WHAT
IS KILLING THE BEES? An article in Natural News by David
Gutierrez on September 30, 2008 has linked the bee die-off in
the Baden-Wurttemburg state of Germany to direct contact with
the insecticide clothianidin found on corn seeds
A
Tale of Two Whales Pity the poor whale. All it wants is
to peacefully swim in the ocean. Instead it finds
itself caught up in a net of litigation and rule
making processes. Writing for the majority,
Chief Justice Roberts said, “the most serious possible
injury would be harm to an unknown number of marine mammals” whereas
imposing restrictions on Naval exercises would force “the
Navy to deploy an inadequately trained antisubmarine force” that
would jeopardize “the safety of the fleet.”
Whales
and penguins at risk in krill harvest
Companies are scrambling to harvest Antarctic krill for health supplements,
causing concern over the ocean ecosystem
Mystery
of the 5-Legged Freaks
Oddly high rates of deformation among salamanders,
frogs and other amphibians have puzzled scientists in recent years.
Possible causes include inbreeding, parasites or pollution that
permeates the animals' skin. The mysterious deformations have included five-legged
salamanders, frogs
with extra limbs and other amphibians born so messed
up that they can't survive to reproduce. In at least some cases,
frog deformities are related to increasing numbers of infections
caused by tiny parasites that thrive on nutrient-rich runoff from North
American farms, a study
last year found.
In
Hard Times for Humans, Hardships for Pets, Too
At New York City’s main animal shelter, monthly calls to
the volunteers who can help people keep their pets through tough
financial times doubled, to 225 from 115, between January and
September.
Wildlife
gives early warning of 'deadly dozen' diseases spread by climate
change
Scientists have nicknamed them the “deadly dozen”:
12 diseases, lethal to humans and wildlife, that
are increasing their geographical range. Ebola,
cholera, plague and sleeping sickness were among
those identified yesterday by veterinary scientists
from the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) as spreading
across the planet because of climate change. The
scientists said that wildlife could give an early warning of
the approach of diseases and save millions of people.
NEPA Buzz
Kill: Is the Agency Hiding Colony Collapse Disorder Information? RDC
Forced to Sue to Get Public Records on Bee Mystery.
The Natural Resources Defense Council filed a lawsuit today
to uncover critical information that the US government is withholding
about the risks posed by pesticides to honey bees. NRDC legal
experts and a leading bee researcher are convinced that the
US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has evidence of connections
between pesticides and the mysterious honey bee die-offs reported
across the country. The phenomenon has come to be called “colony
collapse disorder,” or CCD, and it is already proving
to have disastrous consequences for American
agriculture and the $15 billion worth of crops pollinated by
bees every year.
Plastics
Suspect In Lobster Illness The search for what causes a
debilitating shell disease affecting lobsters from Long Island
Sound to Maine has led one Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL)
visiting scientist to suspect environmental alkyphenols, formed
primarily by the breakdown of hard transparent plastics.
Waves
of disaster By Roberta
Staley
They are called lantern fish, silvery navigators
of the ocean’s
deepest depths, bug-eyed, blunt-nosed, and gap-mouthed,
with close-set rows of pointy teeth.
Every night around the globe, at least 600 million tonnes of
these finned creatures, along with a few related
species—which
make up as much as 90 percent of deep-sea fish biomass—swim
upward from their dark hiding places to near the ocean’s
surface to gorge on zooplankton, made up of organisms
that are often too tiny to be seen with the naked
eye, such as the shrimplike krill, jellyfish, and arrow worms.
Lantern fish have no “genetic ability to differentiate between zooplankton
and plastic”, Moore says. “We have been screwing up the ocean with
plastic for 50 to 60 years. The fact that we’ve done it so fast and that
it has penetrated so low into the food chain is alarming, but we’re just
beginning to make a scientific assessment of what this means.”
Extraordinary
Creative & Psychic Powers of Animals vid
By Michael Goodspeed
Many followers of the Thunderbolts project are familiar
with the revolutionary research of biologist Dr. Rupert Sheldrake,
author of more than 75 scientific papers and ten books, including
the internationally acclaimed "Dogs that Know When Their Owners are Coming Home." In
controlled double-blind experiments, Sheldrake has found compelling
evidence of "interspecies telepathy," including the uncanny
(yet familiar to many pet owners) ability of dogs
to anticipate when their owners are returning home. http://sheldrake.org
The
Bush Administration’s Plan To Make The Endangered Species
Act Extinct Today, the AP reports on new draft rules being
proposed by the Bush administration to gut the Endangered Species
Act. This would be the biggest change to the groundbreaking legislation
since 1988, and would not require the approval of Congress.
8/1/08
Rough to the Gills: Judge
says Calif. salmon in trouble but offers no short-term solution
5/22/08
5/17/08
An epidemic of extinctions: Decimation of life on earth
Species are dying out at a rate not seen since the demise of the dinosaurs, according to a report published today – and human behaviour is to blame. Emily Dugan counts the cost
5/18/08
PET OWNERS - - COCOA MULCH WARNING!!
4/25/08
Molly the Pony Romps to a New Roll in Life.....on Three legs.
4/17/08
Navy sonar blamed for death of beaked whales found washed up in the Hebrides
4/15/08
Scientists try to explain dismal salmon run Amid growing concern over an imminent shutdown of the commercial and sport chinook salmon season, scientists are struggling to figure out why the largest run on the West Coast hit rock bottom and what Californians can do to bring it back. The chinook salmon - born in the rivers, growing in the bay and ocean, and returning to home rivers to spawn - need two essential conditions early in life to prosper: safe passage through the rivers to the bay and lots of seafood to eat once they reach the ocean.
Yet, the Sacramento River run of salmon that was expected to fill fish markets in May didn't find those life-sustaining conditions. And some scientists say that's the likeliest explanation for why the number of returning spawners plummeted last fall to roughly 90,000, about 10 percent of the peak reached just a few years ago.rest at the link
4/12/08
"Major disaster" for bees may jeopardize Washington state's crops Bees are in trouble, and in Washington, that could mean agriculture is, too.Last year, many Washington beekeepers were relieved that they avoided a mysterious Colony Collapse Disorder that silenced hives all over the country. But this year, some beekeepers are reporting a devastating new pathogen — with no reliable cure — is killing their bees in droves.
3/12/08 NZ dolphin rescues beached whales
A dolphin has come to the rescue of two whales which had become stranded on a beach in New Zealand

Articles by Dr. Gerald
Wessner
Homeopathy & Animals
Homeopathic Stories
Is There Hope for Cushings?
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Dr. Gerald
Wessner
Holistic Vet Clinic
PO Box 1749
Summerfield, Fl. 34492
352-245-2025
www.holisticvetclinic.net