Wednesday, October 29, 2014

October 29/2014


(E.B.W.) Critter Corner

                         



Feature:
Mirroring Our Animal Instincts

           “In early 2012, Deni Bechard was deep in a Congolese rainforest when he found himself up close with a group of bonobos, endangered great apes who, along with chimpanzees, share 98.7% of their DNA with humans. Talking to the B.C.-born writer about it now, you can see that it’s an experience he’s not likely to forget.

           ‘When you see their eyes, when they’re looking at you, you get a real sense of a conscious creature that’s making a decision about you,’ said Bechard, 39.

           …the Democratic Republic of Congo, where Bechard was inspired to spend time in the field with the Bonobo Conservation Initiative (BCI)…

           …Empty Hands, Open Arms, a book that not only provides a rare ray of positivity in an often gloomy field but helps outsiders make sense of the Congo… but it’s the creatures whose rescue & protection drive the BCI who form the book’s heart.

           ‘Bonobos are the only great ape that doesn’t kill,’ Bechard said. “Chimpanzees wage organized war, all males dominate all females. With bonobos, the females dominate, & they protect each other against aggressive males…They share resources. They’re the most peaceful of all the great apes- more peaceful than gorillas, orangutans, chimpanzees, & humans, & therefore a fascinating creature to study’…

           …Bechard has no doubt that his experience with bonobos has left him with a fundamentally altered perspective.

           ‘It has absolutely changed the way I view humans,’ he said. ‘After studying the (non-human) great apes, I see humans more as great apes. It’s easier to be forgiving of our behavior because you kind of understand, ‘This is what we’re programmed to do, these are our reactions, & actions, what we do in certain circumstances’…

           ‘There are many humans who behave like bonobos, who are relatively peaceful in their societies,’ Berchard said. ‘We can travel around the planet, we can enter other cultures & be accepted, we can trade…These are not chimpanzee qualities. But we can go one way or another, & what I think is so fascinating about studying the great apes is it’s a reminder of how rapidly that change can become bonobo-like or chimpanzee-like depending on circumstances. Creating the right circumstances is all the more important for creating the kind of human we want to be’.”

Ian McGillis
The Montreal Gazette
Dec. 2/2013


Cute Critter Pic 



Weekly Chuckle
 




Canadian Links: 
International Fund for Animal Welfare: www.ifaw.org/canada/
Canadian SPCA: https://www.canadahelps.org/en/.../the-canadian-spcala-spca-canadienne/ 












Thursday, October 23, 2014

M.C. (1999- 2014)

(E.B.W.) Critter Corner  

                                     

 On Oct. 19/2014 I had to say a final goodbye to my dear cat M.C. He was my big beautiful black cat & we shared 14 years together. M.C. was my companion through good times & bad. I loved him deeply & he will always be in my heart. Rest in peace senior dude.

2000

September 2005



June 2014
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2012
2013
2014
2014

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

October 15/20014

(E.B.W.) Critter Corner  

                                                

Feature:

Pelican Pancho prefers people


           “HAVANA- Pancho the pelican apparently prefers the company of humans to his own kind, & the grit of the big city to a life spent soaring through the breeze above the Caribbean Sea.

           ‘When I saw him, it was love at first sight,’ said Magela Guerrero, Pancho’s 32- year- old adopted ‘mom’, of whom he’s fiercely protective.

           The bird came into her family’s life in 2011 when a neighbor fishing along Havana’s Malecon seawall found Pancho near death…the neighbor brought the pelican to her door.

           Guerrero nursed him through…an unlikely recovery.

           Pancho’s plumage has long since recovered its silky brown luster & he’s strong enough to flap his wings vigorously, but…he never rejoined his brothers & sisters at sea.

           Guerrero repeatedly tried to reintroduce Pancho into the wild…but he ignored other pelicans flying past.”


Andrea Rodriguez
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Gazette, Montreal
Sept. 7/2013

  

Cute Critter Pic 

Weekly Chuckle


Canadian Links: 
International Fund for Animal Welfare: www.ifaw.org/canada/
Canadian SPCA: https://www.canadahelps.org/en/.../the-canadian-spcala-spca-canadienne/
U.S. Links:
Humane Hollywood: http://www.humanehollywood.org
 


 



Wednesday, October 8, 2014

October 8/2014

(E.B.W.) Critter Corner  

Feature:
Canadian helps identify big fish  

           “A Canadian researcher has helped identify the biggest fish that ever swam in the world’s oceans, a 16.5 metre monster that fed voraciously on plankton during the Middle Jurassic era & vanished about 150 million years ago…

           The fish was named for the Victorian-era fossil hunter Alfred Leeds, who discovered the first Leedsichthys problematicus specimens near Peterborough, England, in the 1880s…fossilized traces of it have been discovered in Britain, France, Germany, Mexico, & Chile…

           The scientists concluded that Leedsichthys matched or exceeded the length of today’s biggest fishes- the whale shark & basking shark, also plankton-eating filter feeders, which top out at about 13 metres…

           ‘The giant plankton-feeders we know to live in today’s oceans are among the largest living vertebrate animals alive. The Leedsichthys was the first animal known to occupy this role,’ lead author Jeff Liston, a paleontologist- with National Museums Scotland, said…

           The researchers determined that Leedsichthys would have grown to about 9 metres after 20 years &- if it lived long enough- could have reached 16.5 metres after 38 years.

           ‘This fish was a pioneer for the ecological niche filled today by mammals, like blue whales, & cartilaginous fish, such as manta rays, basking sharks, whale sharks’…

           One of the largest fish ever documented in modern times was a basking shark caught in a herring net in Canada’s Bay of Fundy in 1851. It measured 12.27 metres in length & weighed about 19 tonnes.”
 

Randy Boswell
POSTMEDIA NEWS
The Gazette, Montreal
August 27/2013
 



Critters in the News:

*Update from last week
“The Detroit Zoo says it’s taking care of more than 1,000 turtles U.S. authorities said were…found in a Canadian man’s luggage at the city’s airport…The confiscated turtles are mostly hatchlings.”

The Montreal Gazette
Oct. 4/2014

Baby Elephant @ Zurich Zoo
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-buzz/baby-elephant-takes-a-tumble-at-zoo-zurich-herd-rushes-190429734.html?vp=1

Cute Critter Pic 

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Weekly Chuckle

Canadian Links: 
International Fund for Animal Welfare: www.ifaw.org/canada/
Canadian SPCA: https://www.canadahelps.org/en/.../the-canadian-spcala-spca-canadienne/
U.S. Links:
Humane Hollywood: http://www.humanehollywood.org
 











Wednesday, October 1, 2014

October 1/2014


(E.B.W.) Critter Corner  
 Feature:
Cow Gives Birth To Rare Live Quadruplet Calves

           “PICADURA, CUBA- Holy Cow! A Cuban diary farmer says one of his cows has given birth to 4 healthy calves, a highly rare occurrence. Veterinarian Andres Rodriguez runs state-owned dairy No. 128 in Picadura, about 70 km east of Havana. He says he was shocked when he went to help a 3-year-old cow named Aleli give birth…She’d already had one calf when he got her. Then another was born. And another, & another. 3 are male, & 1 a hermaphrodite.”



in The Gazette, Montreal

Sept. 21/2013




Critters in the News:

 Sept. 26/2014-

Canadian charged after border agents say more than 50 turtles found on his body (https://ca.news.yahoo.com/canadian-charged-border-agents-more-50-turtles-found-194910840.html)

Goldfish Gets Brain Tumor Removed, Will Just Keep Swimming For Years To Come (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/09/15/goldfish-gets-tumor-removed_n_5824538.html)

Cute Critter Pic              
                                                                         

Weekly Chuckle




Canadian Links: 
International Fund for Animal Welfare: www.ifaw.org/canada/ 

U.S. Links:

Humane Hollywood: http://www.humanehollywood.org