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Collaboration to reunite pets with owners
Lost and found website helps find UK pets

Cats Protection has announced that it will now be working alongside Animal Search UK to help reunite pets with their owners.

The charity's lost and found pages for each individual branch and centre will now take people directly to the Animal Search UK website.

Animal Search UK is a free site that helps reunite lost pets with their owners. With more than 20,000 volunteers, it has one of the largest networks of Pet Patrollers in the UK.

When a pet is reported as missing, Animal Search UK alerts its Pet Patrollers in that area, who will keep an eye out.

Tom Watkins, a former police officer who founded Animal Search UK, explained that the website enables users to add up to four photos of a missing family pet, or a pet that has been found straying.

It also has a sophisticated mapping system that automatically matches lost and found reports, dependant on their location in relation to one another.

"In the past, despite the best efforts of many, there have been occasions whereupon a missing pet has been adopted after being rescued and the original owners have been none the wiser," he said.

"Particularly if the pet did not have a microchip which confirms the owner's details."

While recommending microchipping as a safe and permanent means of identification, Cats Protection encourages owners who's cats are already microchipped to ensure their contact details are up to date.

Lee Bishop, Cats Protection's website manager, commented on the collaboration: "Our branches and centres have been offered the opportunity to direct people from their lost and found pages to the Animal Search UK site so that they can register pets on a national database.

"We hope that this will increase the chances of pets being reunited with their owners."

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Birmingham Dogs Home makes urgent appeal

News Story 1
 Birmingham Dogs Home has issued an urgent winter appeal as it faces more challenges over the Christmas period.

The rescue centre has seen a dramatic increase in dogs coming into its care, and is currently caring for over 200 dogs. With rising costs and dropping temperatures, the charity is calling for urgent support.

It costs the charity £6,000 per day to continue its work.

Fi Harrison, head of fundraising and communications, said: "It's heart-breaking for our team to see the conditions some dogs arrive in. We really are their last chance and hope of survival."

More information about the appeal can be found here

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News Shorts
Avian flu confirmed at premises in Cornwall

A case of highly pathogenic avian influenza H5N1 has been detected in commercial poultry at a premises near Rosudgeon, Cornwall.

All poultry on the infected site will be humanely culled, and a 3km protection zone and 10km surveillance zone have been put in place. Poultry and other captive birds in the 3km protection zone must be housed.

The case is the second avian flu case confirmed in commercial poultry this month. The H5N5 strain was detected in a premises near Hornsea, East Riding of Yorkshire, in early November. Before then, the disease had not been confirmed in captive birds in England since February.

The UK chief veterinary officer has urged bird keepers to remain alert and practise robust biosecurity.

A map of the disease control zones can be found here.