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In The News:
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Hogzilla! Smuggled Snakes! What a
Catch-fish
Malaysia Mulls Cloning Rare Turtles    
   

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  Hogzilla!
 Now you seen the picture, Read the article and the facts.   An amazing animal!
      The whole hog story!

 

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Cairo Customs Prevents Snakes on a Plane

By Associated Press

CAIRO, Egypt - Customs officers at Cairo's airport on Thursday detained a man bound for Saudi Arabia who was trying to smuggle 700 live snakes on a plane, airport authorities said.

The officers were stunned when a passenger, identified as Yahia Rahim Tulba, told them his carryon bag contained live snakes after he was asked to open it.

Tulba opened his bag to show the snakes to the police and asked the officers, who held a safe distance, not to come close. Among the various snakes, hidden in small cloth sacks, were two poisonous cobras, authorities said.

The Egyptian said he had hoped to sell the snakes in Saudi Arabia. Police confiscated the snakes and turned Tulba over to the prosecutor's office, accusing him of violating export laws and endangering the lives of other passengers.

According to the customs officials, Tulba claimed the snakes are wanted by Saudis who display them in glass jars in shops, keep them as pets or sell them to research centers.

The value of the snakes was not immediately known.

 

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Fish Story
[]

A guy who lives at Lake Conroe (50 miles north of Houston) saw a ball bouncing around kind of strange in the lake and went to investigate.
It turned out to be a flathead catfish who had obviously tried to swallow a basketball which
became stuck in its mouth!!
The fish was totally exhausted from trying to dive, but unable to because the ball would always bring him back up to the surface.
The guy tried numerous times to get the ball out, but was unsuccessful.
He finally had his wife cut the ball in order to deflate it and release the hungry catfish.
You probably wouldn't have believed this, if you hadn't seen the following pictures...






 

 

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Malaysia Mulls Cloning Rare Turtles

By JULIA ZAPPEI, Associated Press Writer
Thu Jul 12, 4:10 AM

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia - Malaysia is studying a plan to clone leatherback turtles, an endangered species that scientists believe once swam with dinosaurs, an official said Thursday.    But some biologists say the plan is impractical and unlikely to succeed, since no reptile is known to have been cloned.    The Fisheries Department hopes to embark on a leatherback cloning project that could cost $9 million over the next five years, said its director-general, Junaidi Che Ayub.    "The number of leatherbacks is decreasing every year," he told The Associated Press. "Even though some of them have returned to our shores to nest, their eggs are not fertile and do not hatch."

Junaidi said the clones could produce hatchlings to boost the population.    Malaysia once had one of the world's largest populations of the turtles, which returned regularly to its east coast beaches to lay eggs. Overfishing and pollution have sharply cut their numbers.   A United Nations report last year said leatherbacks, which can weigh up to a ton, have become virtually extinct in Malaysia, with nest sites dipping from 5,000 in the 1960s to less than 10 in recent years.

Tests could first be carried out on Malaysia's abundant green turtles to see if cloning is workable, Junaidi said.    "It's a bizarre idea," said conservation biologist and university lecturer Chan Eng Heng.    Cloning has been done only on mammals such as dogs, sheep, cats and cows, and uncertainties persist about cloned animals' health and life spans, she told the AP.   "The money can be used to carry out other conservation work that will really make a difference," she said.   Malaysia's waters are visited by four turtle species _ the Olive Ridley, the leatherback, the green and the hawksbill. All are listed as endangered or threatened with extinction. Human activity, including shoreline development, fishing, pollution and the stealing of eggs has increasingly threatened the creatures.

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