Anything relating to pets and animals: Interesting and bizarre animal news and pet news. Pet related information, animal related web sites, stories about pets and wild animals. Humor,photos, and videos of animals and pets. Useful and unusual pet products, merchandise and pet supplies.
Monday, March 31, 2008
An unusual friendship
The baby kangaroo should have not survived the road accident that claimed its mother...but then along came Rex the wonder dog.
The 10-year-old dog - a cross between a German shorthaired and wirehaired pointer - and the four-month-old joey are now friends.
Source: Daily Mail
Sunday, March 30, 2008
Two-headed bearded dragon born in NC
Saturday, March 29, 2008
Knute: Addicted to love?
Funny Penguins
Friday, March 28, 2008
Thursday, March 27, 2008
A bunny in the carrots
An agouti in a blanket
Staff at the Newquay Zoo have been waiting for two years for their only breeding agouti couple to mate.
And the wait finally paid off when the two tiny creatures, which are the smallest of the ten agouti species in the world, were born three weeks ago. They are the first hairy rump - or black-backed - agouti to be born in the UK.
Source: Daily Mail
A frog in a cast
Nicolas the frog recovers from his broken leg in bright blue plaster
Source: Daily Mail
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
This is fast evolution?
Scientists have pinned down the fastest-known evolving animal — a "living dinosaur" called a tuatara.
Researchers found that although tuatara have remained largely unchanged physically over very long periods of evolution, they are evolving — at a DNA level — faster than any other animal yet examined.
Photo Credit: Reb/Dreamstime
Source: MSNBC
Cute little Zebra Mouse
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Wheelchairs keep disabled pets moving
Walking on water
Monday, March 24, 2008
Horse visits hospital patient
“I’m coming up to see a relative.”
That’s what a Kauai man said at Wilcox Memorial Hospital on Kauai—before taking a horse three floors upstairs.
Hospital security stopped the reportedly intoxicated man and his steed. He’d already trotted the horse through the hospital’s lobby and into an elevator, all to cheer up his relative.
But when he saw the stallion, the ailing patient said, “That’s not my horse.”
Source: Hawaii Magazine
Mustangs of Las Colinas
Cute or not? Hairless guinea pig
Sunday, March 23, 2008
Peep Show
The Washington Post has held a Peeps Diorama Contest for two years now.
Here is my favorite entry from the first-ever Sunday Source Peeps Diorama Contest, held in 2007.
And my favorite entry from Peeps Show II, held in 2008.
(via)
Saturday, March 22, 2008
Video: Swan Lake
Swan Lake performed by the acrobats and dancers of the "Great Chinese State Circus."
(via)
Friday, March 21, 2008
Animals on the attack
London Zoo opens tropical bird house
Thursday, March 20, 2008
Rabbit Scissors
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
World of Tarantulas
Tarantulas are the largest and most revered of all spiders, comprising just over 900 species in the mygalomorph family Theraphosidae.
The name tarantula originated around the 14th century from two genera of poisonous spiders, Lycosa (Wolf spiders) and Latrodectus (Widow spiders), found on the outskirts of the Italian city of Taranto in the State of Apulia.
Rick West is one of the leading authorities on tarantulas (Theraphosidae) in the world and has traveled to over 27 countries to document and study them in their environment.
The World of Tarantulas: Birdspiders is a fascinating website full of information, history and photographs.
(via)
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Quick Facts about Puppy Mills
Puppy mills originated in the post-World War II era. Midwestern farmers looking for an alternative crop reacted to a growing demand for puppies, resulting in the development of the first commercial puppy mill business.
A puppy mill can be defined as:
* a filthy, trashy place where one or several breeds of dogs are kept in deplorable conditions with mostly no medical care and puppies are available at all times
* any high-volume breeder whose cash crop is puppies
* any high-volume breeders who breed pets as their livelihood and keep them in overcrowded and unsanitary conditions
* a place where lots of dogs are raised, where breeding is done solely for financial gain rather than protection of the breed, and where puppies are sold to brokers or to pet stores
Puppy mills are able to stay in business due to the high demand for purebred dogs. However, the public does not know that pure breed registration papers and health certificates obtained with the purchase of a pet store puppy are not guaranteed by the American Kennel Club.
The Animal Welfare Act, which is managed by the US Department of Agriculture, is listing several categories of dog selling businesses:
* Pet dealers: import, buy, sell, trade or transport pets in wholesale channels
* Pet breeder: breed for the wholesale trade
* Laboratory animal dealers, breeders, bunchers, auction operators and promoters of contest in which animals are given as prizes
* Hobby breeders: sell directly to pet stores
Warning Signs that help in identifying high-volume breeders
Does the breeder/seller…
* Advertise in classified ads in the newspaper or on the Internet
* Use handwritten road signs to advertise puppies for sale
* Advertise that puppies are ready for Christmas, Easter, etc.
* Advertise many different breeds for sale
Does the breeder/seller…
* Tell you that the ‘deal’ can be completed by phone or e-mail
* Make up excuses why you can’t meet the puppy’s parents
* Offer stud services to the general public
* Sell puppies less than 8 weeks old
If allowed on property, do the adult parent animals…
* Appear dirty or poorly groomed
* Have temperament issues
* Spend their lives in stacked cages
* Have no water available
* Appear unhealthy
* Lack the proper shelter
Does the breeder/seller…
* Use registries that you have never heard of
* Tell you that papers are no available at time of delivery of the puppy
* Tell you to meet him/her and the puppy at a public location
* Sell the puppies at a public place like a flea market, dog auction, yard sale, out of the back of a pickup, etc.
What you can do to help
With millions of unwanted dogs (including 25% purebreds) and cats euthanized in shelters every year, there is no need for animals to be bred and sold for the pet-store trade. Stay away from buying puppies from pet stores, over the Internet or from newspaper ads. Buying puppies from these sources will help to keep the puppy mills in business. Instead, adopt from your local shelter or rescue groups. You can also contact your U.S. senators and representatives and ask them for better enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act by the USDA. Speak up and spread the word about puppy mills to your family and friends.
Source: Humane Society of Southern Arizona
From stew to fashion accessory: A dog's life in China
Monday, March 17, 2008
Booze with a Bite
St. Patrick didn't do it
Baghdad Zoo Rebounding With Help from U.S. Vets
In better times, the Baghdad Zoo had more than 500 animals, including giraffes, elephants and exotic birds. But its location, inside Zawra Park in the city's center, put it in the middle of heavy fighting between invading U.S. troops and Saddam Hussein's forces in 2003. U.S. shells damaged the compound and inadvertently freed some animals; looting that followed the fall of Baghdad stripped away everything else.
Thousands of North Carolina-based soldiers and Marines are trying to make things as normal as possible for Iraq's people. North Carolina-based veterinarians are trying to ensure that for some animals in that embattled country, life is a zoo.
Veterinarians, students and animal researchers across the state are leading the effort to help the Baghdad Zoo -- once the Middle East's largest -- return to its pre-war glory days.
The U.S. established a Green Zone in Baghdad that included Zawra Park. Soldiers from the U.S. Army civil affairs were given oversight of the zoo. Cages and pens were rebuilt, and some animals were brought in. Last year, the N.C. Zoological Society raised money to buy computers to send to the zoo and got help from the military in getting an Internet connection. Eventually, zoo staff could use the connection to ask advice on how to treat the animals in their care.
While still not up to the standards of most zoos in the United States, the Baghdad Zoo is now an oasis for Iraqis, who stroll with babies amid grass and shade trees. The zoo has lions, camels, monkeys, bears, 23 aquariums' worth of fish, swans, eagles, donkeys, a hyena, a leopard, a fox, a few wolves and dogs.
Source: Red Orbit
Sunday, March 16, 2008
'bunny and carrot' paper towel holder
Animals in the news
***** In the Macedonian city of Bitola, a bear was convicted of theft and damage for stealing honey from a beekeeper. Since the bear had no owner and belonged to a protected species, the court ordered the state to pay the 140,000 denars ($3,500) to the beekeeper for damage the bear had caused to the hives.
***** After two years of debate, the Dutch Parliament voted unanimously yesterday to make sex with animals a crime. Sex with animals and making "animal pornography" now carries a penalty of up to six months jail.
*****The government of Randolph, Iowa, has rescinded a five dollar bounty on stray cats . Instead, the town has agreed to work with animal rescue groups on a catch, neuter and release program.
***** In a bid for privacy, Leanne, the Sumatran tiger at the San Francisco Zoo, licked the video camera being used to monitor her and her newborn cub. To everyone's surprise, Leanne has three new babies, not just the one which had been filmed. The three 9-day-old Sumatran tiger cubs, all males, had their first health exam on Saturday, March 15, 2008. (Photo: George Nikitin, San Francisco Zoo)
***** Daniel J. Collins, 39, of Indiana, is being held on one count each of animal cruelty and battery and two counts of neglect of a dependent. He forced his 7-year-old daughter to kill the family cat by holding a knife in her hand and making her stab the feline. Collins told his 11-year-old son and daughter he wanted them to "learn how to kill."
***** Delta Flight 4704 was delayed more than five hours at the Des Moines International Airport on Thursday morning because of a mouse. Crews set up traps with peanut butter on board the plane when a flight attendant was too frightened to fly with the mouse onboard.
***** In Church Hill, TN, investigators are searching for whomever poured deer urine into an air conditioning unit at a school in eastern Tennessee. About a dozen students became ill after the prank at Volunteer High School.
A kiwi destined for life in spotlight
Saturday, March 15, 2008
Confession to cats doesn't hold up in court
David Henton, 72, who had been charged with murdering his partner after police recorded him apparently confessing to his cats was cleared yesterday by a jury that decided his comments were the ramblings of an old man.
During a seven-week trial, the prosecution played hours of secret and largely inaudible recordings of Henton muttering to himself and the cats.
Source: Times onLine
Woman fights off killer python
Friday, March 14, 2008
Why would you?
Attention, cat haters
There's money to be made in Randolph, Iowa, which is offering a $5 bounty for each feral feline turned in.
Mayor Vance Trively says that the southwest Iowa town of 200 people is being overrun by dozens of feral cats and needed to do something.
"You can't just let them keep multiplying in town," Trively said.
Town officials approved the bounty after receiving numerous complaints, ranging from a cat attacking a small dog to a dozen cats showing up at the bowl when a resident tried to feed his own cat.
Under the new policy, stray cats without collars will be taken to a veterinarian in the nearby town of Sidney - Randolph has no vet clinic - where they'll be kept "for a time for people to claim them," the mayor said.
If no one does, they'll be euthanized and buried.