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szdaily -> Kaleidoscope -> 
Town fines owners for barking dogs
    2019-02-19  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

A FRENCH town has banned dogs from barking too much — and animal rights activists say the rule is too “ruff.”

Pooch owners who fail to keep Fido quiet in the small northern village of Feuquières will be hit with a US$68 fine for “prolonged or repeated barking,” according to reports.

“The aim is not to ban dogs and we won’t be fining people for the slightest hint of a yap,” Jean-Pierre Estienne, the mayor, told Le Parisien newspaper.

“The town has nothing against dogs but when you decide to have them, you educate them.”

But so-called “animal freedom” boosters are barking mad over the vocal crackdown, which they say is too strict.

“You may as well stop church bells ringing Sunday morning! If dogs have mouths, it’s so they can bark,” Stephane Lamart, president of For the Defense of Animal Rights, said.

(SD-Agencies)

Other cities have banned prolonged barking, including Centennial, Ohio, where pooch owners have howled over fines up to US$75.

Hawaii County and parts of Los Angeles also have similar bark bans.

Rare black panther photographed in Kenya

Biologists have documented a black panther stalking the forests of Kenya -- a rarity.

The black panther is the melanistic color variant of any of the big cat species. In Asia and Africa, black panthers are leopards, Panthera pardus. Among leopards, an all black coat is caused by a recessive allele, which means the trait must be inherited from both of the cat’s parents.

Last year, scientists working with the San Diego Zoo and Camtraptions set up camera traps throughout the bushlands of Kenya’s Loisaba Conservancy. It didn’t take long for the cameras to capture footage of the extremely rare melanistic panther.

Researchers with the Louisaba Conservancy confirmed the discovery in a blog update.

“We are very excited to hear that these camera traps have captured rare footage of melanistic leopards, otherwise known as black panthers,” the conservation group announced.

The juvenile female was spotted traveling through the bushlands with an older, normally colored leopard. Biologists think her companion is her mother.

Researchers didn’t originally set up the cameras to find a black panther. Scientists wanted to better understand the dynamics of the leopard population in Loisaba, as well as the different causes of human-wildlife conflict.

Documenting the black panther was an added bonus. Scientists described the rare photos in a paper published in the African Journal of Ecology.

“Regionally we’ve heard reports of black leopards living here in Kenya, but high-quality footage or imagery to support these observations has always been missing,” Nicholas Pilfold, San Diego Zoo Global scientist, said in a news release. “That’s what we’ve provided here with our cameras, and now we’re able to confirm what has been long suspected about black leopards living in Laikipia County.”

Pilfold initially claimed the photographs are the first to document a black panther in a century, but researchers at the Ol Ari Nyiro Conservancy uncovered photographs of a separate black panther taken in 2007.

“I do however believe that they are the first high-quality camera trap photographs,” Will Burrard-Lucas, wildlife photographer and founder of Camtraptions, wrote in a blog update.

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