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The New Zealand government said Tuesday that it would ban greyhound racing starting in 2026, citing concerns over the rate of injuries and fatalities among racing dogs. Commercial greyhound racing remains legal in only a few countries around the world, including the United States, Australia, Britain and Ireland. The government proposed a bill on Tuesday to prevent the unnecessary killing of racing dogs, while legislation to outlaw greyhound racing altogether will be introduced next year, allowing it to be phased out over the next 20 months. Peters said the greyhound racing industry would be able to make submissions on the legislation. He also said the government would work with animal welfare groups to rehome about 2,900 racing dogs.
Persons: Winston Peters, Peters, ” Sean Hannan, , , ” Hannan, Arnja Dale, ’ GRNZ Organizations: New, Racing, Greyhound Racing New Zealand, greyhounds, New Zealand Locations: New Zealand, United States, Australia, Britain, Ireland
Wellington, New Zealand AP —New Zealand plans to outlaw greyhound racing because too many dogs are hurt or killed, the government said Tuesday, spelling an end to the practice in one of the few countries where it still operates. Commercial greyhound racing continues in the United States, Australia, the UK and Ireland, with only two tracks remaining in the US after many states ended the practice. Unease over animal welfareNew Zealand’s greyhound racing industry has faced repeated reviews in recent years over its dog safety record, with multiple reports urging sweeping changes. A racing industry in global declineSome lawmakers in parliament on Tuesday described the racing industry’s end as inevitable following the steady decline of greyhound racing worldwide. Greyhound racing is also legal in Australia, where critics have decried the practice, and the rules governing it vary by state.
Persons: Winston Peters, Peters, , ” Peters, , Sean Hannan, SPCA, Arnja Dale Organizations: New Zealand AP, greyhounds, Racing, New Zealand greyhounds, Greyhound, Zealand, Greyhounds, Scottish Locations: Wellington, New Zealand, Zealand, United States, Australia, Ireland, Greyhound Racing, West Virginia, , Iowa , Arkansas, Florida, Mexico, Vietnam
When a man arrived at a New Hampshire animal shelter last week claiming he wanted to surrender 150 pet mice, the shelter was ready to take them in. But the problem soon became much more mouse-ive when he clarified that he had 150 tubs full of mice to surrender, not 150 individual rodents. The overwhelmed mouse owner initially brought 73 mice last Monday, the New Hampshire Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said in a Thursday news release. The shelter said they expect the number of mice to grow to nearly 1,000. These are pet mice, or "fancy mice," the shelter confirmed in the release.
Persons: Charles Krupa, They've, Savannah Alcero Organizations: New Hampshire Society for, Staff, New, New Hampshire SPCA, New England Federation of Humane Organizations Locations: New Hampshire, Stratham, N.H, New England, Savannah
CNN —When an overwhelmed man came to a New Hampshire animal shelter last week hoping to surrender 150 mice, shelter employees were ready to assist. But now, the shelter is facing an “enormous” breeding problem, the director said – because the man didn’t have just 150 mice. “When he first arrived, he said he had 150 mice,” said Lisa Dennison, executive director of the New Hampshire Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. “The breeding of the mice has just created this enormous problem for him,” Dennison told CNN on Sunday. “With a gestation period of just around 20 days, mice can reproduce at an alarming rate.”Staff and volunteers attend to surrendered pet mice at the New Hampshire SPCA.
Persons: , Lisa Dennison, ” Dennison, , ” NHSPCA, NHSPCA, Savannah Alcero, Charles Krupa, Lexi Giannopoulos, Dennison, Elisha Murray, Kelly, Dee, “ We’ve, Doug, Daryl Organizations: CNN, New Hampshire Society for, Sunday, ” Staff, New, New Hampshire SPCA, Associated Press Locations: New Hampshire, Savannah, Stratham , New Hampshire
THE SNOW SHOWAt 44 years old, Nancy Snow was a force to be reckoned with. And she loved us so much,” Justine Snow told Dateline. Nancy Snow made the most of her time there. Nancy Snow Justine Snow“We can place her at BWI airport,” David Cordle, retired chief investigator for the Anne Arundel County State Attorney’s Office, told Dateline. “Nancy Snow was one of the ones that I had ended up with.”Cordle worked on Nancy’s case for decades.
Persons: , William Noel, Snow, ” Corporal Noel, , it’s, Nancy Snow, “ Nancy, ” Cpl, Noel, she’s, ” Nancy Snow, Stacy, Justine, Kimberly Justine Snow, Justine Snow, Kimberly, ” Justine, Nancy, Nancy Snow Justine Snow Nancy, Clint Eastwood’s, ’ ” Justine, Justine Snow “, Gene McNary’s, Thomas Eagleton, Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, McNary, Eagleton, Nancy Snow Justine Snow, ” David Cordle, ” Cordle, Cordle, “ Nancy Snow, Louis, , Corporal Noel, she’d, St . Louis, ‘ I’m, hadn’t, She’s, NANCY SNOW, Nancy Snow Justine Snow Justine, J, Jay, “ We’ve, David Cordle, doesn’t, “ I’ve, Nancy Justine Snow, Jane Doe, Jane, Jane Doe’s, nothing’s, Cpl, ” Nancy Snow Justine Snow Organizations: City of, City of Annapolis Police Department, New York Times, Army, Volkswagen, California Bay Area, Republican National Committee, RNC, U.S . Senate, Anne, Attorney’s Office, Annapolis police, Annapolis Police Department, St, Baltimore, ” Authorities, VW, Nancy Locations: City of Annapolis, Europe, Germany, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Italy, France, U.S, California, Maryland, KMST, East Coast, Annapolis, St, Louis , Missouri, , Baltimore, East Coast from Missouri, BWI, Anne Arundel County, St ., Connecticut, , Nancy’s, Caribbean, Florida — Fort Lauderdale, Bahamas, Georgia , Connecticut, CODIS
“We had to leave without him,” Anguiano told KSBW. However, they adopted another cat a month after Rayne Beau went missing to keep his sister company, Anguiano told CNN. Then, 61 days after Rayne Beau went missing, the couple received a notification about a cat with Rayne Beau’s identification number being located, KSBW reported. Rayne Beau was found in Roseville, California, around 190 miles away from his home in Salinas. The couple said they’re not sure how Rayne Beau made it all the way back to California, but they are thankful he’s back home.
Persons: Rayne Beau, Susanne, Benny Anguiano, , Anguiano, , ” Anguiano, KSBW, ” Rayne Beau, Susanne Anguiano, Starr, Rayne, Leilani Fratis, ” Fratis, they’re, Organizations: CNN, KSBW, Placer Society Locations: Yellowstone, Salinas , California, Wyoming, Roseville , California, Salinas, Roseville, California
Benny and Susanne Anguiano, a couple from Salinas, California, were reunited with their missing cat after he mysteriously traveled that distance. On a trip to Yellowstone National Park in early June, the couple's beloved house cat, Rayne Beau, was spooked and ran off into the dense trees. "We had to leave without him,” Susanne Anguiano said in an interview with NBC affiliate KSBW. "He was really depleted," Susanne Anguiano told KSBW. "Definitely microchip your cat or your pet and register the microchip online," Susanne Anguiano told KSBW.
Persons: , Benny, Susanne Anguiano, Rayne Beau, Benny Anguiano, ” Susanne Anguiano, KSBW, Rayne Beau's, Rayne Organizations: NBC News, Yellowstone, NBC Locations: Salinas , California, Yellowstone, Roseville , California
AdvertisementHere are the 10 riskiest states for your pet, the most common diseases to watch out for, and some basic tips for keeping your pet happy and healthy. Top 10 riskiest states for your petForbes Advisor created its own ranking scale based on data from all 19 diseases. Two of these 10 states, West Virginia and Maine, were also among the top three riskiest states for tick-borne diseases. The most common diseases to watch out forTicksTick-borne diseases like Lyme Disease, anaplasmosis, and ehrlichiosis are especially common in the spring and summer months. Fever, lethargy, loss of appetite, and joint stiffness or pain are all common symptoms of these three tick-borne diseases.
Persons: , Alexandria Cremer, Peter M, Fisher, It's Organizations: Service, Forbes, Business, Center for Disease Control, American Veterinary Medical Association, York, West Virginia, Veterinary Clinic, Watch, Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine, American Society for, FDA, US, MetLife, Animal Foundation Locations: Jersey, Coast, Rhode, , New Jersey , Maine , New York, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maine, Arkansas, South Dakota , Wisconsin, New Mexico , Mississippi, Oklahoma, Kentucky, Mississippi, Brandywine
CNN —An upstate New York man was forced to say “see you later, alligator” to his unusual pet after local authorities determined he was keeping the reptile illegally. Environmental Conservation police officers seized the 11-foot, 750-pound pet alligator from a Hamburg home on Wednesday, according to a Facebook post from the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. “I’m Albert’s dad, that’s all there is to it,” his owner Tony Cavallaro told WKBW. “He’s like family to everybody.”Cavallaro told WKBW his license to own Albert had expired in 2021 and he tried unsuccessfully to renew it with the Department of Environmental Conservation. Owning any animal classified as a “dangerous animal” – including alligators – is illegal in New York unless the owner has a Dangerous Animal License from the Department of Environmental Conservation.
Persons: , Albert, that’s, Tony Cavallaro, WKBW, , ” Cavallaro Organizations: CNN, Environmental Conservation, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, Facebook, WKBW, Department of Environmental Conservation, Environmental, Locations: upstate New York, Hamburg, Erie, New York, Erie County , New York, Buffalo
CNN —A pigeon suspected of spying for China and held for eight months was released by Indian officials this week after intervention from animal rights organization PETA, the group said in a statement. “After learning that a pigeon was held at the Bai Sakarbai Dinshaw Petit Hospital for Animals (BSDPHA) in Parel as case property for an astonishing eight months, PETA India sprang into action to secure the bird’s freedom from captivity,” PETA said. The animal’s ordeal began in May last year, when it was captured near a port in Mumbai. There was a message written on the pigeon’s wings in words that appeared to be Chinese, PETA added. B. Kulkarni, Chief Medical Superintendent of the BSDPHA,” PETA said.
Persons: Dinshaw, , Mumbai’s, Narendra Modi, B, Kulkarni, Bombay SPCA, Hvaldimir Organizations: CNN, Indian, PETA, Hospital for Animals, ” PETA, ” CNN, Bombay Society for Locations: China, Parel, PETA India, Mumbai, Bombay, Russian
NORTH BELLMORE, N.Y. (AP) — Authorities seized about a hundred animals from a Long Island home packed with exotic species — including a giant African snail, a sulcata tortoise and a South American ostrich, advocates said Friday. The menagerie's owner was cited for 30 violations related to the illegal possession of animals, according to the advocacy group Humane Long Island. Especially not in someone’s shed or their basement,” said John Di Leonardo, the group's president and executive director. The group took custody of several dozen animals, including a five-month-old, female South American ostrich — or lesser rhea — named Eddy found in the crowded basement. Authorities said the investigation began after the man began appearing with animals at events like birthday shows and street fairs.
Persons: , John Di Leonardo, rhea —, Eddy, Di Leonardo, rhea, Matt Roper, Roper, ” Roper Organizations: — Authorities, Nassau County SPCA, Authorities Locations: North Bellmore, New York City, Nassau County
Hong Kong CNN —It’s dusk in Hong Kong Park. On a sweltering summer day in Hong Kong Park, nestled between skyscrapers in the urban center of the Asian metropolis, a yellow-crested cockatoo perches on a branch. Noemi Cassanelli/CNN Yellow-crested cockatoos nest in old trees, typically more than 100 years old, which form cavities in the trunk. Hong Kong, despite its urban sprawl and concrete veneer, is a stronghold for several endangered species, including Chinese pangolins, Hong Kong groupers, and the black-faced spoonbill. (According to the AFCD, it has “not received any report related to poaching of yellow-crested cockatoos in the past three years.”)Extremely picky about where they roost, the yellow-crested cockatoos use cavities that form in the trunks of trees that are typically older than 100 years.
Persons: Hong Kong CNN —, , Astrid Andersson, it’s, , Andersson, Quadrupling, Noemi Cassanelli, Cassanelli, CNN Andersson, CNN There's, they’ve, , Tom Booth, Fox, It’s, , Fiona Woodhouse, Woodhouse, Hong Kong’s, Jovy Chan, Chan, “ They’ve Organizations: CNN, Hong Kong CNN, Press, University of Hong, Timor Leste, International Trade, Fisheries, Conservation Department, CITES, Scottish wildcats, ADM Capital Foundation, Society for, Bird, Cultural Services Department, Facebook, Hong, SPCA HK, WWF Locations: Hong Kong, Swedish, Indonesia, Timor, Australia, University of Hong Kong, Hong, , Mainland China, HKD28,000, Indonesian
Can Literal Mall Rats Save the Mall?
  + stars: | 2023-05-09 | by ( Claudia Rosenbaum | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
When Alia Mahmud visited Westfield Annapolis Mall in February 2022, she didn’t go to buy clothes, or to watch a movie or to even meet up with her girlfriends. She was looking for rats. A week earlier, Ms. Mahmud saw a post online about a pack of rodents at the SPCA of Anne Arundel County, whose shelter opened an outpost at the mall in September 2020. When she arrived at the new location and approached the rat enclosure, she saw Snoofles, Algernon and Ikit, 5-month-old sisters who perked up and pressed their pink noses through their crate to get a better look at Ms. Mahmud and her boyfriend. “They kind of ran up to us and said hi,” said Ms. Mahmud, 32, a school therapist in Alexandria, Va. “They melted our hearts with how little, affectionate and outgoing they were from the beginning.”But it wasn’t until a meet-and-greet days later when Ms. Mahmud finally decided to take them home, where Snoofles proceeded to run down her shirt.
CNN —A contest planned for children in New Zealand to hunt and kill feral cats as part of a drive to protect native species has been axed following backlash from the public and animal rights groups. In neighboring Australia, authorities say feral cats threaten the survival of more than 100 native species. Feral cats are blamed for killing millions of birds, reptiles, frogs and mammals, every day, prompting authorities to arrange regular culls. The New Zealand Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals said it was “both pleased and relieved” that the cat-killing contest for children had been removed. Blackie, who has studied feral cats for two decades, said numbers had exploded in the last decade, and in some areas where pests were tracked by camera, feral cats outnumbered other species like possums.
Ralphie, who went viral earlier this year for a Facebook post that described him with brutal honesty, has been adopted. Ralphie spent time with the Niagara SPCA this year after two owners decided he was too much to handle. The 26-pound, one-year-old white French bulldog with black spots drew quite a bit of attention earlier this year after a January Facebook post described the temperamental pup as "a whole jerk." "Ralphie is a terror in a somewhat small package," a January Facebook post from the Niagara County SPCA read. However, as someone with experience training dogs, Jason knew helping Ralphie through his triggers and aggression would take time.
But for Ralphie, a dog currently with the Niagara SPCA, the shelter decided to use a different strategy. A popular Facebook post shared over 700 times since last week describes the pup as "a whole jerk." What could go wrong with a 26lb dog, right? "What they actually meant was: Ralphie is a fire-breathing demon and will eat our dog, but hey, he's only 26lbs," the post reads. As of Friday, Ralphie was still available for adoption, according to CNN.
In the United States, egg prices have far surpassed the increase in other grocery items, soaring nearly 60% in the 12 months to December compared to the year before. The trend has prompted animal welfare advocates to warn against making impulse buys. “Egg producers had the option to move to colony cages, barns and free-range systems,” added Hyde, the ministry’s acting national manager of animal welfare and national animal identification and tracing compliance. “It’s a significant change for the egg supply industry,” Emma Wooster, the company’s head of public relations, told CNN in a statement. New Zealand is currently undergoing a major egg shortage, squeezing businesses and sparking a rush in demand for pet chickens.
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