by Ephraim on December 21st, 2007

Ephraim

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Do cows really get hair balls?

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  • by Galeanda on December 28th, 2007

    Galeanda

    Even lobsters can get hairballs....How you may ask? LOL!

    Some lobsters have developed hairballs after eating chunks of cowhide in traps used by fishermen.

    It's an unsavory discovery that has prompted legislators to promote new regulations on alternative bait. Legislation approved Monday by the Marine Resources Committee also would allow the state to investigate reports of slaughterhouse waste being sold as bait.

    Sen. Dennis Damon (D, Hancock), co-chairman of the committee, proposed the alternative bait legislation, which must be approved by the full Legislature.

    “This is a sensitive topic because of the potential effect it might have on the market,” Damon said. He estimated that catching and selling lobsters in Maine is a $750 million business.

    Under Damon’s proposal, it would be unlawful to use wild or domestic animal renderings or offal as bait to fish for lobsters or crabs, unless the bait were animal hide with its hair removed.

    David Etnier, deputy commissioner of the Department of Marine Resources, said reports of hair in lobster meat surfaced about a year and a half ago and raised concerns, particularly in the Japanese market. He said his department’s own survey showed that less than 5 percent of the traps in Maine waters, and probably closer to 3 percent, were using cowhide at any given time during the year.

    While the animal hide did not appear to pose a health threat, Etnier said his department was concerned about the slaughterhouse waste because of reports that fishermen had gotten blood poisoning after handling the bait.

    The outright prohibition on hairy hides and offal would go into effect Jan. 1, 2006, unless the bill is passed as an emergency measure with the required two-thirds vote. Then the DMR could use rulemaking before that date to ban bait it deemed a threat to public health. Such rulemaking would prompt a public hearing well before the ban went into effect –- a move pushed by committee member Rep. Jeff Kaelin (R, Winterport). Kaelin told Damon he agreed with the intent of his proposal, but wanted to give fishermen and others a chance to weigh in.

    “I want to go to the same place,” Kaelin said. “I had hoped we could have a more deliberative public process.”

    The problem with alternative bait was discussed at a public hearing last week, attended by lobstermen from up and down the coast.

    Most spoke in favor of regulating the bait, but not banning cowhide outright because it is cheaper than herring or other fish used as bait and lasts longer in the traps –- an important consideration in the colder months when fishermen can’t get out to bait their traps as often.

    Getting rid of the hair, however, seemed a good idea to most.

    “If you’re opening up the lobster and you get this hairball, that would not go over well, said Bill Anderson of Trescott.

    Phil Dziezyk of Swans Island questioned what chemicals were used to remove the hair and whether they would harm the species. “Two to three years down the road, are the females going to stop dropping their eggs?” he asked.

    The slaughterhouse waste raised concerns not only about the lobster, but the fishermen using the bait.

    “It’s some pretty bad stuff,” said John Carter of Hulls Cove, representing Zone B in the Bar Harbor and Ellsworth area. He described it as having hides from moose, deer and cows, feces, blood and hair in it. He also said there have been reports of fishermen getting blood poisoning as a result of sticking their hands in the bait bucket –- reports the DMR also have heard.

    Clive Farrin of Boothbay Harbor, representing the Zone E Council, said he heard the bait described as “whatever comes off the slaughterhouse floor.”

    He said it was going for $20 a pail as compared to $100 to $120 a pail for good artificial bait. “People used to pay to get it hauled away,” he said. Now it’s being sold to fishermen.

    Asked by one committee member why some would buy it, he said: “It’s cheap. Believe it or not there are guys in this business who are looking for a bargain.”

    Damon said the issue of regulating alternative bait is overdue. He said that for over two years there have been concerns coming to him from the industry about alternative bait The cowhide is being used because it is durable and the lobsters were attracted to it. "But is it detrimental to the stock?”he asked.

    For an industry that’s worth $750 million to Maine, Damon said, bait is being used that has not been tested and is not being monitored.

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  • by C-C. on December 21st, 2007

    C-C.

    National Hairball Awareness Day on April 27, Did you know that cats aren’t the only ones to get hairballs? Humans and cud-chewing animals, such as cows, oxen, sheep, goats, llamas, deer, and antelopes get hairballs, or other types of “bezoars” (pronounced BE zor). A bezoar is a mass of nondigestible matter that collects in the stomach.
    a 31-month-old Japanese black cow with duodenal obstruction due to hair ball formation. In this case, since severe impairment of defecation and marked bilateral abdominal distention suggested impaired passage in the pyloric part of the 4th stomach or duodenum, laparotomy was performed. A hair ball with a diameter of about 5cm was resected from the proximal area of the duodenal s-shaped loop. After operation, defecation was observed, and the appetite improved, showing healing. Based on the time of onset, induration in the 1st and 3rd stomachs (food stagnation), decreased gastrointestinal motility due to a decrease in water intake may have induced the hair ball. We speculated that the hair ball partially obstructed the pyloric part of the 4th stomach in the early stage but may have moved with time and obstructed the proximal area of the duodenal S-shaped loop, when severe symptoms developed. (author abst.)
    Saro Murabito collected cow hairballs: http://www.galleriarte.it/index.htm?artisti/murabito/htm/main_Mur.htm

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  • by Anonymous on December 21st, 2007

    Anonymous

    I would imagine any animal that has fur could end up with hairballs.

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  • by koldkanuck on February 20th, 2008

    koldkanuck

    No, don't think so.
    but the bulls do.

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