First Light Productions

investigative journalism

Posts by Michael Elton McLeod

High in Galicia

Posted on August 24, 2012

Iberian wolf (Photo: Netícola – Raúl A)

Despite limited food resources and a presence that is not always welcome, the Iberian wolf holds out against all odds in the northwestern corner of Spain, an intensely human-dominated area since prehistoric times.

Although the wolf boasts highly adaptable strategies for survival, landscape is the factor that best explains their distribution across Galicia. They hold out by staying in high places with dense vegetation that are difficult for humans to access and allows them to go unnoticed. Studies have shown that Iberian wolves prefer wild hoofed animals–their favourite prey are roe deer, deer and wild boar–to livestock, in spite of the latter being readily available.

Humans are the known cause of wolf death in Spain in 91% of instances. Some 65% of wolves are killed on the road, 20% by poaching and 6% by legal hunting.

Source: from materials provided by Plataforma SINC, via AlphaGalileo via Science Daily.

The Concept of Sanctuary

Posted on August 24, 2012

Paradigm Shift

In recent years the battle to rescue the chimpanzee, endangered in the wild and jailed in research laboratories throughout the U.S., has acted as a catalyst to spur the growth of sanctuaries: lifelong homes for primates rescued from biomedical research, the entertainment industry, the exotic pet trade, or no longer wanted as pets. There are now seven primate sanctuaries in North America and eighteen in Africa united under the banners of the North American Primate Sanctuary Alliance and the Pan African Sanctuary Alliance that provide permanent homes for these animals, in close accordance with their social nature, with caregivers that recognize each animal as an individual, giving them, whenever possible, choices, and keeping them off-limits to the general public to shield them from anxiety and human disease.

Sanctuaries for many species are springing up around the world. Sometimes in man made environments for formerly captive animals incapable of return to the wild, others in protected parks and reserves carved from the wild.

New Definition

The idea of “sanctuary” doesn’t refer only to the dictionary definition of a safe place, but also a concept—an awareness. A goal. To treat all animals as sentient beings deserving of respectful treatment as individuals wherever they are found.

Late Breaking Success

Julius was one of the first chimps to be released into the sanctuary officially known as Chimpanzee Habitat for Conservation and Education.

With funding provided by the supporters of the International Primate Protection League, a new forested enclosure built especially for sanctuary chimpanzees in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo welcomed its first residents. Construction on the 2.7 hectare (nearly 7 acre) electric-fenced enclosure at the Centre de Réhabilitation des Primates de Lwiro (CRPL) started in February 2008, was completed on May 1, 2012, at a cost of US $200,000. Two days later, the first chimpanzees were released into this forested habitat.

Misisi, Monique, Ituri, Maiko, Fizi, Julius, and Uvira (all around 4 to 6 years of age) were the first to investigate their new home. According to Andrea Edwards, the outgoing CRPL co-manager, “The young chimpanzees, accompanied by their long-time caregivers, were released into the forest and immediately began exploring. While Misisi and Monique were brave and independent, young Ituri decided it was wiser to be carried around by her dedicated caregiver, Papy.” A guava tree was the biggest hit!

Lonesome George

Posted on August 23, 2012

Officials at the Galapagos National Park in Ecuador recently announced the death of Lonesome George, the Galapagos tortoise whose failed efforts to produce offspring made him a symbol of disappearing species. He was found in his pen by his longtime keeper, Fausto Llerena. His death was attributed to unknown causes.

LonesomeGeorge(FlickrCommons-Davey)

He was thought to be 100 years old. Giant tortoises can live well over a century and scientists had expected him to live another few decades.

Attempts were initially made to mate him with two females but the eggs they produced were infertile.

George had become a symbol of the Galapagos Islands, which attracted some 180,000 visitors last year.

The Galapagos’ giant tortoise population was decimated after the arrival of humans but a recovery program run by the park and the Charles Darwin Foundation has increased the overall population from 3,000 in 1974 to 20,000 today.

Bligh Reef

Posted on August 23, 2012

Twenty-three years after the Exxon Valdez ran aground on Bligh Reef outside the port of Valdez, Alaska, and leaked more than 11 million gallons of crude oil into Prince William Sound, polluting 1,300 miles of shoreline, the ship will be dismantled for scrap metal in an Indian ship-breaking yard.

Exxon Valdez (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

Only about one-fifth of the ship’s cargo seeped into the waters of the sound, but it was enough to kill a quarter-million seabirds, 2,800 sea otters, 247 bald eagles, 22 orcas, 300 harbour seals, and innumerable salmon and herring eggs. The spill reigned as the worst oil spill in national history until the BP Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded in 2010.

Workers struggle to clean oil off the beach of Big Smith Island. (Photo: Jim Brickett)

The scale of the extractive projects mounted by the oil and gas industries today are simply too large to be safely contained when problems arise. In light of the immense profits made by these companies you’d think the government would recognize that the environment is finite and that penalties should be assessed to send a message that irresponsible behavior of such magnitude will not be tolerated. But decades after the Exxon Valdez spill, a federal court substantially reduced the penalty initially assessed against the company for the tragedy they caused in Alaska.

Oil still coats the beaches of Prince William Sound, disguised beneath layers of sand. Though the Exxon Valdez has run aground for good, the effects of the 1989 disaster will long outlast its namesake.

The legacies of the Exxon Valdez and Gulf oil spills remind us of the continued risk of future catastrophies. Shell Oil will soon start drilling in Alaska’s cold Beaufort Sea, only 15 miles from the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Just weeks ago Shell lost control of a drilling ship—the ironically named Noble Discoverer—while it was anchored in the harbor. A stark reminder that, despite the oil industry’s statements that safety is their top concern, accidents happen.

–Sourced from Audubonmagazine.org.

Afghanistan

Posted on August 23, 2012

Biologists have discovered a surprisingly healthy population of rare snow leopards living in the mountainous reaches of northeastern Afghanistan’s Wakhan Corridor.

Wildlife Conservation Society

 

Wildlife Conservation Society-trained community rangers used camera traps to document the presence of snow leopards at 16 different locations across a wide landscape.

The big cats are threatened in the region. Poaching for their pelts, persecution by shepherds, and the capture of live animals for the illegal pet trade have all been documented in the Wakhan Corridor. Between 4,500 and 7,500 snow leopards remain in the wild scattered across a dozen countries in Central Asia.

Snow leopards have declined by as much as 20 percent over the past 16 years and are considered endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

–Reprinted from materials provided by Wildlife Conservation Society.

Animal Husbandry

Posted on August 23, 2012

The story of westward expansion in the United States is often told from the perspective of the men and women who crossed the Great Plains in search of a better life in the west. But a historian at Missouri University of Science and Technology is bringing to light the role settlers’ animals played in the westward migration of the mid-1800s.

Hooves & Paws

Posted on August 22, 2012

Reba

Reba lived her life out at Hooves & Paws Rescue of the Heartland. She was a 25 year old mare when she came to the rescue, an Owner Surrender along with six other horses. She was totally blind in her right eye and had almost no sight left in the other. She was very underweight and had not had any vet care for many years.

The vet came out to see Reba because she was struggling to gain weight and had started to get a thick discharge from her nose. He reached in her mouth to look at her teeth and one of them actually broke off at the root. He said her teeth were infected and most of them would need to come out. She had a severe sinus infection that was filling her nasal cavity. She was full of worms and also had parasites.

She was a wonderful, sweet girl, even after all the neglect she had suffered.

Reba crossed over the Rainbow Bridge, April 2nd, 2008.

 

http://www.hoovespaws.org

Thank you BP

Posted on August 21, 2012

A recently released study explains how lax environmental standards can have disastrous consequences.

Most troubling to scientists was the exceptionally high number of young dolphins that made up close to half of the 186 dolphins that washed ashore from Louisiana to western Florida from January to April 2011. (Credit: University of Central Florida)

According to a two-year study by scientists at the University of Central Florida released last month, the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in conjunction with other environmental factors led to a historically high number of dolphin deaths in the Gulf of Mexico. Most troubling was the exceptionally high number of young dolphins that washed ashore.

Graham Worthy, a UCF scientist and co-author of the study, called it a ‘perfect storm’ of factors. “The oil spill and cold winter of 2010 had already put significant stress on (the dolphins’) food resources, resulting in poor body condition and depressed immune response. It appears the high volumes of cold freshwater coming from snowmelt water that pushed through Mobile Bay and Mississippi Sound in 2011 was the final blow.”

The BP Deepwater Horizon disaster in April 2010 dumped millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf, disrupting the food chain. This was in the middle of the dolphins’ breeding season. A sudden entry of high volumes of cold freshwater from Mobile Bay in 2011 imposed additional stress on the ecosystem and specifically on dolphins that were already in poor body condition.

–Story Source: reprinted from materials provided by University of Central Florida.

Profit Before Animals

Posted on August 21, 2012

August 15, 2012. NIAGARA FALLS, ONT.—Larry lies behind bars in a pen, his eyes red and swollen. The harbour seal with “an amazing little personality” who arrived at Marineland about eight years ago is now a shadow of his former self. After repeated exposure to unhealthy water, he has gone blind.

Larry, the harbour seal with “an amazing little personality” who arrived at Marineland about eight years ago is now a shadow of his former self. After repeated exposure to unhealthy water, he has gone blind.

Larry isn’t the only sea mammal living in distress at Marineland, the sprawling attraction in Niagara Falls. In extensive interviews with the Star, eight former Marineland staffers describe a pattern of neglect that has repeatedly resulted in animal suffering.

What the public doesn’t see, they say, is the deterioration of marine mammals that become sick, suffer fur loss, skin damage and even blindness because of recurring water problems.

They also point to chronic staffing shortages that leave trainers unable to provide a minimum standard of care for animals to do well in captivity.

John Holer, owner of the Niagara institution for 51 years, denies there are problems with water quality at the park and that unhealthy water has harmed marine mammals. He says there is more than sufficient staff to look after the animals. “All our facilities are legal,” he said.

There are no government regulations for sea mammal captivity in Canada.

A February 2012 photo shows sea lions Sandy and Baker (left). The pair had to be pulled repeatedly from the water and confined in dry cages, in one case for more than two months, to limit further harm to their already damaged eyes. Videos shot in 2011 and 2012 shows them writhing in pain or plunging their heads into a single bucket of clean water.

Among several troubling incidents at the park between last fall and this spring: Sea lions Baker and Sandy had to be pulled repeatedly from the water and confined in dry cages, in one case for more than two months, to limit further harm to their already damaged eyes. Videos shot in 2011 and 2012 shows them writhing in pain or plunging their heads into a single bucket of clean water. Sandy often sits like a statue, dry as a bone. There’s no lens in Baker’s left eye. When a trainer put him back in the water in April, he barked and it flew out.

Sea lion Baker, shown in an April photo, has no lens in his left eye. Baker had to be pulled repeatedly from the water and confined in a dry cage, in one case for more than two months, to limit further harm to his already damaged eyes.

On May 28, baby beluga Skoot died after a two-hour assault by two adult male belugas in an incident former trainers say points to understaffing at the park. The evening attack unfolded in front of a guide untrained and helpless to intervene. The males bit Skoot’s head and body, spun her around by the tail and bashed her into a rock wall where she stuck. After two trainers finally arrived to pull Skoot out of the pool, she convulsed and died in their arms.

Holer says Skoot was attacked because she had contracted bacterial meningitis, explaining: “If animals see another animal is going to die, they kill it.”

Five female dolphins — Sonar, Lida, Marina, Echo and Tsu — swam almost continuously in bad water in a concrete pool in a facility called the barn. Former employees say they lay at the bottom in murky green water or breeched and thrashed wildly, their reactions changing with the chemicals. Their skin fell off in chunks, their colour darkened and they refused to eat. This lasted intermittently for eight months, from October 2011 until just before show season began in May 2012 when their water was changed.

Phil Demers, a former animal trainer at Marineland, is shown with female walrus Smooshi several years ago. Demers left Marineland in May after 12 years, worn down by his inability to help animals in his care.

There are other problems at the facility. Walruses, which crave attention in captivity, are confined sporadically in cramped, waterless pens.

Six of the park’s seven seals are blind, have impaired vision or have had serious eye problems because of exposure to unhealthy water, former trainers say.

Poor conditions drove some of the eight former employees to leave and were a major factor in the departure of others.

Former employee Phil Demers resigned this past spring after 12 years as a senior trainer, worn down and frustrated by his inability to help the animals in his care. “I realized I was no longer part of the solution. I was part of the problem,” he said. “I can’t train animals that are sick and compromised.”

All the animals in the pools suffered over the course of the winter and spring, Demers and the supervisor say.

The Star obtained photos, videos and documents that support the accounts of the former employees. Three made the difficult decision to speak out publicly, despite having signed non-disclosure agreements. Five asked that their names not be used for fear of legal consequences.

Record books from one former supervisor log a history of problems with the various pools from March 2011 to March 2012. He described the water as stagnant and flat in the barn, stadium and Aquarium pools. Although water periodically improved, he and Holer were never able to find a permanent solution to the problems. The effect on the animals, he said, was devastating.

“It got so that I didn’t even have to test the water when I arrived in the morning. I could tell just by looking at how sick the animals were,” the former supervisor said. “If you don’t look at them, there’s no problem. What hurt me most is those animals in those pools. They can’t go anywhere. They can’t get out. They’re stuck.”

Larry, about 10 years old, was pulled from the water for days or weeks at a time and kept in either a waterless pen or a metal box on wheels.

Aging animals may suffer from cataracts, trainers said. But their eyes “are not red, swollen, bulbous and inflamed from age. That is from water quality,” one trainer said.

Records show the barn and stadium pools deteriorated after an ozone generator breakdown on Sept. 4, 2011. The supervisor says the water turned green and serious water problems persisted intermittently over the coming months.

After the first day of green water, “the animals were in hell,” including walruses, Demers said. Smooshi had a wildly inflamed flipper, which a veterinarian said was a “chemical burn,” and Sonja’s ulcerated eye worsened. “All the animals showed signs of damage. This was one of the worst states I’ve ever seen them in.”

Sonja, a female walrus show in an April photo, has suffered eye damage that former trainers blame on poor water conditions at Marineland.

The situation was particularly acute for the five dolphins, which, unlike sea lions, seals and walruses, are unable to pull themselves from the water. The supervisor recalls many times when the dolphins were so dark and the water so green, they were barely visible. Photos show dolphins with eyes squeezed shut.

In a 2010 memo, Demers blamed poor water quality for ill health among walruses, as well as sea lions and seals. “Health issues arise in every instance, ranging from eye damage, fur loss, weight loss, stress, skin lesions (and more).” A few days after Demers left, Holer changed the water in the barn and stadium pools. The May 10 opening was delayed five days to do it. Water was not changed at the Aquarium.

Former employees say that a shortage of trainers means the animals don’t get the attention they need to do well in captivity. Walruses in captivity crave human attention and yet former trainer Bentivegna says they were left days at a time in their dark barn pens with no stimulation apart from feeding. Walrus vomiting and weight loss is a recurring problem at Marineland.

Bentivegna says the final straw was seeing Zeus, a powerhouse walrus who knew his own strength, disintegrate into the shell of a once intimidating creature. Recent videos and photos show him sitting behind bars in a waterless space barely big enough to turn around in and looking broken-down and miserable. He was being treated for regurgitation issues—exacerbated by bad water—and the lack of trainers meant he often lay unattended in his own excrement.

Baker is a big guy, the only male sea lion swimming mindless laps during the Star’s two recent visits to the Aquarium. He used to be the clown, the funny fellow with the clear eyes, still featured in “Attractions Niagara.” Now his body is scarred and itchy with patches of missing fur. Every time he passes he rubs his head hard against the side, trying to scratch himself over and over. His eyes are squeezed so tightly shut it looks like he doesn’t have any. For all intents and purposes, he doesn’t.

From a report “Marineland animals suffering, former staffers say,” By Linda Diebel.
http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/1241961–marineland-animals-suffering-former-staffers-say

Slaughter Bound

Posted on August 20, 2012

Here is your basic slaughter bound horse. She was surrendered to us last night when the owner decided that Habitat for Horses wasn’t going to leave him alone.

Habitat for Horses

The dysfunctional owner, having placed the horse in a “pasture” smaller than most living rooms, decided that the horse needed to be tied up with a thin, wire normally used as a dog runner. The mare probably started fighting with the wire sometime in the afternoon.

The wire became tangled in the brush, wrapped around stumps and trees and then wrapped tightly around the horse’s back leg. The constant struggles led to foot being nearly severed. There is no telling how much blood was lost by the time we arrived. It was bad – really bad.

His response? “Well, I was gonna’ give the horse to my neighbor. I suppose he can take it now.”

Uh, no. If left alone the horse would have been dead in a few hours.
“Well, can I just give it to you?”

Probably another half gallon of blood drained out of her on the way to the vet clinic. The foot was barely attached. Once unloaded and in the stock, she went down – hard.

I’ve seen that look far too many times. That’s what nightmares are made out of – that haunting scream, ”I don’t want to die!,” from horses starved in pastured, cut to ribbons by barbed wire, horses dying from lack of water. Yes, those are the direct causes, but what caused that problem? Stupidity. Ignorance. Absolute mindlessness. Total idiots breeding horses with piss-poor conformation knowing full well that there is no market for the foals. Not just backyard breeders, either. The same applies to AQHA members, APHA members, even the 10,000 thoroughbreds that are slaughtered ever year. No market for them because there is not a single human brain cell in their wrinkled pea brains that says, “Uh, what are you doing?”

I bet I received 20 emails yesterday screaming such highly intelligent questions as, “What do you intend to do with all the horses?”

My response – why would you think that I need to take responsibility for the results of your mindless breeding program? Do I have to take care of your kids, too? What the hell happened to your level of responsibility for the life you create?

Much as I hate to tell people this, horse slaughter is a business, not a service. If the demand stops, so will the slaughter trucks. And trust me on this one – the EU will finally be forced to face up to the fact that American horsemeat is about as filthy a substance as you could get down your throat without throwing up, absolutely crammed full of poisons.
Do you think maybe we didn’t give this horse any pain medication?

Our crew and the vet crew worked late into the night trying to save this girl. By midnight she was up and munching hay, this morning she was looking out the stall windows, watching her new world.

If she survives, and there is a serious chance she won’t, she will never walk normal again. I guess for a lot of folks, that makes her prime for the slaughter truck. Hell, I bet she’s bring $25 at the auction, and I’m sure someone in France would love to have her for dinner.

But through some small miracle she ended up as Case Number 11-152 on our books and, God willing, someday soon she’ll be standing by the hay stacks with Pete and Tiger and a half dozen “useless” horses, doing what horses do best.

And to the killers, to the heartless, nonthinking, mindless blobs who drool over the possibility of grabbing another cheap horse for the slaughter truck – too bad. You loose, this mare wins.

Did you call the President yet? I did, five times yesterday and twice today so far. Keep it up. Never stop. This is what you are fighting for – the lives of horses that never got a chance to know what love is all about.

–Jerry Finch. December 2, 2011. Habitat for Horses. http://habitatforhorses.org/

Apex Predators

Posted on August 18, 2012

As Discovery’s Shark Week continues its 25th season, sharks worldwide are under threat of extinction. According to a report released this month by the Pew Environment Group, nearly one-third of shark species are endangered.

Great White shark (Oceana)

    Environmental groups in the U.S. recently petitioned the federal government to list the great white as endangered. Oceana, an international group focused on protecting the world’s oceans, estimates there are only about 340 mature great whites remaining in the northeast Pacific and perhaps less than 100 breeding females. Great white sharks can live about 30 years and reach a size of 6,600 pounds and a length of 20 feet.

    Dead Zam and Freediver

    One of the main threats to the specie’s survival is bycatch of white shark pups off Southern California and across the border into Mexico, primarily in entangling gill net fisheries targeting halibut, yellowtail, swordfish, thresher sharks and white sea bass.

    Chemical pollution is another factor. Young great whites off that same coast have the second-highest mercury level on record for any sharks worldwide, six times higher than levels shown to cause physiological harm to other ocean fish. Studies in that area showed that the sharks liver tissue contained high levels of the contaminants PCB and DDT.

    There is also vast poaching going on globally to satisfy the lucrative market in shark fins considered a delicacy in Asian communities in soup. It is estimated that up to 73 million sharks are killed each year for their fins, many of those the most endangered shark species. Much of the finning happens at sea. Rather than filling up a boat with whole sharks, they are simply brought aboard, their fins cut off and, often still alive, dumped overboard.

    Photo: Marshall Islands law enforcement personnel on a longline fishing vessel sort through hundreds of kilograms of confiscated shark fins in the Marshall Islands territory’s waters. The Marshall Islands has begun fining vessels caught fishing for sharks since the introduction of a ban on trading shark fins across its vast waters late last year. (By Giff Johnson/AFP/Getty Images)

    Sharks play a crucial role in shaping the ecosystems they inhabit by affecting the numbers and behaviors of their prey species. As prey resources become more or less abundant, sharks switch between different types of prey, regulating these species’ populations, preventing middle-level specialists from becoming too prevalent and wiping out their often more specific prey/foraging material.

    Organisms that used to be held in check by sharks are threatening some of the base levels of the food chain in their environment, which also means they are badly hurting some of the few remaining and relatively sustainably regulated seafood industries left. On the East Coast, for instance, the diminishing number of sharks has led to a surge in skate populations to the point they are threatening the viability of some shellfish populations.

    Discovery Channel

As shark populations decrease the fish they eat grow in numbers, eating more, possibly too much, the result being a complete collapse of the food chain.

California Sea Otters control Urchin populations which, if left unchecked, can ravage kelp forests. Wolves are now understood to be so important in regulating herbivores like deer that they have been reintroduced into places like Yellowstone National Park (with a subsequent increase in community diversity). When wolves were exterminated from Yellowstone in the early 1900s, the numbers of deer and elk increased substantially. They, in turn, denuded the forest of younger trees and saplings, which led to a lack of habitat for songbirds, leading to a boom-and-bust cycle of starvation for the overpopulation of deer and elk. This led to a lack of raw materials (young trees) for beavers, which adversely affected the fish that were dependent on beaver dams to create ponds. The lack of fish went on to hurt other predators that were dependent on fish as a food source. When wolves were reintroduced, this cycle reversed.

Sharks, like chimpanzees, are known as a “keystone species,” which helps regulate the health and function of the entire ecosystem.

Proposals are being presented through the United Nations to encourage the establishment of shark sanctuaries around the world.

Spotted Beast

Posted on August 18, 2012

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has formally proposed to protect 838,232 acres as “critical habitat” for endangered jaguars in southern Arizona and New Mexico — an area larger than the state of Rhode Island.
 
When finalized in the next year, and joined with a developing federal recovery plan, the decision will ensure jaguars return to the wild mountains and deserts of the American Southwest.
 


The agency listed the jaguar as an endangered species in 1997 following a lawsuit by the Center for Biological Diversity that ended protection delays stretching back to 1978, but refused to protect the jaguar’s habitat or develop a recovery plan! Instead it declared that jaguars should not be recovered in the United States — despite the fact that the beautiful cats historically ranged all the way from Monterey Bay, Calif., to Louisiana and north to the Grand Canyon and Colorado.
 
Refusing to allow federal bureaucrats — for the first time in U.S. history — to consign an endangered species to extinction in the United States, the Center went back to court. In 2009 they won their case: The Fish and Wildlife Service was ordered to protect the jaguar’s habitat and create a plan to fully restore the species.



Like wolves and grizzly bears, jaguars were killed en masse by federal trappers and sharpshooters paid to make the West safe for public-land ranching. By the 1950s jaguars were virtually extinct, but in recent years began to show the first signs of recolonizing Arizona and New Mexico. Individual animals from a Mexican population have been exploring the borderlands of the two states recently. Macho B, the last jaguar to be seen, was killed in a botched capture in 2009 — the very year the Center won a court order requiring the species’ protection and recovery.

From a Center for Biological Diversity news release August 17, 2012.

Jaguar (FlickrCommons-EricKilby)

Tony

Posted on August 15, 2012

Fayetteville, N.C.: Despite the fact that the permit issued to Michael Sandlin, owner of Grosse Tete’s Tiger Truck Stop, to exhibit Tony the “truck stop tiger” expired last December, he has continued to keep Tony on public display, in open violation of state law.

Tony the Truck Stop TIger (photo: S. Zaunbrecher)

The Animal Legal Defense Fund and other interveners seeking to defend the state’s law banning private ownership of big cats were buoyed recently when a District Judge agreed that the ALDF and two Louisiana residents can be parties to the lawsuit filed by Sandlin, against the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries. ALDF can now participate in all steps of the litigation as it moves forward to force the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries to do its job of enforcing Louisiana’s big cat ban. “The Sad Tale of Tony the “Truck Stop Tiger” By Jeffrey Flocken, 5/14/2012: Laws that govern the private ownership of big cats vary widely from one state to another but they do have one thing in common—they’re not enough to protect big cats in private hands. Some 10,000 to 20,000 big cats are kept captive by private owners in the U.S., and they aren’t in zoos but in backyards, basements, garages, sheds and even truck stops. Tony, a 10 year old tiger, has been kept every single day of his life at the Tiger Truck Stop in Grosse Tete, Louisiana. Living at a truck stop is no life for a tiger; Tony is subjected to noise and diesel fumes from trucks and kept in a concrete cage with no adequate enrichment or escape from the elements, resulting in constant stress. Ten years of living at Tiger Truck Stop have taken a toll on Tony’s health, according to experts. The good news is that Tony’s permit expired in December of 2011 and hasn’t been renewed. The bad news is Tony is still being kept at the truck stop in violation of Louisiana law because the judge ruled that the Department has discretion whether or not to enforce Louisiana’s law on big cats. Tony’s owner sued the State of Louisiana claiming that the law against private ownership of big cats was unconstitutional. There is no reason that Tony or big cats like him should be left to suffer in such conditions due to squabbles over state laws and poor enforcement. Tony should be roaming the Savannah not cooped up in an iron cage with a concrete floor enveloped in diesel fumes. A nationwide solution like the Federal Big Cats and Public Safety Protection Act, H.R. 4122, is needed. Please urge your U.S. Representative to support the passage of H.R. 4122 and protect tigers like Tony!