Mother Nature Comments on the Debates
Although President Obama, Gov. Romney and the debate moderators all chose not to raise the topic of climate change, Mother Nature may get the last word.…
Although President Obama, Gov. Romney and the debate moderators all chose not to raise the topic of climate change, Mother Nature may get the last word.…
As an unprecedented political drama continued to unfold outside London’s 10 Downing Street, police had to be called to break up the catfight over who should inhabit the Prime Minister’s official residence.
An eight-year-old girl, dressed in a skunk costume for a Halloween party, was in critical condition at Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh after being shot by her cousin, who thought she was a skunk.
Wildlife park owner Damian Aspinall says it’s time to shut down zoos – especially city zoos. And to make his point, he’s preparing to release an entire family of 11 western lowland gorillas from his wildlife park in England to the wild in Africa as part of his charity’s Back to the Wild project.
How do emperor penguins manage to reach a maximum speed approaching 20 miles an hour when swimming in Antarctic waters where they have to avoid hungry leopard seals? The secret is in the bubbles!
Two thirds of the chimpanzees who died at vivisection laboratories over the past ten years were so sick from chronic illness or multi-organ diseases that they should, by law, have been retired from experimentation. Instead, they were simply held for further research.
That’s the conclusion of a new study from the New England Anti-Vivisection Society (NEAVS) to be published in October 2012 edition of the journal Alternatives to Laboratory Animals.
Kidnapped by human traffickers at age four, Marina Chapman woke up to find herself abandoned in the rain forest of Colombia. She spent the next five years living with Capuchin monkeys – like a female Tarzan.
Now in her 60s, she’s finally telling her story.
Wandering behind the scenes at a Japanese marine zoo, Chinese photographer Huang-Ju came across this scene.
“I saw the workers scrubbing this tank,” he says, “but then I suddenly realized there were dolphins lying in the drained pool. I was shocked at how the staff ignored the dolphin and didn’t seem to be in any hurry to refill the pool.”
The photo won Huan-Ju a special commendation in this year’s photo contest for the Veolia Environnement The World in Our Hands Award.
Proverbially, the world ends either with a bang or with a whimper. But last night we learned that it will end, instead, in silence.
In a debate that was all about how we relate to the rest of the world, neither President Obama nor Gov. Romney ever mentioned the global devastation being wrought by climate change, the mass extinctions that are unfolding, the multiple pandemics that can break loose at any moment, the poisoning of the land, the oceans and the air we breathe, or any of the other enormous threats we face.
Shortly before a giant asteroid smacked into the what is now Mexico’s Yucatan, 65 million years ago, setting off a firestorm, a nuclear winter and the demise of the dinosaurs, a tiny mammal, weighing just over an ounce, was racing up and down trees and staying out of the way. Today, one of her descendants is you.
Are the trees still green where you live? If they are, your memory is not playing tricks on you. Fall really is starting later. But millions of Americans must not be looking out of their windows. A new survey shows that a large number of us are still buying into the propaganda that nothing unusual is really happening.
Deep in the Borneo forest, a clouded leopard peers into a camera that takes a photo whenever it senses movement. For 18 months, researchers from the…
Ring-tailed lemurs on Madagascar More than 400 plants and animals have been added to the “Red List” of species that are considered at risk of extinction…
A new study shows that dogs at a shelter who heard classical music tend to bark less and sleep more than when other kinds of music are playing.
They’re salivating at the prospect of a kill, stalking their prey in the wild, cunning and lethal … and we’re not talking about the wolves, but rather the wolf hunters. Five states – Idaho, Montana, Wyoming, Minnesota and Wisconsin – are back in the business of killing wolves, and ’tis the season for hunters to be jolly.
Last month, I wrote about my friend Tom, who, after doing much to bring an end to the killing of homeless pets, finds himself involved in horse rescue and rehab – one horse at a time. Last month, Spartacus, an 18-year-old Peruvian Paso who had had a horrible life, had just had a visit from the chiropractor. Here’s an update from Tom on how Spartacus is doing a month later:
Sounds like something out of a bad James Bond movie. The Ukrainian navy is training captive dolphins to attack enemy swimmers. According to RIA Novosti: The…
It’s a terrible irony that Happy, the elephant who demonstrated to scientific researchers how animals of her species are capable of a high level of self-awareness, now languishes all alone in a cage about twice the size of her body. No animal with the kind of cognitive abilities that Happy has demonstrated belongs in a zoo – and, worse, in a cage.
It’s bad enough holding dolphins in captivity so people can pay to swim with them. And it’s bad enough that baby alligators were being brought to…
In order to get rock star Morrissey to appear on his show, Stephen Colbert had to agree to his entire studio being free of animal products…