Rare purebred dingo pup found
Veterinarian Rebekah Day of Alpine Animal Hospital in Bright, Victoria, said a Wandiligong family found a rare purebred dingo pup in their backyard and initially left it alone, believing to be a stray dog.
The family eventually brought the puppy to an animal hospital when no one came to claim the canine and Day noticed marks on the animal’s back that indicated it may have been dropped into the backyard by a bird of prey.
Lyn Watson, director of the Australian Dingo Foundation, asked Day to send a genetic sample from the puppy to the University of New South Wales, which revealed the animal was 100 percent purebred dingo.
The dingo, now named Wandi, was taken into the care of the Australian Dingo Foundation, which said the young canine will be an important part of its breeding programme for the species, which is listed as ‘vulnerable’ by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources.
Worm in man’s eye
Recently, a stomach-churning video surfaced on the internet, showing medics removing a 7cm long wriggling worm from Jasubhai Patel’s right eye after he complained about pain and itching him for the last few months.
The patient, from India, desperately sought help from several doctors but couldn’t be diagnosed with any illness. Finally a medic spotted the parasite squirming at the back of his eye. The doctor warned that the worm could damage the man’s eyesight if it was not removed immediately and could go to the brain through the bloodstream.
Doctors suspect the worm in the patient’s eye could have entered through a dog bite because dogs and cats have these parasites in their tongue. On investigating from the patient, it was revealed that Mr Patel had been bitten by a dog some years earlier.