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Friday, December 11, 2015

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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Missouri Police Chief Resigns After Shooting Dog Because He Had a High-Priority Call and Couldn’t Figure Out What to Do With Him


A Missouri police chief caught a loose dog, caged him, and then shot him because he had a high-priority call and couldn’t figure out what to do with him in the meantime.  He was placed on leave during the course of the investigation into the incident, and has now resigned.


“I want justice.  I don’t think he deserves his place,” Elizabeth Womack told KSPR.  “If he can’t even do what’s right with an animal, would he do what’s right with a human being?”

Chase was adopted by the Womack family in Springfield, Missouri in March.  As a rescue, he was thoroughly tested for temperament, and was not aggressive.  The pit bull/Lab mix got along famously with the Womacks’ baby boy.“He was around our new born baby from the day we adopted him.

He was a playful and loving puppy who wanted to do nothing but play and cuddle,” it says on a Facebook post.  “He played with our son and watched over him. They were like brothers, which was the reason we got him.”

 Chase escaped from their yard on November 10th, and Sparta Police Chief Andrew Spencer says he received two calls about an aggressive dog on the loose.

“The only reason our dog would charge at anybody would be to play,” Elizabeth said.  “He was just such a playful little pup. He had no aggression. He didn’t know what that was.”

The chief snared him with a catch pole, and forced him in a cage.  He says he called around to a number of shelters, but no one could take the dog, so he was going to locate “the cheapest vet to destroy the dog at the cost of the city.”

Spencer then received a call that was urgent – a roll-over crash near Sparta high school.  Because he apparently could think of nothing else to do with the dog, he took it to the gun range and shot him before responding to the call.

Meanwhile, the Womacks spent days trying to find their beloved Chase, and were lied to by Spencer.  This comes from Chase’s Facebook page:

I was told by a police officer that they didn’t catch any dogs that day. He said they got a call about Chase, but responded to an assault call instead. So we called for a whole week trying reach chief Andrew Spencer. He did nothing but give us a run around for days. So we called all dog pounds and shelters and rescue one where we got Chase from. A few days later we get a call from chief Spencer, saying he had shot a pit bull chow mix that he picked up in the trailer park down the road from us. He told us He buried him in the sludge field if we wanted to make sure it was him. We didn’t find any freshly dug holes anywhere. So we tried the Sparta shooting range but we only found a pile of burnt meth pipes, cell phones and pill bottles. Then we found out from our neighbor on Friday evening that Chase had been picked up from an unmarked police car in front of our house. So we call and call and call trying to get a hold of chief Spencer again. To pick up our dog. Finally, 5 days later, chief Spencer contacted us saying he dug him up and left him at the police station. We picked him up that night after work. He was wrapped in a garbage bag, no traces of dirt on him or the trash bag anywhere. We got the police report. It never showed who he supposedly bit. So we took our fur baby home after searching for him for a week and laid him to rest. All our 1-year-old son says every time he sees a dog is “Chase.” We want justice for what has been done. It was illegal for chief Spencer to do what he did. By law, if a dog bites someone they have to quarantine them for 10 days to check for rabies. Chief Spencer did not do it. We asked him if Chase acted like he was bit by something, he told us he acted scared. The mayor of Sparta said Chase wouldn’t get out of the police car at the shooting range.

Baby Cody misses his best friend something fierce.

“We had a kennel for Chase, and all he does is he sits in the kennel now. He’ll just sit there and look around and call for Chase,” Elizabeth said.

Residents in Sparta and the surrounding areas were outraged.  Loose dogs are required to be held for five days in Sparta, and the fact that pit bulls are banned does not change that.

Spencer was placed on administrative leave, and local animal lovers protested at a city council meeting in late November.  The two officers under Spencer’s command resigned after the meeting, and now the chief has formally resigned from his post.  His last day on the job will be December 14th.  Christian County deputies will now be responding to calls.

Though nothing can bring back Chase, or replace him, hopefully now the Womacks will find some closure.






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Wednesday, December 9, 2015

Meet Vincent, The Cat Who Received a Custom Pair of Extruded Titanium Peg Legs


Due to a congenital defect, Vincent was born without rear tibias and likely would have died had he not been rescued and surrendered to an Iowa animal shelter. Once adopted, he caught the attention of Dr. Mary Sarah Bergh, an associate professor of orthopedic surgery at Iowa State University's Lloyd Veterinary Medical Center. She worked with 3D printing firm Biomedtrix to create a custom pair of extruded titanium peg legs for the feline, enabling him to walk for the first time.

"I think this does open the door for us to be able to help other animals that have similar problems," Bergh said in a statement. "And even what we've learned just through Vincent's one case, we've actually refined the technique and the implants, so the next cases we do moving forward will be even more successful."

Unlike conventional prosthetics, these legs are surgically embedded into his upper leg bones so that as he grows, they fuse themselves to the prosthetics. So while he walks like a pirate, Vincent is technically a cyborg.



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Heartwarming Story: Owner of West Coast Animal Rescue Gets the Biggest Surprise of Her Life


Get your tissues!

Sherri, the owner of West Coast Animal Rescue, has dedicated her life to finding a home for dogs in need. However, she has been through a lot of stress lately and planned to organize a huge adoption event hoping to find families for the older dogs from her shelter.

However, what she didn’t know was that she was about to get the biggest surprise of her life. The Prank It FWD movement decided to help her a bit, but they had to bother her a little first. Watching this actually brought tears to my eyes. At the end they had all her older dogs adopted, but what is equally important they rescued Sherri and her animal rescue center. Wonderful!



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