Sunday, 24 December 2017

Why do Polish animals talk on Christmas Eve?


If you have a dog, cat, or other animal around at midnight on Christmas Eve, listen up!

According to legend, this is the one night of the year when they gain the magical ability to speak.

Where does this myth come from? While there is no definite answer, scholars have offered a few possibilities.

Some connect it to a tale that the farm animals which surrounded St. Mary on the first Christmas bowed to the baby Jesus when he was born.

Others trace its origins even further back, to the ancient Roman festival Saturnalia. During this week-long winter holiday, social roles were reversed – most famously, it was during this time that masters traditionally served their slaves.

As with many fairy tales, some of the stories are quite dark. For example, some say that the only people who can hear animals speak are fated soon to die. Other legends even say that the animals speak to each other to plot revenge against neglectful owners.

Now, though, the myth is  observed lightheartedly in Poland and some other European countries on Christmas Eve.

For example, asked if she expected her hamster, Kwant, to say anything, high schooler Michalina Smoleń replies, "I hope not! His favorite tidbits were finished a month ago… and he is not happy."

Neuropsychology student Ania Starowicz reports that her cat Jerry would probably say, "I hate you."

And then? "‘I love you.' He's bipolar."

Monday, 27 November 2017

Animal activists hope to save infamous Deep Ellum dog



Animal activists and rescue groups in Dallas are scrambling to save a locally infamous dog from being put down this week. They say the dog shouldn't have to pay for what they believe are the sins of the owner.

On any given night in Deep Ellum, you could find a man named Sean and his sidekick a little dog he named Lamby. That's short for her full name. He calls her Lamb of God.

For months neighbors have been complaining about what they see as animal abuse. The dog, sometimes rolled around the city in a child's stroller, is often strapped in a milk crate on the front of a bicycle. Hats and sunglasses are rubber-banded to her head while she serves as a roadside attraction for her owner to panhandle for money.

"There's a saying that there are no bad dogs just bad owners. And that's really never been truer than in this situation," said Deep Ellum neighborhood activist Raine Devries.

"It is absolutely horrific that an animal has to pay the price for a horrible person," said Jessica Brodsky who says she has seen, and complained about, the man and his dog on multiple occasions.

Because here's what happened. During one of its "performances" the dog nipped at someone. Dallas Animal Services took custody of the dog, gave it vaccinations, had her spayed, and a rescue group says they were told they had a chance to adopt her.

But the owner payed the necessary fines and got the dog back. A short time later, as detailed in a police report, the duo was in the Bishop Arts area south of downtown Dallas and the owner reportedly told a family that their child could move in close to take a picture. Police records show that the dog bit the child in the face.

"If you were strapped inside a milk crate with no padding underneath your butt 20 hours a day with a rubber band around your muzzle, you might want to bite someone too," said Lee Jamison with the animal rescue group Awwdoptable, Inc.

"Well we have an order form the courts that the animal be humanely euthanized," said Edward Jamison the new director of Dallas Animal Services. He says his hands are tied, there are two biting incidents on record, and that he is required to abide by the court order and euthanize the dog later this week.

"We do everything we can to responsibly find home for animals but we're also not in the business of putting known dangerous animals back out in the public," Edward Jamison said. "At this point, again, we're operating on that court order."

And that's what he told local activists when he agreed to explain the situation to them this morning. They met for several minutes outside the Dallas Animal Services facility in West Dallas.

But those hoping to rescue Lamby are still searching for a last minute reprieve, maybe a legal change of heart.

"We have so many wonderful animal rescue groups and so I think that that they need to be utilized more before we hand a dog a death sentence," said Brodsky.

A death sentence due to be carried out unless the courts decide Lamby, the reluctant roadside attraction, deserves another chance.

Tuesday, 24 October 2017

From Félicette the space cat to Dolly the sheep – which animals should be given a statue?


There is hardly any good news any more, so it was pleasing to hear of a crowdfunding campaign to raise money – £40,000 – for a bronze statue to honour Félicette, the first cat in space. Félicette survived her escapades – the only cat ever to do so – and returned to live in Paris in 1963 as a cause célèbre, nine lives still intact. Laika who? Inspired by this fearless feline, here are some animal peers also deserving of a monument.

Congo the chimp

Congo was one of the most prolific artists of the 1950s, producing 400 abstract expressionist works before the age of four. Pablo Picasso was reportedly a big fan and owned a Congo, and in 2005 three pieces by the chimp were included in a Bonhams auction (along with Warhols), selling for $26,000. Salvador Dali once said of a Congo painting: “The hand of the chimpanzee is quasi-human; the hand of Jackson Pollock is totally animal.” Sick burn.

Dolly and Shrek the sheep

Dolly was the first mammal to be cloned from an adult cell. In a creepy sounding move, she was named after Dolly Parton because her DNA came from a mammary cell. I’d recommend placing Dolly on a plinth alongside Shrek, a merino sheep who escaped and was found in 2004, having been unsheared for six years. It’s thought he hid in caves to evade capture. Once rounded up, Shrek’s 60lb of wool was cut live on television. He raised $150,000 for charity and even met the New Zealand prime minister. What a baa-d ass.

Wheely Willy the chihuahua

Wheely Willy is the first of a long line of pets with disabilities who have found phenomenal success and been granted book deals and TV shows (see also: fellow doggos TurboRoo and Tuna Melt; Crisp P Bacon the piglet; Grumpy Cat and Lil Bub). Born in 1991, Willy was horribly abused as a young pup, leaving him with spinal injuries. He was fitted with one of the first wheelframes for dogs and became an international sensation: in Japan, members of the royal family got down on the floor to greet him. Sadly (and awkwardly), after a life of overcoming adversity, Willy died when his owner dropped him. He was 18.

Huberta the hippo

Huberta is “one of the most famous hippos in the history of South Africa”. One day in 1928 Huberta decided to go for a walk. An epic walk of 1,000 miles. She walked from the now KwaZulu-Natal province to East London – the East London in South Africa, that is – followed by curious journalists and adoring fans. The walk took three years, and 121 rivers were crossed. It was made illegal to hunt Huberta – until some numbskull did just that a month after she had settled.

Saturday, 23 September 2017

Wild Love – The New Missy Dress 2018 Collections


I love this time of year so much. All the fabulousness of autumn is gathering pace outside my window while my email is filling up with all the 2018 bridal collections.

Missy Dress is well known for creating collections that bring a contemporary feel to classically elegant designs and these gowns continue that heavenly tradition.

Both collections are wonderfully made. The construction of each and every gown is superb and the Missy Dress signature level of attention to detail is evident throughout. Everything works so well – the fabric choices and combinations, the selections of embellishments, the shapes – and everything comes together to create these perfect dresses.

The 2018 collection from Missy Dress is all about elegance and femininity and I have to say that I'm totally in love with the dreamy, voluminous skirts. Missy Dress have managed to totally reinvent the silhouettes of the dresses in this collection and you just know that these gowns are going to be so incredibly flattering to wear.

Now I think there are so many reasons why you'll love the Missy Dress collection (err, hello gorgeous lace!) but these designs look even better when you wear them. The movement of the gowns is just heavenly thanks to the combination of materials and fabrics in each. The weight is perfect, the cut is perfect and the craftsmanship is excellent.

Finally, can we just take a moment to talk about those embellishments? The white gemstone hand embroidery is one thing but the fringes on the sleeves and necklines? That's so, so right.

The Missy Dress 2018 collection itself is just as wonderful and there's so much here that will steal your heart. This is a collection that's light and delicate and all of the dresses totally emphasise this. Think gowns buttoned top to bottom, skirts with centre openings and applications of lace and gauze godets that completely alter the look of the dresses giving a really unexpected touch of refined glamour to each.

I'm also a huge fan of the amazing off-the-shoulder necklines and detachable cap sleeves that we're seeing in the collection for the first time now. Cap sleeves are so on-trend right now and I'm really crushing on those sexy-yet-so-sophisticated necklines. It great to see that this collection let's you create your own style combinations for a truly personal wedding day look.

Tuesday, 29 August 2017

Hurricane Harvey rescues: California groups helping displaced animals


Rescue groups in California and throughout the country are mobilizing to help pets displaced by Hurricane Harvey and subsequent flooding in Texas and Louisiana.

RedRover, a national nonprofit animal welfare organization based in Sacramento, is headed to Texas later this week to help the SPCA of Texas provide daily care and comfort for animals rescued and relocated to Dallas, Texas.

Wings of Rescue, based in Livermore, has several cargo planes filled with crates and supplies standing by in El Paso, and the group already has begun evacuation flights.

The volunteer pilots of Wings of Rescue fly pets to areas where they stand better chances of being adopted. In this case, they are flying pets to safer parts of the country, where they will be cared for until they can be reunited with their owners.

The group is working with the Humane Society of the United States, Greater Good, Freekibble and Rescue Bank.

Planes left Lafayette, Louisiana, on Monday carrying 88 dogs and 20 cats bound for temporary care in San Diego. On Tuesday, 100 dogs will be transported from San Antonio to shelters in Oregon and Washington, and on Wednesday, another 100 dogs are scheduled to fly out of San Antonio to Morristown, New Jersey.

RedRover officials and volunteers expect to be in Texas by Thursday.

“RedRover Responders appreciate the opportunity to help comfort and care for these animals and bring some relief to the aid teams during this crisis,” RedRover Director of Field Services Beth Gammie said. “We haven't seen this type of unprecedented flooding in more than a decade. Our hearts are with the people and animals of Texas during this difficult time.”

RedRover Responders volunteers, who wear bright red shirts, are trained to care for and shelter large numbers of animals after they have been rescued from natural disasters. Volunteers provide the workforce that enables local communities to address their animal needs following a natural disaster.

The organization has more than 3,800 trained volunteers in the United States and Canada, and is able to deploy volunteers quickly when communities become overburdened by a crisis.

In its 30-year history, RedRover has responded to more than 180 natural disasters and other crises, including Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005; Hurricane Isaac and Superstorm Sandy in 2012; the Oklahoma tornadoes in 2013; flooding in Gonzales, Louisiana in 2016; and the dam crisis in Oroville in 2017.

To help the pets displaced by Hurricane Harvey, you can donate to any of these groups.

Thursday, 27 July 2017

One thing animals share in common: the sound of screaming


Charles Darwin, when musing about the evolution of emotion, pointed out the similarities in how animals mouth off. "With many kinds of animals, man included," he wrote in 1872, "the vocal organs are efficient in the highest degree as a means of expression." Pigs grunt while eating, he noted. They scream while terrified. Darwin theorized that emotional sounds could be traced back to a common animal trait.

Now researchers are investigating the idea Darwin posed more than 100 years ago. They've demonstrated that humans can detect an animal's arousal — which can range from low (asleep) to high (frenetic).

We can sense excitement in the sounds of species as different as frogs and pandas, the researchers say. The scientists also suggest that these sounds are part of a very old "signaling system."

"Our study shows that humans are naturally able to recognize emotional arousal across all classes of vocalizing animals," said Piera Filippi, who studies the evolution of cognition and communication at the Vrije University Brussels in Belgium. Filippi and her colleagues, psychologists and biologists from Germany, France, the Netherlands and Canada, published their study Tuesday in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B. "This outcome may find an important application in animal welfare, suggesting that humans may rely on their intuition to assess when animals are stressed."

The scientists asked 75 college-age people to listen to sounds from nine species. To check for consistency across languages, the group included English, German and Mandarin speakers. The researchers collected 180 recordings of animal vocalizations, reflecting high or low levels of excitement.

This was not excitement like the kind you'd find at Six Flags. Instead, these were desperate or negative screams: the sounds of frogs in competition for mates, monkeys reacting to danger or ravens confronted by a dominant bird. Representing our species were actors speaking in Tamil, asked to read lines as if increasingly upset. The subjects had to identify which vocalization, out of paired sounds from the same species, represented higher arousal.

"Humans performed better than expected by chance," Filippi said. As you might suspect, they accurately selected humans acting out emotional distress (95 percent correct) over humans talking regularly.

But the excited giant panda (94 percent) was close behind, followed by the aroused hourglass tree frog (90 percent), African bush elephant (88 percent), American alligator (87 percent), black-capped chickadee (85 percent), pig (68 percent), common raven (62 percent) and a monkey called a Barbary macaque (60 percent).

"These results suggest that fundamental mechanisms of vocal emotional expression are shared among vertebrates," the authors wrote. Put broadly, every unhappy land-dwelling four-legged animal sounded unhappy in a similar way.

Harold Gouzoules, a bioacoustician and animal behavior expert at Emory University in Atlanta who was not involved with this research, called this study a "significant contribution" toward answering the questions that had puzzled Darwin. "It goes beyond previous studies of mammals and birds to include reptiles and amphibians," Gouzoules said. "That also makes it challenging to understand."

It struck Gouzoules as odd that humans were better at identifying arousal in tree frog sounds than for the monkeys. But Filippi said that it was possible the difference in emotional intensity of the low and high monkey calls was "less extreme" compared with the other species' sounds. "However," she said, "finding that humans perform better in evolutionarily more distant species corroborates the hypothesis that this is a biologically rooted ability."

What's more, Gouzoules argued that this study does not get to what Darwin would have considered emotion. "If emotions are equivalent to a carrot cake," he said, then arousal is like the "wheat before it becomes flour."

Arousal is an important dimension of emotion, but "it doesn't equate to assessing emotional processing," he said. He offered the example of a chimp baring its teeth. "A person will describe that as a smile. They would read it as emotional — they'd get that, easy," he said. But "they'd get it dead wrong," Gouzoules said. (These chimp facial expressions are in fact "fear grins.")

The authors acknowledged that this research would benefit from physiological data. Having brain recordings or heart rate might paint a clearer picture of the animals' true feelings.

Filippi also wants to repeat the experiment, but with a twist. "We are currently running the same study on black-capped chickadees, in order to assess their ability to identify emotional intensity," she said. So we may soon know whether these little birds can tell the difference between an excited or relaxed panda.

Tuesday, 27 June 2017

Local Volunteers Become National Therapy Animal Team Evaluators


Silent Sidekicks' Volunteers, Stacey Coventry and Elin MacKinnon, and Silent Sidekicks' Founder, Danielle Ireland McGuckin, became the newest Pet Partners Evaluators in the United States, this month. Team Evaluators are Pet Partners volunteers who are licensed to conduct the Pet Partners skills and aptitude evaluation required for registration as a therapy animal team. Evaluators play a critical role in ensuring safe and well-qualified Therapy Teams.

Pet Partners is the national leader in demonstrating and promoting positive human-animal therapy, activities and education. Nearly forty years since the organization's inception, the science that proves these benefits has become indisputable. Today, Pet Partners is the nation's largest and most prestigious nonprofit registering handlers of multiple species as volunteer teams providing Animal-Assisted Interactions.

Pet Partners teams interact with a wide variety of clients including veterans with PTSD, seniors living with Alzheimer's, students with literacy challenges, patients in recovery, people with intellectual disabilities and those approaching end of life. The impact of these interactions is felt one million times a year. Pet Partners' curriculum and continuing education for licensed instructors, evaluators, and handlers is the gold standard in the field.

It takes a lot of work and dedication to become a registered Pet Partners Team Evaluator. To qualify they successfully completed an intense six-week hybrid training program that included online coursework, discussion groups, and an in-person practicum in New Hampshire.

Danielle, Stacey, and Elin will be continuing volunteering their services through Silent Sidekicks, Maine's first Animal-assisted Therapy nonprofit organization, including hosting Pet Partners Evaluations across Maine.

Friday, 26 May 2017

Rangers reaction says goodbye to Yaz, a triple crown winning cat



TORONTO - I've had pets all my life so I've dealt with the heartbreak of their death. It's never easy, especially for those pets with a great disposition, the ones who really seemed loyal and loving. Those kinds of pets are why we have them in the first place.

That describes our cat, Yaz, who passed away Friday afternoon. He had been sick for a couple of months and his death does not come as a total shock, but that no lessens the blow because he was such a wonderful companion.

I've had many cats in my life. My parents always had a cat, sometimes two, along with dogs. I've loved having both as pets. I understand why many people dislike cats, especially compared with dogs. Cats aren't as needy as dogs and don't show their affection as readily as dogs will. I'm fine with that.

But Yaz wasn't like that. Yaz was more like a dog. He would fetch toy mice. He'd drop a toy at your feet and expect you to throw it for him. He'd do it over and over until he got tired. He also wanted your affection, whether you were sitting at your desk, on the couch or in bed. He wanted to sit on your lap, curl up and sleep contently. He loved a good scratch session on his neck and under his chin. I could get him so relaxed that his legs would eventually start stretching out in different directions.

Yaz was named after Red Sox legend Carl Yastrzemski. Yaz's brother is named Fenway. My wife Laura is a Red Sox fan, if that wasn't obvious. (She also likes the Rangers, so back off.)

Yaz had to have a cancerous leg amputated in November 2015 and it was awfully expensive. If he could live pain-free, however, it was a no-brainer decision. He healed up and eventually was back to his old self, fetching mice and happy to be alive. We don't regret the expense at all.

Life goes on, of course. We'll move on and remember him fondly. The videos and pictures of him will probably bring sadness for a while but hopefully we'll be able to eventually remember him for who he was, a one-of-a-kind cat.

One more thing: Thanks so much to all of you who sent your well-wishes on Twitter. If I did not reply with a thank you know that I saw your message and it was much appreciated. I was running out of time before the game started and also I did not want to start annoying people with a bunch more tweets about my cat. Thank you for your thoughts!

Here's the Rangers reaction from a loss at Rogers Centre:

1. More than a loss — A.J. Griffin's intercostal strain, which will send him to the disabled list Saturday, may not seem like a massive problem with Tyson Ross waiting in the wings but consider this: Ross hasn't pitched in a major league game since Opening Day 2016 and he's unlikely to go deep in his starts the rest of the year. Dillon Gee will join the team from Triple A Round Rock and be used out of the bullpen, according to manager Jeff Banister. Depending on how long Griffin is down, the Rangers' rotation, which had been the rock of the club through most of the first two months, is now dealing with its second injured starter (also Cole Hamels).

2. Rougned's return — Rougned Odor downplayed the rivalry and history with the Blue Jays before the game and he sounded and looked genuine. Odor is trying to distance himself from the infamous punch thrown at Jose Bautista, refusing to sign memorabilia relating to it and generally has tried to downplay any lingering animosity. That's all understandable and respectable. Plus, you can understand why the same tired topic would get annoying for Odor.

3. Rougned's revenge — Having said all that, there was no doubt some massive satisfaction for Odor when he quieted Blue Jay fan boos with a three-run homer in the ninth inning that pulled the Rangers to within 7-6. The Rogers Centre crowd booed every time Odor came to the plate. They booed him before the game when the starting lineups were announced. Odor was 0 for 3 with a strikeout before his homer.

4. Stop, or not — Elvis Andrus appeared to run through a stop sign by third base coach Tony Beasley in the third inning and was thrown out at home plate. In Andrus' defense, the stop sign may have come late, and in the moment perhaps Andrus thought he could beat the throw. He wasn't and instead of having runners at second and third with one out, the Rangers had a runner at second with two outs. Odor lined out to left to end the inning, a fly out that would have scored Andrus from third on a sac fly.

5. Big bulllpen lift — Reliever Austin Bibens-Dirkx was forced to replace Griffin in the second inning and did an honorable job of saving the bullpen with four innings of relief. He allowed three runs (including two solo homers) but if he's unable to get the Rangers deep in the game before Jeremy Jeffress came on in the sixth, the already staggering bullpen would have been decimated for the rest of the series. Jeffress, allowed the third run against Bibens-Dirkx to score on a wild pitch but otherwise turned in his best outing in nearly two weeks. The Rangers needed that. He needed that.

Saturday, 8 April 2017

Animals in medicine cared for like the heroes they are


The animal research industry has a history of silence that we are beginning to understand must be broken. The public doesn’t have the information needed to understand what happens in our facilities. They’ve been inundated by propaganda that, at best, misrepresents us and at worst, spreads hate and fear. The public is almost exclusively exposed to this nearly always false, fantastical, fanatical misleading information. This isn’t fair to the public, to those of us who work in this industry, or to our animals.

During a recent interview, I was asked what I wanted the public to know about my job in animal research. My answer may have been too simplistic. Please allow me to give a more complete answer.

What I want the public to know is the truth.

I chose a career in animal medicine initially because I believed in ensuring the good health of animals and animal welfare, and because I believe in the great value of serving as an advocate.

When I was in vet tech school, a facility visit was arranged as we prepared to graduate and choose our career paths. One of our instructors urged us strongly to consider a path in animal research. He said we would never see the level of animal suffering in the research setting as we would in private practice. I have years of experience in both settings, and I can tell you without hesitation that he was absolutely right.

Some of the public hates us and our industry for what they think we do, because they’ve been misinformed. In an animal medical research facility, there are two groups of employees — the research group and the husbandry group. The researchers are kind to the animals and treat them with the utmost dignity. They want them to be happy and healthy. The animals do not make very good models if they are sick or depressed, and also the researchers want them to be treated as the heroes they are for leading patients to hope and healing.

Medical research doesn’t include the types of things that people see in extremists’ photos and videos. There are no cosmetics involved, no uncontrolled pain and no drug overdoses. Researchers are not going room to room inflicting pain on every creature in their path. The reality is researchers are seeking cures and comfort for humans and animals alike. How could this group of professionals whose careers are focused on helping possibly be focused on spreading cruelty? I challenge the doubting public to justify this misconception.

The other group is the husbandry group, which provides food, shelter, health, peace, love, toys and so much more to the animals. The husbandry group does not conduct research on animals. Instead, we take care of them as if they were our own. We refer to them as our own because we feed them every day, play with them, give them treats and as many special things as we can — every single day. Caring for these animals is the sole reason the husbandry group exists. We grieve when we lose them and celebrate when we send them to a new forever home. We know everything about them — which toys are their favorites, which foods they like, who is their favorite person and even their favorite music.

I want the public to understand everything we do in a research facility is guided by many, many regulations. We undergo inspections several times a year — often unannounced — by several different agencies, including the United States Department of Agriculture.

I want the public to know environmental conditions are strictly controlled. For example, if an animal room’s temperature gets even a degree out of range, we must respond and correct it immediately — no matter the hour of the day or night. Recently, I drove in to work to check on a mouse whose water valve had stopped working at 1 a.m. Now tell me people like me feel nothing.

Telling the public about those of us who work in animal research may not change opinions, but I want to break the silence.

I want real information to be available so, no matter what opinions are formed, they are formed only after considering and knowing facts.

Finally, I also call on others in this industry to follow me and tell the story from our side, to be transparent and open the door to the truth to dispute and dispel the myths about animals in medical research.

Friday, 24 March 2017

Kendal Museum project reveals extinct, endangered and rare birds


A METICULOUS project to identify and catalogue every single specimen of bird at a South Lakeland museum has been completed after almost 10 years.

All 1,681 specimens of the impressive bird collection at the World Wildlife Gallery in Kendal Museum have been catalogued for the first time with help from Museum and Gallery Skills students, staff and volunteers.

The work has highlighted the existence of some extremely rare, critically endangered and extinct birds from all over the world in a collection that boasts 717 different species.

Much of the collection dates from the 19th century and Kendal Museum is now working to refurbish the gallery to make it possible for every single specimen to be on public display.

“This is really quite a remarkable feat," said museum curator Carol Davies. "It’s been 10 years of work and now we’ve got this incredible scientific record at the museum, which is unique in the UK.

"We had to check, update and in some cases, correct the identities of the specimens and add their current scientific names. Sometimes this involved identifying specimens that didn’t have any previous label or record such as a case of 61 hummingbirds. This was certainly a challenge as there are over 300 species – many with different male and female plumages - to choose from.

“We couldn’t have completed this project without the support of our dedicated volunteers, none more so than Judith Robinson who consistently shared her expertise to catalogue this collection for posterity and of course for all of our visitors to enjoy.”

The fully catalogued collection includes a note of 2017 International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources status, which shows that there are more than 10 specimens of birds on the red list as being endangered or critically endangered and many more classed as vulnerable or near-threatened.

There are also specimens of the extinct Huia from New Zealand and the possibly extinct Eskimo Curlew and the Ecuadorian Turquoise-throated Puffleg hummingbird.

Friday, 24 February 2017

Poorly horse found covered in faeces


A young, poorly foal covered in faeces has been found straying near Rugby.

The RSPCA was contacted on Saturday, February 18 by a woman who found the young colt in Millers Lane, in Monks Kirby near Rugby, after he nearly got hit by a vehicle while straying on the road.

The horse, thought to be around six months old, was underweight, lethargic, in poor body condition and had an infection on his genitals when he was rescued. He is also being treated for redworm burden, a parasite which can be fatal in horses.

RSPCA inspector Nicky Foster, who is investigating, said: “The poor horse was covered in faeces all down his rear legs and his tail was thick with it.

“He really was in a very sorry state. It is worrying that he was wandering down a road, vulnerable and near to traffic. At this stage we can’t say if he was abandoned or was straying, but either way he was in a bad state and is possibly even too young to be away from his mum.

“The foal had no form of identification and clearly hadn’t been kept very well at all. He is now recovering at our equine centre in Shropshire, where he has been called Blackjack. He will be cared for there until he’s made a full recovery.

“We are very keen to find out where he came from and how he came to be in this way.

Saturday, 7 January 2017

End of species extinctions is in sight as we bring animals back


Unleash the long-gone beasts. We won’t see a woolly mammoth in 2017, but a host of schemes to bring animals back from the brink of extinction will kick in next year.

Genetic and stem cell technologies are on the cusp of letting us clone even infertile endangered animals when intact DNA is available. And some extinct species could be brought back by tweaking the genome of a living close relative. It should also be possible to engineer lost traits into a population.

One initiative involves the northern white rhino, which is now down to three infertile individuals living in Kenya. This year, a plan was announced to use stem cell technologies, frozen specimens and assisted reproduction to make new rhinos.

Similarly, genetic rescue could help the black-footed ferret (pictured), one of the most endangered mammals in North America, to make a comeback. The first in vitro experiments are set to begin in 2017, and will tackle inbreeding and disease resistance, because a type of plague and an untreatable virus are in danger of wiping out the animals.

Another project is using gene editing to make a chimeric rooster of prairie chickens to help bring back their extinct relative the heath hen. If it works, they hope to revive the passenger pigeon next.

Woolly mammoths are a little further over the horizon. A project is under way to endow Asian elephant eggs with mammoth DNA. After the legwork is done over the next year, the first cloning attempts are scheduled for 2018.

Jurassic Park is still beyond us, but Pleistocene Park, full of ice age animals, might soon be a realistic dream.