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Our latest edition

For Spring 2026, we explore how selective breeding has caused serious health issues in many beloved dog breeds; learn how Humane World for Animals is making menus more plant-based; follow along a shocking rescue in Maryland; find out if backyard feeders and baths help or hurt wildlife; and more. Plus, test your logic skills with a new puzzle!

Close-up of a French bulldog with labeled callouts explaining common health issues related to its facial structure.

Svetography/Getty Images

Popular dog breeds suffer serious health issues linked to appearance

French bulldogs, pugs and other beloved dog breeds pay the price—serious health issues—for our aesthetic desires.

Illustration of a plant-based meal tray with tofu, vegetables, and rice, with ingredients like beans and produce shown above.

Rachel Stern/Humane World for Animals

How Humane World for Animals is shifting menus toward plants

Humane World for Animals is replacing meat and dairy with plants on menus around the globe.

Dogs in stacked cages inside, in a home used as a puppy mill

Meredith Lee/Humane World for Animals

During the rescue, most of the dogs were found in stacked cages.

Rescue reveals hidden horrors in the home of Maryland dog breeder

Our team removes more than 100 dogs from a Maryland home, rescuing them from filth and neglect.

Hummingbirds at a feeder

Kevin Trimmer/Getty Images

Hummingbird feeders have been popular among animal lovers for decades, appearing in gardens and residential areas across the country.

Are your backyard feeders and baths helping or hurting wildlife?

Backyard feeders, baths and houses meant to attract animals can sometimes do more harm than good.

A woman, walking outside at a vulture conservation center.

Alan Eason/Vulpro

Kerri Wolter has spent the past two decades helping to restore vulture populations in the wild.

Vulpro’s Kerri Wolter champions vultures in Africa

Finding beauty in the misunderstood, Kerri Wolter works to protect vulture populations in Africa.

Illustration of farm and sanctuary animals—a donkey, pig, kangaroo, and marmoset—gathered on grassy land near a barn and trees.

Rachel Stern/Humane World for Animals

Paws and play: Can you crack the animal clues?

Try your hand at a Paws and Play logic puzzle featuring Black Beauty Ranch animals’ favorite treats and hobbies.

Two cats snuggle up to each other and one looks at the camera

Jackie Kreutzer

Submit your story

Do you have an inspiring photo of an adopted pet or farm animal? Send it to us, along with the story of your animal in 150 words or fewer, for possible publication in All Animals magazine.

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Magazines
Man walking dog on bridge
Dog and cat welfare
When you volunteer to help animals, you help yourself

If you have a full-time job and also attempt to be a good friend, partner, parent and pet owner, you might assume that adding volunteering to the mix would make you feel more stressed. But volunteering for animal shelters, rescues and nonprofits actually improves your mental and physical health.

Rescued chimpanzees at the waters edge eating fresh vegetables
Animal testing and research
From animal researcher to animal advocate

Following one former lab worker's path to advocacy.

Dogs in filthy conditions at a dog meat farm in South Korea
Ending the dog and cat meat trade worldwide
Runway to adoption

Rescuers with Humane Society International saved more than 150 dogs from a dog meat farm in South Korea. Now, the team helps to prepare these pups for new lives in loving homes.

Two deer in a landscaped yard.
Wildlife protection
Deer eat my garden­—and it flourishes

Living alongside deer for decades, I’ve learned that gardens can thrive in their presence—to the point where our habitat now hosts uncommon butterflies, drawn to plants the deer leave untouched.

Pearl (left) and her puppies (right)
Puppy mills
Saved in the nick of time

A puppy mill raid keeps a mother and her puppies alive.

Chipmunk outside, on bird feeder
Wildlife protection
The invasion of the chipmunks?

Many factors drive fluctuating wildlife populations. Some are distinctly manmade, as when mosquito spraying in Fargo, North Dakota, killed migrating monarchs in August. But others are part of the natural cycle.

All Animals spring 2026 cover and feature spread on problems with purebred dogs

Humane World for Animals

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Meredith Lee/Humane World for Animals