Sunday, December 23, 2012

The Seattle Times, November 26, 2012
California farmers want orcas taken off endangered-species list
California farmers have filed a petition to take Puget Sound's killer whales off the endangered-species list, arguing they are not a separate population.
By Lynda V. Mapes

California farmers want to take Puget Sound's killer whales off the endangered-species list, arguing they are not a separate population and that protecting the fish they eat is hurting business.
The listing of the animals as endangered under the federal Endangered Species Act in 2005 caused cutbacks in irrigation to protect fish, and that's made it harder to get loans from banks, pay help and expand their operations, argues a petition filed by Empresa de Bosque and Coburn Ranch. The two farms raise a variety of crops, from cherries to almonds, melons and tomatoes, using irrigation water from several California water districts in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta.
The listing of Puget Sound's orcas has affected farmers in California because the southern resident orcas travel the outer West Coast in winter, and are known to feed on salmon as far south as the Sacramento River.
The petition to delist was filed on the farmers' behalf by the Pacific Legal Foundation, a nonprofit based in Sacramento that has built a $25 million business fighting endangered-species listings, environmental restrictions, Title IX funding for high-school sports, affirmative action in public-sector contracting and more.
The foundation, with its motto "Rescuing liberty from coast to coast," operates regional offices in Bellevue, Hawaii and Florida. It is funded with individual contributions and awards of attorneys' fees.
NOAA Fisheries announced Monday it had accepted the petition and would finish by August a status review of the southern resident population of killer whales to determine if listing is still warranted.
Donna Darm, assistant administrator for protected resources at NOAA, said new science, including findings published in peer-reviewed journals since the orca was listed, warrants a new look at the listing. The decision to consider the petition does not indicate what the outcome of the review will be, she noted.
If the animals were taken off the endangered-species list, designation of critical habitat for them would disappear, but other protections under the Marine Mammal Protection Act, including a requirement the animals not be harassed or harmed, and that whale-watch vessels keep 200 yards away, would remain in effect.
NOAA Fisheries' listing of orcas as endangered came a year after it listed the animals as threatened in 2004. It had decided in 2002 not to list them at all. The agency initially determined the southern resident killer whales of Puget Sound, in J, K and L pods, were not a distinct population segment.
That finding was set aside by a U.S. District Court judge in 2003, who ruled there was enough uncertainty in the science to give the matter more study. The agency convened a science task force that eventually found the southern resident killer-whale population to be a distinct population, resulting in the 2005 listing.
Since then, the agency has designated 2,560 square miles of Puget Sound critical habitat for killer whales; required whale-watch vessels to keep a longer distance from the animals; and produced a recovery plan. But the southern resident population remains quite small, with only about 86 animals.
Fred Felleman, of Seattle, who in 2001 advocated for the original petition for listing, said the petition now to delist the orcas is a distraction from the necessary work of rebuilding orca populations.
"Oh great, here is a chance to biopsy them and tag them and chase them all over town until we don't have to worry about them any more," Felleman said.
To him, the distinct behavior of the southern residents sets them clearly apart from other orcas. They eat only fish, while other orcas eat seals and other mammals. They have distinct family groups, dialects, greeting ceremonies and migratory patterns.
"If there was ever a poster child for this type of subspecies, it's the killer whales," he said. "It's not just their genetics, it's culture. These clearly are the tribes of the sea, and if you extirpate that population not only do you lose the genetic code, you lose a unique brain trust."
In its petition, Pacific Legal Foundation stated there are about 50,000 killer whales roaming all the oceans of the world. Puget Sound's J, K and L pods comprise less than 0.2 percent of the species and, being such a small part of a larger population from which they are not distinct, protection is not warranted, the firm argued.
Miyoko Sakashita of the Center for Biological Diversity, which sued to get the animals listed, said the petition to delist is just a rehash of old arguments. NOAA's decision to list was right, she said. "I am sure when they take another look at the science they will affirm protection."
Seattle Times news researcher Gene Balk contributed to this report. Lynda V. Mapes: 206-464-2736 or lmapes@seattletimes.com.
Copyright ©2012 The Seattle Times Company.

MERRY CHRISTMAS

Holiday Bearly Ecard

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Man Reunited With Beloved Shih Tzu After 5-Year Search

Man Reunited With Beloved Shih Tzu After 5-Year Search
A Shih Tzu named Bandit disappeared five years ago. But he wasn’t gone forever.
Bandit’s person, Mike, and Mike’s nieces kept looking for the dog, whom Mike had fought to keep in his divorce settlement. But it turned out that Bandit found him.
Bandit somehow wound up at an animal control facility, and from there he went to a shelter called reTails Indy, which later posted Bandit’s story on its website.
The shelter scanned him for a chip, and lo and behold, he had one. Somehow animal control had missed it. The shelter staff were even more surprised to find that the phone number registered with the chip was still current. Mike lived right nearby. Within 10 minutes he was at the shelter, ready to reunite with his long-lost companion.

“This is my little buddy,” Mike said, holding Bandit close and fighting back tears. “This is my best friend.”
Bandit had run out an open door five years earlier and was seen being scooped up by a stranger in a car. Someone got the car’s license plate number, but Mike says the man refused to return Bandit despite his repeated attempts.
Mike was often out of town doing construction work; it was lucky that Bandit happened into the shelter when he did, because a week earlier Mike would not have been home to take the call and pick him up.
Without a microchip, Bandit and Mike never would have found each other again. Time Magazine writes that “approximately 10 million pets that have been chipped over the past 15 years.” They “have helped reunite more than 600,000 pets with their owners,” reports Petside.com‘s Lavanya Sunkara. For a FAQ about microchips, visit the Humane Society‘s website.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/five-years-of-reasons-to-microchip-your-pet-2.html#ixzz2FnzBBEXP

Friday, December 14, 2012

5 Reasons Not to Buy a Puppy for Christmas

5 Reasons Not to Buy a Puppy for Christmas
1) Family members should be adopted, not “bought”: There are enough animals looking for homes in shelters that the idea of encouraging the demand for backyard-bred puppies is difficult to justify. Here’s a cute animal shelter commercial encouraging viewers to adopt:
I’ll also add that some people purchase their animals, particularly dogs, because they are looking for a particular breed. In reality, just abut any mix or breed will come through your local shelter at one time or another. They likely will not come with pedigree papers, but the people for whom that is a priority are probably not my audience here.
One of the things I like about my local shelter is that they treat their animals as individuals, carefully informing prospective owners about energy levels, interests and attitudes. Finding the perfect match is not just about finding a specific breed, but the quirks and particularities of each individual. Mixed breeds are an excellent choice no matter what you’re looking for: you just have to find the one that’s just right for you.
2) Buying animals makes it okay to throw animals away: I believe the commoditization of animals is a huge root cause of animal cruelty. Putting animals on shelves and selling them like cheap, plastic toys makes them a part of our disposable culture. What does disposable mean for an animal? It means that rather than raising and teaching them, as we would our human family members, we play with them until they break or get boring, and then throw them away.
It’s not that I think a lot of people are purchasing pets whom actively abuse their animals (though such sickos exist). Rather, I think this is the type of attitude that makes it okay to buy puppies because they’re cute, not bother training them, and then get rid of them. It’s the animal shelters who now need to find homes for adult, poorly-socialized dogs. Purchasing a pet means tacitly endorsing the idea that companion animals are disposable (and sub-consciously affirming it).
3) Buying animals keeps puppy mills in business: We vote most effectively with our wallets, and if we don’t like the mistreatment and neglect puppies experience in those horrible facilities, we have to stop buying from them. Puppy millers don’t get into it because they actively hate animals. They do it because they’re lazy and greedy. If there’s no money in it, puppy mills will cease to exist.
4) You can’t play matchmaker for someone else: Dogs are as individual as people. Some are couch potatoes; some need to run. Some need a lot of attention; some need their space. And maybe you think you know someone well enough to pick the right dog for them, but even if that’s true, there’s that indefinable, je ne sais quoi, that you just can’t force.
5) You can’t make that kind of commitment for someone else: Adopting an animal is a huge commitment, and nobody can make that choice but the person who will be taking care of it. Even a lifelong animal-lover has to be in the right frame of mind and at the right moment in their lives to take someone new into their home.
Giving someone the wrong animal, or even the right animal at the wrong time, is much less likely to result in a forever home than a person making that decision themselves. As cute as it may seem to wrap up a little puppy or kitten in a bow and surprise someone on Christmas morning, it’s a guilt-ridden and heart-rending experience to be returning that same animal to a shelter in January.
I wonder how much of the income that supports puppy millers comes from well-intentioned but thoughtless individuals buying eight-hundred dollar pet store puppies that end up in a shelter a few weeks or months later. It’s no skin off the breeder’s nose, nor the pet shop owners.’
Having said all that… is there a right way to give someone a pet as a gift? Perhaps. If somebody has already expressed a very clear intention to adopt a pet in the near future, you might take them to a shelter and pay for part or all of the adoption fee. Some shelters also sell adoption certificates for use as gifts. This would probably work best with one’s spouse or (maybe) an older, responsible child.
But if you’re not absolutely sure, you should probably let someone choose their own time and place to adopt, and knit them a scarf instead.

Read more: http://www.care2.com/causes/5-reasons-not-to-buy-a-puppy-for-christmas.html#ixzz2F3O685Nv

ASPCA-CHRISTMAS PUPPY STORY

When Dora was rescued by our Humane Law Enforcement department in December 2011, she was very thin and suffering from a severely damaged tail. But at the ASPCA, she got the care she needed—both physical and emotional—to start over in life.

When one of our supporters heard her story, he was overcome with emotion. He later became her foster parent, then her adopter. Today, Dora is living the good life with three other Shih Tzus, completely pampered and totally content. She couldn’t have it better, and that’s thanks to our members.
Dora is a happy, healthy pup because people like you care about her and the thousands of other animals who experience unnecessary suffering. Please consider making a gift today. For every Dora in a wonderful home, an untold number await our help.

*some may see this dog as not the cutest thing in the world (oddly I do) but all dogs have personality and the want to love you.

Thursday, December 13, 2012

TAKE-ACTION TOOLBOX #1: DEFEND THE ENDANGERED SPECIES ACT

The Endangered Species Act is a remarkable success. A new Center for Biological Diversity analysis of 110 species finds that 90 percent are recovering on pace to meet recovery goals set by federal scientists.

Simply put, it’s the most powerful tool for protecting and saving species at the brink of extinction. Wolves, whooping cranes, panthers, sea lions and species in all 50 states are improving because of the Act. From the Key deer in Florida to the Aleutian Canada goose in Alaska, the Act has saved more than 99 percent of the 1,482 species under its care from extinction.

But some members of Congress have attacked the Act, falsely claiming it’s a failure and using specious arguments to call for gutting crucial parts of this life-saving law.

The Center has been at the forefront of Endangered Species Act protection, petitioning for thousands of species, protecting habitat and filing litigation against those agencies that fail to uphold the Act. Likewise, the Center is dedicated to protecting the Act itself.

Our new report is a science-based rebuttal to attacks on the Act by critics like Rep. Doc Hastings (R-WA), chairman of the U.S. House Committee on Natural Resources, who says the Act is “failing badly” because only 1 percent of species have been recovered. The report finds that 80 percent of species haven’t been listed long enough to reach their projected delisting date but that, again and again, species are on a positive trajectory toward recovery.

It’s time to celebrate the success of the Act and to defend it from those who want to tear it down. Click here to locate endangered species where you live, and please take a moment to write your senators or a letter to your local newspaper.

So You Wanna Be an Animal Lawyer?

November 30th, 2012

Animal Legal Defense Fund

You’re almost a senior in high school, or just starting college, and you think you might want to spend your life helping animals? What a great idea! Animals need your help and the next generation of animal lawyers is going to revolutionize animal protection laws. If you want to do something cool with your life, help animals, and impress your parents with a smart career—animal law may be for you!
animal lawyers!
What classes should I take for a career as an animal lawyer?
Actually, a wide range of classes are useful, including sociology, political science, psychology, economics, history, and anthropology, science, mathematics, logic, philosophy, and computer science. Make sure you keep a high GPA!
What is the average salary of someone working in the animal law field?
An average starting salary for a new animal lawyer is around $50,000. Many lawyers practice in the private sector and incorporate animal law into their practice. In this case, the pay scale would be based on salaries at private firms – and vary depending on the size of the firm, and the location.
What are some groups with job opportunities in the animal law field?
Animal rights nonprofits such as the Animal Legal Defense Fund (ALDF), In Defense of Animals (IDA), the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA), employ animal lawyers. Many attorneys offer their services to ALDF on animal related cases pro bono, or free of charge.
What are some skills needed in the animal law field?
Being an animal lawyer requires an above average capability in skills such as reading, writing, speaking, listening, and analysis. In addition to those skills, being an animal lawyer takes an incredible amount of patience.
Do I get to work directly with animals?
Overall, animal lawyers work indirectly with animals; however some cases may require the attorney to interact with animals. In addition to working with passionate co-workers, animal lawyers work with judicial employees, legislators, clients, and the public.
What does a day in the life of an animal lawyer look like?
This depends on the type of law you choose to practice. ALDF has three main focuses: filing lawsuits, helping prosecutors put abusers behind bars, and animal law education—working with law schools, law students, and law firms on incorporating animal law into their legal profession.
What else should I know?
Many consider the animal protection movement one of the greatest movements of our generation. It’s a great time to get involved because there is so much work to get done and each individual has the potential to have a major impact on making the world a better place for animals.

Expert Advice from Animal Lawyers

EMILY DAVIDSOHN
Emily DavidsohnEmily is a Staff Attorney and Case Coordinator with the Oregon Humane Society. She was also featured in ALDF’s Where Are They Now? series.
What is one piece of advice you have for young lawyers interested in animal law?
EMILY: Set a goal of where you want to be or what you want to be doing and then pursue every path to reaching that goal with equal vigilance.
What do you wish you knew as a teen or had maybe done differently?
EMILY: I wish that I had known about all of the groups doing national work on animal welfare issues, like ALDF, HSUS, ASPCA, and Best Friends. These organizations are a wealth of material and opportunities for all ages and would have helped me shape my goals at an earlier age if I had known about them.
What’s your favorite thing about being an animal lawyer or studying animal law?
EMILY: The best thing about my job is being an advocate for the animals involved in our cases through every step of the investigation—from the very beginning when the report comes in until the animal is adopted out to a new forever home.
LEWIS BOLLARD
Lewis BollardLewis is a third-year law student at Yale University and winner of the Hogan/Smoger Access to Justice Essay Contest (sponsored by Public Justice) for his essay “Ag-Gag: The Unconstitutionality of Laws Restricting Undercover Investigations on Farms.”
What is one piece of advice you have for young lawyers interested in animal law?
LEWIS: Think incrementally. We're sadly not going to litigate an end to animal abuse tomorrow, but we can reduce animals' suffering with every lawsuit.
What do you wish you knew as a teen or had maybe done differently?
LEWIS: The law is not the only way to fight for animals. If you're passionate about the law, become an animal lawyer. But if you're not, pursue your passion for politics, business, advertising, or whatever, and put that skill to use for the animals.
What’s your favorite thing about being an animal lawyer or studying animal law?
LEWIS: The prospect of helping animals… It's worth getting up in the morning if you might be able to help a hen trapped in a battery cage or a pig stuck in a gestation crate live a happier life.
MATTHEW LIEBMAN
Alexis FoxMatthew Liebman is a senior attorney at ALDF and co-author of the first-of-its-kind book on international variations of animal law, entitled A Worldview of Animal Law.
What is one piece of advice you have for young lawyers interested in animal law?
MATTHEW: Think hard about what you want to accomplish for animals and make sure you’re choosing the career path that will best enable you to make a difference.
What do you wish you knew as a teen or had maybe done differently?
MATTHEW: I became a vegetarian when I was 15, but I wish I knew then how much cruelty is involved in the production of dairy and eggs, not just meat. I didn’t go vegan until I was twenty; I wish I had done it sooner.
What’s your favorite thing about being an animal lawyer or studying animal law?
MATTHEW: The best part of being an animal protection lawyer is seeing how our cases create real differences for animals. In one case, we rescued several pregnant horses from horrific neglect, and a few months later, I got to see them frolicking in a pasture with their foals. In another case, we sued to remove a bear from a tiny concrete cell, ultimately placing him in a naturalistic sanctuary where he can splash around in his swimming pool and explore his surroundings. Seeing the law have such a tangible, material difference in the lives of animals is incredibly rewarding.
ALEXIS FOX
Alexis FoxAlexis Fox is the Massachusetts State Director of the Humane Society of the United States and was featured in ALDF’s Where Are They Now? series.
What is one piece of advice you have for young lawyers interested in animal law?
ALEXIS: Find a mentor! The field of animal law is filled with friendly attorneys and advocates who want to help you find your way. You are the future of our movement and we want to help you help animals. So reach out, ask to meet for a cup of coffee and talk with mentors who can guide you as you find your place in this fight for animal protection.
What do you wish you knew as a teen or had maybe done differently?
ALEXIS: I wish I had read Dale Carnegie’s book How to Wins Friends and Influence People at a much younger age. It was first published in 1936 but the lessons inside are timeless. I also wish I had read Ethics Into Action by Peter Singer a long time ago. Both books are now required reading for my interns.
What’s your favorite thing about being an animal lawyer or studying animal law?
ALEXIS: I love that we are writing history. Whenever I am told that something cannot be done I remind myself that it just has not been done yet.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

4 Vital Interview Questions to Ask

Most candidates can hack your interview questions to tell you what you want to hear. But if you approach it right, not these.
iStock
 
474
Share
Most job candidates feel interview questions can be decoded and hacked, letting them respond to those questions with "perfect" answers.
And they're right, especially if you insist on asking opinion-based job interview questions.
(Quick aside: Is there really a perfect answer to a question like, "What do you feel is your biggest weakness?" I think there is: "If that's the kind of question you typically ask, I don't want to work for you.")
Asking opinion-based questions is a complete waste of time. Every candidate comes prepared to answer general questions about teamwork, initiative, interpersonal skills, and leadership.
That's why you should ask interview questions that elicit facts instead of opinions. Why? I can never rely on what you claim you will do, but I can learn a lot from what you have already done.
Where employee behavior and attitude are concerned, the past is a fairly reliable indication of the future.
How do you get to the facts? Ask. Ask an initial question. Then follow up: Dig deeper to fully understand the situation described, determine exactly what the candidate did (and did not do), and find out how things turned out. Follow-up questions don't have to be complicated. "Really?" "Wow... so what did he do?" "What did she say?" "What happened next?" "How did that work out?"
All you have to do is keep the conversation going. At its best, an interview is really just a conversation.
Here are my four favorite behavioral interview questions:

1. "Tell me about the last time a customer or co-worker got mad at you."

Purpose: Evaluate the candidate's interpersonal skills and ability to deal with conflict.
Make sure you find out why the customer or co-worker was mad, what the interviewee did in response, and how the situation turned out both in the short- and long-term.
Warning sign: The interviewee pushes all the blame and responsibility for rectifying the situation on the other person.
Decent sign: The interviewee focuses on how they addressed and fixed the problem, not on who was to blame.
Great sign: The interviewee admits they caused the other person to be upset, took responsibility, and worked to make a bad situation better. Great employees are willing to admit when they are wrong, take responsibility for fixing their mistakes, and learn from experience.
Remember, every mistake is really just training in disguise... as long as the same mistake isn't repeated over and over again, of course.

2. "Tell me about the toughest decision you had to make in the last six months."

Purpose: Evaluate the candidate's reasoning ability, problem solving skills, judgment, and possibly even willingness to take intelligent risks.
Warning sign: No answer. Everyone makes tough decisions, regardless of their position. My daughter works part-time as a server at a local restaurant and makes difficult decisions all the time - like the best way to deal with a regular customer whose behavior constitutes borderline harassment.
Decent sign: Made a difficult analytical or reasoning-based decision. For example, wading through reams of data to determine the best solution to a problem.
Great sign: Made a difficult interpersonal decision, or better yet a difficult data-driven decision that included interpersonal considerations and ramifications.
Making decisions based on data is important, but almost every decision has an impact on people as well. The best candidates naturally weigh all sides of an issue, not just the business or human side exclusively.

3. "Tell me about a time you knew you were right but still had to follow directions or guidelines."

Purpose: Evaluate the candidate's ability to follow, and possibly to lead.
Warning sign: Found a way to circumvent guidelines "... because I know I was right," or followed the rules but allowed their performance to suffer.
Believe it or not, if you ask enough questions some candidates will tell you they were angry or felt stifled and didn't work hard as a result, especially when they think you empathize with their "plight."
Good sign: Did what needed to be done, especially in a time-critical situation, then found an appropriate time and place to raise issues and work to improve the status quo.
Great sign: Not only did what needed to be done, but also stayed motivated and helped motivate others as well.
In a peer setting, an employee who is able to say, "Hey, I'm not sure this makes sense either, but for now let's just do our best and get it done..." is priceless.
In a supervisory setting, good leaders are able to debate and argue behind closed doors and then fully support a decision in public - even if they privately disagree with that decision.

4. "Tell me about the last time your workday ended before you were able to get everything done."

Purpose: Evaluate commitment, ability to prioritize, and ability to communicate effectively.
Warning sign: "I just do what I have to do and get out. I keep telling my boss I can only do so much but he won't listen.... "
Good sign: Stayed a few minutes late to finish a critical task, or prioritized before the end of the workday to ensure critical tasks were completed.
You shouldn't expect heroic efforts every day, but some level of dedication is important.
Great sign: Stayed late and/or prioritized - but most importantly communicated early on that deadlines were in jeopardy. Good employees take care of things. Great employees take care of things and make sure others are aware of potential problems ahead of time just in case proactive decisions may help.
Obviously there are a number of good and great answers to this question. "I stayed until midnight to get it done," can sometimes be a great answer, but doing so night after night indicates there are other organizational or productivity issues the employee should raise. I may sometimes be glad you stayed late, but I will always be glad when you help me spot chronic problems and bottlenecks.
Like with any other question, always evaluate a candidate's answers to this question based on your company's culture and organizational needs.
Few candidates can bluff their way through more than one or two follow-up questions. Turning the interview into a fact-based conversations helps you identify potential disconnects between the candidate's resume and their actual experience, qualifications, and accomplishments.
And you'll have a much better chance of identifying a potentially great employee, because a great employee will almost always shine during a fact-based interview.

Monday, December 10, 2012

rankenstorm Sandy: The Ghost of Climate Future

Hurricane SandyWith global warming raising sea levels around the world and increasing the intensity of massive storms, Superstorm Sandy, which caused major damage and dozens of tragic deaths on the East Coast this week, is a mere hint of climate-related natural catastrophes to come.

The good news is that Sandy seems to be making an impact on public awareness of the need to get serious about combating the climate change juggernaut. There's widespread discussion online and in the media about the link between climate change and storms like Sandy, and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo is even talking about building levees around Manhattan.

"The terrifying truth is that America faces a future full of Frankenstorms," said the Center for Biological Diversity's Climate Science Director Shaye Wolf. "Climate change is raising sea levels and making storms stronger. The threat to many of our coastal cities will grow by the year unless we get serious about fighting greenhouse gas pollution."

Read more about storms and climate change at ABC News.

Court Upholds Habitat Protection for California's Santa Ana Sucker
Santa Ana suckerSouthern California's Santa Ana sucker, a threatened fish, will keep 9,300 acres of protected critical habitat that it won back in 2010. A federal judge recently upheld those protections after a legal challenge by 12 water districts and cities. The Center for Biological Diversity, which has worked to save the small fish for more than a decade and was instrumental in getting its habitat protected under the Endangered Species Act, went to court to help the government defend that protection in this latest case.

The decision protects river and stream habitat for the sucker in San Bernardino, Riverside, Orange and Los Angeles counties.

The Santa Ana sucker is a small, olive-gray fish found in clear, cool, rocky pools of creeks, as well as gravelly bottoms of permanent streams. It has vanished from nearly 95 percent of its historic range since the 1970s.

Read more in the Los Angeles Times.

15 States Not Up to Snuff in Protecting Marine Life
Elkhorn coralFifteen coastal states in America don't have water-quality standards tough enough to protect wildlife from the harmful effects of ocean acidification. To remedy that, the Center for Biological Diversity petitioned the Environmental Protection Agency to override those states and put lifesaving measures in place to meet federal recommendations for protecting sea life.

More than 20 million tons of carbon dioxide pollution from factories, cars and power plants fall on our oceans every day, making water more acidic and hurting the ability of shellfish, corals and other animals to build the skeletons and shells they need to survive. Ultimately, acidification threatens the ocean's entire food web, as well as people who rely on the sea for protein. It's time for states to step up: Some have rules on the books that would allow oceans to get a hundred times more acidic before any action's taken. That just doesn't cut it.

Read our press release to find out if you live in one of those 15 lax states; learn more about our petition in Scientific American.

Defeat NRA Provision That Will Kill Wildlife -- Take Action
California condorCongress is on the verge of voting on a scary provision, pushed by the National Rifle Association, that would bar the Environmental Protection Agency from doing anything to protect wildlife from lead poisoning.

The provision, part of the cynically named "Sportsmen's Heritage Act," is aimed at halting any effort to apply the Toxics Substances Control Act to lead ammunition that poisons and kills millions of birds each year, including endangered California condors, eagles, swans and loons. The EPA should use this law to limit the amount of lead that's left in the wild for nature's scavengers to eat.

The Senate could vote as early as Nov. 13. Take a moment today to tell the Senate to nix this lethal provision. If the NRA wins, our wildlife will lose.

Join Our Polar Bear Webcasts From Hudson Bay
Polar bearAre you ready to come face to face with a polar bear? Join live webcasts next Tuesday and Wednesday with Center for Biological Diversity staffers on the Hudson Bay tundra. Kassie Siegel, director of the Center's Climate Law Institute and lead author of the petition to federally protect polar bears, will take part in Tundra Connections, a series of free webcasts broadcast from Polar Bear International's Buggy One during polar bear migration season.

Join us for incredible views of prowling polar bears making their way to the winter sea ice they need to survive; then participate in fascinating discussions about climate change and Arctic wildlife. You can even ask questions in real time.

The first webcast will be just for kids on Tuesday, Nov. 6 at noon Pacific (1 p.m. Mountain, 2 p.m. Central, 3 p.m. Eastern). The second will be Wednesday, Nov. 7 at 10 a.m. Pacific (11 Mountain, noon Central, 1 p.m. Eastern).

Click to learn more.


Climate Denier James Inhofe Wins 2012 Rubber Dodo Award
Sen. InhofeMore than 15,000 people cast their votes in this year's Rubber Dodo contest, and the results were crystal-clear: Senator James Inhofe, one of Congress' most fervent deniers of climate change, was the winner by a landslide. The Center for Biological Diversity gives out the award each year to those who have done the most to drive endangered species extinct.

When it comes to denying the climate crisis, Inhofe has few peers. The Oklahoma Republican is a driving force behind the tragic lack of U.S. action to tackle this global problem. 2012 saw the publication, to the sound of no hands clapping, of his magnum opus The Greatest Hoax: How the Global Warming Conspiracy Threatens Your Future, by a press also known for its "birther" campaign against President Barack Obama.

"Senator Inhofe's pet theory that climate change is an elaborate hoax would be hilarious, if only he weren't an elected representative of the American people," said Kierán Suckling, the Center's executive director. "If he were, say, a performance artist, it'd be really funny. But sadly he has the power to affect U.S. climate policy. Deniers like Inhofe, in positions of leadership, are dooming future generations of people to a far more difficult world."

As Superstorm Sandy makes clear, our work to combat climate crisis denial is increasingly urgent. Read more on the Rubber Dodo Award in Climate Progress.

Call to Obama: Protect the Marbled Murrelet's Ancient Forest Home
Marbled murreletThe Center for Biological Diversity and 20 other conservation groups are urging the Obama administration to withdraw from an agreement with the timber industry that would slash safeguards for nearly 4 million acres of protected habitat for marbled murrelets and the old-growth forests they call home.

Murrelets are shy, robin-size seabirds that nest on wide branches of old-growth trees. Commercial logging of Pacific Northwest forests propelled them dangerously close to extinction and still poses the greatest threat to their survival. The agreement proposes taking away the "critical habitat" protection of 3.8 million acres of forest where murrelets nest.

"Murrelets urgently need more, not less, habitat protection," said Noah Greenwald, director of Center's endangered species program. "A backroom deal with the timber industry that strips protections for an endangered species is a clear throwback to the Bush days."

Read more in our press release and then take action by telling President Obama to reject this timber-industry deal. 

New Eco-fantasy Novel for Young Readers Has Global Warming Theme
The Shimmers in the NightCenter for Biological Diversity Staff Writer Lydia Millet, a Pulitzer Prize finalist and winner of the PEN-USA Award for Fiction, has a brand-new book out in her eco-fantasy series The Dissenters, intended for readers about 9 years old and up.

The Shimmers in the Night is the second book about 13-year-old named Cara, who lives with her father and two brothers in a rambling house on Cape Cod in the aftermath of her marine biologist mother's disappearance. When Shimmers begins, her younger brother Jax is off at "smart kid boot camp" in Boston; he texts Cara in distress, and she and her two best friends go into action to help fight a sinister force that wants to make the planet over in its own image -- leaving no space for other animals, plants or people.

Buy the book here for your children or the other readers in your life, young or old -- it's a Junior Library Guild Selection and a great way to introduce preteens and teens to themes of global warming and ocean acidification in a way that intrigues and inspires them. When you use the link above to buy Shimmers as a gift, the Center receives 10 percent of proceeds.

You can also buy the first book in the series, The Fires Beneath the Sea, here.

Wild & Weird: Tampa's Renegade Rhesus Monkey
Rhesus macaqueIn a world too rapidly shifting from wilderness to concrete, a new kind of hero may be emerging -- one that, like the superheroes of yesteryear, swings from trees to billboards, from office buildings to Dumpsters; and yet, unlike the superheroes of yesteryear, does not foil bank robbers or turn time backward to save the Hoover Dam. This new mythmaker visits retired grandmothers for morning tea but by midday is baring its teeth, throwing its feces and peeing on wildlife officials.

The pink-faced, toddler-sized Tampa monkey, which has caught the attention of The New York Times and has its own Facebook page, has lived for three years on the lam in highly urbanized South Florida. Nicknamed "Cornelius," the rhesus macaque is believed to hail from a feral clan living near Florida's Silver River, 100 miles away. He's a controversial local-media star: Some fear him, while thousands of others tout him as a rebel hero and even, as one reporter said, a symbol of "good, old-fashioned American freedom."

Sadly, last week a tranquilizer dart from a veterinarian ended the outlaw's escapades -- for now. Admirers are already calling for his liberation.

Read more about Cornelius's exploits in The New York Times and about his capture in the International Business Times.

Friday, December 7, 2012

2012 Humane Awards Announced

Thursday, October 25, 2012 - 11:30am
 1904  72  54  134
Fiona ASPCA Dog of the Year
We are thrilled to announce the recipients of the 2012 ASPCA Humane Awards. This group of outstanding people and animals includes a rescue dog with more than 5.5 million views on YouTube and a 10-year-old horse advocate who has appeared before Congress.
The 2012 ASPCA Humane Award winners include:
ASPCA Dog of the Year
Abandoned in a trash heap, Fiona, an 11-year-old Poodle mix, was sick, covered in dirt, matted, infested with fleas and blind in both eyes. A Los Angeles-based animal rescue group Hope for Paws, came to Fiona’s aid, and with the help of hundreds of donors all over the world, they raised the funds for Fiona’s surgery. Fiona’s miraculous story of survival has since garnered more than 5.5 million views online, a testament to what can be accomplished when homeless animals get a second chance.

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Whales Win in CA


Whales WIN! The California Coastal Commission Sends PG&E Packing


Whale lovers it’s time to CELEBRATE and thank the California Coastal Commission (CCC) for protecting whales, dolphins, sea otters and a long list of other marine wildlife from the devastating impacts of a proposed seismic testing project by PG&E. Last Wednesday, the CCC voted unanimously to deny PG&E’s application to conduct seismic testing in California’s coastal waters adjacent to the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant.
The proposed seismic tests would have blasted powerful underwater air cannons every 15 seconds for 9 days decimating marine life from whales to plankton. PG&E had hoped by doing this and mapping another earthquake fault they could then claim that Diablo Canyon was safe and should have it’s operating licensee renewed. Earthquakes, oceans and nuke plants are a dangerous combination no matter how many tests they do – Fukushima – need I say more.
Nearly 60,000 of you took part on our online action and sent the CCC a message urging them to deny PG&E’s permit request. During the Commission’s deliberations they thanked the public for their comments and participation, letting us all know that they heard us and agreed with us. I too want to thank everyone who contacted the CCC. The coalition that came together to fight this insane proposal was rather amazing with whale lovers, conservationists, fishermen, native Americans and a host of others standing together telling the CCC not now, not ever, our coastal heritage both cultural and environmental is priceless and NOT to be sacrificed for one companies profits.
Several of the commissioners went on to tell PG&E that proposals like this will never be approved in California. Also that PG&E should decommission the Diablo Canyon nuke plant, shut it down permanently and start investing in green energy alternatives. I couldn’t agree more.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012


Demand an end to sea turtle cruelty at the Cayman Turtle Farm

An undercover investigation conducted by WSPA at the Cayman Turtle Farm -- a popular tourist destination and the world's only last remaining facility that raises sea turtles for slaughter -- has revealed disturbing animal cruelty and potential human health risks.
Video footage and photographs from the farm shows thousands of endangered sea turtles being kept in dirty, packed touch tanks. Swimming in water filled with their own waste, the turtles fight for food, bite each other and even resort to cannibalism. Many suffer from disease and birth defects, such as injured fins or missing eyes.
These foul conditions aren't only affecting the resident turtles -- humans could be at risk, as well. WSPA tested and found traces of Salmonella and E. coli in the turtle touch tank waters -- meaning that visitors who touch the sea turtles are at risk for contracting these diseases.
Take action today to urge the Cayman Turtle Farm to end sea turtle farming and transition to a safe and animal-friendly education center.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Dear Jennifer,

We have some exciting news to share with you! After more than 40,000 PETA supporters, including you, wrote to NBC about the use of Crystal the monkey and other wild animals on Animal Practice, the network has canceled the series.

PETA wrote to NBC prior to the show's airing pointing out that wild animals used for TV and film typically undergo physical abuse during pre-production training sessions and are subjected to unnatural and unhealthy living conditions. In addition to our action alert, PETA's efforts included weekly protests outside NBC headquarters in Los Angeles and New York and letters to the show's advertisers asking them to pull their ads from the show. We kept the pressure on through our network of hundreds of thousands of followers on Facebook and Twitter, who helped spread our message.

The cancelation of Animal Practice sends the strong message that using animals for cheap laughs on TV shows is archaic and uninteresting to today's viewers, who are sophisticated enough to know that not only is putting a monkey in a lab coat not funny, it's also cruel.

Thank you for letting your voice be heard and for all that you do for animals!

Sincerely,

petateam-signature.gif

Saturday, November 3, 2012

he Truth about Pit Bulls

Wednesday, October 17, 2012 - 4:00pm
 3932  272  178  317
Happy Pit Bull
“Pit Bull.” There is no other breed of dog—or arguably, any other animal at all—whose mere mention can elicit such strong opinions. Try a word-associate game with your friends: Ask them what they think of when you say “Pit Bull.” Chances are that by the numbers, their responses will be more negative than positive. And it’s no wonder: No other type of dog is as widely banned from housing, legislated against, or incorrectly vilified by the media.
How did we get here?
Pit Bulls were once widely considered ideal family pets—affectionate, loyal and gentle with children. But in recent years, these dogs have suffered tremendously from a combination of overbreeding, bad publicity and irresponsible owners. In reality, the overwhelming majority of Pits and Pit mixes are sweet goofballs who have gotten a very bad rap.
Learn the truth.
National Pit Bull Awareness Day, on October 27, is a day of appreciation and education designed to change perceptions and stereotypes about Pit Bulls and their responsible owners. Please take a moment to learn the truth about these wonderful dogs and consider rescuing one of them from a shelter.
Are you a proud Pit Bull parent? Please participate in National Pit Bull Awareness Day, and help us dispel the myths about these dogs by leaving a comment below about your wonderful pooch.

Friday, November 2, 2012

Black Veil Brides Announce Release Date and Track List for New Album


Los Angeles-based hard rockers Black Veil Brides will release their third album Wretched And Divine: The Story Of The Wild Ones on January 8 via Lava Records/Universal Republic. The album marks the band’s first full length release since 2011’s Set The World On Fire which debuted at #1 on the iTunes Rock chart, #4 on the iTunes overall album chart and #17 on the Billboard Top 200. The pre-order for the new album goes live on iTunes on October 31 and fans who pre-order the whole album will be treated to an instant download of the first single “In The End” which was the theme song for WWE’s Hell In A Cell Pay-Per-View event recently. Wretched And Divive: The Story Of The Wild Ones was produced by John Feldmann known for his work with The Used, Neon Trees, Panic! At The Disco, and The Veronicas, among others.
The tracklisting for Wretched And Divine: The Story Of The Wild Ones is:
1)   Exordium
2)   I Am Bulletproof
3)   New Year’s Day
4)   F.E.A.R. Transmission 1: Stay Close
5)   Wretched And Divine
6)   We Don’t Belong
7)   F.E.A.R. Transmission 2: Trust
8)   Devil’s Choir
9)   Resurrect The Sun
10) Overture
11) Shadows Die
12) Abeyance
13) Days Are Numbered
14) Done For You
15) Nobody’s Hero
16) Lost It All
17) F.E.A.R. Transmission 3: As War Fades
18) In The End

Black Veil Brides Announce 2013 Tour Dates

Black Veil Brides will be hitting the road next year. The band has American and international tour dates for support of their new record, Wretched and Divine: The Story of the Wild Ones, which will be released in January. Dates are posted below.






1/04 – Las Vegas, NV @ Hard Rock Café
1/05 – Phoenix, AZ @ Nile Theatre
1/07 – Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
1/09 – Odessa, TX @ Dos Amigos
1/10 – Dallas, TX @ The Palladium
1/11 – San Antonio, TX @ Backstage Live
1/12 – Houston, TX @ House of Blues
1/14 – Tampa, FL @State Theatre
1/15 – Jacksonville, FL @ The Edge
1/16 – Atlanta, GA @ The Masquerade
1/18 – Baltimore, MD @Rams Head Live
1/19 – Philadelphia, PA @ The Trocadero
1/20 – Sayreville, NJ @ Starland Ballroom
1/22 – Cleveland, OH @ Peabody’s
1/23 – Buffalo, NY @ Infinity
1/25 – New York, NY @ Best Buy Theatre
1/26 – Worcester, MA @ The Palladium
1/27 – Manchester, NH @ Armory
1/29 – Pittsburgh, PA @ Alter Bar
1/30 – Toronto, ON @ Opera House
2/03 — Cardiff, UK @ Cardiff Uni. Great Hall
2/04 — Manchester, UK @ Armory
2/05 — Bristol, UK @ O2 Academy
2/07 — Southhampton, UK @ Guildhall
2/08 — Norwich, UK @ UEA
2/09 —Liverpol, UK @ O2 Academy
2/10 — Glasgow, UK @ O2 Academy
2/12 — Newcastle, UK @ O2 Academy
2/13 — Sheffield, UK @ O2 Academy
2/14 — Birmingham, UK @ O2 Academy
2/15 — London, UK @ O2 Academy Brixton
2/17 – Allentown, PA @ Crocodile Rock
2/19 – Louisville, KY @ Headliners
2/21 – Chicago, IL @House of Blues
2/22 – Detroit, MI @ Crofoot Ballroom
2/23 – Mexico City, MX @ El Plaza Condesa
2/27 – Salt Lake City, UT @ In The Venue
2/28 – Boise, ID Knitting Factory3/01 – Seattle, WA @ Studio Seven
3/02 – Spokane, WA @ Knitting Factory
3/04 – Chico, CA @ Senator Theatre
3/05 – Reno, NV @ Knitting Factory
3/06 – Sacramento, CA @ Ace of Spades
3/08 – San Francisco, CA @ Regency Ballroom

Monday, October 29, 2012

Categorized | Alaska, Arctic, Features, Photo, Video, Wildlife

Orphaned Baby Walrus Charms our Alaska Program Director, Karla Dutton!

Pakak the orphaned walrus at the Alaska SeaLife Center
Quite often in our wildlife conservation jobs, we find ourselves spending far too much time at our desks, instead of viewing the very wildlife we work to protect. That changed for me this past weekend, when I was thrilled to volunteer at the Alaska SeaLife Center (ASLC) to help care for a walrus calf that was orphaned in July when it was separated from its herd off of Barrow, Alaska.
The ASLC is the northern most arctic marine research facility, the only permanent stranding facility for marine mammals in Alaska.  It also houses a research facility and a public aquarium.  In my role as a trained volunteer, I’ve assisted with the care of Steller sea lions, arctic seabirds, and seals.  Working with the walrus calf was a very unique experience.
Walruses, or more specifically in this case Pacific walruses (Odobenus rosmarus divergens), are large flippered marine mammals that live in remote arctic locations. Adult males can weigh more than 3,700 lbs. and, among pinnipeds (the family that includes walruses, seals, and sea lions), are exceeded in size only by the two species of the elephant seal.  Walruses prefer to haul out on sea ice over the continental shelf, near their main food source of mollusks and crustaceans.  But as Arctic sea ice shrinks each year, it becomes more difficult for them to find a safe location to rest and raise their calves safely near their feeding grounds.
The young walrus is healthy and happy, thanks to excellent care by volunteers and SeaLife Center staff.
Knowing about the challenges walruses face made meeting the orphaned calf even more special.  Staff and trained volunteers at the Alaska SeaLife Center care for the calf (who I called Walter) and another walrus calf 24 hours a day, seven days a week.  I worked three four-hour shifts, during which we prepared walrus formula and fed the calf every three hours. He now weighs about 300 pounds! When we were not feeding or cleaning up after him, we spent time with him while he played in his pool filled with icy cold water or explored his pen.  He has since been named Pakak, which means “one who that into everything” in Inupiaq.  This adorable video was taken soon after he arrived:
Walrus are very tactile and social animals. The dedicated staff and volunteer caretakers provide the social interaction that he would otherwise receive from other walruses. Walrus calves almost immediately habituate to human care, and therefore cannot be released into the wild after being rehabilitated.  So the two orphaned walrus will be placed in an aquarium with other walruses in the fall.  Like the iconic polar bear, they will become ambassadors for Arctic wildlife.
Here’s Pakak in a later video enjoying his baby pool, which it looks like he may outgrow very soon!
To learn more http://www.alaskasealife.org/New/rehabilitation/index.php?page=firstpage.php

Related Posts with Thumbnails

This post was written by:

Karla directs the work of Defenders’ Alaska field program team. The Alaska office is focusing increasingly on initiatives on climate change and the related habitat impacts on polar bears.