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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

Protection's in peril for our endangered species'¦again

March 28, 2007 / (8) comments


"First it was necessary to civilize man in relation to man. Now it is necessary to civilize man in relation to nature and the animals."

-Victor Hugo

If you’ve never read this quote before, you’ve been missing one of the most concise and eloquent historical analyses of the global environmental movement. My favorite word in this snippet? “Necessary.”

Yet we don’t all agree on Mr. Hugo’s fine point.

Apparently our country’s current Presidential administration is numbered among its dissenters. (What the hell is she talking about now?) I’m referring to the recent leak of a draft of new changes to the Endangered Species Act planned by the executive branch of our government.

Now you may not deem this a worthy or particularly relevant topic for a pet blog but it’s also a vet blog (and it happens to be a tree-hugger’s blog, too) so you’ll occasionally be subjected to the occasional opinionated rant on the wider subject of stewardship for animals in general. So jcat, this one’s for you and your ilk…

If you read the New York Times, the LA Times or even Salon.com (they get extra kudos for breaking the story) you’ll read about the endangerment of the Endangered Species Act.

Now, Nixon may have been a tad rough around the edges but his administration achieved some very fine things, which include the ESA. Before the turn of the ‘seventies, threatened and endangered species only got special attention if the individual states where the species resided got together and decided it was a good idea. Nixon and his then-cronies thought states were too personally invested to make rational decisions on whether a black-footed ferret gets precedence over a highway (for instance).

It made a lot of sense then and still does today. The thinking was, an individual state (comprised disproportionately of citizens hankering for a highway, powerful property owners looking for the bucks and a collapsing construction industry looking to employ simple folk) might not make the best decision for the “freakin’ ferret.” Imagine that!

And “next thing you know we’ll be up to here with spotted owls!”  (add gesticulations for emotional impact)

Remember that gem? I guess you can say Bush-the-former had no special sensitivity for bird-life—not  when pitted against the Northwest’s powerful logging lobbyists. To be fair, the loggers had been losing for a long time. Their industry was (and still is) imperiled. They [understandably] sought the right to continue to log in the face of a dwindling owl population, whose niche was tied to the very trees they expected to cut to put food on their children’s tables. Damn owl! Damn Endangered Species Act! The owl won.

Since then, the Republican administration has been seeking to blunt the effects of the ESA. After all, they want to feed the children of farmers and loggers nationwide. Their approach? Allow dams to crowd out the habitats of endangered fish so farmers can have their water. Allow loggers to fell the owls’ trees so they can have their lumber. Allow miners to blast the mountains so they can have their ore. Shall I go on?

All politics is local. And that’s why the ESA will be emasculated if Bush-the-latter has his say. His solution? Let the states have more control. Let those affected make the decisions. Add new measures to the Act so it doesn’t endanger the livelihoods of our little people and doesn’t infringe on the rights of property owners.

Hearing the administration make its plea (as was attempted two years ago with a Republican legislature—for the record, it failed) you’d think the most vital afectees made sub-minimum wages and lacked for F-350’s and funds for college tuitions. Not so.

The most effective constituents? The property owners of large expanses ripe for highways. The wealthy land owners and contractors poised, tractors-a-ready, for that new dam to get built. The logging companies, flush with land-cash, if only they could continue to rape it as often as they’d like to.

No, we’re not really talking about the dispossessed, the destitute or the depressed. Sure, some of these will suffer. They’ll have to move. They’ll lose income over the spotted owl or some invisible “freakin’ frog.” I’m not insensitive. I understand what they might suffer.

But consider the alternative: a long, relentless trend towards destruction of the continent. Where would it end?

As one prominent attorney for property owners in California said, (and I paraphrase) extinction of a species will be limited to situations where power or water to a population becomes necessary. He means human populations, of course. He means when his clients might lose out if they can’t sell their hundred-acre plots of three-bedroom homes to the highest bidders because there’s no power or water to be had if his other clients can’t build dams and plants on their otherwise-“worthless” land.

I think Dante imagined a particular layer of Hell for people like this.

If you care about our animal populations, insignificantly flighty, froggy or fishy as they might seem, consider writing a letter to your congress-person. Consider posting a comment on an environmental blog. Consider sending ten bucks a month to your local (state) environmental group. Consider how your next favorite presidential candidate thinks on this and vote accordingly

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COMMENTS (8)
1
by on 03/31/2007 02:26pm

Oh boy....another all-round controversial subject.

From what I can see, conservation world wide works on the rules of :
- is it cute? And cuteness stops if it bites my dog or my brat when we invade it's habitat.
- is it's limited habitat somewhere where we can pack in huge numbers of people on very expensive developments, most of which will have a pic of the 'cute' species that lived there before
people trashed the place.
- can we then complain furiously about it eating our invasive-species flowerbeds.
- can we then make wildlife rescue groups such as the one I work for come and remove the last of the species in the area, because they are annoying us

And then....as the last insult, can we then put up large signs saying 'home of the bushbaby' etc,
when we have done every possible thing to destroy their environment, and cornered the last of the survivors into a 100m wide strip - said strip only exising because it's not suitable for building on.

Wildlife worldwide has become a lose-lose battle. We take their space, and then kill them when they eat the invasive species we put there. We pride ourselves on having them, but god help the raccoon who trashes your dustbin.

Funnily enough, as a wildlife rehab worker, I agree - support every hunter's group possible. Because they are the ones with the power to enforce a natural zone, and the willingness to yell loudly. And if the reason they do it is so that they can go shoot things......heck. At least they are ensuring that there are things to be shot, and places in which to do it.

2
by on 03/29/2007 10:47am

Yes I live in MA.

The problem with enviromental groups here ( atleast the ones that I'm aware of) is they are not consistant with what their goals are and what they want to accomplish. They tend to be wishy-washy and go with the times instead of sticking to their original agenda or purpose. It's like PETA on a less extreme level which I'm not a fan of.

If a group or community of people wants to save something, they shouldn't be swayed by what the media or what the nay-sayers think. Since your original post was about wolves, if people that want to help the wolf population, they shouldn't be accepting funds from hunters so they have more money to get their information out to people. I'm not saying that happens, but things of such nature do happen.

The state of Maine has this thing every year where they set up mechanical animals. The two most often used are moose and deer. These mechanical animals are set up off in the distance from a highway and move their heads like a real deer or moose that look like they are grazing and there are cameras watching these areas for the entire time they are set up. The reason for these fake animals being put up in the first place is to make sure that people are not hunting them in the off season.

Either last year or the year before, game wardens were caught shooting at the mechanical moose when they were the ones that were supposed to be protecting the moose and the moose population during the off season. Whether they were part of any type of conservation group or not I don't know, but usually when it comes to protecting a animal species, game wardens are involved even if they are not in the thick of things. They are there to enforce the state's law which in a way helps those that want to protect { insert animal species here}

It's these types of situations that completely turn me off and it happens more often than not. I think the only ones here that actually follow the law of the land here is a group called "Clean Harbors". They have been working hard to get the disgusting mess in Boston Harbor cleaned up over the past many years and have been standing up against developers that would like nothing more than back fill all of our wetlands so they can build more Wal*Marts or whatever. They do other stuff as well, but for the most part when there is a problem or somebody decides to try and do something stupid, they are usually all over it. If there is anything weird going on with them they keep it hidden well as I don't remember ever hearing anything bad about them.

I won't start about issues like the Big Dig or the Big Pig as I call it as that was a disaster even before it started.

3
by on 03/29/2007 09:26am

Stacy: isn't MassPiRG a good advocate for environmental issues in your state? (you're in MA, I assume?)

4
by on 03/29/2007 08:36am

Pardon the religious comments I'm about to make.

But Bush and Co. claim to be Christian, yet they don't follow the first tenets laid out in Genesis, that Adam and Eve were given the charge of caretakers of the Earth. This does not mean permission to destroy it- it's take care of it. And frankly, they aren't. I feel like he read Maciavelli and 1984 as training manuals, instead of attempting the Bible as he claims.

5
by on 03/29/2007 07:41am

If I sent money to any eviromental cause in this state, it would end in somebody else's pocket.

There has been an ongoing battle over whether to build windmill farms off of Natucket. They would be a clean source of energy that everybody would benefit from, but because John Kerry and Ted Kennedy like to go on their personal booze cruises, they claim that it will obstruct their view as if they are really going out for "the view."

When they were called on that, they blamed everything on the Coast Guard. They said that the Coast Guard would have a problem with it should somebody get into trouble while being out on their boats. That didn't last long as the Coast Guard came back and asked them what they were talking about as these farms wouldn't be an issue.

Coyotes are not rare, but because people insist on having a shopping mall, Dunkin' Dounuts, McDonalds and everything else every couple of miles, people have been complaining about how their cats and small dogs keep disappearing for the past number of years. If people stopped building stuff in every nook and cranny, the coyotes might actually start keeping the deer population in check instead of eating peoples cats and small dogs.

We have a pack of them that live in the power lines behind the house. They were making all kinds of noise the other night over something, but for the most part, most people are not even aware that they are there. It's one place they can go as they won't be bothered and since we have deer around, there are food sources for them although I'm sure a few cats that have ben posted as missing have acted like a meal.

People don't like to think beyond themselves as after all who would be impressed with that? It's easier to build a 5,000 square foot house with 3 people living in it as that will impress the Johnsons next door.

The same can be said for the wolves. People insist on turning everything into money, so they build and build and build and bad things start to happen. It has nothing to do with playing God, it's all about money.

6
by on 03/28/2007 09:04pm

My cynical side says the only way people will notice is if we DO make a bunch of species extinct, and so we should hurry it up as much as possible so they notice sooner. An even more bitter side says that humans have already doomed the Earth, so we might as well use it up and move on to another planet.

But my practical side thankfully doesn't listen, and votes for protection of this only planet that we have, and that we are methodically destroying.

7
by on 03/28/2007 07:51pm

You won't get ripped by me...I have one, too.

8
by on 03/28/2007 07:47pm

I agree. I might get ripped for this, but... buy a fishing license, or a hunting license, even if you have no desire to hunt or fish, as much of the funds from the sale of both go toward conservation; and conservation might just be what it takes to slow the mass destruction of wildlife habitat.

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About fully vetted

Patty Khuly, VMD, MBA

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Dr. Khuly is a former petMD blogger and small animal veterinarian in Miami, Florida, where she practices medicine at Sunset Animal Clinic and serves on the board of the South Florida Veterinary Medical Association. She is a graduate of Wellesley College, the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, and The Wharton School of Business.

As a significant sideline, she writes...a lot. She authors pet health columns for USA Today, The Miami Herald and Vetstreet. She also writes a popular monthly column for Veterinary Practice News and serves as regular contributor to Veterinary Economics, The Bark, and the Veterinary News Network.

Dr. Khuly lives in South Miami with her brood of hens, goats, dogs, cats...and humans.

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