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A Stork, a Fisherman and Their Unlikely Bond Enchant Turkey

Thirteen years ago, a stork landed on a fisherman’s boat looking for food. He has come back every year since, drawing national attention.

Adem Yilmaz in his fishing boat with his stork companion, Yaren.

Germany’s Beloved Dachshund Could Be Threatened Under Breeding Bill

The bill would strengthen laws around dog breeding, but Germany’s kennel club worries that the legislation could lead to bans on several breeds.

Dachshunds have long been a national symbol in Germany.

Pets or Pests? How Australia Tackles its Two Cat Populations

Experts say that since the overpopulation of both affects native wildlife similarly, the country should use the same strategies in managing them.

A cat inside an apartment building in Sydney, Australia.

Why Snake Catchers in Australia Are Getting Busier

Business is good for snake catchers in Australia, as the period of brumation, a sort of hibernation for reptiles, is shrinking — a result of the warming earth.

Stuart McKenzie catching a carpet python at a home on the Sunshine Coast, Australia.

For Some Mammals, Large Adult Daughters, Not Sons, Are the Norm

Despite a common narrative that male mammals tend to dwarf female ones, fewer than half of mammalian species display that pattern, a new study suggests.

A yellow-winged bat in Kenya. In nearly half of all bat species, females are larger than males.

Zoo Official In India Is Punished For Giving Lions Revered Names

The names, Sita and Akbar, evoking a Hindu goddess and a Muslim emperor, drew outrage from Hindu activists who saw it as blasphemy.

The Bengal Safari park in 2020. Names given to a pair of lions have been drawn into a religious and legal debate.

Report: Joe Biden's Dog, Commander, Involved in 24 Biting Incidents

Par : Paul Bois · Paul Bois
A report indicates that President Joe Biden's dog, Commander, has bitten Secret Service agents as many as 24 times at the White House and other locations.

What’s Causing Cape Town to Smell? A Ship Full of Cows.

As the stench wafted more than a mile inland, the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals found a buildup of dung in the animals’ cramped holding pens.

Cape Town in 2021. The livestock carrier that was the source of this week’s foul odor in the city was expected to leave by Wednesday.

Is That Polar Bear Getting Enough to Eat? Try a Collar With a Camera.

Scientists collected video from 20 bears during ice-free months to understand whether the animals can survive longer periods on land in a warming world.

A female polar bear and her cub on Hudson Bay, near Churchill, Manitoba, in 2022.

Alaska Health Officials: First Deadly Case of Alaskapox Kills Elderly Man

Par : Amy Furr · Amy Furr
Health officials say an elderly man who lived on Alaska's Kenai Peninsula is the first individual to die of a virus known as Alaskapox.

Pigeon Was Cleared of Being a Chinese Spy, but Served 8 Months Anyway

Birds, be careful: Loitering at an Indian port with a microchip on your leg can make people nervous and get you locked up.

The pigeon was released on Tuesday from the veterinary hospital that had held it since it was found wandering in a port with Chinese writing on its wings.

Bullfighting Returns to Mexico City. A Fight Over Its Future Goes On.

After a nearly two-year ban, a legal ruling brought bullfights back to La Plaza México in Mexico City. But the fight continues after a federal judge again stopped the events.

Monkey Who Escaped in Scotland is Captured

A Japanese macaque escaped from a wildlife park on Sunday. After five days of “living his best life,” he was back home on Thursday.

Even Rats Are Taking Selfies Now (and Enjoying It)

A photographer trained two rats to take photographs of themselves. They didn’t want to stop.

Scotland, Joining England and Wales, Will Restrict Bully XL Dogs

The dogs, seen as dangerous by many, will have to be muzzled in public, neutered and microchipped, among other regulations.

Scotland will strictly regulate bully XL dogs, after England and Wales passed similar measures.

'Badly Abused' Arkansas Dog Finds New Home After Nearly 500 Days in a Shelter

An Arkansas rescue dog who had been "badly abused" in his previous home has found a new one after spending nearly 500 days in a shelter.

South Korea Bans Dog Meat, a Now-Unpopular Food

Par : John Yoon
Breeding, killing and selling dogs for their meat will be banned in a country where it has fallen out of favor. Hundreds of thousands of the animal were still being bred for human consumption.

Humane Society International workers rescued a dog at a farm in Wonju, South Korea, in 2017. Under the new law, anyone who butchers dogs for human consumption could face three years in prison or a fine of about $23,000.

‘Welsh Tidy Mouse’ Tidies Tiny Welsh House

For months, a mysterious helper was cleaning up the work bench in Rodney Holbrook’s shed every night. He caught the visitor, tail and all, on video.

The World in Stories: 13 Favorite Dispatches From 2023

Our correspondents ventured to some of the world’s most remote, and dangerous, locales to report stories that reveal a country’s culture and the human condition. Here are our favorites from the year.

Anonymous Good Samaritan Rescues 8 Puppies Abandoned on Texas Highway

An anonymous good Samaritan rescued eight puppies that were abandoned on the side of a Texas highway, the local Humane Society chapter says.

Bad News Bears

Books

Bad News Bears

From TAC’s Bookshelf: The Chinese attitude to animals is very different from our own.

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What would a Chinese future look like? We spend a lot of time in Washington debating the best ways to maintain American power against an increasingly aggressive China, so it’s easy to lose sight of why that’s a goal worth fighting for. Is it just because it’s always better to be on the winning side than the losing one? What would be so bad about a more Chinese world?

Animals would fare poorly in it. It may be a minor thing, but it is a difference between Chinese culture and ours that I can’t help being bothered by. It is hard to find concrete information on animal rights in China, but a useful book on the subject is Animal Welfare in China: Culture, Politics, and Crisis (2021).

Author Peter J. Li states right at the beginning: “The term ‘animal welfare’ is not native to the Chinese language.” No kidding. The Cantonese are famous for their omnivorous and sometimes sadistic eating habits, including brains, eyeballs, scorpions, monkeys, and other (sometimes still) living things. As the saying goes (it is sometimes attributed to the late Prince Philip but I believe it is original to China): If it has four legs and is not a chair, if it has two wings and is not an airplane, the Cantonese will eat it.

The phenomenon is not merely culinary. Animals are mistreated outside the context of food. Bears in zoos are displayed in open pits and pelted with snacks, trash, and other items. In 2002, a man poured concentrated acid on a bear in the Beijing Zoo, just to see how it would react, he said. A viral video in 2017 showed a policeman in Changsha beating a golden retriever to death on the street. Another in 2016 showed a man dragging his pet dog to its death behind his SUV.

The biggest animal abuse in China is the farming of so-called “bile bears,” which today affects around 10,000 animals. Asiatic black bears are kept in tiny cages and open wounds are created in their abdomens so that bile can be extracted from their gall bladders and sold for use in traditional Chinese medicine. Iron corsets prevent the bears from clawing at their stomachs. 

Western activists drew attention to bear farming in the mid-1990s and some regulations were passed, such as a ban on the use of iron catheters. When the company Guizhentang Pharmaceuticals applied to go public on the Shenzhen stock exchange in 2012 to raise funds to expand its bear farming, the IPO was halted due to public outcry over animal cruelty. Yet efforts to ban bear farming entirely have been unsuccessful.

If indifference to animal suffering is native to Chinese culture, the Communists amplified it. Mao considered pet ownership a bourgeois affectation. Li writes that he has never seen a single photo “of a Chinese Communist leader holding or walking with a pet dog.” Pet ownership was officially discouraged by party policy.

As China has opened up, pet ownership has become more common. Authorities estimate that there were 168 million pet dogs in China in 2017, a 900 percent increase since 2003. But the life of a pet dog in China is still fraught with danger, including the threat of being picked up off the street and sold for meat.

“Dog theft for the meat trade is an open secret in China,” Li writes. Most Chinese people never eat dog meat, but it is a popular minority taste in some regions. Between 10 and 15 million dogs are slaughtered and eaten per year, it is estimated. Farming dogs costs more money than their meat is worth, so much of the meat trade relies on other methods for obtaining animals.

“Mainland China is today almost 200 years behind the industrialized nations in lawmaking for animal protection,” Li writes. China’s first animal rights organization, the China Small Animal Protection Association (CSAPA), was founded only in 1992. Great Britain passed its first animal cruelty law in 1822. The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals was founded in 1866.

Yet perhaps Li is wrong to think of this linearly. There is no reason to think that, given enough time, Chinese culture will converge on the same ethic toward animals that the West has. Indeed, based on the panoramic depiction in his book, I rather doubt it.

The post Bad News Bears appeared first on The American Conservative.

A Tokyo Taxi Driver Is Charged With Running Down a Pigeon

The arrest of the 50-year-old driver highlighted the strict law in Japan against harming the birds, even if they take over balconies or get in the way of traffic.

A pigeon at a closed shopping area near Sensoji Temple in Tokyo.

Tasmania Falls for Neil the Seal, a 1,000 Pound Beach Bum

He basks in parking spaces, frolics with traffic cones and generally makes himself at home. But the authorities are worried about the risks of too much time among humans.

Sandra Wray, the owner of a seafood restaurant in Tasmania, Australia, said Neil the Seal often liked to rest in the middle of the road.

Bird Flu Is Still Causing Havoc. Here’s The Latest.

The virus, which recently reached the Antarctic region for the first time, is surging again in North America.

In July, officials in Finnmark, Norway, collected birds that had died of avian flu.

Drug That May Help Big Dogs Live Longer Nears FDA Approval

Par : Amy Furr · Amy Furr
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) may soon green-light a drug that could help large-breed dogs live longer.

A World Map With No National Borders and 1,642 Animals

Anton Thomas, a New Zealander in Melbourne, Australia, has given three years of his life to a hand-drawn map of our planet and its animal inhabitants.

'Absolutely Extraordinary': Extremely Rare White Alligator Born in Orlando's Gatorland

Orlando, Florida's Gatorland has made history with the birth of an extremely rare white leucistic alligator – one of just eight in the entire world.

Britain Says Bye-Bye to Its Only Pandas as They’ll Soon Depart for China

The playful, waddling bears charmed millions of people at the Edinburgh Zoo of the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland.

A large panda seen in its enclosure at the Edinburgh Zoo in Britain in 2020. The country will return its pandas to China after about 12 years of having them as zoo residents.
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