Additional posts

South Sudan Safeguards Wildlife Amidst Interethnic WarfareBoma National Park, South Sudan, March 13, 2012 (ENS)A new headquarters building was inaugurated in wildlife-rich Boma National Park on Friday in South Sudan’s conflict-ridden Jonglei State. The world’s newest nation, South Sudan claimed its independence on July 9, 2011, but fighting still rages in Jonglei…

Sea Shepherd Declares Victory as Japanese Whalers Head HomeWilliamstown, Australia, March 9, 2012 (ENS)The whale conservation group Sea Shepherd is celebrating victory as Japan ends its whaling season with less than a third of its annual self-assigned quota. “It has been a successful campaign,” Sea Shepherd founding president Captain Paul Watson said Friday. “There are hundreds of whales swimming free …

Ted Turner Donates $1 Million to the Dian Fossey Gorilla FundAtlanta, Georgia, March 7, 2012 (ENS)Philanthropist, environmentalist and CNN founder Ted Turner tonight announced his contribution of $1 million to the Atlanta-based Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International, which works to save endangered gorillas in Rwanda and eastern Congo. …

Two Public-land Grazing Plans Dismissed to Protect Arizona Wildlife

January 18, 201,  www.biologicaldiversity.org| “In response to appeals filed by the Center for Biological Diversity last fall, the U.S. Forest Service today reversed two decisions that would have allowed livestock grazing across 33,000 acres of national forest lands in Arizona.  Apache-Sitgreaves National Forests failed to account for the impacts of grazing on pronghorn, deer, elk and tassel-eared squirrel populations. The lands and species in question also include habitat and prey for the threatened Mexican spotted owl and critically endangered Mexican gray wolf.”

“~ 33,000 ACRES PROTECTED FOR RARE GRAY WOLVES, PRONGHORN ANTELOPE, ELK, SPOTTED OWLS AND TASSEL-EARED SQUIRRELS. There are millions of acres already available for cattle grazing. January 18, 2011
Two Public-land Grazing Plans Dismissed to Protect Arizona Wildlife
www.biologicaldiversity.org
PHOENIX— In response to appeals filed by the Center for Biological Diversity last fall, the U.S. Forest Service today reversed two decisions that would have allowed livestock grazing across 33,000 acres of national forest lands in Arizona.”
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What to do with Unwanted Fur? Donate It to Help Orphaned Wildlife

Dec 1, 2010, www.humanesociety.org | “Do you have an old fur coat in your closet? Is your grandmother’s mink stole stored in the attic? Many of us have fur apparel that we no longer want or that was left to us by a family member. Some aren’t comfortable selling it or giving it to charity, because they feel people should not wear animal fur.  So what should people do with it?

Give it back to the animals. If you would like to see that old fur put to a good use, see if there is a wildlife rehabilitator in your area who will use it to aid and comfort wildlife.”

Lindy Rose shared a link.
Donating Used Furs to “Coats for Cubs” Helps Wildlife : The Humane Society of the United States.
Don’t know what to do with that old fur coat? Give it back to the animals. Here’s how.”
Comments:
Robert Brothers “What a great idea! Wildlife rescuers use the furs to warm and comfort orphaned and injured wildlife. More than 200 groups from across the United States and Canada now participate in the program. This is the kind of creative thinking that helps us look for other opportunities like this.”
    • Judith Green “Three years ago while my mother and I were cleaning out her closets we ran across some old forgotten fur muffs and stoles that had been purchased by some family member or other back in the 1940’s or ’50’s. We both felt bad finding those furs. We sure did not want to keep them or wear them! But we didn’t want to sell them, either–didn’t want the money, and didn’t want to encourage other to wear the furs. Fortunately I’d seen a notice about this “Coats for Cubs” programs at the Buffalo Exchange in Bellingham, Wa. My mother agreed that was where they should go. It felt good to be able to give the fur back to animals and to know it would give comfort to some little orphan or injured animal.”
    • Robert Brothers “great to hear how this really works!”
    • Robert Brothers, Ara Johnson, Judith Green, Ysabel Vicente, and Christine Aspinall like this.

Man saves 375 lbs black bear from drowning

July 1, 2008, www.treehugger.com | “Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist Adam Warwick just couldn’t let the bear drown, so he took off his shirt and dove after it. The 375 lbs black bear had been spotted in a residential area, obviously looking for food, and was shot with a tranquilizer dart. Unfortunately, before it went under, it jumped in the water of the Gulf of Mexico. More photos and a video below.”

Would you do that??
Man saves 375 lbs black bear from drowning (with photos and video)
www.treehugger.com
Rescuing a 375 lbs Male Black BearFlorida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist Adam Warwick just couldn’t let the bear drown, so he took off his shirt and dive after it. The 375 lbs black bear had…

Olaus and Mardy Murie: Alaska’s Passionate Protectors

October 21, 2013, www.wilderness.net | “Margaret (Mardy) Murie is fondly called the Grandmother of the Conservation Movement, but her love of the land began at a young age. Born on August 18, 1902 in Seattle, Mardy moved to Fairbanks with her family when she was five years old. Her step-father was an assistant U.S. attorney. She attended Simons College in Boston but finished her degree in business administration at the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines, now the University of Alaska.”

GoodNews FortheEarth shared a link.
HISTORY – Olaus and Mardy Murie: Alaska’s Passionate Protectors
“I hope the United States of America is not so rich that she can afford to let these wildernesses pass by, or so poor she cannot afford to keep them.” – Mardy Murie – In congressional testimony about the Alaska Lands Act
Thanks to Dena Nickell for posting this.
Wilderness.net – Olaus and Mardy Murie, 1902 – 2003
www.wilderness.net
Olaus is rememberd as a biologist, Alaskan explorer and author. Mardy is often call the ‘grandmother of the conversation movement.’
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