Tuesday, March 30, 2021

Pandemic possibilities are all around us -- & growing

                     Coughing gorillas                           NYTimes image
                      

They’re unpleasant subjects – coronavirus, bats, wet markets – but as animal advocates, we need to know about them, to protect ourselves, our pets and the animal world at large.  With the pandemic surging again and vaccines becoming a political/cultural issue, it’s likely we’ll have Covid-19 with us (and in us) for the indefinite future. 

So we need to be armed with knowledge.  It should include (1) the importance of stamping out wet markets everywhere (yes, they’re here too); (2) the frightening situation of humans infecting animals, instead of the reverse; (3) the overarching need for us to bond with all animals and stop the trafficking and consumption of wild animals.

“We are animals, too,” David Quammen reminds us at the end of his latest column on infections and pandemics.  Reporting on coughing gorillas in a California zoo, he illustrates that what goes around comes around.  Tests showed that “SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes Covid-19, was among

Silverback gorilla
them [the gorillas].”

The most ominous part: “It could have come only from a person,” most likely an infected but asymptomatic zookeeper.

Instead of animals transmitting the virus to humans (a zoonosis), which is how the current pandemic began, those infected coughing gorillas signaled transmission from a human to a nonhuman animal.  That this human virus can now spill over to great apes (as well as domestic and big cats, minks and other animals) is fearful because of the potential for its being passed back and forth among animals including humans, and spreading widely.  Read it and weep: https://tinyurl.com/nr52nh3p

Just sign here

Great news: Passed by both NJ’s assembly and senate, the trunk-fighting bill now moves to Gov. Phil Murphy’s desk.  If he signs it or doesn’t act on it within 45 days, it becomes law.

Please ask the governor to sign this legislation into law.  Phone him at 609-292-6000.  And/or message Gov. Murphy through Twitter (@GovMurphy) and Instagram (@GovMurphy).

Allocations for animals

Yes, “the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021” is primarily designed to address continuing issues stemming from the pandemic.  But the government’s new relief law also helps animals, reports the Humane Society of the US.   

Bonobo
“Acknowledging the close link between public health and animal welfare, Congress also allocated millions of dollars to examine and mitigate risks posed by animals susceptible to contracting and spreading diseases, many [animals] of which are currently farmed and traded in local and global exploitative industries.  This includes the legal wildlife trade, wildlife trafficking and mink fur farms.”

Thanks, HSUS, for lobbying on behalf of animals!

Moving a giraffe

How would you move a giraffe from here to there?  Or a few giraffes?

Because poaching in Uganda has severely reduced its giraffe population, a once-yearly “translocation” of giraffes takes place.  It’s a tricky operation to safely move these tall, long-necked animals, as illustrated in a graphic NYTimes story.

Giraffe
Three straps (one on the neck and two on the sides) and 11 people make it happen once a giraffe is gently tranquilized, fitted with ear plugs and blindfolded.  Led to a specially designed trailer, up to 15 giraffes are moved to a livestock enclosure and ultimately to a truck bound for their new home site(s). 

And you thought moving that piano would be tough!  

https://tinyurl.com/yr5fnfwj

April animal events

In the last post, I promoted “Cat Camp,” the Saturday, April 10 session all about felines from Jackson Galaxy & Co.

This time, I’m recommending the Wildlife Conservation Network’s (virtual) Expo, on Saturday, April 24, 11 am-4:30 pm.  These events highlight conservationists in the field all over the world, emphasizing what local people are doing for the animals who share the land with them: all quite exotic -- and heartening.

To learn more about this expo and to register, go to www.wcnexpo.org.

Painted dogs


 
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