Canada's most populous city has an exotic animal problem. To deal with the issue, the city has launched a wide-ranging consultation on prohibited animals.
More than 3.75 million animals — primarily fish, mice, and birds — were used by Canadian scientists in 2014, a whopping increase of 24 per cent from the previous year.
From the birds-eye-view in the nosebleeds to the infield where you can see the strain in the horses eyes and hear the crack of the reins on their hides, it's hard not to imagine a tragic ending
Alberta plans to continue the provincial wolf cull for the foreseeable future, but announced Wednesday that it intends to restore habitat to ease pressure on the endangered caribou