Scottish Daily Mail

Why Boris should study an ant colony

NATURE ANIMALKIND by Ingrid Newkirk and Gene Stone (Simon & Schuster £16.99, 304 pp)

- BEL MOONEY

MAnY of us have shed tears recently at the thought of the countless millions of wild creatures, both large and small, killed by the apocalypti­c fires raging in Australia.

Of course the loss of humans and their property is a real cause for grief — but there is something about the plight of the helpless that touches a chord within our souls.

noah was compelled to save two of every species within his ark, and the idea that we merely share this world with animals is surely at the heart of true civilisati­on.

Therefore Animalkind — subtitled ‘remarkable Discoverie­s About Animals And revolution­ary new Ways To Show Them Compassion’ — is welcome, providing evidence that not even science can explain the miracles we see in this ‘other’ world.

Author Ingrid newkirk is the founder of PETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of

Animals) — and naturally her aim is to convince us all to become completely vegan.

Do she and her co-writer succeed? Certainly their celebratio­n of animal talent leaves you wanting more.

It’s delightful to learn that swans mate for life, that a collie dog called Chaser learned the names of more than 1,000 toys, that sheep recognise each other, that the social life of an ant colony displays more calm and purpose than any bunch of politician­s, that a tiny desert mouse knows how to conserve water and (of course) that the navigation­al skills of birds defy all rational explanatio­n. This is one of those books that make you interrupt whatever your partner is doing with a constant stream of ‘did you know?’ anecdotes: arctic terns hold the record for the longest bird migration, cheetahs don’t roar, they cheep, bees can find their way home from two miles away . . . and so on.

As for animal emotions, the many examples here are very touching. If I cry watching a sad film, my dog will nudge me anxiously — and the authors emphasise that such behaviour is extremely common.

They cite famous footage of a rescued chimpanzee released by Jane Goodall returning to hug her in gratitude.

Gorillas and elephants mourn the deaths of old and young alike: one research team concludes this shows how elephants ‘have an awareness of and interest about death’.

Anthropolo­gist Dr Thom van Dooren argues that ‘human exceptiona­lism’ — the belief that humankind is superior to other creatures — has harmed our understand­ing of ‘animalkind’. Who can possibly disagree?

But when the authors leap from asking us to marvel at the talents and beauties of animals to suggesting it is wrong to use them in any way for our purposes (and this goes beyond vegetarian­ism, of course; it means no milk, cheese, eggs, yoghurt — or wool, leather shoes or sheepskin coats), some readers may find its certaintie­s bordering on the sentimenta­l as well as messianic.

For me there is no contradict­ion in loving animals and choosing to eat organic meat (although not every day) and enjoying other by-products of farming. Surely you can at once loathe all cruelty and support charities such as Compassion In World Farming?

Whatever conclusion­s you are led to by your conscience and taste, ‘Animalkind’ must be welcomed for its plethora of facts as well as an abundance of emotions.

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