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Animal rights group sues National Park Service over dying elk
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Animal activists sue National Park Service over dying tule elk
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Updated
Jun 22, 2021 05:01 pm
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Dozens of tule elk at Point Reyes National Seashore have died from starvation and dehydration in the last year because the animals couldn’t get past a fence that the National Park Service placed to stop them from competing for food and water with cattle, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday against the federal government.
Three California residents and the Animal Legal Defense Fund sued the park service in federal court in San Francisco claiming it is being negligent and more animals will die if the agency is not ordered to provide food and water during the drought.
The Best Hikes Along the California Coastal Trail
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By 06/16/2021
Disease-carrying ticks are much more widespread in Marin than scientists once thought. In hotspots like the Bolinas Lagoon, roughly one third of ticks may carry human pathogens.
Ticks are commonly associated with woodlands, and scientists have mainly studied Lyme disease rather than other tick-borne illnesses. But a recent study took a more open-ended approach and found that the arachnids were plentiful in open coastal areas of Marin, and that many carried bacterial diseases other than Lyme.
Dan Salkeld, the study’s lead author, suspected that Marin hikers probably understood the risk before scientists caught up. “I think locals have known this for a while, and I just wasn’t aware of it,” he said.