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Man caught laden with rare animals at Thai airport

Aussie crocs 'traumatised' by cyclone
Sydney (AFP) Feb 11, 2011 - A group of ferocious Australian crocodiles were so traumatised by a maximum-strength cyclone last week that they hid under water and stopped eating, wildlife park officials said Friday. Bob Flemming from Townsville's Billabong Sanctuary in Australia's northeast said the 12 saltwater crocodiles, some more than four metres (13 feet) long, took days to recover from Severe Tropical Cyclone Yasi. "They were traumatised for a couple of days," Flemming told AAP news agency.

"They stayed underwater for some time and didn't even surface for food." However, Flemming said he did not lose any animals during Australia's worst storm in nearly a century, which remarkably also failed to cause any direct human casualties. "Lots of trees came down on the aviary and some birds, including wedgetail eagles, flew away but they have since returned home," he said.
by Staff Writers
Bangkok (AFP) Feb 11, 2011
Dozens of snakes, boxes of spiders and one of the world's rarest tortoises were among hundreds of live animals found in a man's airport luggage after a shopping spree at a Bangkok market, Thai officials said Friday.

Rivo Cahyono, a 34-year-old from Indonesia, was arrested trying to board a flight from the Thai capital when X-rays showed the creatures stuffed inside three suitcases, said the National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation department.

Special compartments in the man's bags contained 88 Indian Star tortoises, a protected species, 33 Elongated tortoises and one Ploughshare -- the world's rarest type of tortoise, Wildlife trade group Traffic said.

Among the many snakes found were two Boa Constrictors and 34 Ball Pythons, while 18 Baboon Spiders, packed individually in plastic containers, squirrels, lizards and an African Grey Parrot were also discovered.

The Thai official who made the arrest said Cahyono told authorities he had bought all the animals from Bangkok's Chatuchak Market.

Traffic said the capital's biggest open air market was a "major hub for some of the world's rarest species" and illegal sales continue "every weekend on an open basis" despite complaints to Thai authorities.

The group's regional director, William Schaedla, commended the seizure but raised concerns about the open availability of protected animals at Chatuchak, which he said was "just down the street" from Thai wildlife protection offices.

"Frankly, the situation is totally unacceptable in a country that claims to be effectively addressing illegal wildlife trade," he said.

The group said sellers at the market had openly admitted to its staff that many animals they sold had been illegally obtained and "even offer advice on how to smuggle them out of the country".

A statement from the National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation department said it estimated the man could have bought all the animals for around 24,000 dollars, but Traffic said the re-sale value would likely be much higher.

Cahyono was about to board an Air Asia flight to Surabaya in Indonesia when animals were discovered in one of his bags, the airline then unloaded two suitcases already on the plane and the extent of the haul was revealed.

He was charged with illegal possession and wildlife smuggling and faces a maximum of four years in prison and a fine up to 40,000 baht ($1,300).



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Conservation paleobiologists-scientists who use the fossil record to understand the evolutionary and ecological responses of present-day species to changes in their environment - are putting the dead to work. A new review of the research in this emerging field provides examples of how the fossil record can help assess environmental impact, predict which species will be most vulnerable to e ... read more







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