers have starved to death in their hundreds of thousands during the annual moult, when they are unable to swim and, therefore, feed because their feathers are not waterproof.

Other penguins have suffered, but have bounced back, while the rockhoppers only seem to stabilise before falling again. A red tide of toxic algae in the Falklands also killed thousands in 2002-3.

Dr Hilton said: "There must be some major big thing going wrong in the eco-system. We did see some clues [in the feathers study] and the finger is tentatively pointing at global warming."

In Happy Feet, a rockhopper penguin called Lovelace, voiced by Robin Williams, is a self-proclaimed prophet who also narrates the story.

The film has proved a huge hit.

The research was funded by the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland, which runs Edinburgh Zoo. Roslin Talbot, the zoo's head keeper of penguins, said: "It is very serious for them. Zoos generally have found them quite difficult to breed. They are choosy when they go to pick their mates and they like very specific places to nest."

Grant Munro, the director of Falklands Conservation, said there were fears that rockhoppers might become extinct. "If the present situation were to carry on then it's not a particularly great forecast. It doesn't look like they are suddenly going to start increasing in numbers," he said.

"In the Falklands, they are part of everyday life. If you head down to the beach you are going to see penguins."

And they are amazingly tame and inquisitive.

"You are not perceived as a risk so they will come over and say hello."


Informant: binstock

Freitag, 22. Dezember 2006

Urge Your Representative to Support Truth in Fur Labeling Act

http://ga0.org/campaign/hr4904a

While it is strictly illegal to sell cat and dog fur in the U.S., the law is difficult to enforce because fur worth $150 or less can be sold without labels specifying the species of animal the fur comes from. H.R. 4904, the Truth in Fur Labeling Act, would close that loophole by requiring all fur garments to include labels with important information about the material’s origins. Please “Take Action” to urge your Representative to support and co-sponsor the Truth in Fur Labeling Act.

Tell me more
http://ga0.org/campaign/hr4904a/explanation

Urge California Coastal Commission to protect whales from Navy sonar

http://ga0.org/campaign/navysonar

The U.S. Navy is seeking permission from the California Coastal Commission to conduct training exercises involving powerful explosives and sonar devices that flood vast areas of the ocean with deafening noise, making them extremely harmful - even lethal - to whales and other species. Please "Take Action" to thank the Commission for protecting whales by requiring the Navy to provide information ensuring that their activities will not threaten the survival of these highly intelligent and endangered marine mammals.

Tell me more
http://ga0.org/campaign/navysonar/explanation



http://freepage.twoday.net/search?q=whale

Donnerstag, 21. Dezember 2006

EU-Fischereirat: Wissenschaftler halten EU-Fangquotenbeschränkung für unzureichend

21.12.06

Die am Donnerstag von den EU-Fischereiministern beschlossenen Beschränkungen beim Kabeljaufang für 2007 gehen Wissenschaftlern nicht weit genug. "Der Wiederaufbauplan für den Kabeljaubestand in der Nordsee wird weiter schlecht gemanagt", meint der Leiter des Instituts für Seefischerei in der Hamburger Bundesforschungsanstalt für Fischerei, Siegfried Ehrich, der Nachrichtenagentur ddp. "Wir befinden uns erst am Anfang eines richtigen Weges, damit die eingeleiteten Maßnahmen in einigen Jahren richtig greifen." Das deutsche Bundesministerium für Ernährung, Landwirtschaft und Verbraucherschutz bezeichnete die Einigung der Minister hingegen als "Erfolg".

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet: http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php?Nr=15001

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