Saturday, June 23, 2018

June animal news highlights -- so far


 The well taught philosophic mind / To all compassion gives; /  Casts round the world an equal eye, / And feels for all that lives. -Anna Letitia Barbauld, poet, essayist and editor (1743-1825) 

Hello again, everyone, and happy summer!  I hope you’re as glad to see this post as I am to be back doing it. The hiatus was good in lots of ways, but I prefer learning, thinking and writing about animals to almost anything else. 

And who wouldn’t be interested in the mix of animal news out there since early June?  To whet your appetite: the raccoon who climbed a Minnesota skyscraper, the tusk-free female elephants in Africa, the bog turtle becoming New Jersey’s state reptile . . .  and more. 

NJ’s state reptile

Let’s start with the bog turtle, a local species in need of all the help it can get.  Thanks to Princeton school kids and others, people may now become more aware of bog turtles and in the process, help them survive and maybe even thrive.  When states make endangered or threatened species their state animals, enhanced protection and preservation can follow.

It’s estimated that fewer than 2,000 of the tiny turtles are left in NJ, with habitat changes and development, both caused by humans, as the main reasons.  Thanks, kids, for caring and fighting the good (legislative) fight!  

. . . and MIA shelter bill

Maybe we should get those student movers and shakers involved with making Senator Linda Greenstein’s animal shelter bill (S725) a reality.  Painfully slow in development and drafting, it’s now languishing in the state legislature, while animals suffer and die in horrible NJ facilities misnamed “shelters.”  Bad enough that some provisions won’t take effect till months or years after passage; worse that it currently looks like a half-hearted effort, at best, to move it forward.

Skyscraping raccoon

On to the wild raccoon who climbed a 25-story building in St.Paul, Minn., while (it seemed) the world watched. With time out for a nap near the top (where a trap awaited), the raccoon made it, using his “strong limbs, five-toed paws with long claws and immense dexterity.”  

Although raccoon specialists weren’t at all surprised by this feat, those with acrophobia probably hoped only that the raccoon wouldn’t look down.  Not to worry.  Once trapped at the top, he was fed soft cat food (!) and transported to a wooded area for release.  

Tusklessness can pay

Tuskless female, Addo      Finbarr O'Reilly/NYTimes
In South Africa’s Addo Elephant National Park, 90-95% of the female elephants lack tusks -- in contrast to most African elephant populations, where as few as 2% of females are tusk-free.

“Tusklessness” comes with a huge advantage: it protects these females from poachers intent on slaughter for ivory. And the tusks of bull elephants at Adoo tend to be smaller than elsewhere. Together with the “nearly impenetrable landscape” of “valley thicket,” these factors all deter poachers.

But elephants everywhere are still in jeopardy, if not for their tusks, then for their skin. The newest thing is elephant leather accessories and traditional remedies made from their hides.  According to Adoo Park’s conservation manager, who extols elephants’ intelligence and parenting skills, “I hate to say that they’re close to humans, because we’re the scourge of this planet. They’re not.”

Meanwhile, back in NJ

Two bills crucial for animals -- Nosey’s Law (S1093), named for a long-suffering elephant now in sanctuary, would prohibit elephants and other wild or exotic animals in traveling animal acts, and S1860 (about pets left in hot vehicles and those who help them) -- are posted for full NJ senate votes on Monday, June 25.  Phone your state senator to request support, then help get these two bills successfully through the state assembly by Friday, June 29, before summer recess begins.  

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