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It belongs to them, but will we give it back? Hardly

Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2015 7:39 pm
by FrankGSterleJr
B.C. conservation service still assessing fate of rescued bear cubs
(July 9, 2015)

Two orphaned black bear cubs that owe their lives to a Vancouver Island conservation officer who refused orders to kill the brother and sister still face an uncertain future.
The cubs, named Athena and Jordan, sat in the corner of a holding pen on Wednesday at the North Island Wildlife Recovery Association awaiting their fate, which could involve rehabilitation, release or euthanasia.
Black bear cubs Athena and Jordan look on from their enclosure at the North Island Wildlife Recovery Association in Errington, B.C., Wednesday, July 8, 2015. The bears were orphaned when their mother was killed for breaking into a meat freezer inside a mobile home in Port Hardy. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chad Hipolito
Insp. Chris Doyle of the British Columbia Conservation Officer Service said the cubs' future remains unclear because when wild animals — even very young ones — get close to humans they become habituated.
"Obviously, the preference is to keep the bears alive and wild and to prevent conflicts from happening in the first place," he said.
"Communities, businesses and residents need to do their part to keep bears wild. It's a horrible situation to have to put down an animal of any kind. The public, generally, does not want to see that happen. Nobody wants to see it happen."
B.C. Environment Ministry statistics show that conservation officers destroyed 32 black bears last month, relocated 10 bears and frightened off 21 bears. No black bear cubs were sent to rehabilitation.
Doyle said bears, especially cubs, are not handed an immediate death sentence when they come into conflict with humans, but the odds are not in their favour.
"Senior ministry staff, biologists, as well as wildlife veterinarians will determine how the orphaned cubs are dealt with and we'll use various assessment tools, including ... the level of habituation and the level of food conditioning of those cubs to determine what can happen," he said.
Doyle said initial examinations of the cubs point to exposure to conflict and habituation.
The cubs were orphaned when their mother was killed after breaking into a meat freezer inside a mobile home in Port Hardy on northern Vancouver Island.
The photogenic pair, believed to be about five months old, has since gained international attention when it was reported that conservation officer Bryce Casavant was suspended for refusing an order to destroy the cubs last weekend.
Doyle said he could not discuss what he described as a personnel matter, but did not dispute reports that Casavant was suspended with pay for his refusal to kill the cubs.
Robin Campbell, a spokesman for the centre where the bears are being held, said Casavant's actions were heroic and called for the officer to be immediately reinstated.
Campbell said it would have been easier for Casavant to follow orders, but he took the high road.
"The easy thing to do is he's way up north, nobody is going to know. He pops a couple of bear cubs and throws them in the bush and away he goes and starts worrying about the fires up there."
About 50,000 people have signed an online petition asking that Casavant be reinstated.

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A few years ago I read about an Alberta aboriginal senior citizen who had insisted upon animal-control officials not disturbing—let alone snuffing out—a couple of adult bears that were invading her garbage containers.
As bitterly-ironic fate would have it, a few days later those bears, somehow, got into physical contact with the woman and mortally mauled her.
When I read about it, I felt naught but admiration for that woman: I believe(d) that she so much respected nature, though especially the animal life, that she in essence sacrificed her life for their lives and freedom; for they had been on that land well before even Canada’s aboriginal peoples settled here from abroad, and perhaps she could empathize with those bears, and many other wild animals before them, because of European colonizers’ abhorrent abuse of many members of her aboriginal heritage.
When are we going to clearly acknowledge the great injustices being committed against wild animals—in this case near Port Hardy, B.C., shooting dead stray adult bears and euthanizing their cubs—by human encroachment via deforestation and development on the animals’ natural home grounds that had been theirs many millennia before colonization.
Too many stray wild bears, and other such potentially dangerous animals, are being killed when they behave in a threatening manner towards humans, and thus we’re ready and willing to kill them when we could make it a regulated rule to dose them with as much potent tranquilizer as is necessary to encase and relocate them all, alive and well.
But it appears that humanity’s superior-minded nature allows our collective conscience to simply shoot dead such animals for reacting in their natural, predatory manner.

Frank Sterle Jr

Re: It belongs to them, but will we give it back? Hardly

Posted: Fri Jul 10, 2015 7:43 pm
by Wyman
My natural manner includes shooting dangerous animals. What then?

Re: It belongs to them, but will we give it back? Hardly

Posted: Mon Jul 13, 2015 3:52 am
by Impenitent
zoos, prisons, or death

it's a question of cost effectiveness

affording mercy is a luxury

-Imp