Sunday, June 14, 2015

Big Cat Rescue Tampa, FL

Big Cat Rescue

Big Cat Rescue is a non-profit organization located in Tampa, Florida that is devoted to protecting big cats in the wild and in captivity. Big Cat Rescue is home to over 100 wildcats, and it is working to stop exotic pet ownership and the trade of these animals. All of their animals were either mistreated, rescued from tiny backyard pens, circuses, fairs, orphaned, abandoned, or injured. Big Cat Rescue is an amazing wildlife rescue that any cat lover would want to go to.

Fun Facts

  • won the People's Choice Awards 3 times
  • has been supported by celebrities such as Animal Planet's Ms. Adventure, celebrity chefs from Hell's Kitchen, the cast of Marry Poppins, and Jane Goodall
  • been on the news over 1,000 times: including Discovery Channel, Animal Planet and National Geographic   
Big Cat Rescue's Website: https://bigcatrescue.org/

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Ban on Big Cat Hunting in Zambia Lifted

2013 Leads to Death of Lions and Leopards

   Recently in 2013, Zambia's government lifted the ban on killing wild lions and leopards. They announced that the killing of lions would resume in 2016 (last year) and that leopards would start to be killed in 2015.

   This decision may be the cause of the decline of big cats, rather than stabilizing the population. You see, Zambia lifted the ban only because the ban started when the species started declining due to trophy and game hunting. Their government decided there was a steady amount of cats and explained that hunting would resume shortly.

   But their calculations were wrong! Zambia's estimated population was 8,000 leopards and 4,000 lions. However, only about 1,500 lions currently were in Zambia. Conservationists were angered to see that although the estimates were wrong, the ban was still in order. However, this was all done for a good cause.

What was the Cause of the Act?
  Now I know you're all wondering why a nice, peaceful place like Zambia would once more allow people to shoot the majestic animals that lions and leopards are. Of course, there's a reason. Zambia's government believes that the money they make from the hunting permits will help raise money for poor villages in need of assistance.

   “I am lifting the ban on the following conditions: the guidelines are drafted into a statutory instrument so that they become part of the wildlife law. Lion hunting should only resume in the 2016/2017 hunting season and not this year. Leopard hunting can resume this year 2015/2016 season, but with very cautionary quotas,” Mrs Kapata, government official, said.
     
   However, some people are still against the act. "The decision is not good at all and frankly we have a crisis," says James Chungu of  the Lusengwa Conservation Trust. "There are concerns about Africa's big animals in the face of a surge in poaching where well-armed criminal gangs have killed elephants for their ivory tusks and rhinos for horns that are often shipped to Asia for use in ornaments and medicines," says Yahoo News. The main reason that people are a bit angry is that the population of these cats will most likely decrease.

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Sunday, March 22, 2015

Is the Big Cat Trade Still Going On?

 


   Before we get started, the big cat trade is basically the trade or abuse of wildcats including circuses, wildcats at carnivals, and having these cats as pets. The big cat trade also includes canned hunting and trophy hunting. It is a horrible cycle where cats are either killed or abused.

   And the answer to the question is yes. The big cat trade, unfortunately, is still going on. However, we can end it if we become educated on it and do our best to stop it.

Circuses
 
   One of the main abusers of wildcats, or just wild animals in general, is the circus. The circus may seem like a fun place for people to laugh at clowns and have a good time, and if it wasn't for the animal abuse, it might be. But the animal abuse is so unbelievably cruel that it is hard for us to enjoy ourselves.

   Animals there are brutally abused and treated like their only purpose in life is to perform. Instead of rewarding animals for their triumphs, circus trainers strip them of their wild instincts and freedom. Big Cat Rescue states, "Often the cats are beaten, starved and confined for long periods of time in order to get them to cooperate with what the trainers want." These animals either spend time performing unnatural acts or waiting for up to twenty-two hours in their cages. "...life on the road means that most of a cat’s life is spent in a circus wagon in the back of a semi-truck or in a crowded, stinking box car on a train or barge," Big Cat Rescue truthfully tells us.

   One way you can stop this kind of trade is just saying no to the circus. Circuses have already lost their elephants, and this will bring less and less people to the cruel show. Now, all you have to do is say no.

Cute Cubs at the Carnival

   Seeing those adorable tiger cubs at the local fair or carnival is a classic way to enjoy yourself. However, many people don't know how abusive and cruel this actually is. By even touching one of these majestic cats, you are unknowingly supporting animal cruelty and maybe even giving this cat a horrible life. Big Cat Rescue states, "The truth is that by petting the cubs you are unknowingly participating in a business that results in a lifetime of misery for these animals and has a negative impact on conservation of these majestic animals in the wild."

   I know this may seem confusing, because the cats are "rejected" by their mothers or are orphans. Unfortunately, the story is twisted. The cats are usually taken from their mothers and live a horrible life when they grow too big to remain at the carnival.

   After their time at the fair is up, they are usually sent to canned hunters or circuses. Big Cat Rescue tells us, "If they survive, they typically end up living in tiny, barren cages." Since the cubs have underdeveloped immune systems, many do not survive, and if they do, they live a life full of gloom.

Canned Hunting 

   Our last issue of petting cats at carnivals leads to our next issue, canned hunting. Canned hunting and trophy hunting are probably some of the most disturbing examples of the big cat trade. Canned hunting is essentially taking "tamed" and helpless wild animals, such as the tigers and lions at the fair, and shooting them in cages.

   Big Cat Rescue states, "The term 'canned hunt' refers to the shooting of exotic animals on game farms or hunting ranches that are in the business of breeding or buying exotic animals so that 'hunters' can pay to be guaranteed a kill." This is especially horrible because the cats are unsuspecting and unafraid of the "hunter" since they have usually been around people their whole lives.

What can we do to end the trade?

   There is one very simple thing we can all do to help end the trade. Just say no. Say no to circuses and to the oppurtunity of petting a cute lion club at the fair. There are terrible consequences to these forms of the big cat trade, but if we just say no to them, there will be nothing to protest in the future.

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