animal Behaviorists and Vets Take on Cesar Milan

December 14, 2009 on 8:28 pm | In General | No Comments
clipped from www.boston.com

The debate over the Dog Whisperer

The Boston Globe

His TV show is a hit and celebrities swear by him. But his tough-love training has detractors barking that positive reinforcement is less cruel and fetches better results.

clipped from www.boston.com

Now widely used around the world by animal trainers in zoos, performing-animal handlers, and domestic pet trainers, the clicker method and other positive, noncoercive forms of training have scientific evidence backing up their effectiveness, according to Dr. Nicholas Dodman, director of the Animal Behavior Clinic at Tufts University.

Now pediatricians and schools and parents have swung to a reinforcement-based model. In the dog world, I think that operant techniques are gradually sweeping the system.

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Whiskerology

December 3, 2009 on 10:01 pm | In General | No Comments

Maybe the Three Blind Mice didn’t really need their vision

Hartmann said one of the biggest surprises in her research was finding out how much independent control a rat has over its whiskers. Hartmann’s team found that whiskers do not bend and move the way people typically think– in sync and in a fluid brushing motion. A rat can shut down one side of its whiskers, while the other side goes to work.

Hartmann explained why it is important for scientists to study such seeminglyunusual systems as rat whiskers.
“By studying rat whiskers, what we’re really studying is the neural basis for the sense of touch and motor control. In the long run, understanding the rat’s neural circuits will greatly help us in understanding circuits of the human brain, and helping people with motor and sensing disabilities or injuries.”

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Great Ape Cardia Disease

November 24, 2009 on 4:59 am | In General | No Comments

Gorillas, particularly male gorillas, have a high risk of heart disease. They are not the only non-human primates at risk either. Other apes like the chimpanzees and monkeys are also at risk for heart disease. Diagnosing the extent of heart disease has challenges with these intelligent patients. Positive reinforcement training is a critical element in something as simple as a blood pressure measurements. It is not really training, but building trust and communicating what needs to happen and what the vet or trainer is willing to “pay” for cooperation. Read My Ampblog at http://dmccluredvm.amplify.com/2009/11/23/great-ape-cardiac-disease/

From The Higher Chronicle

October 20, 2009 on 5:07 pm | In General | No Comments

Donna Haraway is capturing a fundamental truth in the way way humans in modern western culture interact with animals.  It isn’t about human domination over the animal world, but humans and animals as companions on Earth.  Her request that we take a serious and new look at the relationship between humans and animals from both a cognitive and scientific perspective is laudable.  I also value curiosity and  the inquisitive nature of humans as “precious and fragile and not very nice virtue.”

Read more in the Higher Chronicle about Donna Haraway and three other articles in a series called:  Confronting the Animal: 4 Perspectives

Rescue Dolphins Savaged by Sharks Hours After Release from Rehab

August 4, 2009 on 7:56 pm | In About Animals | No Comments
clipped from www.thesun.co.uk

Unlucky Dunham had spent months being nursed back to health by carers after he
was found washed up on coastline in Florida.

Biologists at the Clearwater Aquarium, Florida, spent seven months treating
the stricken dolphin — before releasing him into the sea.

They watched on in horror as the predator mounted a stealth attack on the
mammal — tearing into the dolphin with its razor-sharp teeth.

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New Insights About the Novel H1N1 Flu Virus

July 13, 2009 on 8:44 pm | In News | No Comments
clipped from www.nih.gov

New Insights Into Novel H1N1

Several research groups funded by NIH’s National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) have recently put together a picture of where the novel H1N1 virus came from and how it evolved. They discovered that the novel H1N1 virus is a descendent not only of swine viruses but also of the H1N1 virus that caused the 1918 pandemic, which killed 40-50 million people worldwide.

Electron micrograph image of an influenza virus.
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CVMA Supported Bill Passes!

July 4, 2009 on 4:29 pm | In General | No Comments

SB 762 was CVMA’s response to West Hollywood.

The Gov signed SB 762 by Senator Sam Aanestad (R-Grass Valley) – Professions and vocations: healing arts! Cities can not longer create laws that override the practice act…like declawing.This is key legislation for veterinarians and other health professionals.

clipped from gov.ca.gov

Legislative Update

NOTE: These
bills were sent to the Governor for his consideration prior to his announcement
yesterday that he would not sign any non-urgent legislation until a budget
agreement is reached.

SB
762
by Senator Sam Aanestad (R-Grass Valley) – Professions and vocations:
healing arts.
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PeTA Open Your Eyes & See What PPI is Today!

June 26, 2009 on 4:53 pm | In Animal Activism | No Comments

As a primate veterinarian, I was invited to visit PPI June 21-22, 2009. The program at PPI has made necessary corrections and is functioning well. It continues to improve. I support PPI and I hope PeTA will recognize the harm they are doing. PeTA please open your eyes – look at PPI today!

Baboons Fight Malaria with the Same Genetic Variation as Man

June 25, 2009 on 11:03 pm | In About Animals, animal models | No Comments

On Malaria Struggle, Baboons And Humans Have Similar Stories To Tell

ScienceDaily (June 24, 2009) — Evolutionarily speaking, baboons may be our more distant cousins among primates. But when it comes to our experiences with malaria over the course of time, it seems the stories of our two species have followed very similar plots.

“It’s a nice example of how – in the vastness of the genome – the same gene was modified in the same way in two different species to produce the same kind of resistance,” says Greg Wray, director of the IGSP’s Center for Evolutionary Genomics. “That’s a pretty remarkable thing when you think of all the different ways malaria resistance might have evolved.”

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Survivorship Depends on Your Mother’s Social Skills

June 10, 2009 on 8:24 pm | In About Animals | No Comments

Close social ties make baboons better mothers, study finds

“If you’re a baboon, the strength of your mother’s relationship with other females is the best predictor of whether you’ll live to have children yourself,” said Joan Silk, the study’s lead author and a UCLA professor of anthropology. “The study adds to mounting evidence of the biological benefits of close relationships among females.”
The findings are significant because “survivorship to reproduction is the gold standard in evolutionary biology,” said co-author Dorothy Cheney, a professor of biology at the University of Pennsylvania. “Females who raise offspring to a reproductive age are more likely see their genes pass along, so these findings demonstrate an evolutionary advantage to strong relationships with other females. In evolutionary terms, social moms are the fittest moms — at least when it comes to baboons.”
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