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3.5 to 4.0 million animals were trapped and killed for the commercial fur
trade during the 1996/97 trapping season.
Less than 0.006% of the American population participates in trapping. The
average annual income for trappers in the U.S. is less than $250, after
equipment costs and license fees are subtracted.
Every year in the U.S., steel-jaw leghold traps cripple or kill approximately 5
million non-target animals -- domestic dogs and cats, owls, squirrels,
chipmunks, blue jays, swans, deer, and golden eagles, as well as threatened and
endangered species.
To make a 40-inch fur coat requires the skins of 16 coyotes, or 18 lynx, or 60
minks, or 45 opossums, or 20 otters, or 42 red foxes, or 40 raccoons, or 50
sables, or 8 seals, or 50 muskrats, or 15 beavers.
In a 1995 Associated Press survey, 59% agreed it is always wrong to hunt an
animal for fur.
Trapping is allowed on 280 units (more than half) of the National Wildlife
Refuge System. Steel-jaw leghold traps are used on 140, or half, of these 280
refuges.
 | Many of the animals caught in traps suffer excruciating pain. Traps can
tear the flesh, cut tendons and ligaments, and break bones. Some animals chew
off their own limbs to escape, only to die later. Some break their teeth
chewing at their traps in their desperate efforts to escape. |
 | Trapped animals are killed by predation, drowning, strangulation,
freezing, shooting, suffocation, and blows to the head. |
 | Each year worldwide, traps injure and kill millions of "nontarget"
animals—domestic dogs and cats, rabbits, deer, songbirds, raptors, livestock,
and even endangered species. |
 | Sometimes referred to as "trash" animals, most nontarget wildlife species
caught by traps are not commercially valuable and often are simply thrown
away. |
 | Injuries from steel-jaw leghold traps are often so severe that the injured
limb of a trapped companion animal must be amputated. Conibear traps, however,
kill many of their unintended victims. |
 | Companion animals have been trapped along the edges of railroad tracks,
running and hiking trails, streams, airport fences, and campgrounds. They’ve
been caught under porches, in backyards, agricultural fields, and in the
middle of cities. They are caught on private property and on public lands,
including national forests and municipal parks. |
 | Trappers are rarely prosecuted when a pet is caught by a trap. Trapping is
a largely unregulated activity, and where restrictions do apply, they are
poorly enforced. In most cases, trappers do not leave identification on their
traps, so trappers cannot be traced or fined for neglecting their traps.
Further Information:
Trapping: The Inside Story
www.bancrueltraps.com
Get The Facts - The Truth About Trapping
Fact Sheet: Trapping on National Wildlife Refuges
Even companion animals like dogs and cats are at risk of severe injury and
death in traps and snares. A sampling of HSUS case history reports reveals
just how traumatic the experience can be, both for pets and their owners.
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Andrea Cimino, of affiliate The Humane Society
of the U.S. (HSUS), explains why
even companion animals like dogs and cats are at risk of severe injury and death
in traps and snares. A sampling of HSUS case history reports reveals just how
traumatic the experience can be, both for pets and their owners.
Pets and Traps
Traps, be it steel-jawed leghold traps, conibear traps, or snares, are
inherently indiscriminate. Each year, traps in the United States injure and kill
millions of "nontarget" animals—domestic dogs and cats, rabbits, deer,
songbirds, raptors, livestock, and even endangered species. Referred to as
"trash" animals, nontarget wildlife often are simply thrown away. Injuries from
leghold traps are often so severe that the injured limb of a trapped companion
animal must be amputated. Conibear traps, however, kill many of their unintended
victims.
Conibear traps
frequently clamp down on the chest or pelvis of an animal, crushing bones, blood
vessels, and nerves and causing excruciating pain.
"Companion animals have been trapped along the edges of railroad tracks,
running and hiking trails, streams, airport fences, and campgrounds. They’ve
been caught under porches, in backyards, agricultural fields, and the middle of
cities. They are caught on private property and on public lands, including
national forests and municipal parks."
Trappers are rarely prosecuted when a pet is caught by a trap. Trapping is a
largely unregulated activity, and where restrictions do apply, they are poorly
enforced. In most cases, trappers do not leave identification on their traps, so
trappers cannot be traced or fined for neglecting their traps.
This cat in Maryland
lost its hind leg to a steel-jawed leghold trap (Photo courtesy HSUS).
The following examples of companion animals caught in traps show the inherent
indiscriminateness of traps. Companion animals of all breeds, ages, sizes, and
states of health can be caught. Companion animals have been trapped along the
edges of railroad tracks, running and hiking trails, streams, airport fences,
and campgrounds. They’ve been caught under porches, in backyards, agricultural
fields, and the middle of cities. They are caught on private property and on
public lands, including national forests and municipal parks. Some traps that
have caught companion animals were set in blatant violation of the law; while
other traps were set legally, but still managed to trap a companion animal.
Sometimes the animals can be saved and adopted out to a loving home; other times
the animal dies or must be euthanized. However, regardless of the outcome, all
of these examples prove that traps are inhumane devices that inflict unnecessary
pain and suffering on animals.
How you can help: report nontarget trapping incidents to HSUS
The Humane Society of the United States documents cases in which domestic and
nontarget animals are injured or killed as a result of trapping. The information
we collect from our Trapping Case Report Forms helps us to enact trapping bans
and educate the public about the danger of traps. If your companion animal was
the unfortunate victim of a cruel and indiscriminate trap, please fill out a
form and send it to us. You can download a copy of the form at
www.hsus.org/ace/12052.
We would appreciate hearing your story.
Each year traps
in the US injure and kill millions of "nontarget" animals, including domestic
dogs and cats.
Case histories from the HSUS files
Little Rock, Arkansas, 1986—A female athlete and a friend routinely ran
with their three dogs on a commonly used trail along the Arkansas River. One
day, as they approached a small creek that ran through the woods along the
trail, the two women heard one of the dogs, Tina, utter a bloodcurdling yelp.
When they rushed over to the creek, they saw Tina sitting on her haunches in
shallow water yelping in pain. When Tina’s owner saw that Tina's rear foot was
caught in a steel-jawed leghold trap that was concealed beneath the water of the
creek, she tried to free Tina. As she attempted to get the trap loose from a
sapling to which it had been wired, Tina, maddened by pain, attacked her owner.
Tina bit through her owner's forearm to the bone, then bit her on the hand, and
then on her lower leg. The woman was taken to the emergency room, and eventually
had to have stitches to close her wounds. Her friend's husband eventually was
able to free Tina’s foot from the trap's jaws. Tina suffered from swelling,
bruising, and cuts. When Tina's owner reported the incident to the Arkansas Game
and Fish Commission, they reportedly told her that she was a fool for trying to
free her dog from the trap and that her wounds were her own fault. They informed
her that Arkansas at the time had no state or city law against setting
unattended animal traps in an incorporated area or in an area frequented by
humans and domestic animals.
San Diego, California, 1988—This case shows that even areas frequented by
adults, children and pets are not always necessarily safe from the danger of
traps. In a forested area near a campground in Cleveland National Forest, a
Doberman Pinscher stepped in a steel-jawed leghold trap. Luckily, its owners
were nearby and rescued the dog from the trap in about 5 minutes. The dog
suffered many bruises, but was not seriously injured. California has since
passed a ballot initiative (1998) banning the use of leghold traps, conibear
traps, and snares for recreation and commerce in fur.
Gadsden, Alabama, 1990—In a rare case in which a trapper was prosecuted
and punished for catching a domestic animal, a homeowner was found guilty in a
municipal court of cruelty to animals for placing a steel-jawed leghold trap on
his property. Neighbors reported to Gadsden Animal Control officers that they
had seen a grey male shorthaired cat caught with one of its hind legs in the
trap on the porch of the man’s home. Thought to be in the trap for at least 24
hours, the cat first lost its toe, then lost its leg as result of the incident.
The man claimed he placed the trap under his porch to catch squirrels. With many
humane alternatives to common nuisance wildlife problems, there was simply no
excuse for the danger the actions of this man posed to wildlife, companion
animals, and even small neighborhood children. As cruelty to animals was only a
misdemeanor in Alabama at the time, the man was simply fined $25 and assessed
$44 court fees.
North Pole, Alaska, 1990—Shiloh, a 3-year-old husky, stepped in a
steel-jawed leghold trap in a rural residential area. The animal control officer
who examined her estimated that Shiloh had been in the trap anywhere between 3-6
weeks. Shiloh managed to escape when her left front paw rotted off. During the
time she was caught in the trap, her weight plummeted from 60 pounds to 20
pounds. Fortunately, once Shiloh was taken to a vet’s office, she began to eat
healthily, put on weight, and improve her temperament. The vet amputated
Shiloh’s paw up to its wrist. Shiloh, now a three footed dog, was eventually
adopted by the animal control officer.
The jaws of a
Conibear trap snap shut on the head and face of a domestic dog.
Lebanon, Connecticut, 1992—From a letter sent to HSUS from a pet owner
whose cat was a victim of a steel-jawed leghold trap: "Our cat 'Murray' that we
have owned and loved very much for 11 years was missing for ten days. We spent
many sleepless nights thinking we would never see him again. We were worried
sick not knowing what could have happened to him. After 10 days, our cat finally
made it home at 10:30 at night, dragging a steel-jawed leghold trap. We
immediately brought him to the local veterinarian hospital, where he was treated
and lost part of his paw. Just the very thought of him suffering and dragging
that trap all the way home makes us wonder how could anyone be so cruel to set
traps for any animal!" —Sharon Pineault
Unity, Maine, 1993—A shepherd puppy was following a path through a
pasture with its owner and smelled a skunk scent on a steel-jawed leghold trap.
The trap was set out of season and had no identification on it. The puppy’s
owner had to call an animal warden to release it. The puppy suffered from
swelling and bruising.
Valparaiso, Indiana, 1994—A dog became trapped in a rusty steel-jawed
leghold trap set in a trailer park. The owner was bitten as he attempted to
release the dog, who suffered from swelling, cuts, bruising, and broken bones.
The neighbor of the dog’s owner said he had set the trap to catch cats in the
park. Of hundreds of trapping case reports received by HSUS, this case was one
of the only ones in which the trapper paid the pet owner’s veterinarian and
medical bills. Thus, the owner decided not to press charges.
Minneapolis, Minnesota, 1996—Companion animals can even be caught in some
of the largest cities in the U.S. A cat spent 24 hours in a steel-jawed leghold
trap on public property in Minneapolis before being rescued and taken to a
veterinarian. The cat suffered from swelling, cuts, bruising, and broken bones,
and had to have its digits amputated.
Leghold traps
can tear flesh, cut tendons, and ligaments, and break bones.
West Wyoming, Pennsylvania, 1996—A pregnant short haired female cat lost
her five kittens and sustained cuts to the ear and neck while attempting to free
herself from a conibear trap. The cat was found in the trap and taken to a local
animal shelter where a veterinarian discovered the dead kitten fetuses while
treating the cat.
Hinesburg, Vermont, 1997—Drivers spotted a small black and white cat
limping along a road dragging a steel-jawed leghold trap. The drivers reported
that the terrified cat’s leg was almost falling off. They managed to remove the
trap and took it to a veterinary clinic. The attending veterinarian reported
that she could smell the rotting flesh as the cat came through the door. The
cat, who was estimated to have been in the trap for at least 5 days, had 2
broken bones protruding through its putrified flesh, a left hind leg that had
almost rotted off, and was extremely thin, weak, and dehydrated. The
veterinarian was forced to amputate the cat’s leg to save her life.
Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, 2002—A six-year-old Labrador-shepherd
cross named Jake was caught in an illegally set conibear trap baited with steak
and duck meat along the Pitt River. Jake and his owner had been walking along a
gravel pathway along the river when Jake’s owner heard a sudden yelp. When she
followed the noise to the edge of the river, she found Jake with his head caught
in the conibear, which had no identification tag on it. Though legal if set
underwater, this conibear trap was illegal, as it had been set above ground. A
district conservation officer guessed that a local farmer may have set the trap
to catch a coyote that was preying upon his sheep or chickens, while activists
believed the trap was professionally set by someone hoping to sell a coyote's
skin.
Cornerbrook, Newfloundland, 2003—A seven year old black Labrador
retriever, Coal, was rescued after three days spent caught in a fox snare in
woods. The dog became trapped as it walked in an area of woods near a salmon
hatchery that he routinely frequented with his owner. When Coal didn’t come back
when called, his heartbroken owner searched unsuccessfully for him for three
days. Then a friend with a trained search dog named Brandy was brought out to
the woods where Coal was last seen. Within 45 minutes, Brandy found Coal, who
was caught around the mouth in the baited fox snare just off the regular road
from which he had been walking with his owner. Coal’s owner was not able to find
him because Coal could not make any noises since the snare was pulled tight
around his mouth. After a search, three more baited fox snares were found in the
area. The snare had torn through the dog's mouth and nose, and Coal was worn and
feeble. His weight had dropped from 100-plus pounds to 77 pounds by the time he
arrived at the veterinary clinic. Coal avoided the possibility of blood
poisoning and gangrene through intravenous and antibiotic treatment. After
several days, Coal recovered and went home from the veterinary clinic with his
owner.
The 2003 Phoenix
victim. Photo courtesy Arizona Humane Society.
Phoenix, Arizona, 2003—A male tabby cat found in a steel-jaw leghold trap
was taken to an animal shelter after a Phoenix resident reported that an injured
cat was dragging a large metal trap through his front yard. The cat, who
remained in the trap for an estimated 24-48 hours, suffered four severe breaks
to his front left leg, which was badly dislocated as a result of the animal
struggling to free himself. The veterinarians amputated his front left leg.
Tragically, the cat did not recover well and the shelter was forced to euthanize
him. It is unlikely the cat covered a lot of ground with his leg stuck in a
metal trap, leading hospital managers to believe that the trap had been
illegally set somewhere in the residential area. When traps are set in densely
populated residential areas, they pose serious dangers not only to pets and
wildlife, but also to small children.
Further Information:
Readers wanting to learn more about wildlife trapping and its legal, animal
welfare and conservation implications would be well advised to check out the web
sites of the Animal
Protection Institute, www.api4animals.org and
www.BanCruelTraps.com.
The following section links may serve as a useful navigation guide:
Casualties:
Animals trapped in the U.S., 1986-1999 (listed by state).
Trapping on National Wildlife Refuges (pdf download). API’s in-depth report.
http://www.survival-center.com/buckshot/
Off site resources for fur info:
Fur Q&As -- Fur questions and answers. Download an anti-fur brochure.
Trapping Myths -- Exposing the Myths: The Truth about Trapping.
Inside Fur Farm -- Inside the Fur Industry: Trapping Maims and Kills
Animals.
Activists Guide -- Fur Free Activist Guide.
Protesters -- This time it's war, say fur protesters. As hostilities
escalate, activists warn of guerrilla tactics against traders ... and wearers.
By Iain S Bruce.
Seal Hunt Facts -- as of March 2006.
CAFT -- Oct 2005 vs. Joseph Ltd.
Fur Factory Farming -- Fur Factory Farming. Description.
CaseVsFur -- The Ethical Case Against Fur Farming.
Fur Today -- The Fur Trade Today 12/29/01. Joe Miele.
Dog Fur -- Betrayal of Trust: The Global Trade in Dog and Cat Fur.
Fur Environment -- Fur, An Environmental Nightmare
Anti Fur -- The Oregonian -- Commentary -- 12/09/01. Misery on the mink
farm.
Anti Fur art
-- Life and Liberation's Anti-Trapping Page. Poem "The Trap" by Wolf
Fang.
Radio Ad -- NEW RADIO AD TELLS LISTENERS, "FUR ISN'T COOL--IT'S CRUEL" Starring
Wendie Malick.
Turncoats -- BETRAYAL OF THE FUR TURNCOATS By Katie Fraser and Sally Eyden.
Celebrities who changed their "minds".
To fur wearers -- Leslie Craine: Another good thing to say to fur wearers.
Fur Wars -- Fur wars, by Jillian Risberg, Special to the Daily
Record. Fur is making an all-out comeback.
Fur substitute: Pleather .
FAQs - Seal Hunt -- FAQs about HSUS's Campaign against the Canadian Seal
Hunt.
Sea Shepherd -- Canadian Seal Hunt 2005.
Seal Editorial -- Canada's National Post has come out forcefully against the
seal hunt.
Seal Commentaries -- 2 Commentaries. 1. Our black eye: Most propaganda about
seal hunt is true, by MARGARET WENTE. 2. River of Blood.
Anti-Fur Posters 2
Anti-fur posters -- gifs and jpgs
Dog Cat Fur Booklet.pdf
European Fact Sheet.pdf
Fur report 2005.pdf
News Stories.pdf
Warning: Before you view the videos below, please read some of the readers
reactions:
Reactions to the fur movies
Fur.wmv movie of dog fur industry in China
Chinese Fur Farm Footage
Dog-fur products have been sold as:
- gae-wolf -goupee- Asian wolf- China wolf- Mongolia dog fur- Sobaki- Pommern
wolf- dogue de Chine- loup d'Asie
Cat fur has sold as:
- rabbit- maopee- goyangi - katzenfelle- natuerliches mittel- chat de Chine- gatto
cinesi
Fur Farm -- another fur farm movie
Seals -- HSUS movie
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