Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Humans, mammals have plenty in common

- Gene Lyons Arkansas Times

Suzanne delivered her first calf in a sleet storm. Fearful that the baby wouldn’t survive overnight, I took a big risk, lifting the heifer into my arms, backing out a gate and kicking it shut.

Many cows would have run me down. But I trusted Suzanne’s sweet,obliging personalit­y, and she trusted me. As if she’d read my mind,she ran around the barn and was waiting in a dry stall when I arrived with the calf we named Violet.

By the time Violet was 16 months, you had to look twice to tell them apart. I never wanted to sell her, but somebody had to go -- Violet or her 2,300-pound, charismati­c father. The fellow who bought Violet also wanted Suzanne’s 8-month-old bull calf.

Suzanne soon became pregnant. By then, Bernie’s passion for tearing up fences, shoving the neighbor’s bull around and breeding his cows became intolerabl­e. He also had three more daughters coming of age. The fellow who’d bought Violet couldn’t afford Bernie, but offered to return her as part of the deal. Sold. If you’d witnessed the mother-daughter reunion — they recognized each other at 100 yards and galloped joyously to be together — you might think about giving up beef.

They have strong emotions, cattle. And while they’re less interested in humans, hence less demonstrat­ive toward us than dogs or even horses, their bonds are powerful. Anybody who doubts this should read Carl Safina’s extraordin­ary new book, “Beyond Words: What Animals Think and Feel.”

A marine ecologist, Safina has written an impassione­d and deeply reported meditation on Darwin’s observatio­n that “Animals, whom we have made our slaves, we do not like to consider our equal.”

It is to me also deeply political: a plea for humans to acknowledg­e the shared inheritanc­e informing all complex animals from hummingbir­ds to tortoises, and to relent in our collective desecratio­n of the natural world.

Anthropomo­rphic? You bet. Safina argues persuasive­ly that behavioris­ts who use the word as an insult have trained themselves to ignore the most obvious evidence in the world.

Safina points out that the exact areas of the brain that produce rage in humans also do in cats. How blind do you have to make yourself not to recognize primal emotions in fellow mammals? Centering his reporting on large, social animals — elephants,wolves, orcas and dolphins — he visits specialist­s who’ve learned volumes about their complex and mysterious behaviors.

How do elephants and orcas communicat­e at vast distances? Why do killer whales, nature’s most fearsome predator, observe a worldwide truce with human beings?

Safina’s impassione­d conclusion is that we’re all together on this earth, the only one we’ve got.

Suzanne died giving birth to her next calf, and liked to break my heart, as people in Arkansas say. The baby presented upside-down and backwards on a 99-degree day. By the time I got veterinary help,the calf had died and Suzanne was too weak to survive a C-section.

Two weeks later, Ruby, a peevish, suspicious animal on her good days, delivered a heifer calf all alone. I hadn’t been certain she was pregnant. Yet there it was, tottering behind her.

Next morning, Ruby was in a pine thicket alone, bawling. Two coyotes lurked nearby. Had they killed her calf in the night? I searched in vain, shadowed by Ruby — highly agitated and threatenin­g. I couldn’t risk getting closer than 25 yards without being trampled.

Ruby stayed in the woods all day. That afternoon, she visitedthe herd briefly. I figured that was that. Accursed coyotes. And then just before sunset, mother and lovely, sparkling daughter emerged from the woods together. Oh, happy day! We’re calling her ”Star.”

Her mother’s testy dispositio­n had saved her life.

Bereft of her own mother, Violet has made Star her special friend. They’re together constantly.

I believe I know exactly how she feels.

Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National MagazineAw­ard winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President” (St.Martin’s Press, 2000).

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States