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Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Bunnies Vs Big Cats

Animal sanctuaries are not immune to controversies as illustrated by the follow story:




Rescue groups collide over feeding one animal to another
Big Cat Rescue says there's no substitute

Posted: 9:57 PM
By: Brendan McLaughlin

HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY, Fla. - Moses and Bailey were abandoned as kittens, but the two Florida bobcats are being pampered now at Tampa's Big Cat Rescue in Hillsborough County.
As they lay sleepily on their backs in their sunny enclosure, the wild cats look as tame as tabbies.

But at feeding time, they become deadly serious predators.

"She's fed live rats Monday through Friday and rabbits on Saturday," says the announcer in a video produced by Big Cat Rescue. The three-minute production details the rescue program that involves releasing chubby domesticated rabbits into the bobcat's enclosure right around dinner time.

The feeding of live rabbits along with rats and mice has angered a network of rabbit rescue organizations based in Gainesville.

"We're not asking them not to rehabilitate the bobcats to go back into the wild. We're asking them to look into different and more humane alternatives," said Kathy Finelli of Gainesville Rabbit Rescue.

Carole Baskin, founder of Big Cat Rescue says she wishes there was an alternative, but does not believe there is.
"With the bobcats that have to go back to the wild, we have to make sure they are able to hunt before we release them. Otherwise we would be putting them out there to starve to death," said Baskin.

The sprawling acreage off Gunn Highway in Hillsborough County cares for wild cats that have been abused, abandoned or given up by overwhelmed owners.

The permanent residents are fed either fresh beef and chicken or a specially prepared ground meat. But the native bobcats that will be released back into the wild are fed live rodents and rabbits.

"They are not scavengers like coyotes, so they have to be able to hunt, and they have to be able to know what their food source looks like," said Baskin.

Kathy Finelli doesn't buy it.

"When a rabbit walks directly up to a bobcat and puts it's nose on the bobcat's nose, how is that training the animal to hunt? The animal is now expecting the animal to walk up to it," said Finelli.

Baskin says wild rabbits could introduce disease to the rescued cats and the rabbits would be doubly traumatized - having to be first trapped, and then eaten by the cats. So they purchase live rabbits and rodents bred as food, and keep them in cages until feeding time.
"We give them treats and lots of places to hide. We treat them with respect. When they're taken out to the cats, it's the hardest thing we have to do," said Baskin.

Both Baskin and Finelli are committed animal lovers who accept that all animals are ultimately food for another. But their respective devotion to prey and predators puts them on a biological collision course that may not be possible to resolve."

Workers and Volunteers Fed Dead Rabbits to BCR Cats
 
Carole Baskin  At Big Cat Rescue, our 100+ exotic cats are carnivores and therefore must be fed a carnivorous diet. One night a week the cats receive "whole prey," which are dead rats and rabbits that have been bred by a commercial breeder for this purpose and purchased by us.

ONLY bobcats that we are rehabilitating in order to return them to the wild are fed live rats and rabbits. We must feed them live prey so that these orphaned bobcat kittens are able to learn their hunting skills; and so adult bobcats rec...

User ID:http://facebook.com/595786918
The WAO took in a lot of pet rabbits (especially after Easter) for "small donations" and then allowed the bunnies to bounce around free at the Leslie Road facility, knowing full well what would happen to these cute furry critters.  I witnessed, on more than one occasion,  rabbits eaten by the big cats (I won't go into graphic detail as to what I saw on those occasions).  What does this say about the WAO?  Think about it this way--people unknowingly paid the WAO to have their pets eaten by the big cats. 

Now that is sick.

[Later:  One of the reasons why I commented on this story is because (1) I believe that BCR used purchased bunnies as "treats" for its animals for its permanent 100+ big cats (2) the WAO also (in way) fed bunnies to its cats, but the private owners actually paid the WAO for this privledge (indirectly).]

[Much Later:  Ah ha!  I was right!  Bunnies were fed as "treats" to the BCR 100+ permanent residents.  I found these statements on BCR Facebook page:

Big Cat Rescue - Tampa FL   Hi Laurie, the pic was taken two years ago around Christmas time. Some of the volunteers had been allowed to pick their favorite cats to get a dead rabbit and they were on the cart going out to hand them out. They were all happy and smiling because their favorite cats were going to get a very special treat and they were going to be able to give it to them.

Margie T. Zunick  - So what? It was 2 yrs ago... it was yesterday... who cares? Dead domestic, tame rabbits are not a treat.]

2 comments:

  1. Unfortunately, the sanctuary is right ONLY because the cats are being rehabbed for release. If they were permanent residences, I would be infuriated with them, too. I would expect them to feed only dead animals to them.

    Humans are an animal species that can survive very well with no ill side affects being on a vegetarian diet. Other animal species cannot, and if that is where the other place had the hang up about the rabbits, then, even as a vegetarian myself, I cannot agree with them. I would bet good money that most, if not all, of those rabbit people are not vegetarians, which makes them responsible for the deaths of hundreds of animals each and every year.

    I'm sorry, guys, but that's how it is.

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  2. The following is what I said after certain things were brought to my attention. I cannot watch videos of anyone killing or harming others, including animals in their natural habitats hunting for food.

    Put that way, it sounds sadistic and sick. And, no, I would not think that was OK either for 'treats' or fun...for anyone..cats or them. I didn't watch the video or read the whole article. I can't watch real wildlife shows on TV of animals hunting other animals.

    Ideally, cats that are to be turned back into the wild after rehabbing, should be kept on protective property that is like their natural habitat that has existing wildlife that they would naturally prey on. I don't see how throwing them a dead or alive animal in a cage is teaching them how to hunt.

    I was just saying that carnivorous wildlife have to be fed their natural diet, and those being rehabbed for release have to be able to survive. And unless these are newborns, ohphaned as babies, they should already know how to hunt. I wasn't commenting on all that other stuff. I didn't even see or read all of that.

    And one addition about myself and cats. I have one thing against cats...other than being allergic to them. Other than humans, cats are the only other animal species, that I know of, that kill for the sake of killing or just for fun, and will cripple or literally tear another creature apart, and after the amusement wears off, will walk away leaving the other creature in agony and pain to die regardless of how long that might take. Unfortunately, we cannot and should not change other animal species, but we can and should change our own behavior.

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