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  • 18
    Aug
    2011
    10:17am, EDT

    Endangered animals seized from smugglers in the Philippines

    Dozens of endangered animals were seized from illegal traders in the Philippines on Wednesday, according to a police official who spoke to EPA. Manila Police intelligence chief Ernesto Fojas said authorities seized 50 talking myna birds, one serpent eagle and 30 Asian box turtles from the accused traders, who were named as Luz Estacio, James Ferolino and Jake Vargas. All three species are considered critically endangered in the Philippines, facing an extremely high risk of extinction in the wild, according to EPA. 

    Francis R. Malasig / EPA

    Myna birds seized from illegal traders are seen inside a police station in Manila, the Philippines on August 18. Several endangered animal species were seized from three illegal traders in Manila on Wednesday, a police official said.

    Francis R. Malasig / EPA

    Accused trader Luz Estacio sits inside a jail as she looks at a serpent eagle, one of the seized animals, at a police station in Manila on August 18.

    Cheryl Ravelo / Reuters

    An Asian box turtle is tagged by a veterinarian at the Manila zoo on August 18. Police turned over the animals seized from smugglers to the Manila zoo, according to authorities.

    To learn more about the illegal trade in Asian wildlife, watch photographer Patrick Brown's project Black Market.

    Related content on PhotoBlog:

    • Reptile smuggling is no teddy bears' picnic
    • 451 turtles rescued after being smuggled on plane
    • Smuggled shipment of sea turtles and coral intercepted in Philippines
    • Curious newborn pangolin greets photographers
    • Baby elephant tortured into submission before illegal smuggling from Burma to Thailand
    • Exotic animals found in suitcases at Bangkok airport

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: philippines, asia, animals, smuggling, wildlife, world-news, animal-rights, manila, wildlife-trade, myna-bird
  • 30
    Jun
    2011
    8:47am, EDT

    Reptile smuggling is no teddy bears' picnic

    A couple from Hong Kong have been arrested for attempting to smuggle reptiles out of Australia by hiding them inside teddy bears.

    The 27-year-old man and 30-year-old woman were detained by customs officials in the city of Perth on Wednesday night.

    A search led to the discovery of 12 bobtail lizards, several soft toys, packaging and postage material, according to a statement released by the Department of Environment and Conservation (DEC).

    Western Australian Department of Environment and Conservation

    A Department of Environment and Conservation (DEC) officer slits open a teddy bear. A Hong Kong couple have been arrested in Perth, Australia, for attempting to export reptiles concealed inside teddy bears.

    Authorities had been monitoring the pair after they allegedly made several attempts to post teddy bears overseas which contained more than 18 bobtail lizards, sand swimmer skinks and crevice skinks.

    Over the past 12 weeks, a total of six packages in four consignments were intercepted by Customs and Border Protection at Perth Mail center, the statement said.

    Western Australian Department of Environment and Conservation

    One of the bobtail lizards discovered after the arrest of two wildlife smugglers.

    DEC senior wildlife investigator Rick Dawson said bobtail lizards were worth up to 7500 AUD ($8,000) on the Asian black market.

    "While common in Western Australia, these lizards are highly sought after in Asia because they are easy to care for, attractive, and exotic," he said.

    "In some instances the reptiles' eyes had been taped up, and the cold and cramped conditions they would have had to endure on a long journey without food or water in a cargo hold is abhorrent."

    "This joint effort between Customs and Border Protection and the Department of Environment and Conservation demonstrates that we are committed to putting an end to this cruel practice."

    The seized reptiles were due to be assessed by veterinary staff at Perth Zoo on Thursday.

    Western Australian Department of Environment and Conservation

    A DEC officer examines one of the reptiles.

    To learn more about the illegal trade in Asian wildlife, watch photographer Patrick Brown's project Black Market.

    1 comment

    I cant stand lizards but taping them up like that is just cruel!!

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    Explore related topics: animals, australia, smuggling, lizard, wildlife, world-news, perth, animal-rights, oceania, teddy-bear, wildlife-trade
  • 9
    Jun
    2011
    6:04am, EDT

    Asthma sufferers line up to swallow live fish

    The AP reports from HYDERABAD, India:

    Thousands of people seeking relief from asthma gathered in southern India on Wednesday to swallow live sardines smeared with secret herbs that they believe will cure them.

    People travel every June from across India to Hyderabad for the treatment offered free by one family on a day chosen by astrologers. Continue reading.

    Mahesh Kumar A / AP

    A member of the Goud family inserts herbal medicine into a fish before administering it to a patient in what is believed to be a cure for asthma, in Hyderabad, India on June 8.

    Mahesh Kumar A. / AP

    A child sticks out her tongue to swallow live sardines smeared with secret herbs in Hyderabad on June 8.

     

    1 comment

    Raising circulating (blood serum) levels of vitamin D in asthmatic children (and adults!) will do more to prevent and treat the disease than any current protocol. Look at the research- the recent studies- and see that asthma symptoms/diagnosis is DIRECTLY linked to circulating vitamin D levels.

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    Explore related topics: india, health, south-asia, fish, world-news, asthma, hyderabad, animal-rights
  • 12
    Apr
    2011
    5:58am, EDT

    Live fish and reptiles sold as keychain fashion accessories

    AP

    Live fish, small tortoises and young giant salamanders sealed in plastic pouches and sold as keychains are displayed at a roadside stall in Beijing, China on April 12. Each keychain is sold for 10 yuan (USD $1.50). The vendor claims a special liquid inside provides oxygen and nutrients for the creatures.

    AP

    A customer holds up a plastic keychain containing two live goldfish at a roadside stall in Beijing, China on April 12.

     

    105 comments

    I'm betting inside of a couple days the purchaser is carrying around a dead and rotting animal on their keychain. While this isn't baby seals and unlikely to capture the attention of celebrities, it is still appalling.

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    Explore related topics: china, fish, reptiles, animal-rights, keychain
  • 23
    Mar
    2011
    9:25am, EDT

    Shocking number of animals dying at Kiev Zoo

    Maria Danilova of AP reports from Kiev, Ukraine: An Indian elephant called Boy, the pride of the Kiev Zoo, collapsed and died in his enclosure. Around the same time, Maya the camel succumbed to a digestive illness and Theo the zebra died after crashing into a metal fence. And there's more, much more.

    AP file

    Boy, a 39-year-old Indian elephant, lies in his pen covered with a cloth after he collapsed and died on April 26, 2010. Animal welfare groups say dozens if not hundreds of animals have died at Kiev Zoo in recent years due to malnutrition, a lack of medical care and mistreatment, and some suspect that corruption is at the heart of the problem. Naturewatch, a British-based animal welfare group, is among the organizations calling for the 100-year-old zoo to be closed and its animals sent elsewhere in Europe.

    The animals just keep on dying at the Kiev Zoo, a place some have likened to an unkempt warehouse for those with fur and feathers. Animal welfare groups say dozens if not hundreds of animals have died at the zoo in recent years due to malnutrition, a lack of medical care and mistreatment — and some suspect that corruption is at the heart of the problem.

    Naturewatch, a British-based animal welfare group, is among the organizations calling for the 100-year-old zoo to be closed and its animals sent elsewhere in Europe.

    "The Kiev Zoo will never attain any basic standards, it's so far removed from any zoo in Europe," said John Ruane of Naturewatch. "The conditions have been absolutely horrendous and no matter how many more directors were appointed the situation still remained the same."

    New managers appointed in October said that nearly half of the zoo's animals either died or mysteriously disappeared over two years under their predecessors, and a government audit found that thousands of dollars were misspent as animals were illegally sold and funds earmarked for their food and care disappeared. Ukrainian prosecutors have also opened an investigation.

    But despite the management change, the zoo's animals are still dying. Some activists suspect a secret real estate deal is in the works — that the zoo is being deliberately decimated so it can be closed down and the prime land that it sits on in the center of Kiev can be sold.

    Genya Savilov / AFP - Getty Images file

    People hold candles and pictures of dead elephant Boy during a protest in front of the Kiev city administration on April 30, 2010. Ukraine prosecutors are probing the suspected poisoning of 40-year-old Asian elephant Boy who dropped dead at Kiev Zoo on April 26, 2010. Kiev prosecutors quoted by the Interfax agency said they had opened a probe into the death, after zoo officials suspected poisoning.

    Other violations included the purchase of medication for already deceased apes, paying for hyenas that were never shipped to the zoo, the illegal sale of 12 macaques, the unrecorded sale of zoo tickets and the misallocation of funds earmarked for feeding zoo animals. The violations totaled 1.6 million hryvna ($200,000 or €140,000), according to Irina Parkhomenko, spokeswoman for the government auditing agency.

    Once the jewel of the Ukrainian capital and a favorite weekend spot for families, the zoo began to deteriorate after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union and the years of poverty that followed. Animals were kept in cramped, poorly lit and poorly heated enclosures, fed improperly and left unattended, according to watchdogs.

    The Kiev Zoo gained international notoriety in 2007 when it was expelled from the European Association of Zoos and Aquaria after the tragic death of a female bear.

    The elderly brown bear named Dinara had been moved from a small enclosure where she had spent all her life to a bigger pen with a male Malayan sun bear. Stressed by the new premises and her new companion, Dinara began to bang her head against the concrete walls of the enclosure, leaving blood stains on the walls and floor. After days of this, she was euthanized.

    On a recent visit, the zoo looked desolate. The elephant's pen stood empty, a lonely wolf paced an open-air enclosure, a collection of farm animals was closed to visitors and two giraffes were locked in two small indoor cells.

    The zoo's problems grew worse under the leadership of the city's eccentric mayor, Leonid Chernovetsky, who has been widely accused of mismanagement. Under his appointed zoo director, Svitlana Berzina, about a quarter of the animals died and another quarter disappeared in the two years before she was ousted in October, according to the new zoo director, Oleksiy Tolstoukhov.

    Sergei Chuzavkov / AP

    Zebras walk in the zoological garden in Kiev Zoo on March 16, 2011.

    Boy, the biggest Indian elephant in a European zoo, collapsed in his enclosure and died in April at age 39. Berzina denied any wrongdoing and claimed the elephant was poisoned.

    Others disagree. Serhiy Hryhoryev, a zoo worker who has set up a group to protect the animals, believes that Boy was killed by a yo-yo diet. He said zoo staff considered Boy to be overweight and put him on a diet of mainly water and hay, causing him to lose more than a third of his weight in four months.

    "By the end, his ribs were sticking out," Hryhoryev said.

    Then Boy was put back on beets, carrots and apples, which caused rapid weight gain, which Hryhoryev said led to the elephant's heart failure. An autopsy was inconclusive.

    A month later, Maya the camel died. Hryhoryev said zoo workers failed to treat her for abdominal bloating after a sudden diet change. The zoo, however, blamed the death on a mysterious poisoner, a middle-aged man with an earring who just happened to resemble the whistleblower Hryhoryev. He was fired from his job but then reinstated through a court order late last year.

    Theo the zebra died in late March after being separated from his female companions, as the animals were let outside after spending the winter in cramped indoor quarters. The male zebra threw himself into a metal fence in a desperate attempt to reach the females.

    Officials are having a hard time determining exactly how many animals died or disappeared under the previous management. The zoo now has 2,600 animals from 328 species.

    Oleksandr Mazurchak, deputy head of the Kiev city administration, said about 250 animals died due to "problems" during two years under Berzina. The government audit last year also found that 131 other animals were missing.

    Mazurchak said 50 animals have died since Tolstoukhov took over, though most from old age. But some deaths could have been avoided, like those of the three fish that died in late December when a power outage stopped the flow of oxygen into their tank.

    Defending his record, the new director said the zoo has not purchased any new animals in recent years due to funding shortages and 60 percent of the zoo's animals are approaching the end of their natural life span anyway.

    "It's not as bad as they say," Tolstoukhov said. "In all the zoos, including in Europe, animals don't live a million years. They also die and get sick."

    But Volodymyr Boreiko, an ecologist who has monitored developments at the zoo, said in a report last week that the number of animals that have died since the new managers took over in October is closer to 250 and includes a penguin, a crane, turkeys and mongooses. The zoo said his findings are falsified.

    Sergei Supinsky / AFP - Getty Images file

    Ukrainian animals-rights organization activists, locked in a cage and wearing masks, tke part in a protest called 'No ZOOcide!' at the entrance of Kiev Zoo on December 20, 2009. The protesters demanded an improvement in animal-keeping conditions at the zoo.

    Tolstoukhov said the zoo hopes to attract funds to restore existing enclosures and build new ones, and to repair the heating, air conditioning and electric systems. The zoo also plans to acquire new animals, including two young female elephants and 12 blue sheep.

    He denied any plans to sell the 34 hectares (84 acres) of land the zoo occupies in central Kiev.

    Luisa Kuznetsova, 26, who came to the zoo last week with her 2-year-old twins Kolya and Karina, hopes it can be saved.

    "I want there to be a beautiful zoo here with all the beautiful animals because the kids are growing and the zoo helps them develop," Kuznetsova said as the twins watched a giraffe attempt to kiss them through a glass wall.

    But Tamara Tarnavska of the Kiev-based SOS animal rights group believes the zoo must be closed to protect its animals from further abuse.

    "The zoo is in such a condition that it's no longer a zoo, it's a concentration camp," Tarnavska said. "When I look those animals in the eyes, I am ashamed to be a human being."

    174 comments

    shut it down and move those animals to a better facility!!!! no excuses. who are we to keep these animals in these conditions? they are all living, feeling creatures that deserve a decent life. end of story!!!! this story made me sick.

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    Explore related topics: europe, animals, ukraine, world-news, animal-rights, kiev, cruelty-to-animals, kiev-zoo, boy-the-elephant, dying-animals
  • 1
    Mar
    2011
    12:06pm, EST

    Vadim Ghirda / AP

    Hercules, a small dog, was rescued after an accident left its back legs paralyzed. He is seen at a demonstration by animal rights activists against plans to euthanize stray dogs in Bucharest, Romania, on Tuesday, Mar. 1. According to local media there are 50,000 stray dogs in the Romanian capital of which 60 percent are sterilized.

    Dog on wheels attends demonstration against euthanasia

    .

    10 comments

    If the vote is passed that says they will euthanize the stray dogs then it will be a huge tragedy! Botosani in May will never ever be forgotten! Those lost souls some all ready to be adopted and fostered gone! Neuter and spay is the option and only option over the inhumane cruel and totally disgusti …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: animal-rights, animal-tracks, jwoods
  • 16
    Dec
    2010
    9:54pm, EST

    Saving rare black rhinos in Kenya

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    Two male Rhinoceros lock horns playfully while pasturing in the savanah at the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy on Dec. 10.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    Three park rangers look through their binoculars while sitting in the shade of a tree at the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in central Kenya on Dec.9.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    The carcass of a Rhino shot dead by poachers and later scavanged by wild animals lies on the ground at the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in central Kenya on Dec. 9.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    John Pameri, head of the security at the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in central Kenya, holds a Rhino tusk his team took from a Rhino that was shot dead by poachers earlier in the week, at the security headquarters on Dec. 9.

    Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

    John Pameri, head of the security at the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy in central Kenya, speaks in front of board showing digital images of dead rhinoceros at the security headquarters on Dec 9.

    By James Cheng

     

    According to AFP, two rhinos were killed by poachers at the conservancy during 2010 and two in the last two months. Conservancy officials are alarmed by a sharp increase in the poaching activity which they say is fueled by a high demand for Rhino horns in Asia and especially China. Poachers can sell the horns to the first intermediary for about 8,000 USD per kilo as the two horns of an adult Rhino weight more or less 10 kilos. Spanning 62,000 acres, Lewa is home to more than 10 percent of Kenya s black rhino population and over 14 percent of Kenya’s white rhino population.

    Also, Reuters reporting, poachers kill rare black rhino at Serengeti park, see full story from here.

     

    5 comments

    The Chinese public are real schmucks because of their demands for rhino horns, shark fins, and bear organs. They may be the most superstitious people on earth.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, environment, kenya, rhino, poaching, animal-rights, serengeti
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Jonathan Woods worked for msnbc.com for three years, ending in 2012. For six years prior he worked as a photojournalist and multimedia producer for four newspapers across the U.S., including the Rocky Mountain News in Denver. Woods earned his B.A. in photojournalism from Western Kentucky University. He is now working for TIME Magazine, leading a team of picture editors online for TIME.com.

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