But, a TORNADO OUTBREAK near Christmas was never heard off a decade or so ago. The tornado outbreaks have become the norm and not the occasional and rare deadly outcome.
This Blog is created to stress the importance of Peace as an environmental directive. “I never give them hell. I just tell the truth and they think it’s hell.” – Harry Truman (I receive no compensation from any entry on this blog.)
Wednesday, December 21, 2022
So, the states that hate immigrants absolutely consent to insulting federal authority at it's borders for profit.
The Reinvesting in Shoreline Economies and Ecosystems (RISEE) Act, which Kennedy cosponsored, would reform GOMESA to allow Louisiana and other states to share more resources from offshore oil and gas leases. Kennedy also introduced the Offshore Cap Parity Act to eliminate the GOMESA cap.
“The current GOMESA cap unfairly targets oil producing states and denies them revenue that they have earned. Without this money to build infrastructure and storm barriers, Louisianians remain even more vulnerable to natural disasters. Eliminating the GOMESA cap is key to protecting people’s lives and livelihoods, and I’m glad we’ve made a way to move this bill forward. There’s still more to be done, but this is a step in the right direction,” said Kennedy....
At a Glance (click here)
- A tornado hit the New Orleans metropolitan area.
- Multiple deaths and dozens of injuries reported in Louisiana.
- People were trapped in their homes after a tornado in New Iberia, Louisiana....
That is the most ridiculous regulation I have ever read regarding immigration and/or asylum seekers.
About 75 men, women and children stood on a narrow strip of concrete between the river and the guard members, facing coils of razor wire, seven National Guard members holding rifles and two state troopers as a National Guard member holding a bullhorn told them in Spanish that they would not be able to enter the country here and directed them to a port of entry.
Border Patrol agents positioned behind the National Guard and state troopers watched the standoff. A Border Patrol spokesperson on site said Border Patrol agents would not process the migrants....
Monday, December 19, 2022
Washington Post…
…about Trump in his closing days in office through recent months is all about damage control. He recruited young and naive staff because they are malleable. But, he is focused on 2024. He appears at rallies because that is the imagine he wants. It also is a battleground whereby it fends off criticism. He only can be criticized directly for his words in a place where critics are political opponents including media. All the other harsh realities of his legal issues are fought by others and Trump remains aloof and removed. It would be best and just if he was seen in a “perp walk.” His imagine would take on another perspective.
His mishandling of our documents is typical of the continued lack of respect for the country.
Two things bother me, the Helsinki meeting and the image he carries as a potential monarch that will listen to the people and bend to their will. Trump as a monarch would never care about the people and surround himself with security so he was untouchable. I have a hard time believing Ukraine and US lack of response was never discussed. I think the plan for Ukraine was laid out as well as NATO.
Saturday, December 17, 2022
Flint - An engineering firm (click here) accused of having some responsibility for Flint’s lead-contaminated water in 2014-15 has settled a lawsuit with four families, months after a jury couldn’t reach a unanimous verdict in August.
Details of the agreement between the families and Lockwood, Andrews & Newman, known as LAN, were not publicly disclosed in federal court in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
“To avoid the significant costs, expenses and time of another protracted trial, the parties were able to reach a mutually agreeable resolution, subject to court approval,” LAN attorney Wayne Mason told MLive.com.
The families sued LAN and another company, Veolia North America, accusing them of not doing enough to get Flint to treat the highly corrosive water or to urge a return to a regional water supplier.
Flint’s water became contaminated because water pulled from the Flint River wasn’t treated to reduce its effect on lead pipes. Citing cost, managers appointed by then-Gov. Rick Snyder switched to the river in 2014 while awaiting a new pipeline to Lake Huron....
Friday, December 16, 2022
It is time that the truth and justice win its rightful place.
By Luke Broadwater
Washington - The House committee (click here) investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol plans on Monday to vote on issuing criminal referrals against former President Donald J. Trump for insurrection and at least two other charges, according to a person familiar with the matter who was not authorized to discuss it.
It had been widely expected the panel would recommend charges against Mr. Trump for obstructing an official proceeding of Congress and conspiracy to defraud the United States. The panel’s members had already argued in federal court that they believed it was likely that he committed those two felonies. But the addition of an accusation of insurrection was a new development....
Thursday, December 15, 2022
It serves Putin's purpose to escalate any conflict that involves his enemies.
By Beth McKernan
Late on Sunday night, (click here) like almost every other night in Jenin, the fighting started. The Israeli army said it entered the occupied West Bank city to arrest three suspected Palestinian terrorists and militants responded by throwing firebombs and opening fire.
According to two members of her family, 16-year-old Jana Zakaran ventured up to the roof of her home when gunfire erupted nearby to bring her cat inside to safety. When Zakaran’s father went to look for her, he found her dead in a pool of blood, the cat by her side.
In a rare admission of error, the Israel Defence Forces (IDF) said the teenager had been accidentally shot by a sniper....
Russia wants a just settlement to the Palestine-Israel issue (click here) in line with UN resolutions, President Vladimir Putin said in a meeting with his Palestinian counterpart, Mahmoud Abbas, on Thursday, Anadolu News Agency reports.
Russia has "a principled stance based on the fundamental resolutions of the United Nations and it remains unchanged," Putin told Abbas during talks in Kazakhstan's capital, Astana, on the sidelines of a regional summit.
He said Moscow continues to closely monitor developments in the Middle East.
On bilateral cooperation with Palestine, he said "a lot" needs to be done to enhance economic ties.
Abbas hailed Russia's position on the Palestinian-Israeli settlement.
"We believe and know that Russia has a clear position on the settlement, and I am absolutely sure that it will never change. We know perfectly well that Russia stands for justice, for international law," he said.
Abbas stressed the need for a greater role of the Middle East Quartet, which comprises the UN, US, EU and Russia....
By Lazar Berman
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky’s personal aide (click here) said Wednesday that Kyiv’s UN vote in November to refer the Israeli-Palestinian conflict to the International Court of Justice in The Hague was a “mistake” that must be fixed.
Speaking at the Ukraine-Israel Innovation Summit in Warsaw, Oleksiy Arestovych blamed inertia within Ukraine’s foreign ministry for support of the resolution, titled “Israeli practices and settlement activities affecting the rights of the Palestinian people and other Arabs of the occupied territories.”(click here)
The UN General Assembly Fourth Committee voted in favor of the measure by a margin of 98 in favor, 17 opposed and 52 abstentions....
By Yonah Jeremy Bob
Israel struck a convoy of trucks (click here) carrying Iranian weapons along the Syrian-Iraqi border last month, IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. Aviv Kohavi confirmed on Wednesday.
Without specifying the exact timing, it appeared clear that he was referring to an attack within Syria, next to the Iraqi border, which the Wall Street Journal and various other media outlets attributed to Israel in early November, but which Israel did not take responsibility for at the time.
According to reports at the time, the caravan was moving Iranian weapons, likely including powerful missiles, from Iraq to Syria, and around a dozen Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps members and other Iranian-affiliated forces were killed....
By Luke Tress
Unilever, the parent company of Ben & Jerry’s, (click here) says it resolved a lawsuit with the ice cream maker over its attempt to boycott Israeli settlements last year.
“Unilever is pleased to announce that the litigation with Ben & Jerry’s Independent Board has been resolved,” the UK-based conglomerate says in a terse statement, without providing further detail.
The announcement appears to finally put an end to a legal battle that has dragged on for over a year. Ben & Jerry’s sued Unilever’s main US branch, Conopco, earlier this year as part of its boycott attempt, which it first announced in July 2021.
Avi Zinger, the head of Ben & Jerry’s Israel branch and a key player in fighting against the boycott, says he is “pleased” that the litigation has been resolved.
There were no details available about the settlement, but Zinger says there was no change to an agreement he inked with Unilever earlier this year....
Benjamin Netanyahu (click here) is preparing to become the Prime Minister of Israel for the third time. He has until December 21 to form a government before taking office.
In a wide-ranging interview with a group of print and television journalists at Al Arabiya, Mr. Netanyahu discussed Israel’s relations with Arab states, the US alliance structure in the Middle East, unrest in Iran, Israel’s new hard-right government, the future of the US-brokered maritime border agreement with Lebanon, and the Russia-Ukraine war.
Mr. Netanyahu reiterated the paramount importance of normalization with Saudi Arabia, which would be a “quantum leap” toward ending the Arab-Israeli conflict that “would change our region in ways that are unimaginable.” Saudi officials have consistently maintained that no normalization can happen without a Palestinian state.
Mr. Netanyahu indicated a willingness to explore a wide variety of peace options behind closed doors, stating “I believe in open covenants, secretly arrived at or discretely arrived at.”...
With a new government on the way, (click here) Israel will have its latest opportunity to assess the status of its global relationships.
Israel continues to deepen its ties with the Muslim world through the signatories of the Abraham Accords. With Benjamin Netanyahu now set to return to power, the discourse has grown around additional countries, such as Pakistan and Saudi Arabia potentially joining the Accords. Further, Azerbaijan’s parliament recently initiated the process of opening an embassy in Israel, making it the first Shi’ite Muslim-majority nation to take that step.
At the same time, Israel must also consider which of its relationships could prove counterproductive. In that regard, ties with Paraguay deserve increased scrutiny....
Wednesday, December 14, 2022
A word for Celine Grounder about the death of Grant Wahl
First and foremost, (click here) on behalf of myself and our family, I want to express our deepest gratitude for the outpouring of support, love, and sympathy from around the world. This continues to be a very difficult and painful time as we grieve a beloved husband, brother, and friend. It is some comfort to know that so many people Grant reached—countless colleagues, readers, athletes, coaches, friends, and fans—are grieving alongside us....
...An autopsy was performed by the New York City Medical Examiner’s Office. Grant died from the rupture of a slowly growing, undetected ascending aortic aneurysm with hemopericardium. The chest pressure he experienced shortly before his death may have represented the initial symptoms. No amount of CPR or shocks would have saved him. His death was unrelated to COVID. His death was unrelated to vaccination status. There was nothing nefarious about his death....
Sunday, December 11, 2022
Qatar as an international venue has failed.
When a country accepts the RESPONSIBILITY of HOSTING a global event it needs to open its doors to every citizen in the world, not just a select few.
The arrest of Brittany Griner in Russia was also an expression of intolerance of other citizens in a country for a sports venue. Mrs. Griner was harmless in her actions and the scant amount of CBD oil was a personal possession approved of by her government and physician. Russia carried out a harmful act against Mrs. Griner by arresting a lesbian woman with a family at home. She could have been separated from her loved ones for years that could have snowballed into decades or death.
Grant Wahl is another example of hostility toward an international citizen on assignment to bring perspective to those back home. He had no malice against anyone and because he was an American wearing a Gay Pride tee shirt he was detained.
His death is causing shock waves through the journalists’ community as his writing was among some of the best sports media in the world. His brother states he is alarmed and believes there is reason to suspect criminal intent in his detainment and death.
The United States of America accepts everyone of its citizens as important. When the USA hosts any international venue it strives to keep everyone safe and doing their best in their competitions. The world needs to respect every international citizen that crosses their borders as valued back home.
Americans are not international volleys for politics and policy. If a country objects to policies and laws carried to their borders by international citizens of other countries then they should be ineligible to hold international events. It is not safe for the visiting persons no matter their capacity at home or international stability in avoiding conflict.
Good night.
Saturday, December 10, 2022
This is how the greed of the petroleum industry is playing out in the USA.
By Paula Tracy
Concord -In a bit of a pleasant surprise (click here) just in time for the holidays Eversource has filed a petition to decrease electric rates by 10.3 percent for its small customer group for six months beginning in February....
...The default service rate for electricity, which went from 10.669 cents per kilowatt hour in July to 22.566 cents per kilowatt hour in August and continues through January would go down to 20.22 cents per kilowatt hour if approved next week by the Public Utilities Commission....
But Gov. Chris Sununu said Wednesday that the fact it has been warmer than normal both here and in Europe has allowed for some storage capacity to develop, possibly easing the demand and the cost.
No explanation for the change was given in the documents delivered to the PUC Thursday afternoon.
A hearing for the rate change is set for 9 a.m. next Tuesday, Dec. 13.
Jessica Chiavara, senior counsel for the state’s largest utility, wrote Daniel Goldner, chair of the
New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission, about its competitively procured default Energy Service rate, proposed to begin February 1, 2023....
By Steven Mufson and Timothy Puko
Some of the world’s major oil companies (click here) remain internally skeptical about the “energy transition” to a low-carbon economy, even as they publicly portray their firms as partners in the cause, according to documents obtained by The Washington Post that a House committee released Friday.
The documents are part of a trove obtained by the House Committee on Oversight and Reform during a year-long investigation. They reveal oil company executives dismissing the potential for renewable energy to quickly replace fossil fuels, while working to secure a future for natural gas. They also detail industry efforts to secure government tax credits for carbon capture projects that might relieve them of the need to drastically alter their business models.
The documents — many of them copies of internal emails between oil company officials — describe ExxonMobil’s efforts in 2021 to persuade big industrial firms and oil giants to co-sponsor a mammoth carbon capture project in Texas. Elsewhere, in one email string, officials at Shell discuss whether BP, Shell and TotalEnergies — a French oil firm — increased their carbon footprints by selling Canadian oil sands interests to more eager investors....
USPS received an additional $3 billion in funds from the Inflation Reduction Act to invest in battery electric vehicles (BEV) and supporting infrastructure. The lawmakers urge USPS to make a commitment to increase its fleet electrification commitment to 95 percent from 40 percent, leveraging the additional funding provided through the Inflation Reduction Act to not simply meet its previous commitment, but rather to make further progress towards a more ambitious benchmark. In the letter, the lawmakers also push USPS to ensure the manufacturing workers producing the mail delivery vehicles have an opportunity to collectively bargain and join a union....
Sinema would have lost the primary.
By Geoffrey Skelley
...To some, (click here) Sinema’s party switch might not come as a surprise considering her moderate reputation. After all, she has the second-most conservative voting record in the Senate among Democrats,1 according to roll-call data from Voteview.com, with only West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin coming in to her right. Since joining the Senate, she’s taken public stances against Democratic efforts to abolish the filibuster and, along with Manchin, pushed her party to sharply reduce the outlays in budgetary legislation. Her positions have infuriated many Arizona Democrats, and the state party formally censured her over her 2022 vote to retain the filibuster, which helped block Democratic efforts to pass voting rights legislation....
...But there’s a solid chance Sinema’s 2024 electoral outlook played into her decision-making process. Sinema hasn’t said whether she plans to run for reelection, but there’s little question that her tendency to break with her former party has outraged much of the Democratic base that helped put her in the Senate in the first place. A Suffolk University/Arizona Republic poll of the state in September found that Democratic likely voters viewed her quite negatively, with 49 percent holding an unfavorable opinion and 30 percent a favorable one. Facing a potential primary challenge on her left from Democratic Rep. Ruben Gallego, Sinema stood a real chance of losing renomination if she sought reelection as a Democrat (she might’ve been in trouble against a more center-left Democrat, too, like Rep. Greg Stanton). Tellingly, Yoshinaka’s study found the prospect of facing a highly competitive primary in one’s own party can play into leaving that party....
Friday, December 09, 2022
Living with ruthless Republicans have never been this dangerous before.
December 9, 2022
By Ed White
Flint - A judge dismissed criminal charges (click here) against former Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder in the Flint water crisis, months after the state Supreme Court said indictments returned by a one-person grand jury were invalid.
Snyder, a Republican who left office in 2019, was charged with two misdemeanor counts of willful neglect of duty. He was the first person in state history to be charged for alleged crimes related to service as governor.
Snyder also is the eighth person to have a Flint water case thrown out after the Supreme Court's unanimous June opinion.
Genesee County Judge F. Kay Behm signed the order Wednesday, a day after the U.S. Senate approved her nomination to become a federal judge in eastern Michigan.
“The charges against (Snyder) were not properly brought and must be dismissed at this time,” Behm wrote....
Habitat can be reclaimed and repopulated with viable populations in any area of the world.
Understanding the objections to habitat loss is more than hugging trees or embracing nature, it is about Earth, it's biosphere and its water to ensure a home for millennia to come. Earth needs to be valued for it's unique place in space that promotes life with water it's primary component.
The IPCC and global members have been steadfast in their dedication and their message that Earth is to be valued and not taken for granted. Governments around the world need to embrace policy that promotes nature as a priority.
Nothing and I mean nothing is lost when prioritizing habitat of both land and water is part of any growth solution.
December 7, 2022By John Flesher
Harris and colleagues have placed trail cameras in woodsy sections of 25 city parks for the past five years. They’ve recorded thousands of images of animals that emerge mostly at night to roam and forage, revealing a wild side many locals might not know exists.
“We’re getting more and more exposure to wildlife in urban environments,” Harris said recently while checking several of the devices fastened to trees with steel cables near the ground. “As we’re changing their habitats, as we’re expanding the footprint of urbanization, ... we’ll increasingly come in contact with them.”
Animal and plant species are dying off at an alarming rate, with up to 1 million threatened with extinction, according to a 2019 United Nations report. Their plight is stirring calls for “rewilding” places where they thrived until driven out by development, pollution and climate change....
Unlike most big cities, its human population is declining, even as its streets, buildings and other infrastructure remain largely intact. And there’s diverse habitat. It ranges from large lakes and rivers to neighborhoods — some occupied, others largely deserted — and parklands so quiet “you don’t even know you’re in the city,” Harris said while changing camera batteries and jotting notes in a woodsy section of O’Hair Park.
Her team’s photographic observations have yielded published studies on how mammals react to each other, and to people, in urban landscapes.
The project connects them with local residents, some intrigued by coyotes and raccoons in the neighborhood, others fearful of diseases or harm to pets.
It’s an educational opportunity, Harris said — about proper trash disposal, resisting the temptation to feed wild animals and the value of healthy, diverse ecosystems....
World Economic Forum
By Carly Nairn
Climate change and global food demand (click here) could drive a startling loss of up to 23 percent of all natural habitat ranges in the next 80 years, according to new findings published in Nature Communications.
Habitat loss could accelerate to a level that brings about rapid extinctions of already vulnerable species. Shrinking ranges for mammals, amphibians and birds already account for an 18 percent loss of previous natural ranges, the study found, with a jump expected to reach 23 percent by this century's end.
Global food demand currently fuels agricultural sectors to increase land use, moving into habitats previously untouched. What results — deforestation — leaves more carbon dioxide in the air, increasing greenhouse gas emissions, the main driver of climate change. In the U.S. alone, agriculture-related emissions measure 11.6 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions, which include carbon dioxide, methane and nitrous oxide....
As the Australian bushfires continue to burn (click here), a shocking piece of information appeared: since September, over 500 million animals have died because of the flames. Especially hard-hit was the koala population, with many of these animals dying in the calamity.
However, the situation in Australia showed us that people are willing to step up and be the everyday heroes that we need. 19-year-old Micah and 18-year-old Caleb are two such heroes and they’re being praised all over the net. These two cousins drove around Kangaroo Island, rescuing koalas and putting them in their car....
Nature Based Solutions could generate twenty million jobs while addressing major challenges such as climate change, disaster risk, and food and water insecurity.
By Patrick Whittle
Populations of a vulnerable species of marine mammal, (click here) numerous species of abalone and a type of Caribbean coral are now threatened with extinction, an international conservation organization said Friday.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) announced the update during the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity, or COP15, conference in Montreal. The union’s hundreds of members include government agencies from around the world, and it’s one of the planet’s widest-reaching environmental networks....
The IUCN uses its Red List of Threatened Species to categorize animals approaching extinction. This year, the union is sounding the alarm about the dugong — a large and docile marine mammal that lives from the eastern coast of Africa to the western Pacific Ocean.
The dugong is vulnerable throughout its range, and now populations in East Africa have entered the red list as critically endangered, IUCN said in a statement. Populations in New Caledonia have entered the list as endangered, the group said....
...The IUCN Red List includes more than 150,000 species. The list sometimes overlaps with the species listed under the U.S. Endangered Species Act, such as in the case of the North Atlantic right whale. More than 42,000 of the species on the red list are threatened with extinction, IUCN says.
IUCN uses several categories to describe an animal’s status, ranging from “least concern” to “critically endangered.” IUCN typically updates the red list two or three times a year. This week’s update includes more than 3,000 additions to the red list. Of those, 700 are threatened with extinction....
What is the difference between a Dugong and Manatee? (click here)Both manatees and dugongs, nicknamed "sea cows", are slow-moving herbivorous (mostly) marine mammals that belong to the Sirenian animal order. The first sailors were persuaded that these creatures were sirens (or mermaids), hence the name of the order.
There are five known species of Sirenia - the West Indian manatee, the Amazonian manatee, the West African manatee, the dugong, and the extinct Stellar’s sea cow (hunted to extinction in the 18th Century).
Although manatees and dugongs have a lot in common, they are oceans apart in terms of location, biology, and behavior....
79% of all cheetah populations contain 100 or fewer individual.
Cheetahs are expected to be moved from vulnerable (click here) to endangered.
December 6, 2022Omaha - Four cheetah cubs (click here) were born at the Lee G. Simmons Wildlife Safari Park on Nov. 4, which is part of Omaha's Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium. The zoo said in a news release that cheetahs have historically been a difficult animal to breed, but since 2014 29 cubs have been born at the safari park....
...“These cubs are a great example of the collaboration benefits among zoos,” said Dr. Jason Herrick, Vice President of Conservation and Animal Health for Omaha’s Henry Doorly Zoo and Aquarium. “Not long ago, cheetahs were considered one of the more difficult species to breed in zoos. Over the last couple of decades, the members of the National Cheetah Breeding Center Coalition, including our Wildlife Safari Park, have worked together to really figure out how to breed cheetahs.”...
As part of the annual "Festival of Lights" the Cincinnati Zoo goes greener.
Cincinnati - The Cincinnati Zoo (click here) has a new electric train chugging through the zoo this year.
The new train is powered by the solar panels that visitors park under when visiting the zoo. The train charges overnight and while loading and unloading.
The train will chug through an extra bright light tunnel that's part of the 40th annual PNC Festival of Lights.
The new train will save the zoo about $35,000 on fuel and maintenance costs annually and will get it closer to its goal of being net-zero by 2025....
...The new train is also more comfortable for visitors, giving more legroom and wider seats.
And to match the green initiative, the train itself has been painted green.
"As the Greenest Zoo in America, we thought it would be fitting to have a green train," Maynard said. "The change makes it more obvious that it's new and different and brings more attention to the Zoo's sustainability efforts."...
Panthera onca is endangered.
By Christine Mattson
A pair of big cat siblings (click here) will be leaving the Elmwood Park Zoo in Norristown, Pennsylvania, for a new home in the Midwest, the zoo announced Tuesday.
In the next couple of weeks, beloved cougar siblings Russet and Yukon will be moving into a large enclosure the Saint Louis Zoo in Missouri while major construction projects begin at the Elmwood Park Zoo.
The cougars' new home in Big Cat Country at the Saint Louis Zoo is another Association of Zoos & Aquariums-accredited facility that will “ensure that their comfort and well-being are maintained,” the zoo said in a statement.
“We don’t want these confident-yet-sensitive cats to regress into the timid animals we first met,” the zoo continued.
Russet and Yukon were rescued from the wild after being orphaned as cubs in Idaho. They spent their early years at the Elmwood Park Zoo mostly off-exhibit as they were “too skittish” to leave their indoor holding, according to EPZ....
The Black Jaguar is endangered in Central and South America.
The four-month-old cub, (click here) who's still waiting to be named, was initially raised by Mexico City's Chapultepec Zoo staff after the mother Africa, a three-year-old female, rejected it after birth.
Despite the adverse situation at its birth, the director of Conservation and Animal Welfare at the Department of Zoos and Wildlife Conservation of Mexico City, Rafael Tinajero, said the cub is quite healthy and eating properly:
"The black jaguar is also born in the wild but it is very important that they are part of conservation programs. Zoos are wildlife refuges, they are sanctuaries for endangered fauna and what they are looking for is the conservation of these species."
Critically endangered Sumatra tigers expected in Australia's Adelaide Zoo.
By Sarah Swain
Adelaide Zoo tiger Delilah is preparing to become a mum, a year after arriving at the wildlife park.
..."It was amazing (click here) they were such a good pair. Kembali is an amazing male tiger, very impressed, and the cubs are going to be stunning."
Fewer than 400 of the creatures remain in the wild due to poachers and loss of habitat due to palm oil plantations....
December 6, 2022By Sarah Motter
Topeka - As the Topeka Zoo’s last breeding pair of Sumatran tigers (click here) prepares to travel to their new homes, the tiger habitat in the Capital City will be left bare, leaving room for a new breeding pair to make a home in 2023.
The Topeka Zoo says on Tuesday, Dec. 6, that it has reproduced the most critically endangered Sumatran tigers over the last decade and now is about to be tigerless. This week it said it will transfer its two remaining Sumatran Tiger residents to other zoos, which will leave the habitat empty. For a little while, at least.
As part of the Species Survival Plan breeding recommendation through the Association of Zoos and Aquariums, the Topeka Zoo said it received recommendations to move all of its critically endangered tigers to other zoos as part of a larger effort.
According to the Zoo, a new pair of tigers will now join the zoo later in December in hopes to establish another successful breeding pair.