Below is an excerpted BBC article on animal conservation as it originally appeared, and following how the same article would be presented were the standards of Multi-Culturalism applied to animals as they are to people. Fortunately for the animals, that is not the case, otherwise we would not have the wide variety of animal species that we enjoy as most would have gone extinct, and what would be left would be singular and homogenous, and rather drab as they say. In the linked article it speaks of the great lengths, and rightly so, that conservationist are prepared to go to to preserve the distinct birds that visit the islands mentioned from eradication…even going so far as to speaking of removing and or poisoning the mice doing the eradicating. While no one here would speak of poisoning anyone to preserve the distinct peoples, lands, and cultures, of humanity it’s rather interesting that many of the same who would do these things to preserve various birds would not think of doing even the most simple things to preserve the distinct peoples of the world…even if the ones preserved are themselves. The proles and animals are free…

Albatross chicks attacked by mice

By Jonathan Amos

BBC News science reporter

July 24, 2005



The mice tend to attack at night

“Supersize” mice are eating seabird chicks alive on Gough Island, one of the most important seabird colonies in the world, UK conservationists report.

The rodents are taking out one million petrels, shearwaters and albatrosses each year on the UK Overseas Territory in the South Atlantic.

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds says the mice infestation puts some species in danger of extinction…



The injuries sustained are quite horrific

...As a country which has ratified the ACap (Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels) treaty, the UK would be expected to take action on Gough to sort out the mice problem.

“For the albatrosses on Gough, which hosts virtually the whole populations of several species, this just adds to the longlining problem - not only are they threatened at sea they are now also threatened on land,” Dr Cuthbert said.

The Gough mouse is one of 2,900 non-native species damaging native wildlife on the 17 UK Overseas Territories and Crown Dependencies, a review by the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC) has found.

Source

And how this might be reported were the standards of the Multi-Cult applied to the world of animal conservation…