The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too The Pet Tree House - Where Pets Are Family Too

Monday, December 14, 2015

Why Dogs Growl



Today we will focus on how to read dogs in order to prevent being bitten. Dogs communicate with us and other animals in various ways and we will look at some of these.

It is human nature to tell the dog off when it growls at your child or new puppy. However if we teach them not to provide a warning before they bite, they will bite without warning. "If you take the growl out of the dog it is just like taking the batteries out of a fire alarm", was quoted at a recently Dog-Bite Prevention conference.

When a dog growls at a child or new puppy it is probably because the dog has had enough or its space has been invaded. It is important to teach children not to play with a dog that is eating or chewing a toy, when it is in its kennel or lying on its bed, sleeping, etc. The reason for this is that dogs also need privacy and we should respect that.

When a child or new puppy are becoming too much for the dog it is best to remove them from the situation and keep them occupied elsewhere. The growl was a warning to stop and if this warning is not heeded the next step would be for the dog to snap or bite to make the warning clear.

Teach your children to be safe around dogs whether they be your own, a friend’s, family members’ or strange dogs. Respect their space and if they hear a growl to stop doing what they are doing and move away from the dog. Be safe!


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Sunday, December 13, 2015

Thanks To New Law: Every U.S. Military Dog Will Be Brought Home


The heroic pups who courageously serve and paw-tect our country are finally getting the recognition they deserve.

President Barack Obama signed a bill into law last month that guarantees the safe return of all retired military dogs to the United States after serving abroad. In the past, some of these animals were left to retire overseas because they were no longer considered service dogs, and were therefore ineligible for military-funded transportation home, The Washington Times reported.

The American Humane Association estimates that a military dog saves between 150 to 200 service members during his tenure by detecting improvised explosive devices and hidden weapons caches. Upon return from combat, these animals, if given the chance, often continue to protect their humans and help them transition back into society.



“[The bill] will ensure that our four-legged veterans will finally have their chance to come home and live a comfortable, quiet life, hopefully with a handler they deployed with or a fellow veteran,” retired Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Jeff DeYoung, who was reunited with his war dog, Cena, said in a press release. “These dogs have so much love to give…it’s time we show some in return.”

This pooch-protecting measure was part of the $607 billion National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), passed by the Senate on Nov. 10.

There are an estimated 2,500 dogs currently serving overseas, according to the American Humane Association. To get retired dogs home in the past, humanitarian organizations, like the American Humane Association, or the handlers themselves, would front the transportation costs involved, according to The Times.

And the canines who were left behind faced uncertain futures.

“In some cases they’ve been kept in kennels for indeterminate lengths of time until someone wanted them,” Mark Stubis, spokesman for the American Humane Association, told The Washington Times. “In the best cases, some have been adopted by U.S. military personnel living abroad. In others, they were adopted by local people and, we have heard, in some cases, abused.”

Experts say that even after retirement, these dogs actually still have a lot to give, especially to veterans living with post-traumatic stress syndrome and other mental health issues.
“When they come back suffering from those invisible wounds of war, we’re hoping that their four legged battle buddy will help them heal from PTS,” Robin Ganzert, president and CEO of the American Humane Association, told The Washington Free Beacon. “We know it works. We’ve seen it work.”





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Washington Animal Rescue League: Dogs Once Suffering on S. Korean Dog Meat Farm Arrived in the DC Area - Media is Invited to Cover the Transfer of Dogs on Monday, Dec. 14


Washington, DC - Humane Society International rescue dogs and shut down fourth farm; partners with Washington Animal Rescue League and Washington, DC metro shelters to find dogs loving homes.

(Dec. 9, 2015) ― Twenty six dogs rescued from a dog meat farm in South Korea by Humane Society International begin arriving at the Washington Animal Rescue League on Dec. 11, on their way to new lives. Once the animals are evaluated by WARL staff, the dogs will be divided among them and four other Emergency Placement Partner shelters including the Animal Welfare League of Alexandria, Animal Welfare League of Arlington, Fairfax County Animal Shelter and Washington Humane Society to find the dogs homes. Emergency Placement Partners is a program of The Humane Society of the United States, HSI’s U.S. affiliate.

WHAT:       Media is invited to cover the transfer of dogs on Monday, Dec. 14 at WARL.

WHERE:    Washington Animal Rescue League, 71 Oglethorpe Street, NW, Washington,     D.C., 20011

WHEN:       Monday, Dec. 14 at 11:00 a.m. EST

WHO:        
Robert Ramin, president and ceo of WARL
Kelly O’Meara, director of companion animals and engagement for HSI
Representatives from the Animal Welfare League of Alexandria, Animal Welfare League of Arlington, Fairfax County Animal Shelter and Washington Humane Society

Background:  HSI worked with the farm owner to remove the dogs from miserable conditions and close its doors for good. As part of the plan, he signed an agreement with HSI to shut down the property. HSI will follow the farmer’s progress to ensure compliance. HSI will demolish the cages once all the dogs are safely removed.

HSI is working to reduce the dog meat trade in Asia, including in South Korea where dogs are farmed for the trade – and where the 2018 Winter Olympics will be held. HSI will work with other dog farmers who agree to get out of the inhumane dog meat trade permanently and transition into trades like crop growing.

**Photos and video of the Korean dog meat farm, and their arrival at Dulles are available by request.

Media Note: Credentialed media interested in attending should RSVP to a contact below.

Media Contacts:
HSI: Raul Arce-Contreras, 240-620-3263, rcontreras@humanesociety.org
WARL: Matt Williams, 202-280-9412, matt.williams@warl.org

About Humane Society International
Humane Society International and its partner organizations together constitute one of the world’s largest animal protection organizations. For more than 20 years, HSI has been working for the protection of all animals through the use of science, advocacy, education and hands on programs. Celebrating animals and confronting cruelty worldwide – on the Web at hsi.org.

About the Washington Animal Rescue League
For 100 years, the Washington Animal Rescue League has rescued the dogs, cats, puppies and kittens that had nowhere else to go.  As the oldest animal shelter in the Nation’s Capital, the Washington Animal Rescue League has rescued, cared for and adopted more than 100,000 animals in its history.  The only area shelter with a full service medical center, the Washington Animal Rescue League’s mission continues to evolve as conditions change and animals face new and different challenges, but the core of that mission remains unchanged:  to honor and strengthen the human-animal bond by providing the best quality care for homeless dogs and cats, and supporting companion animals in their homes through affordable veterinary care, community outreach, and education. For additional information, visit www.warl.org.

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Did You Know That Cats Use Cardboard Boxes for Stress Relief?


If you have a cat, or have even been around a cat, you know they have a propensity for trying to fit into spaces far too small for them. Many a box has been ruined by a cat with a misguided sense of her size. From shoe boxes to refrigerator boxes, cats zero in on cardboard and make it their own. The question is, why? Is it because they know how adorable it is? Or do they get a thrill from making sure we have to keep climbing over whatever random box they have made their home for the day? Well, science has finally (possibly) found the answer!

It turns out, according to a new study from the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands, that cats use boxes for stress relief. Researches took 19 cats that were new to shelters and gave 10 boxes, while the other 9 did not. Over a 14 day period, the felines with boxes showed far less stress on the Kessker and Turner Cat-Stress-Score (CSS), and adjusted to the shelter environment far better than their box-less cohorts.

Cats are also awful at resolving conflict. If you have more than one cat, pay attention to where they go after a squabble, or to avoid one. Chances are, they are hitting an enclosed space, most likely a box. Hiding out in them helps them ignore whatever is stressing them out. That’s assuming your other cats don’t try to follow into the same box.

Outside of stress relief, boxes also provide something every cat needs: extra warmth. Cats prefer to stay between 86 and 97 degrees Fahrenheit, about 20 degrees higher than the average temperature of homes. Since cardboard is such a great insulator, curling up in boxes helps them maintain their comfort temperature. The same goes for cats curling up in a sink, or in a corner of the basement when they are too hot. They don’t do it simply to be cute.






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Saturday, December 12, 2015

Dozens of Sickly Snakes Removed from an Apartment in Baltimore, Maryland


Animal control officers have removed dozens of sickly snakes from an apartment in Baltimore, Maryland.

Sharon Miller, Baltimore's director of animal services, says officers rescued 56 snakes from the apartment on Tuesday. She says the reptiles were dehydrated and were infested with mites, and three had to be put down.

Miller says the snakes, which included ball pythons, reticulated pythons and boa constrictors, were removed after officers found them in squalid conditions.

The snakes were taken to an animal shelter.

Miller says an investigation is under way and citations or charges could result. A permit is required to own any kind of snake in Baltimore.



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Friday, December 11, 2015

A Litter of Puppies Have Been Born Using In Vitro Fertilization


They're not only adorable - they're a scientific breakthrough. For the first time, a litter of puppies have been born using in vitro fertilization, say Cornell University researchers.

A female dog fertilized with 19 embryos gave birth to seven healthy puppies, according to a statement from Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine. Two puppies are from a beagle mother and a cocker spaniel father, and the other five are the offspring of two pairs of beagle fathers and mothers.

"IVF was first done in people back in the mid 1970s," Alex Travis, associate professor of reproductive biology at the Baker Institute for Animal Health, told CBS News. Yet until now, scientists hadn't been able to perform it successfully in dogs, despite many years of trying, he said.

For in vitro fertilization, a mature egg is fertilized in the lab with a sperm, and an embryo is produced. The embryo is then transferred into a host female at the right time in her reproductive cycle.

The first challenge for the researchers was to collect mature eggs from the female oviduct (called Fallopian tubes in humans). The researchers first tried to use eggs that were in the same stage of cell maturation as other animals, but since dogs' reproductive cycles differ from other mammals, those eggs failed to fertilize.

It's not as easy to perform in vitro fertilization in dogs as it in in people, or cats, Penn Vet's Dr. Margaret Casal told CBS News. "The cycle in the dog is so very different than in other species."


"Dogs only cycle twice a year so if your'e doing experiments, there's not a lot of material," said Travis.

Through experimentation, the Cornell researchers discovered that if they left the egg in the oviduct one more day, the eggs reached a stage where fertilization was greatly improved.

Also, by adding magnesium to cell culture cultures, Travis said they were able to better prepare the sperm for fertilization.

"We made those two changes, and now we achieve success in fertilization rates at 80 to 90 percent," Travis explained in a statement.

The final challenge for the researchers was freezing the embryos. Freezing them allowed the researchers to wait until the right time in the female dog's reproductive cycle and then insert them into the oviducts. Travis said that part of the process was performed in May 2015.

In dogs, pregnancy is 63 days from ovulation -- a little over 2 months, Travis said.

The Cornell team previously delivered Klondike, the first puppy born from a frozen embryo in the Western Hemisphere, in 2013.

This first litter of IVF puppies, born July 10th, has broad implications for wildlife conservation, Travis told CBS News.

"We can freeze and bank sperm, and use it for artificial insemination." He said the technique could be used to conserve the genetics of endangered species.

"The reason for doing things like this is that it will lead to the preservation of species that are almost lost. Canid types - wolves, foxes - certain sub-species. There are many different types. They may not be facing extinction just yet but some are running into a crisis," said Penn Vet's Casal, an associate professor of medical genetics, reproduction and pediatrics for dogs and cats.

She said some types of wolves, for example, are very genetically similar animal to animal - they have very similar immune systems.

"If some virus comes along that has mutated, it can essentially wipe out the population. This gives the ability to freeze embryos and perform IVF later to revive a species that may have been brought to extinction," Casal said.

With new gene editing techniques, researchers may one day be able to remove genetic diseases and traits in an embryo, too, ridding dogs of heritable diseases.

"With a combination of gene editing techniques and IVF, we can potentially prevent genetic disease before it starts," Travis said.

Canines share more than 350 similar heritable disorders and traits with humans, almost twice the number as any other species. So, dogs now may offer a "powerful tool for understanding the genetic basis of diseases," Travis said.

"Yes this is a very big deal. It's pretty spectacular to get that to work," said Casal.

Jennifer Nagashima, a graduate student in Travis' lab and the first to enroll in the Joint Graduate Training Program between the Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and Cornell's Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future, is the paper's first author. The research was described in a study published today in the scientific journal PLOS ONE.

Travis said the puppies have all gone to happy homes, including his own. "I have two of them. We named them after colors and I have Red and Green." The puppies turn five months old this week.

IVF puppy
These adorable pups are the first litter of puppies born by in vitro fertilization. Cornell University researchers introduced them to the world on Dec. 9, 2015. The seven puppies were conceived using an IVF technique that took years to develop successfully for dogs, whose reproductive cycles are much different than humans'.




Cuddle time
To create the IVF puppies, a female dog was fertilized with 19 embryos. She gave birth to seven healthy puppies, according to Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine. Two of the puppies are from a beagle mother and a cocker spaniel father, and the other five are the offspring of two pairs of beagle fathers and mothers.




Look-alikes
Two of the seven puppies born by in vitro fertilization. Cornell researchers say the technique used to create this litter of pups could also help conserve endangered species and eradicate heritable diseases in dogs.




Frolicking in the sun
These frisky puppies were born using in vitro fertilization, the first successful IVF litter of dogs.




Chew toy time
Two of the IVF puppies play with their chew toys.




A little TLC
One of the IVF puppies gets some love from the team at Cornell.




Out for a stroll
One of the seven healthy puppies born in the first litter using in vitro fertilization.




Faces to love
The first litter of puppies born by in vitro fertilization. Cornell University researchers say the successful use of IVF in animals could eventually also help with conserving endangered species and eradicating heritable diseases in dogs.




Sniffing around
Two of the first IVF puppies, born with the help of Cornell University researchers after decades of failed efforts.






Puppy love
The first litter of puppies born by in vitro fertilization. Researchers at Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine transferred 19 embryos to the mother dog, who went on to give birth to seven healthy puppies. Two puppies are from a beagle mother and a cocker spaniel father, and the other five are the offspring of two pairs of beagle fathers and mothers.





IVF puppies
It's not as easy to perform in vitro fertilization in dogs as it in in people, or cats, Penn Vet's Dr. Margaret Casal told CBS News. "The cycle in the dog is so very different than in other species."






VF puppies
Cornell University researchers introduced the first litter of puppies born by in vitro fertilization on Dec. 9, 2015. Researchers had been trying since the 1970s to develop an IVF process that worked in canines, whose reproductive cycles are much different than humans'.


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Animal Control Officer Rescues Pit Bull…And Then Adopts Him


Eagan, Minnesota - When Eagan Animal Control Officer Bob Kent recently was dispatched on a call, he had no idea that the dirty, emaciated stray he picked up would move from his truck... into the city impound... and then his home. Kent has rescued dozens of dogs, but there was just something special about Woody, a young pit bull with an undeniably sweet disposition. And as it would happen, the timing was pretty good too.

"We put our dog down early August," Bob explained. "We were not so much in the market for one, but we did have a vacancy at home."

Kent kept checking on Woody, and it soon became apparent the two were destined to be permanent pals. "He came in, he was dirty, he was starving, he was sick... but I just knew. I guess you can't really put it into words, It's just a feeling you get for him. He (Woody) found a place in our hearts, as well as our home."



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Washington, DC - Washington Humane Society: Cat Found Hanging from a Phone Line - $15,000 Reward for Information Leading to the Arrest and Conviction of Person(s) Responsible for this Horrific Act


I apologize for the nature of the photo below, but we really want to catch the perpetrator(s) of this ghastly act. Thank you to our friends at the ASPCA and HSUS for matching our $5,000 reward. We are now offering $15,000 to anyone who provides information leading to an arrest.

On December 9, 2015, the Washington Humane Society discovered an adolescent male domestic short-haired grey tabby cat dangling from a phone line across the alley of the 400 block of Newcomb Street, SE and the 400 block of Mellon Street, SE. It is believed this act was committed between the evening of December 8th and the morning of December 9th.

The Washington Humane Society (WHS) desperately needs the help of the community for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons responsible for this horrific act of animal cruelty.

The Washington Humane Society (WHS), The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA) and the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS) have partnered together, offering $5,000.00 each for a reward of $15,000.00 to anybody who provides information leading to the arrest.

If you have any information about this case, please contact: Washington Humane Society’s Humane Law Enforcement Department: Officer Russell – ARussell@washhumane.org202-723-5730

Information will be kept confidential upon request.

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In Vitro Fertilization is No Longer a Treatment Reserved for Making Small Humans Can Now be Used to Produce Puppies


It's official: In vitro fertilization is no longer a treatment reserved for making small humans. The assisted reproduction technique that has led to the birth of more than 5 million human babies around the world can now be used to produce puppies.

In work expected to further efforts to preserve endangered wildlife and enhance human health, scientists at Cornell University have succeeded in joining canine egg and sperm, creating embryos, implanting them in the uterus of a female carrier and seeing the gestation of those puppies-to-be to birth.

The successful birth of seven healthy puppies ended about two decades of failed efforts to make the commonly used infertility treatment work on canines, whose reproductive biology differs from that of humans in a wide range of particulars. In humans, physicians have made a science -- and a booming business -- of stimulating egg growth, retrieving oocytes, introducing egg and sperm, cultivating the resulting proto-embryos in laboratory medium and transferring blastocysts to a woman's uterus.

But that multi-step process needed to be tweaked at many points for success to be achieved in dogs. Success was achieved after 19 embryos were transferred into a healthy host female beagle and, after a period of about 63 days, seven healthy pups were delivered by Caesarian section.

Report of the new research was published Wednesday in the journal PLoS One.

Pierre Comizzoli, a research veterinarian at the Smithsonian Institution's Conservation Biology Institute, said the work will offer vital insights into the varied reproductive biologies of many animals. There are 5,500 mammalian species, but scientists have only characterized in detail the biologies of about 100 of them.

For conservation biologists intent on bringing a wide range of endangered mammalian species back from the brink, the project should offer new perspectives on techniques that work, said Comizzoli, who is not among the authors but has been the Smithsonian's point person for joint work with Cornell on the topic.

For human health too, the new work may bring discoveries. Domestic dogs share with humans many diseases, including cancers, diabetes and genetic disorders. So their response to experimental treatments can offer useful insights into the likely outcomes of those treatments in humans.

At the cusp of a new era in which disease-related genes might be edited out of a human's genome, dogs already have provided an important model for experimentation. Because gene editing is done in the laboratory, only with the success of IVF in canines can the animals become a useful test bed for editing changes that might -- pending much ethical and scientific debate -- be used in humans.



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Woman Climbs Fence in a Backyard and Allowed Herself to be Mauled to Death by Dogs


Port Huron, Michigan -  Although authorities said 22-year-old Rebecca Hardy was intent on killing herself when she exposed herself to vicious dogs, the woman's fiancé is insisting she had everything to live for.
  
Hardy deliberately climbed a fence to a backyard and allowed herself to be mauled to death last Thursday in Port Huron, authorities said.

 She died at a local hospital with extensive injuries to her face and neck. The death was ruled a suicide from injuries caused by multiple dogs mauling her, according to the Oakland County Medical Examiner's Office.

 "These were attack dogs. These were vicious dogs in an enclosed space," Oakland County Medical Examiner Ljubisa Dragovic said. "She obviously was aware of that, because she climbed over the fence to subject herself to this threat."
  
He said his office's investigation shows Hardy had recently been kicked out of her house and had attempted suicide in the past. A toxicology report is still pending, but Dragovic said it wouldn't matter if she were intoxicated: "If (drugs or alcohol) were a factor in general behavior, it still does not eliminate the purposeful act of climbing into the dangerous area."

After the attack at about 4:45 p.m. last Thursday, Hardy was taken to Lake Huron Medical Center and later flown to Beaumont Hospital, where she died, the Port Huron (Mich.) Times Herald reports. The two dogs, a pit bull and a pit bull-husky mix, were euthanized the next day. A pit bull-husky mix puppy was also euthanized.
  
Hardy had an 18-month-old daughter with her fiancé, Matthew Grattan. He told The Times Herald on Wednesday that he finds it hard to believe that she would do anything to harm herself.

"I, in no way, shape or form believe that she was looking to hurt herself on that day," Grattan said. "She had a little girl. … She wanted us to be a family."

Dragovic said he didn't immediately know whether there were signs Hardy resisted the dogs' attacks at any point. He also said that she lived nearby and would have been familiar with the area.

"This is not a situation like the kid that was attacked by similar kinds of dogs out on the street," Dragovic said, referring to a Dec. 2 incident in Detroit where a 4-year-old boy was mauled to death after dogs escaped a home. In the Detroit case, the dogs' owner is charged with murder.

Grattan said he's trying not to pay attention to the controversy surrounding Hardy's death.

"It's so much about the pit bulls that it seems like it's not so much about my fiancée anymore," Grattan said.
  


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16 Reasons Why Fostering A Shelter Pet Is Basically The Best Thing In The World


Want to make the world a better place in one easy step? Take home a foster pet from a local shelter or rescue group.

Fostering means bringing in a cat or dog -- or parrot, or baby pig, or any other homeless pet -- with the goal of nurturing them for a while until they can be dispatched to a permanent home with a family who'll love them forever.




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Thursday, December 10, 2015

Cat Found Hanging from Phone Line in D.C., Humane Society Searches for Answers: $5,000 Reward for Information


WASHINGTON (ABC7) — WARNING: The image is graphic and may be disturbing to some viewers.

The Washington Humane Society is offering a reward of $5,000 for anyone who can provide information on a cat found hanging from a phone line in Southeast, D.C.

WHS says law enforcement officers found an adolescent male domestic short-haired gray tabby cat hanging from a phone line on Dec. 9, 2015 across the alley of the 400 block of Newcomb St. SE and the 400 block of Mellon St. SE.


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Elderly Couple Left Bloodied with Scratches and Cuts from Vicious Squirrel Who Has Already Attacked Eight People in a California Neighborhood


A California couple were both hospitalized with deep cuts and scratches after being attacked by a vicious squirrel terrorizing their neighborhood.

Richard Williams, 87, was doing chores in the garage when a squirrel slipped through an open door in his Novato home and pounced on him.

The squirrel clawed and scratched at Williams' head, arm and legs, immediately jumping back on him every time Williams managed to pull him off - and even smashing his glasses.

“He charged me and jumped, and from then on, the battle started,” Williams told CBS San Francisco.

Williams' wife Norma, 83, heard his screams and immediately ran to his aid.

She grabbed a broom and started hitting the squirrel, who then jumped on her and managed to scratch her hands.

Williams was then able to grab the squirrel by the tail and swung him to the garage floor, where he was momentarily stunned before racing out the door.

A neighbor brought the couple to the hospital, where they also received dozens of shots for illnesses such rabies and tetanus, in case the squirrel had them.

This wasn't the squirrel's first strike.

The Marin Humane Society believes the same squirrel has been responsible for attacks on eight people in the past three weeks, according to the San Jose Mercury News.

A Pacific Gas and Electric Company worker was scratched on the head while working in the yard of a home where the squirrel had just attacked a woman inside on November 13.

Just five days later, the squirrel brought chaos to the Pleasant Valley Elementary school when it slipped into a classroom and ran up a teacher's leg before biting her on the shoulder.

The squirrel then ran into another classroom, where it bit a child, according to CBS San Francisco.

A custodian was able to remove the squirrel from the classroom, but it escaped by the time the Marin Humane Society arrived at the school.

Experts believe a single squirrel has been responsible for the attacks because they have occurred in the same general area within the Novato neighborhood.

And officials believe the squirrel's behavior could be tied to humans feeding them, which is illegal in the state of California.

“If a wild animal gets the idea that humans provide food, somehow they get it in their head that all humans provide food,” Alison Hermance of Wildcare told CBS.

Which means they go up to people and when they don't get food, they can become aggressive.”

The Marin Society believes the squirrel may now be dead, as it has not been heard from since the most recent attack on the couple on November 27.

“All of the attacks have been within just a few days of each other,” she said in a statement obtained by the San Jose Mercury News.

“However, since the victim of the last attack indicated he injured the squirrel and there have not been any more attacks since, it's quite possible the squirrel has died.”


Richard Williams, 87, (pictured) and his wife Norma, 83, were left hospitalized with bloody scratches and cuts after a vicious squirrel terrorizing their Novato, Callifornia neighborhood attacked.


Williams was doing chores in the garage when a squirrel slipped through an open door in his Novato door and immediately pounced.



The vicious squirrel clawed and scratched at Williams' head, arm and legs and smashed his glasses. When Norma heard his screams she ran to her husband's aide and hit the squirrel with a broom.


The squirrel then jumped on Norma and managed to scratch her hand (pictured).


The Marin Humane Society believes the same squirrel has been responsible for attacks on eight people in the past three weeks.

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