Malaysia's urban monkeys pose disease threat: report

Yahoo News 7 Jan 08;

Malaysia's monkeys are being forced out of their forest habitat into cities, carrying diseases that could infect humans, veterinary experts warned in a report on Monday.

The monkeys, who are making new homes in streets and housing estates as they make way for urban development, are carrying blood parasites and the herpes virus or suffer from simian malaria and dengue, The Star newspaper reported.

"Once these monkeys carry the virus, there is a possibility that those who keep them as pets would contract the disease," said Veterinary Association Malaysia vice president S. Vellayan.

"However the situation also works in reverse, as monkeys easily catch diseases from humans."

Vellayan said the findings were based on post mortems conducted on monkeys killed in road accidents or dead primates brought to the national zoo.

Malaysia's monkey population is estimated at 700,000, out of which some 250,000 are found in towns and cities -- mostly macaques or leaf monkeys, the paper said.

Veterinarian Roy Sirimanne told The Star that the monkeys could also contribute to the spread of air-borne diseases.

"The mosquitoes that usually feed on the monkeys will also tag along, increasing the risk of vector-borne disease transmission," he said.

The environment minister said steps will be taken to combat the monkey menace after a probe is concluded.

Malaysia last year lifted a 23-year ban on the export of long-tailed macaques from the peninsula, saying they had become an urban pest and were attacking people and stealing food.


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Australia hits back over pro-Japan whaling video

Yahoo News 7 Jan 08;

A popular Internet video accusing Australians of opposing Japanese whaling because of racism while brutally killing animals such as kangaroos and dingoes drew sharp government criticism Monday.

Foreign Minister Stephen Smith condemned the video as he announced that Australia would this week deploy a ship to the Southern Ocean to gather evidence for possible legal action against Japan over its whaling programme.

The 10-minute video, which has recorded more than 100,000 hits since being posted anonymously on the YouTube website, shows graphic images of Australians killing animals and of infamous racial riots at Cronulla beach in 2005.

It says Australians are opposed to Japanese whaling because of a racist ideology, and claims in English, with Japanese subtitles, that Australia holds the world record for mammal extinction.

"It is un-tasteworthy in the extreme, that's the kindest thing I can think to say about it," Smith told reporters. "Its general overtone, its general content, I absolutely condemn.

"It's anonymous, so that tells you something before we even start."

The video would not change Australia's opposition to Japanese whaling, but neither would it "in any way disturb or affect the very good relationship with Japan," he said.

Smith announced that the Oceanic Viking customs ship would leave Australia this week on a 20-day mission to monitor the Japanese whaling fleet in the icy waters of the Antarctic.

The ship's mission would be coordinated with aerial surveillance and aimed to gather video and photographic evidence for a potential international court case against Japan, he said.

Japan exploits a loophole in a 1986 international moratorium on commercial whaling to kill whales for what it calls scientific research, while admitting that the meat from the hunt ends up on dinner plates.

Australia's military to cull kangaroos
Rob Taylor, Reuters 7 Mar 08;

CANBERRA (Reuters) - A cull of hundreds of wild kangaroos from an Australian military base will go ahead following almost a year of debate after authorities on Friday ruled out a costly plan to move them.

The cull of up to 500 animals using tranquillizer darts followed by lethal injection would begin within two weeks, military spokesman Brigadier Andrew Nikolic said.

"There's an ecologist and two veterinarians (who) will be available to advise on animal welfare issues and supervise," Nikolic told reporters.

The eastern grey kangaroos, which feature on Australia's coat of arms, are living on a military communications base in the nation's capital Canberra. Authorities say the mob of 'roos is endangering a species of local lizard and the threatened gold sun moth through overgrazing.

The marsupials have been on death row since May last year when a planned cull was deferred after an outcry by animal protection groups.

An original plan to cull kangaroos on a second base in Canberra was abandoned after a long drought threatening the animals with mass starvation began to ease.

But the military says the situation at the Belconnen Naval Transmission Station is critical and the aim is to protect native grasslands and reduce the population to about one kangaroo per hectare (2.5 acres). Under the plan, about 100 kangaroos would be left on the base.

The local Canberra government this week refused to grant export licenses to move the animals to neighboring New South Wales state using air-conditioned vans, which was judged to be too expensive and inhumane.

Nikolic said that left a cull as the only option. Wildlife groups have been at odds over whether it was more humane to cull the kangaroos or move them.

Wildlife Protection Association President Pat O'Brien said protests were planned to try to stop the cull. A plan to shoot the animals was abandoned after police warned stray bullets could ricochet and hit nearby residents or protesters.

"We can promise Canberra will see serious protest action. There is a lot of public anger over this decision," O'Brien said.

In 2004 there was an international outcry over the shooting of 900 kangaroos at a dam supplying water to Canberra and which were causing erosion problems through grazing.

Steve Garlick, a spokesman for the local Wildcare animal protection group, said relocating the kangaroos would not have been difficult.

"I think they would learn an awful lot before they start going for the default option of slaughtering these animals," he said.

(Editing by David Fogarty)


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Australian government kangaroo killing code draws flak from animal groups

Rob Taylor, Yahoo News 6 Jan 08;

Australian animal protection groups questioned on Monday a new government guide for the humane killing of kangaroos which recommends "forcefully swinging" the heads of young animals against a vehicle tow bar.

A proposed code of conduct for shooting young kangaroos, called joeys, and smaller wallabies released by the Department of Environment also recommended a single close-range shotgun blast.

"These changes are basically saying the federal government believes it's okay to blast a defenseless joey to bits with a shotgun," Pat O'Brien, President of the Wildlife Protection Association, told local newspapers.

Kangaroos are one of Australia's national symbols and feature on the country's coat-of-arms. But they are also hunted for their meat and in some areas are at plague proportions amid drought.

Military chiefs in Canberra recently gave the go-ahead for a euthanasia program to control kangaroo numbers on bases in the national capital to avoid a mass starvation of the animals.

The draft national code aims to guide people on humane disposal of orphaned joeys, which live in their mothers' pouches, after the parent has either been shot or hit by a vehicle. The code rejected sending orphaned joeys to wildlife careers.

"I think we all love kangaroos. The problem is that there are too many. What we are talking about here is responsible environmental management, because if we don't do something you won't have pastures and viable farming," an Environment Department spokesman said.

"We are trying to come up with something that is practicable to use across sometimes remote parts of the country."

Both national animal protection body the RSPCA and the Wildlife Protection Association, founded by late "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin, urged the government to impose a ban on shotgun use in the draft.

Former lawmaker and conservationist Richard Jones said the code could backfire on the government in its campaign against Japanese Antarctic whaling, despite the fact kangaroos are not internationally protected like whales.

"We can hardly take the high moral ground on animal welfare and whale conservation when the government is prepared to condone barbaric practices regarding our native wildlife," Jones told the Canberra Times newspaper.

The Kangaroo Industry Association of Australia defended current methods for killing joeys including a blow to the head with a metal pipe or striking the animal against a tow bar.

"Animal welfare is precisely what this code of practice is all about," said executive officer John Kelly.

(Editing by Jerry Norton)


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Nepal "health food joint" boosts vulture numbers

Gopal Sharma, Reuters 7 Jan 08;

KATHMANDU (Reuters) - The number of rare vultures in one of Nepal's few conservation sites has nearly doubled after a special feeding facility started serving drug-free, safe carcasses to the birds, a leading conservation group said.

Scientists say the survival of vultures eating dead cattle treated with the anti-inflammatory drug, diclofenac, was threatened in South Asia because the drug poisoned the scavenging birds.

Diclofenac was found responsible for the decline of two species -- White-rumped and Slender-billed vultures -- from Nepal and the region, a leading local conservation group, Bird Conservation Nepal (BCN), said.

In a drive to protect vultures by offering them health food, the group opened what it calls a "restaurant" for the birds last year in Nawalparasi district in southwest Nepal where sick and old cattle not treated with diclofenac are kept.

After their death, these animals are offered as chemical-free, safe food to vultures.

BCN said the effort had paid off and the number of the nesting pairs of vultures in Nawalparasi reached 32 in 2007 from a mere 17 in 2005.

"The restaurant has definitely contributed to this increase," the group's conservation officer Dev Ghimire said.

"Nesting is declining in other areas where there are no such facilities. But here they are getting safe food which is why the numbers have gone up."

Ghimire said his group, which has launched an awareness campaign among villagers to conserve the bird, is planning to open more such feeding centers in Rupandehi, Kapilvastu and Dang districts, further west of Nawalparasi, which also have vultures.

Use of diclofenac is not allowed in Nepal but conservationists say the ban is largely ignored.

The population of vultures in mountainous Nepal is estimated to have dipped to only about 500 nesting pairs, down from about 50,000 in 1990.

Ghimire said the numbers were still declining and nests were vulnerable to habitat destruction.

(Editing by Bill Tarrant)


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Heavy rains flood drought-hit Australian farmers

Michael Perry, Reuters 7 Jan 08;

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Heavy rains and flooding in northeast Australia have been both a blessing and a curse for drought-hit farmers, but more rain is needed to break a seven-year drought.

Farm officials say a series of storms have delivered heavy, but sporadic, rain in two of Australia's largest agricultural states, Queensland and New South Wales.

Some farmers who planted big summer sorghum crops have benefited, and some irrigators who had been facing zero water supplies have seen their water rations restored to 100 percent.

But others are still staring at bone dry paddocks, while some farmers already on government drought assistance are now applying for flood aid after rivers burst banks causing millions of dollars worth of damage to crops, livestock and infrastructure.

"We are a long way from getting out of the drought," Lyndon Pfeffer, grains president of farm group AgForce Queensland, said on Monday.

"The main cropping area has certainly missed out. It is still a bit sporadic, it is still just storm rain, general rains have not given everybody a good soaking," he said.

Pfeffer said good rains had fallen in northeast Queensland's sugar growing region and in the west of the state.

"Overall things are promising but there are still pockets light on and looking for rain," he said.

Further south in New South Wales hundreds of farms in the west of the state and along the north coast have been flooded.

The NSW state government has declared the coastal region a natural disaster area, with an estimated A$20 million in damages.

"I think it is fantastic to get the rain," said Jock Laurie, president of the NSW Farmers Federation. "Unfortunately there is always a few people affected when you get flooding."

Laurie said the recent rains had helped grain farmers in Queensland and NSW plant a large sorghum summer crop and would assist wheat farmers who will plant in winter.

"There has been a big sorghum crop put in and the sorghum crop is looking good," he said. "The rain we have now will start to put a moisture profile back in the ground for the winter (wheat) crop -- something they didn't have last year."

"If you can get a bit more rain and get some water in the storages it will really help out the rice and cotton industry and the irrigation industries," said Laurie.

The New South Wales state government said last November that drought had slashed the state's forecast winter crop by 40 percent to 2.82 million tons. The winter crop is mainly wheat, although barley, canola and other crops are grown.

The drought has hit New South Wales harder than anywhere else in Australia, with total crop failures commonplace in the west. Normally the state produces over 8 million tons of winter crops, and about 30 percent of Australia's total wheat crop.

On October 30 the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics cut its forecast of Australia's total wheat crop by 22 percent to 12.1 million tons. The crop is less than half the 25.4 million tons produced in 2005/06.

Meteorologists believe the worst of the storm weather may be over as a former cyclone failed to reintensify in far north Queensland and floodwaters receded in the state's southeast, but more rain and flooding was forecast.

"It's just a tropical low and it's likely at this stage to be weakening to a rain depression," said Bureau of Meteorology forecaster Ivor Blockley.


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South Korea to ban single-hulled tankers after spill

Reuters 7 Jan 08;

SEOUL (Reuters) - South Korea will ban single-hulled tankers from traveling in its waters by 2011, earlier than the international regulation that calls for a ban from 2015, Seoul's maritime ministry said on Monday.

A single-hulled tanker was involved in South Korea's worst oil spill in December, leaking around 10,500 tons of crude oil after a seabound crane mounted on a barge punched holes in the tanker's hull.

As of January, 43 percent of the crude imported into South Korea was carried by single-hulled tankers.

"Most of the tankers over 25 years of operation will be banned sometime in 2010, and we won't permit them starting January 1, 2011," said Lee Ki-sang, the official responsible for offshore operations at the ministry.

This is the first time the ministry has officially set a time frame for banning the tankers.

The ministry had previously said it was aiming to phase out single-hulled tankers as soon as 2010.

In December 2003, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) set 2010 as the principal cut-off date for single-hulled oil tankers, with a strictly limited provision permitting some vessels to continue in service until no later than 2015.

European countries have been accelerating efforts to phase out single-hulled tankers, and EU member countries are to ban vessels that are 15 years old or more from loading heavy fuel oil within 200 miles of their coastlines.

The very large crude carrier (VLCC) Hebei Spirit was about five miles outside a South Korean port on December 7, waiting to unload its cargo of some 260,000 tons of crude oil from the Middle East, when it was struck by a barge.

The discharge was about a third of the size of the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill of crude oil onto Alaskan shores, which was the costliest on record.

(Reporting by Angela Moon; Editing by Sei Chong)


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Best of our wild blogs: 7 Jan 08


The Plight of the Albizias
on the brand new singaporean attitudes towards biological conservation

Chek Jawa Cleanup
efforts to remove massive accumulation of nets, on the wildfilms blog

The legless and the luckless
lizard swallowing trick and snake rescue on the budak blog and another lizard brown to green trick.

Old Chek Jawa
share your nostalgic memories about Chek Jawa before deferment on the singapore celebrates the reefs blog

42% of Asian children are not concerned about environmental protection on the AsiaIsGreen blog

Along the Western Tracks
nature reclaims the railway on the wonderful creations blog

Green Oakblue
a marvellous butterful on the butterflies of singapore blog

Asian Paradise Fly-catcher: fan-tail flushing
find out what this is all about on the bird ecology blog

A day in our forest
on the colourful clouds blog


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Singapore's prosperity comes at a terrible price

Letter from Lee Seck Kay, Straits Times Forum 7 Jan 08;

IT CANNOT be doubted that Singaporeans have embraced the work ethic with gusto, and the payback is obvious in the general prosperity of the country. They have done the country proud.

Of late, however, there are telltale signs of an unhealthy trend, with work becoming a diversion from other life challenges and precipitating in health and social consequences that we can do without.

The trend has been long in coming. With economic growth comes income disparity, and as the rich get most of the fruits of this growth, the lower and middle classes get two income earners and long hours at work, for their real income has more or less stagnated due to decline in the purchasing power of the dollar.

Thus, many nine-to-five wage earners no longer work from nine to five. If you are in downtown Singapore on a week night, you'll probably see many skyscrapers still lit from within on most floors, even as late as 9.30pm. They are still not done with the day's work at the office. They have to work, they have no choice.

Morning session teachers leave home at 7am (many much earlier) and are not home until well past 7pm. Afternoon teachers ditto. Teachers in single session schools work equally long hours. It seems that to teach less the teachers have to work more, all in the name of performance. Like the office workers, they have no choice.

Workers in electronic processing plants across the island are not spared either. Most work on shift and many welcome overtime to maintain high productivity. They have no choice either.

This is worrisome. For the vast majority, time is sucked out of the home and pumped into work. Work has become an obsession in what can clearly be termed 24/7: The idea that we work, or are able to work, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Not to work is folly.

In addition, many in the business world can never really get away from the office on weekends and holidays, and indeed are not expected to. The vast expansion of worldwide communications - cellphones, e-mail and so on - makes this new work ethic possible and widespread.

All this has unpleasant and inescapable consequences: work stress-related ailments, psychosomatic illnesses, lack of fitness, loss of sleep, improper eating habits, reduced quality time with spouse and children, social isolation, joyless vacations... the list goes on.

'Have more than two children, if you can afford it'? You must be joking. And you can almost hear them blurt: We haven't time to find a mate, we won't have time for children, we both work, we need to build our careers first, etcetera. Sounds familiar?

Most telling of all is the disconcerting news that many Singaporeans are leading sexually inactive lives (Mmm.). Now, correlation may not amount to a cause, but the new work ethic must bear some of the blame for totally distracting us from this most natural of human impulses.

Looking ahead, there seems to be no respite in sight. With price increases of essential commodities outstripping inflation, and at best a 'cautiously optimistic' year ahead, all except the rich can expect to face a disquieting contradiction - more tightening of the belt in the midst of plenty.

Will there ever be a genuinely good time that would increase our real income without all the attendant ills? I don't know. Suffice to say, though, that if the answer is 'no', then while we may remain the envy of lesser nations, our prosperity will continue to exact a terrible toll on all who want or have to work long hours to make ends meet, timely rebates and subsidies notwithstanding.

Just the same, all the best for 2008.


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Singapore undergrad turns sea shells into hard cash

Turning sea shells into hard cash
Business Times 7 Jan 08;

JASON LOW speaks to an enterprising undergrad who makes a very decent living selling sea shells online

MOST undergraduates live on parents' allowances and part-time job salaries, but not Choo Koon Po. The 22-year-old business undergraduate from Singapore Management University (SMU) survives on shells. Well, almost.

Koon Po has been operating his online sea shells business for three-and-a-half years now. He said he entered the trade by accident following a vacation in 2005.

'During my holiday trip to Bintan three years back, I picked some beach shells with the intention of using them as craftwork materials for a birthday present,' Koon Po explained. 'Having some shells left over after that, I decided to list them in a set of seven beach shells on eBay for fun.'

Whether it is sheer luck or miracle, Koon Po managed to sell the set to an American lady for US$10. 'It was then that my interest in shells was ignited and I began reading and researching more in-depth into sea shells,' he added.

All that reading and researching has certainly taken Koon Po places - literally. In the last two years, he has visited more than 10 countries, including the United States, Cambodia, Vietnam, the Philippines and Taiwan to source for sea shells for his business. And most of the trips were funded by his online business earnings, a sum he estimates to be around US$2,500-3,000 monthly.

Money aside, what really kept Koon Po going in this business was the myriad of opportunities to interact and communicate with the outside world, and learning about their different cultures.

'Many of the sea shells are endemic to their geographical region and I see these shells as a representation of the unique beauty of each region and country,' Koon Po said.

'Further, I have always been interested in finding out more about the different cultures and countries in the world. And being in this business allows me to do just that - through interaction with shell collectors and dealers from different countries.'

Today, Koon Po has a global network of customers, dealers and collectors from all parts of the world. Treating all his customers and sea shell traders as friends and trusting them right from the start might be his unique formula to success.

Koon Po revealed that he personally writes a postcard to every first-time customer. This is certainly no simple task, considering he has chalked up more than 3,500 transactions from 600 different customers in 40 countries since the start of his online business.

His customers come from all over the world, including exotic places like Iran, Tahiti, Argentina and Cyprus. In some instances, Koon Po knows his customers so well that they host him at their homes when he visits their country during his school holidays. The most memorable trip he has been on was the one to the city of Middleton in the state of Idaho in the United States, where he visited his regular customer Sandy.

'It was particularly memorable mainly because it was one of the first few times that I had met an overseas customer face-to-face and I had a great experience exploring places in Idaho together with Sandy and her family,' he said.

'In fact, we visited the breathtaking Yellowstone National Park together and it was certainly something different visiting it with a customer who has become a very good friend over the years.

'I was also presented with a very different view of the American way of life. I always thought that life there was fast paced and very urbanised but my visit to Middleton certainly brought a different light. Life there was way slower than in Singapore and I really feel that Americans know how to appreciate and enjoy the finer things in life better than most Singaporeans.'

Such relationships fostered with friends across the world enabled Koon Po to further diversify his sea shells inventory. All in, his US$15,000 supply comes from no less than 30 countries. In fact, besides buying his goods from suppliers located in Indo-Pacific countries, he also regularly trades his surplus Indo-Pacific shells with foreign shell traders from countries like Portugal, Israel and South Africa to increase the range and variety of the shells offered at his online store.

'Gem' grade shells

He revealed that there are more than 1,000 different specimens in his inventory to date, the most expensive being the pleurotomaria bayerotrochus philpoppei, a very rare species originating from the Philippines - going at a whopping US$5,999.95 on eBay.

He explained: 'The price (market value) of the shells is based on its rarity, location, supply and grade. Generally, a shell from, for example, Australia is more valuable (because of its lower supply) compared to a similar one from the Philippines. And the grade of a sea shell depends largely on the size, coloration, pattern and condition of the shell. Thus the most expensive shells will be the ones which are rare and of 'gem' grade - fully-grown specimens without any blemish or flaw.'

Looking ahead, Koon Po intends to build up his knowledge in investments and start investing in the markets soon as he sees it as a viable way to grow his wealth.

And starting another business of his own when he graduates is something that Koon Po very much wants to achieve. 'I believe that this experience of running my own online business will put me in good stead for setting up future businesses.'

Terence Lim, a long-time friend of Koon Po commented: 'His online sea shell business is nothing short of unconventional, but to date, the success with which he has built his business has undoubtedly proven to others that he has a sharp eye for opportunities in the business world.'


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Great Barrier Reef shrinking to slimy seaweed forest

Incredible shrinking reef
Daniel Bateman, Townsville Bulletin 7 Jan 08;

THE Great Barrier Reef is shrinking and there could be nothing left but a slimy underwater forest of algae within 90 years, a scientist has warned.

The Australian Institute of Marine Science and James Cook University's Dr Eric Wolanski has created a frightening picture of what the reef is likely to look like by the year 2100. His study was based on past and future averaged coral cover on the Great Barrier Reef between Lizard Island and Bowen. Using physics and historic coral reef cover data, Dr Wolanski suggests the reef has been steadily shrinking since European settlement of Australia.

The main cause of this has been mud and chemicals washed onto the reef from farms, which has choked the coral, cutting it off from sunlight.

It has been shrinking at a rate of about 20 per cent every 100 years.

Dr Wolanski said the reef would continue to die off unless better land management controls were brought in.

"If we run our model forward, we see a steady decrease in the health of the reef," Dr Wolanski said.

"If you look at the reef cover, it's turning into slime, into algae.

"The picture we're seeing is we had about 65 per cent coral cover 100 years ago.

"We are now in the mid-40s. By 2050 we are in the mid-30s and in 2100 we are left with less than 10 per cent.

"We can recover about one-third of this loss if we cut the outflow of mud and nutrients by half from farms and cattle."

Last year the Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released a report which warned that the Barrier Reef would be `functionally extinct' within decades.

The report stated coral bleaching of the Barrier Reef was likely to become an annual event by 2030 because of warmer, more acidic seas.

Dr Wolanski said if the IPCC's prediction was accurate, it would not matter what action was taken.

"We won't have anything left," he said.

"Right now the problem is a land-use problem which we can correct and recover some of the losses if we take more care of the land.

"It is a much bigger issue than other global issues, otherwise we will be left with only an algal mat."

The coral reef around Dunk Island was one of the sites Dr Wolanski considered.

During February last year it was blanketed by mud for close to two weeks, he said.

Dr Wolanski described the existing reefs as representative of what the entire Barrier Reef would look like within the next 90 years.

"If you dive under the sea there you can see the shape of the old reef, but now it's all dead," he said.

"It's quite clear that the cause of this has been carried from the land."


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Florida drought has an upside for coastal marine life

Zac Anderson, Herald Tribune 6 Jan 08;
Lack of rain has left waters cleaner and healthier

SARASOTA BAY -- Drinking water supplies are low. Farmers and lawns are struggling. But Rick Grassett said his charter fishing business has been "very good," and he believes Florida's severe drought is helping.

Grassett sees the drought's positive impacts on local estuaries during near-daily fishing excursions throughout the region.

"It's been great out on the water," said Grassett, a fishing guide who has operated out of CB's Saltwater Outfitters in Sarasota for 18 years. "Sea grass is thicker and more abundant. Fish are more plentiful."

Grassett's observations are supported by a variety of environmental researchers. Statewide, rainfall is 20 inches below average over the last two years, diminishing the flow of fresh water into coastal estuaries.

Environmental experts say the drought is neutralizing harmful drainage from farms and old developments, reducing water pollution and boosting marine life in local bays.

Scallops have been found in some bays for the first time in years, and are expanding in most areas.

Oysters are thriving as well, with the highest survivability rates since Sarasota County began monitoring them in 2003.

Researchers also predict a banner year for sea grass, a key habitat for juvenile fish and other marine life.

And red tide,, a harmful algae bloom which can feed on pollutants in storm-water runoff, has been noticeably absent along the Southwest Florida coast, although the drought's impact is debatable.

The results provide evidence backing ecological restoration efforts and environmental protection measures such as lawn fertilizer restrictions, environmentalist experts say.

"Florida has spent the last 100 years trying to drain off the fresh water -- and we've done a great job of that -- but there were some serious consequences," said Jack Merriam, Sarasota County's environmental manager. "The drought illustrates why we need to restore a more natural hydrology."

To be sure, the drought is having negative ecological effects as well, especially in freshwater ecosystems like the Everglades and Lake Okeechobee, according to scientists.

And extreme conditions are never good in the long run, said Catherine Corbett, senior scientist with the Charlotte Harbor National Estuary Program.

"What you really hope for is balance," Corbett said.

But some species are seeing clear short-term benefits, in habitats such as Dona Bay, in Nokomis.

In the 1960s, the land around Dona Bay's tributaries was drained for agriculture. Area streams were straightened to funnel storm-water and irrigation runoff quickly into the bay.

The result: Dona Bay's watershed expanded from 15 square miles to 75 square miles, dumping millions of gallons of excess fresh water into the bay and disrupting the ecosystem.

With less fresh water and pollutants flowing in, oysters and sea grass this year are thriving and scallops have been found for the first time.

Similar drainage practices were employed from Sarasota Bay to Charlotte Harbor, where miles of canals were dug to drain land and provide waterfront real estate.

Most of the canals in Port Charlotte and North Port drain into Charlotte Harbor, carrying pollutants from roads and lawns.

Especially troublesome are algae-feeding nutrients from lawn fertilizer and from human waste in septic systems.

Dense algae blocks light that sea grasses need to grow, said Jon Perry, a Sarasota County environmental expert who organizes the county's annual sea grass survey.

"Water clarity is very important for sea grass," Perry said. "How much light is available for photosynthesis and growth? If you block the light, then the grass will have degradation."

Sea grass also thrives in more salty water, a trait shared with scallops and other species.

"We've seen a really dramatic increase in scallops this year," said Jay Leverone, a staff scientist for Mote Marine Laboratory in Sarasota, who has studied bay scallops in Southwest Florida for 15 years. "We can't confirm the reasons; we can only observe. But we do know that we don't have those stressors like excessive freshwater and nutrients."

Another factor helping scallops is the lack of red tide in the region. Red tide often kills sea life.

Grassett, the charter boat captain, said red tide nearly wiped out spotted sea trout in the region in 2005. The fish has rebounded nicely this year.

"It's just an observation, but red tide seems to be worse when it rains," Grassett said.

Despite the lack of storm-water runoff that can feed red tide,, Cindy Heil, a senior scientist with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Research Institute in St. Petersburg, said the drought is having a minimal effect on whether blooms come near shore.

"There was a red tide bloom off the coast of Sarasota earlier this year, but the reason it did not come to shore was mostly oceanographic conditions," Heil said.

But if a bloom did come to shore, it likely would be worse during rainy years. Near-shore nutrients can increase the strength of a bloom by 20 percent, Heil said.

Local governments are taking steps to reduce nutrients in local waterways. They range from replacing septic tanks with sewer systems to banning certain lawn fertilizers.

"If we can clean up the runoff, we can clean up our waterways so we're not worried every time it rains," Merriam said.


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Climate change exposes secret reef in Australia

Narelle Towie, Perthnow.com 5 Jan 08;

WA has arguably the most pristine coral reef remaining on the planet - and it's not Ningaloo.

Just 260km off Broome are Rowley Shoals, three atolls on the edge of one of the widest continental shelves in the world.

But with climate change, cyclones and illegal fishing all posing a risk, marine scientists have embarked on a three-year mission to protect one of our best-kept underwater secrets.

Just back from their first trip, the researchers found the reef was in excellent condition, but they feared illegal fishing was already happening.

They spotted suspicious-looking boats just days into their trip, but the vessels' origin could not be confirmed, WA Department of Environment and Conservation marine scientist Suzanne Long said.

Despite these sightings, organisms such as sea cucumbers, giant clams and trepang -- which are usually the first to suffer from illegal fishing -- were found in abundance, Dr Long said.

The DEC and Institute of Marine Science have put $450,000 towards protecting the area which they hope will put Rowley Shoals on the global map for coral reef conservation.

Armed with video cameras and diving gear, a team of 12 scientists spent 17 days collecting images and video footage to take back and study.

"We aim to collect information to manage the reefs better. This is critical in this era of climate change,'' Dr Long said.

The coral islands are bursting with silvertip and grey reef sharks, a species dangerously exploited just north of Rowley Shoals where shark fishing is permitted.

For the first time, tags have been attached to the dorsal fins of some of the sharks that will allow researchers to monitor their movements.

Researchers hope their studies will help them better manage species that are dwindling, as a result of poaching, on other reefs such as Ashmore and Scott.

A formal report of what researchers found at the atolls will not be issued for six months.

"The excellent condition of this marine wilderness is something that you don't see elsewhere,'' Dr Long said.


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Jellyfish sales to China keep Gulf of Mexico fishermen afloat

Tony Bridges, Miami Herald 6 Jan 07;

Somewhere in China right now, there's a cannonball jellyfish from the waters off Panama City just waiting to be eaten.

Shrimpers trying to stay afloat during the off-season have been scooping them out of the Gulf of Mexico by the thousands since September. The gelatinous masses have turned out to be a profitable commodity on the Asian market, once they are processed into crispy protein wafers.

"Cannonball is a whole new business to us," said 68-year-old shrimp boat operator Steve Davis. "We used to run from them when we were shrimping because they would fill up the nets. Now we run to 'em."

The Panama City operation is run by Roger Newton, owner of Gulf Jellyfish. He was on the dock at the St. Andrews Marina recently, watching crews unload their cannonball catch.

He said he has been in the business about seven years, more of them good than not. The cannonballs, rounded, non-stinging jellyfish that can grow to nearly a foot wide, start showing up around September and usually stay about three months, though he never can be certain, Newton said.

"If I could play God, I wouldn't be in the fish business," he said.

Davis, from Apalachicola, said the cannonballs seem to move west along the Gulf in the fall, with the shrimpers following them from Port St. Joe to Panama City. After 40 years of catching shrimp, he still is learning his way around jellyfish, Davis said.

"What we know about them wouldn't fill but about half a page in a one-page book," he said, with a wry grin.

But what he does know is that they are a good way to make money, especially at a time when Asian imports are keeping wholesale shrimp prices low. A day's work and about $70 in fuel can bring in $1,000 worth of jellyfish, he said.

Two trawlers were busy netting cannonball in the bay within sight of the marina, while another boat was tied up to the dock to unload. A large vacuum hose sucked the jellyfish off the boat's sunken deck and delivered them to a conveyor belt, where a crewman with a shovel scooped them into plastic bins.

Though they don't sting, they are slimy, and their mucus-like covering will cause a burning sensation if it gets in your eyes, Davis said.

"You can hardly pick them up. We were going to call that man that's got the dirtiest jobs on television," he said, referring to the Discovery Channel's Mike Rowe.

Another worker with a forklift loaded the bins into a pair of waiting tractor-trailers.

The jellyfish go to a processing plant in Georgia where they are dried out and the salt is removed. Then they are packed into 50,000-pound containers for shipping to China and Japan, Newton said.

He retrieved a plastic bag from his truck to show to curious visitors. Inside were three yellowish wafers about 5 inches across.

"They're all protein and taste like whatever you put on them," he said.

According to the state Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the dried jellyfish are popular in Asia as salad toppers, or with cooked vegetables. A 4-ounce serving contains 30 calories, 8 grams of protein and 120 milligrams of sodium.

Researchers think the jellyfish might be useful in fighting certain types of arthritis because of the collagen they contain.


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Green funerals in Singapore

RIP: Going green for last journey
Tania Tan, Straits Times 7 Jan 08;

Eco-coffins made of waste wood burn up to twice as fast; 100 have been sold here

MEDICAL doctor Tan Chek Wee believes in 'going green' - he wants to make his last journey a green one.

'I've told my family that I want an eco-coffin,' said Dr Tan, 52, who works part-time at three non-profit clinics.

Made from material such as recycled paper or chipboard, ecocoffins are easy on the environment as they spare trees from the axe.

These eco-friendly caskets also burn up to twice as fast as ordinary wooden coffins, which means less carbon emission. Chipboard, for instance, burns about 10 to 25 per cent faster.

Over 16,000 regular wood coffins were used here last year, with each requiring about 80kg of virgin timber to construct.

'Since I want to be cremated, I prefer not to kill a tree in the process,' said Dr Tan.

For religions that allow it, cremations are strongly encouraged here due to land scarcity, said the National Environment Agency. Religions including Islam and Judaism require followers to bury their dead.

Eco-coffins and so-called 'green funerals' have caught on among the environmentally conscious in the United States and Britain, with some opting for woodland burial sites, and using freshly planted trees instead of headstones to mark graves.

Though going green in this manner may not have quite caught on here yet, Singapore-based TentTech has already sold about 100 of its green coffins.

Produced from waste wood or timber from tree branches instead of trunks, its caskets are a more sustainable alternative to traditional coffins, said Dr Ng Khee Yang, the R&D consultant of the year-old company.

'There just isn't enough forest to supply us with wood in the long run,' he said.

But demand for eco-coffins has yet to take off here, conceded Dr Ng.

Undertakers agree.

'Imported green coffins are just too expensive,' said Mr William Quek, the managing director of Union Casket.

'We also don't want costs to become an extra burden for families who are already going through difficult times,' he added.

A Singapore Casket spokesman also cited lack of demand for not offering eco-friendly caskets to customers.

Green paper coffins sold elsewhere - made of densely compressed paper pulp - cost anywhere between US$600 (S$800) and US$3,000.

In Britain, some designs are even leaf-shaped instead of angular boxes.

While TentTech's price range is between $300 and $1,000, it noted that there is limited demand, as there appears to be a perception that its prices are on the 'high side'.

Wooden coffins here cost between $300 and $6,000 each. They are often carved locally from wood imported from Malaysia and Indonesia.

With shiny veneered surfaces, some come with satin cushioned upholstery, gilded religious carvings and gold- or silver-plated handles.

The more intricate the detailing and design of the coffin, the higher its price.

But such caskets are not for Dr Tan: all he wants is an environmentally friendly one for his final moment.

'I've always been a practical man,' he said. 'If my ashes can be used as fertiliser, that's even better.'


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Malyasia to ration cooking oil

Business Times 7 Jan 08;

(KUALA LUMPUR) Malaysian cooking oil will be rationed starting today to counter a supply shortage caused by smuggling and panic buying amid fears of a price hike, a government official said.

Consumers will be allowed to buy only up to five kilograms of cooking oil at any one time, said Hoo Seong Chang, parliamentary secretary of the domestic trade and consumer affairs ministry.

Supermarkets and retail stores nationwide have been told to enforce the rationing, he told The Associated Press yesterday.

'It's a temporary measure to alleviate the shortage. It will help to prevent panic buying,' he said.

'We can't control 100 per cent but at least people cannot buy more than five kilograms at any one time.'

The government is also asking cooking oil manufacturers to raise production, and is urging consumers to cooperate to ensure that the shortage is resolved quickly, Mr Hoo said.

Deputy Prime Minister Najib Razak said panic buying and hoarding had created an 'artificial shortage' of cooking oil, prompting the rationing, but that there was plenty of oil for everyone, The Sunday Star newspaper reported.

'There is enough supply but the situation is due to an extraordinary demand,' Mr Najib was quoted as saying.

A Najib aide who declined to be named citing ministry policy confirmed his comments but could not give further details.

The customs department has been told to step up checks along the border with Thailand following reports that cooking oil was being smuggled into that country, newspapers reported yesterday.

The Sunday Star said news of the rationing had sparked a renewed rush to buy cooking oil nationwide. -- AP

Rationing of cooking oil in Malaysia begins today
Straits Times 7 Jan 08;

KUALA LUMPUR - MALAYSIA begins rationing cooking oil today with each buyer allowed to purchase only 5kg as the government imposes restrictions to curb a shortage blamed on smuggling and panic-buying triggered by price-hike rumours.

But some retailers had begun to ration cooking oil purchases over the weekend, said the official Bernama news agency.

The parliamentary opposition slammed the rationing measure, which it said was harming restaurants, consumers and vendors and was proof of the government's failure to provide the basic needs of the people.

'The nationwide cooking oil shortage which plagued the country is not something new, as previously we faced similar shortages in diesel, sugar and flour supply,' the opposition Democratic Action Party said.

'The government should be ashamed...it is a great irony that we are short of cooking oil even though we are the largest palm oil producer and exporter in the world.'

Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Shafie Apdal, who announced the restrictions last Friday, blamed the crisis on smugglers who cash in on subsidised Malaysian oil by moving it to neighbouring countries.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE


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Singapore start-up develops unique LED lighting solution

Amit Roy Choudhury Business Times 7 Jan 08;

System promises high power lighting at lower cost

A SINGAPOREAN start-up, BrightLite Systems, has come up with an innovative liquid crystal display (LED) lighting system that promises to help users save more than 30 per cent in electricity bills.

The technology was developed by the company in collaboration with the Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Technology (SIMTech), an Agency for Science, Technology and Research (A*Star) research institute.

Speaking to BizIT, the company's CEO Bernard Lim said BrightLite's Ultra-BrightLite LED engine, which is at the core of its products, was an Economic Development Board-approved project under the EDB's Industrial Commercial Scheme.

LED is a semiconductor lighting system with a life span typically 50 times longer than that of traditional fluorescent lighting.

However, the widespread application of LED in lighting is constrained by two major challenges - effective heat dissemination and non-direct power source contact. For each LED type, a power supply must be specifically designed.

The worldwide LED lighting market is estimated by some market analysts of to be worth around US$6.7 billion, with a 15 per cent yearly growth rate.

Mr Lim noted that his company's collaboration with SIMTech in thermal analysis and simulation of a patent-pending LED housing design solved the problem of heat through 'effective and rapid three-dimensional heat dissipation'.

SIMTech's executive director, Lim Ser Yong, added: 'SIMTech's expertise in thermal management has helped BrightLite Systems develop an innovative high power LED lighting solution for the company to make its foray into the global market.'

The Ultra-BrightLite solution integrates the key elements - high power LED ranging from 5 to 30 watts, smart electronics, hard optical lens and aluminium metallic housing - into one integrated package.

Mr Bernard Lim however said the product is not something one can go into a store and buy. Rather, it's targeted at architecture and building firms and lighting and fixture manufacturers, among other customers. These companies will assemble the end products to either install in buildings or sell to consumers. BrightLite has no plans to retail the lighting solutions on its own.

'Ultra-BrightLite offers low cost, high reliability, fast time-to-market LED design solutions and products to companies that make lights that consumers buy,' Mr Lim said.

Asked how a small Singaporean company can hope to compete in a market which has such giants like Philips making similar products, Mr Lim, who used to work in Creative Technology, said product differentiation was the key.

'When one looks at the overall LED supply chain from the LED die, packaging and the finished products, big companies like Philips and Cree own the die patent and not many other companies can hope to enter this market,' he noted.

However, in terms of packaging - that is integrating the LED die in a casing to make an effective lighting system - there has been no marked improvement in design since way back in the 1960s, when the first LED lights started appearing.

He added that till 2005, most LED lights were low power, low wattage types. It was only after 2005 that high power, high wattage LEDs started to be designed.

However, packaging has proved to be a major hurdle.

'Since LED lights dissipate a high amount of heat due to high power lighting, not many designs can take high watt LED lighting. In an LED light, the temperature can reach six to seven times higher than in a normal CPU (central processing unit) of a computer.

'With our Ultra-BrightLite technology we can integrate the LED into a metallic housing which also houses a temperature monitor. If the temperature is too high, for example during summer time, it will control the current.'

Mr Lim noted that by leveraging on SIMTech's competency and experience in thermal management of advanced electronics and microsystems, his company has successfully developed a unique patent-pending LED housing design.

'SIMTech's expertise has enabled us to achieve a miniaturised and high performance LED solution with integrated electronics. This 'Made-by-Singapore' product will enable us to capture the exciting opportunities in solid state lighting.'

At present BrightLite is funded internally by Mr Lim and his associates. However, a few venture capitalists have expressed interest in the company.

Said Mr Lim: 'We are talking to a couple of VCs and for marketing we are in contact with some government departments such as the Housing and Development Board (HDB) as the government is looking at making buildings more energy efficient.'


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US$100 oil price not very high: Opec

Business Times 7 Jan 08;

Taking into account inflation, the current price is below 1980 record, cartel says

(PARIS) The price of US$100 for a barrel of crude oil is 'not necessarily very high' given the high demand of oil and higher production costs, the president of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) said yesterday.

On Wednesday, the price of a barrel of crude reached US$100.09 in New York, before retreating at the close to US$99.18.

Algeria's Energy Minister Chakib Khelil - who took over the rotating presidency of Opec on Jan 1 - told AFP that the current surge must be seen 'in relation to the real price', that is taking into account inflation.

The current oil price was therefore below its 1980 record of 'between US$102 and US$110 depending on estimates', he said.

Mr Khelil said that high oil demand was not only being pushed by 'China and India but also by the Middle East whose consumption has risen immensely'.

'When you take that into account, US$100 is not necessarily very high,' he said.

Mr Khelil said on Saturday: 'The surge in price will probably go on until the end of the first quarter of 2008, before stabilising during the second quarter.'

Speaking on the sidelines of a conference on the security of hydrocarbon pipelines in the Algerian capital, Mr Khelil said to members of the press that a second-quarter stabilisation was 'probable'.

Mr Khelil said on Saturday that the steady rise in prices was due to tension in Pakistan, escalating violence in Nigeria and a fall in oil inventories in the United States.

In Riyadh, Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said the record prices have been set by the market.

'The market fixes the price of oil,' Mr Naimi told reporters at an energy conference in Riyadh when he was asked to comment on the surge of oil to a record above US$100 last week.

Mr Naimi declined further comment on the price or what Opec would decide at its next meeting on Feb 1 in Vienna.

Saudi Arabia is the world's largest oil exporter and the most influential voice in Opec.

High energy costs have caused concern among some members of Opec regarding the potential impact on the global economy.

But ministers say there is little they can do to tame the price, which is driven by political tension and speculators and not supply and demand fundamentals.

An official of Saudi state oil giant Saudi Aramco is on track to hit its oil production capacity target of 12 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2009.

The start of Aramco's 500,000 bpd Khursaniyah oilfield was delayed a few months to the first quarter this year from December last year.

Other expansion projects remain on schedule, Aramco's senior vice-president of exploration and production Amin al-Nasser said.

'We are going up to 12 million bpd (oil production capacity) in 2009,' Mr Nasser said at a presentation to an energy conference in Riyadh.

Aramco's total output capacity does not include the Saudi share of capacity in the neutral zone which is between the kingdom and Kuwait.

Saudi Arabia is aiming for total output capacity, including the neutral zone, of 12.5 million barrels per day in 2009.

Saudi Arabia is spending billions on projects to meet growing world demand and maintain spare capacity of 1.5-2 million bpd of oil to deal with any unexpected outages in global supply.

A 250,000 bpd expansion at the Shaybah oilfield and the development of the 100,000 bpd Nuayyim field will add another 350,000 bpd of capacity by the end of 2008, Mr Nasser said.

The planned 1.2 million-bpd Khurais oilfield is expected to start production by mid-2009.

The 900,000-bpd Moneefa oilfield will start production in September 2011, three months later than Aramco's initial schedule.

Aramco also aims to boost gas output capacity to 12 billion cubic feet per day (cfd) in 2011 from 9.5 billion cfd, he said. -- AFP

Oil prices to keep rising, says Opec president
Straits Times 7 Jan 08;

Speculators driving surge in crude oil market, Qatari oil minister points out
ALGIERS - OPEC president Chakib Khelil said on Saturday he expected oil prices to keep rising during the first quarter before stabilising in the following quarter.

'The rise is likely to continue until the end of the first quarter of 2008 and will stabilise in the second quarter,' Mr Khelil, who is also the Algerian energy and mines minister, told Algerian official news agency APS.

He linked the steady rise of oil prices to 'political tension in Pakistan, escalating violence in Nigeria and a decline of oil inventories in the United States', APS added.

Oil in New York hit US$100 a barrel last Wednesday, the first trading day of the new year.

In further comments relayed by Algerian state radio, Mr Khelil said the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries' (Opec's) next meeting would closely study forecasts for world economic growth, particularly those of the US, which had been seriously affected by the sub-prime mortgage crisis.

The world market had sufficient oil supplies for now, and no decision could be made to increase production before the next conference, he was cited as saying.

Opec is scheduled to meet next on Feb 1 in Vienna.

Separately, a Kuwaiti newspaper quoted the Qatari oil minister as saying Opec was not behind the recent rise in oil prices, as markets were well-supplied and the price was being driven purely by speculators.

'Investment funds and speculators are behind the recent hike,' Mr Abdullah al-Attiyah told al-Jarida newspaper in comments published last Friday.

'The market is not suffering from any lack in supplies, and there is no disturbance in producers' regions.'

Opec, a source of more than a third of the world's oil, decided to keep oil output steady at a Dec 5 meeting, rebuffing calls from consumer countries for more supply to rein in prices, then at levels of around US$90.

REUTERS


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