Alarm over shark hunting in Philippines

Yahoo News 10 Apr 08;

Shark hunting in the Philippines has led to a drastic drop in the numbers of the creatures, authorities said Thursday, despite efforts to limit the slaughter.

The once-abundant population of thresher sharks (alopias vulpinus) off the coast of Batangas city, 80 kilometres (49 miles) south of Manila, has hit "vulnerable" levels due to widespread hunting, said local tourism chief Cecil Rosales.

"The situation is now very alarming," Rosales told AFP, adding local fishermen consider the sharks as "pests" who destroy their nets and pounce on their catch.

While there is no large-scale fin trading locally, Rosales said shark meat is being openly sold in public markets in Batangas and the nearby city of Lucena.

She said the local tourism office, along with international conservation groups, had tried to intervene but the lack of specific legislation banning the trade is slowing down their efforts.

"We will keep on monitoring the situation, but the thresher shark population is very vulnerable," she said.

Provincial vice governor Mark Leviste said he has ordered an investigation into the trade and that a special task force was to be formed to tackle the problem.

A report by the local group First Philippine Conservation Inc. said at least 40 thresher sharks have been killed since December in coastal villages around Batangas city.

Thresher sharks traditionally feed on crustaceans and sardines and can grow up to 10 feet long but are not considered dangerous to humans.

According to the UK-based Thresher Shark Research and Conservation Group, the population worldwide has fallen by a staggering 75 percent over the past five years.

The sharks mature late and a female takes up to 13 years to reproduce.

"This is a a very, very alarming situation," the Philippine Daily Inquirer quoted Simon Oliver, a visiting specialist from the Thresher Shark Research group, as saying.


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Prawn sandwich destroys Philippines fish nurseries: expert

AFP 10 Apr 08;

MANILA (AFP) — She helped turn many of the world's prawn farmers into millionaires, but Jurgenne Primavera now worries that her life's work might have indirectly accelerated the destruction of fish nurseries.

The Filipina zoologist, whose research on breeding the black tiger prawn became a manual that revolutionised the aquaculture industry, pointed at 66 hectares (163 acres) of brackish water fishponds at the bottom of a windy bluff in this seaside town south of Manila.

Local conservationists have filed a landmark suit against the owner, a wealthy lawyer accused of killing off mangroves -- trees that grow on marshy coasts and serve as vital nurseries for the young of open-sea fish species.

"The law bans cutting of mangroves, but he (the fishpond owner) skirted that by building dikes that cut off the seawater, until the trees eventually died," said Jessie de los Reyes, a local marine ecology advocate.

"Now the community is suffering because their ground water has turned salty and their access to fishing areas has been cut," de los Reyes added. The case is pending.

Despite cheap government loans and generous land leases in the 1970s, prawn culture failed to reach its full potential in the Philippines, where the ponds turned out to be better suited for growing milkfish, said Primavera of the Philippines-based Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Centre.

But the industry took off elsewhere, creating new wealth for many of the pioneers who fed the world's acquired taste for prawn sandwiches.

"Mangroves were cleared for prawn farming in countries that did not have a long tradition in aquaculture, such as Thailand, Vietnam and Ecuador," said Primavera.

Thriving at or near the mouths of silt-laden rivers and estuaries, the trees feature grotesque-shaped prop roots that serve as lungs allowing them to thrive in saline and waterlogged soils.

They serve as nutrient-rich marine nurseries for juvenile fish, shrimp and other wildlife and as habitats or wintering areas for coastal and migratory birds, and they protect shores against storms and large waves.

Over the past 50 years aquaculture, or commercial fish farming, has wiped out a third of the world's mangrove forests. In some areas such as the Philippines the loss has been up to 80 percent, said Norman Duke, a University of Queensland marine biologist who is one of the world's foremost experts on mangrove forest ecosystems.

"The simple story is: no mangroves, no fish," Duke said.

Subject to volatile market prices and ecosystem degradation, prawn farms last only for a few years and abandoned farms are virtual wastelands, said Nico Koedam, a University of Brussels botanist who has done extensive research in Sri Lanka, India and Kenya.

"This is happening mostly in Southeast Asia," said Koedam. "You also lose a lot of mangrove forests from fishponds in India and Sri Lanka as well."

Adds Duke: "Conversion is final. Once the soil dries out nothing will grow on it."

The Food and Agriculture Organisation projects marine capture of fish flattening out at 86-87 million tonnes annually between 2004 and 2030, and with aquaculture accounting for a progressively rising share in total fish production to 74 million tonnes in 2015 from 45.5 million tonnes in 2004.

Despite the rapid loss of mangroves, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) denotes the Philippines as the "centre of the centre" of marine ecosystem diversity.

Primavera said the Southeast Asian archipelago remains one of the world's top 15 nations in terms of fish production.

However, this was unlikely to be sustained with the permanent loss of natural fish nurseries.

The Philippines is home to about half the world's mangrove species, but Primavera said up to two varieties are in the IUCN's "red list" of critically endangered species.

At least two more Philippine species could join the list this year, said Kent Carpenter, the IUCN's global marine species assessment coordinator.

"The experts have determined that there are a number of (mangrove) species globally that are threatened with extinction," said Carpenter.

According to Primavera, a healthy coastal ecosystem needs four hectares of mangroves for every a hectare of fishpond.

She estimates the Philippines mangrove cover at about 115,000 hectares, compared to 230,000 hectares of fishponds.

Despite Philippine laws that since 1975 have banned mangrove clearing, she said enforcement has been virtually nil.


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Best of our wild blogs: 10 Apr 08


Sea anemones of Singapore
on the singapore celebrates our reefs blog

Reef critters in action
video clips on the ashira blog

Tuas revisited with TeamSeagrass
on the wildfilms blog

Blog for bears
Sun bear man Wong Siew Te's new blog, links and more on the budak blog

Raising Kings Par II
on the bird ecology blog

Cutting a stretch
about our rubber trees on the budak blog


NUS Undergraduates Raise Alert To Need For Marine Conservation In Singapore

report on the Code Blue event on the NUSSU ridge online blog

More Inconvenient Truths
a critque of Al Gore's We Campaign on the It's Getting Hot In Here blog


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Record beach litter threatens marine wildlife

Peter Griffiths, Reuters 9 Apr 08;

LONDON (Reuters) - Plastic litter on Britain's beaches has reached record levels, endangering whales, dolphins and seabirds, an environmental charity survey said on Thursday.

The Marine Conservation Society, which campaigns for cleaner beaches and seas, said plastic litter has increased by 126 percent since its first survey in 1994.

Scores of marine wildlife species, including seals and turtles, have died after eating plastic or drowning after getting tangled in debris or old fishing nets, it said.

"The results are truly shocking," said Emma Snowden, the society's litter projects coordinator. "Plastics are of particular concern as they could persist in the marine environment for centuries with fatal consequences for marine wildlife."

In the last decade, the amount of plastic drinks bottles has risen by 67 percent, plastic bags by 54 percent and cigarette butts by 44 percent, the society said.

Nearly 4,000 volunteers took part in the survey of 354 beaches in September last year.

They removed nearly 350,000 pieces of litter. The average density of litter was 2,054 items of litter per kilometer, compared to 1,999 last year.

Cotton buds, crisp wrappers and anglers' fishing line were among the most common items found.

The charity urged the government, industry and retailers to reduce packaging and cut the use of plastic bags.

It said people should reuse bags, take home litter and dispose of cigarette ends responsibly.

Conservative Shadow Environment Secretary said the amount of litter was unacceptable.

"It is becoming impossible to walk along a stretch of beach without seeing the eyesore of plastic waste," he said. "It not only causes environmental damage but endangers our wildlife.

"Some of the waste may not have been generated in Britain but it's our responsibility to tidy it up."

The full MCS Beachwatch 2007 results can be downloaded at www.adoptabeach.org.uk

More plastic than ever on Britain's beaches
Paul Eccleston, The Telegraph 10 Apr 08;

More discarded plastic is finding it way onto beaches than ever before, an annual survey has revealed.

Plastic debris in the form of bottles, bags and lids made up almost 60 per cent of all litter found on beaches.

The latest Marine Conservation Society (MCS) check revealed that plastic litter has increased by 126 per cent since the annual survey began in 1994.

The survey found big rises in the amount of drinks bottles, plastic bags and cigarette butts dumped or washed up by the tide.

Over 170 species of marine wildlife including birds, whales and turtles were recorded fatally mistaking plastic for food.

The MCS Beachwatch 2007 Report is based on data collected by almost 4,000 volunteers on 354 UK beaches surveyed in mid-September last year.

Volunteers combed 168.5km of coast and removed over 346,000 litter items. The average density of UK beach litter was 2,054 items per kilometre - an average of two items for every metre stretch of beach.

MCS Litter Projects Coordinator, Emma Snowden, said: "The results are truly shocking, in the last 10 years plastic drinks bottles have increased by 67 per cent, plastic bags by 54 per cent and cigarette butts by 44 per cent.

"Plastics are of particular concern as they could persist in the marine environment for centuries with fatal consequences for marine wildlife."

Over the 15 years of the survey plastic has consistently accounted for over 50 per cent of all litter found.

Larger items eventually break down into small plastic pieces and microscopic dust, which can be consumed by filter feeding animals, such as barnacles.

Pollutants can be attracted onto the surface of plastic pieces and pose a previously unrecognised threat to marine animals who swallow them. They can then possibly be passed on in the food chain to fish and then to humans.

The MCS says wildlife will continue to be at risk as long as litter - especially plastic - persists on beaches.

Coastal communities which rely on the marine environment for their livelihood through tourism, fishing and recreational water sports, have to pay the price of litter through lost revenue from spoilt fish catches and damage to property.

Sewage related debris resulted in tourists going elsewhere the cost of repeatedly cleaning up beaches amounted to millions of pounds per year.

The four main sources of the litter found were identified in the survey as: recreational and beach visitors (35.3 per cent); fishing (13.7 per cent); sewage related debris (6.1 per cent) and shipping (1.8 per cent). Almost 42 per cent of the rubbish found could not be sourced to particular items.

Litter left behind by visitors or which was washed up on the tide was mainly crisp and sweet packets, fast food packaging and cigarette stubs.

Beach visitors were the main source of litter contributing between 29.7 per cent and 44.3 per cent of the total litter recorded. The 725 items found by volunteers per kilometre surveyed was the largest density of any beach litter source, and higher than the 673 items found in last year's survey.

Fishing litter was the second largest source of UK beach litter, accounting for 13.7 per cent of all the items recorded. The debris was made up of fishing nets, fishing line, ropes, and buoys either deliberately discarded or accidentally lost by the fishing industry.

Sewage represented 6.1 per cent of all litter found which was the lowest density for five years. Cotton bud sticks accounted for 78 per cent of the total and 52 per cent of these were found on East Bay in Scotland. When East Bay's data was left out sewage debris dropped to 3.6 per cent of all litter recorded.

Shipping litter from items such as pallets, strapping bands and oil drums accounted for 1.8 per cent of the litter recorded.

Across the UK, Scotland had the highest levels of overall litter density, recording a 30.4 per cent increase on 2006 and the highest level since 1996.

Litter levels rose slightly in Wales on the previous year, and Welsh beaches had the highest density of recreational and beach visitors' debris, fishing litter and shipping litter of any UK country.

The amount of rubbish on Northern Irish beaches increased in 2007 by more than two thirds (69 per cent ) on 2006, while the Channel Islands was the only place to see levels fall on the previous year.

There was an increase of 2.14 per cent in litter density recorded in England, with the South West recording the highest levels of rubbish per kilometre.

The region had the most recreational and beach visitors' litter, fishing debris and sewage-related waste of any part of England.

The North East had the lowest amount of litter dropped by visitors and recreational coast users, while the South East of England had the lowest density of sewage rubbish.


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Species monitoring seen helping slow extinctions

Alister Doyle, Reuters 9 Apr 08;

OSLO (Reuters) - A planned new network to monitor life on earth from microbes to whales could help guide governments struggling to slow extinctions, experts said on Wednesday.

A three-day meeting of 100 scientists and officials in Potsdam, Germany, will end on Thursday with a deal on building blocks for a "Biodiversity Observation Network" for animals and plants facing threats such as pollution or climate change.

Until now, the world has lacked a system for tying together knowledge about the diversity of life -- most observations are local, such as of butterflies in part of the Amazon rainforest or of rice growth in Indonesia.

"We haven't had the capability to knit it all together," Woody Turner, an earth scientist at NASA which is helping put together the global network that will include research institutes and governments, told Reuters.

He said the network would help plug gaps since the time of 19th century naturalists such as Charles Darwin, who published the theory of evolution in 1859 based partly on observations of

The new monitoring network "will advance international efforts to rescue the world's vanishing biological diversity," the Group on Earth Observations (GEO), backed by more than 70 governments, said in a statement of the Potsdam plan.

U.N. reports say the world may be facing the worst spate of extinctions since the dinosaurs vanished 65 million years ago due to human activities such as emissions of greenhouse gases. a tiny fraction of life in the Galapagos.

A U.N. Earth Summit in 2002 set a goal of slowing the rate of biodiversity loss by 2010 but set no baselines for judging success or failure.

DINOSAURS

"The lack of comprehensive information about the world's biological resources continues to undermine the efforts of policymakers and managers to set priorities," GEO said. GEO has prompted the new network with calls for better monitoring.

Initial monitoring by the network would "not be every species on earth. We have to bring it down to a few thousand," said Anne Larigauderie, head of the Diversitas Secretariat in Paris which groups biodiversity experts.

Well-known species such as tigers, lions, whales or dolphins could make the initial list and also "species that play a key functional role", she told Reuters.

Such species could include crops such as rice or wheat, insect pollinators or large trees that soak up carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas. Diversitas and NASA will lead work to build the network, backed by GEO.

Turner said satellites, for instance, could add a new dimension to local studies of species.

"They don't allow you to see the individual tiger or elephant, certainly not the individual microbe, but they let you see the context -- how tree cover is changing, how changes in climate are affecting habitats," he said.

(Editing by Mary Gabriel)


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Indonesia finds flammable gas near mud volcano: official

Yahoo News 9 Apr 08;

Indonesians living near a devastating "mud volcano" that has spewed sludge for nearly two years now have another problem to contend with -- flammable gas.

Highly concentrated methane is pouring into nearby residential areas, a government official told AFP Wednesday, as worried locals said they were afraid to cook at home in case they caused an explosion.

Soffian Hadi Djojopranoto, deputy head of the government team managing the disaster, said the gas appeared to be coming from sewage pipes.

"We are in the process of determining whether the gas originates from the mud volcano or was produced from the sewage in the pipes," he told AFP.

The mudflow, near Indonesia's second-largest city of Surabaya in East Java, has displaced about 15,000 households since it began spewing in May 2006.

Djojopranoto said between 130,000 and 150,000 cubic metres (170,000 to 200,000 cubic yards) of sludge a day is still gushing from the "volcano", which has inundated at least 600 hectares (1,500 acres) of land and shows no sign of stopping.

Yayak, who lives near the mudflow, said the gas had been leaking into his family's home for the past two months.

"The smell is so strong. At night, my family feels dizzy," he told the Kompas daily.

Another resident, Sudarti, told Kompas she was afraid to cook in her home and went out for meals rather than risk her home burning down.

The government has earmarked millions of dollars in state funds to compensate the victims of the mud volcano.

But many people here believe a private energy company connected to Indonesia's wealthy welfare minister is to blame for the disaster.


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Philippines to make climate change part of school curriculum

Yahoo News 9 Apr 08;

The Philippine government will make climate change part of the national school curriculum, officials said Wednesday.

The department of education, other state agencies and the private sector will prepare lesson guides on global environmental issues for public school teachers in elementary and secondary schools.

"Our children will inherit the earth from us," said Education Secretary Jesli Lapus. "We must make sure that this inheritance is in great shape for them to cherish."

Lapus emphasised the importance of "intergovernmental cooperation" in reducing the effects of climate change.

Experts have said the Philippines will suffer from greater incidence of diseases like dengue and lower levels of fresh water due to global warming.

Last Friday in Bangkok, climate brokers from more than 160 nations agreed on a work plan for negotiations leading to a new pact on cutting greenhouse gas emissions -- blamed for the warming -- when current commitments end in 2012.

Rich and poor countries are sharply divided on how to tackle global warming, despite growing fears that rising temperatures could put millions of people at risk by the end of the century.


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Britain wants G8 to discuss biofuel link to food prices: report

Yahoo News 9 Apr 08;

British Prime Minister Gordon Brown has written to his Japanese counterpart asking for the impact of biofuel-production on food prices to be discussed at the Group of Eight rich nations summit in July, The Guardian reported Thursday.

"There is a growing consensus that we need urgently to examine the impact on food prices of different kinds and production methods of biofuels, and ensure that their use is responsible and sustainable," Brown wrote in the letter to Yasuo Fukuda.

Food prices have been spiralling higher globally due partly to the use of certain foods in biofuels to combat climate change, as well as rising populations, strong demand from developing countries, and the increasing frequency of floods and droughts as a result of climate change.

"Rising food prices threaten to roll back progress we have made in recent years on development. For the first time in decades, the number of people facing hunger is growing," wrote Brown.

The British premier called for increased efforts by the G8 -- Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States -- "for a WTO trade deal that provides greater poor country access to developed country markets."

He also proposed "social safety nets for the poorest," adding: "We may need to increase ... the scale of our support for humanitarian programmes."


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Siberia's black market logging

Lucy Ash, BBC Radio 4's Crossing Continents 8 Apr 08;

The vast forests of Eastern Siberia, known as the Taiga, are a goldmine for Chinese wood traders, who send raw logs over the border to serve their home country's booming economy. But much of the wood trade is illegal.

With its barbed wire fences, smashed windows and crumbling apartment blocks, the border town of Zabaikalsk looks like an abandoned army garrison.

The only splash of colour is the pale yellow Stalinist tower of the railway station.

A seemingly endless procession of freight trains rumbles past, south towards China. Some trains are 30 wagons long, all heavily laden with Russian wood.

Much of this pine, larch, aspen and birch has been cut without a licence and is smuggled out of the country.

Illegal logging has long plagued Russia, but the problem has been exacerbated in recent years by China's voracious appetite for timber.

Disappearing forests

The Zabakailsky Krai, a region in Eastern Siberia between Lake Baikal and the Russian Far East, is one of the worst affected areas.

According to the Federal Agency for Forestry, illegal logging here accounts for more than two million cubic metres a year.

The agency warned the region could be stripped of wood reserves in five years if nothing is done to stop the criminal trade.

Last May, Yuri Trutnev, the Russian Minister for Natural Resources, paid a surprise visit and said he was shocked by what he found.

He complained that "entire bandit villages" were cutting down trees, loading them on railway sidings and sending them to China.

Vladimir Putin recently described the export of unprocessed timber as "comparable with embezzlement".

"Our neighbours continue to make billions of dollars on Russian timber, but we are doing very little to create conditions for wood processing here at home," Putin said.

Chinese wealth

A decade ago, Manzhouli was a dusty border town in a corner of Inner Mongolia in North East China. Now it is a gleaming metropolis built on the wealth of timber from the Siberian forests. I understood the Russian president's resentment.

Standing in a vast lumber yard surrounded by piles and piles of wood, I saw a forest of cranes and, beyond them, a cluster of brightly-coloured skyscrapers.

This surreal city plays host to a stream of Russian tourists who travel for days to buy clothes, cameras and DVDs in glitzy shopping malls.

Guang Delin, the boss of just one of the 70 timber businesses in Manzhouli, took us to lunch at an extraordinary restaurant.

Outside an icy wind blew across the steppe, but inside the atmosphere was tropical.

The restaurant was decorated with lush green plants and fish tanks. On my way to our table, I noticed a couple of alligators basking on the edge of an artificial pond.

As I watched waitresses carrying plates of steaming noodles past tinkling fountains, I thought about a woman I met on the other side of the border in Russia.

Natasha lives in one of the so called "bandit villages" in Zabaikalsky Krai, seven hours drive on bad roads from the regional capital Chita. Her house has no running water - she has to fetch it by bucket from a nearby well.

"I'm a single mother with three children and one is an invalid," she told me. "Life is very hard here and now the collective farm has fallen apart there is almost no work."

Her neighbour, an elderly man in a fur hat, agreed.

"Most people have to work as black market loggers just to survive, to buy bread and feed their families.

"We used to have so much forest round here," he added, throwing his arms wide open. "But now look - there's almost none left and they only leave the small, skinny trees - the ones we call toothpicks."

Unlicensed logging

The police have just established a new forestry division to conduct spot checks.

But many points in the new Russian Forest Code contradict each other. The lack of clarity leaves room for unlicensed logging on a large scale, with poachers avoiding taxes and pocketing huge sums of money.

But it can be dangerous to speak out against the illegal trade.



One regional MP, Vladimir Baranov, who also ran a wood processing plant, was shot dead on his doorstep in 2005.

Many, including a fellow MP Viktor Ostanin, believe he was the victim of a contract killing organised by powerful business interests in the area who have links with Chinese mafia.

Ostanin, a former intelligence officer, said the best way to fight illegal logging is to create more jobs in wood processing in Russia.

"Sadly we are allowing the Chinese to buy our forest very cheaply, they process it and send furniture and flooring to other countries - that makes no sense."

"What's worse we are destroying our environment. What kind of legacy are we leaving to our grand children?"

But can Chinese companies be blamed for exploiting weak legislation and corruption on the other side of the border?

"I think initially they all wanted to obey Russian laws," Wen Bo, an environmental campaigner in Beijing, said.

"But if the Russians don't care about their own forest, if Russian officials encourage them to do business illegally, bribing officials and paying money under the table, they soon learn how to do business in such an environment."

Crossing Continents reports on the illegal logging in the Siberian Taiga on BBC Radio 4 on Thursday 10 April at 1100 BST, repeated Monday 14 April at 2030 BST.


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Canada logging may ignite "carbon bomb": Greenpeace

Allan Dowd, Reuters 10 Apr 08;

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Reuters) - Canada threatens to ignite a "carbon bomb" that could drastically worsen global warming if it continues heavy logging in areas of its vast northern forest, Greenpeace warned in a report on Thursday.

Logging and other developments in the boreal forest release the carbon that the trees have trapped from the atmosphere over decades, potentially producing more greenhouse gases than from burning fossil fuels, the environmental group charged.

Greenpeace called for a moratorium on new logging in areas of the forest that still have large, unfragmented blocks of older-growth trees, and warned it had similar fears about the boreal forests that stretch across Russia and northern Europe.

"Research is starting to show that the forest is tipping from being an annual carbon sink to being an annual carbon source," said Christy Ferguson, Greenpeace's forests campaigner in Toronto.

The "Turning Up the Heat" report, prepared by researchers at the University of Toronto, surveyed a variety of separate scientific studies on the boreal forest in recent years.

Canada's boreal forest, characterized by the predominance of conifers like pine and spruce, stretches in a vast curve across the country below the Arctic, from the Yukon territory in the northwest to the Atlantic coast of Newfoundland.

A 1993 study estimated it stored about 186 billion metric tons of carbon, equal to about 27 times what the world produces from burning fossil fuel each year.

Two-thirds of the carbon is stored in the forest's soil, which decays when the tree cover is removed.

Greenpeace says the carbon released as trees are harvested contributes to climate change. That, in turn, threatens the northern forest with problems such as insect outbreaks and increased forest fires that destroy more trees.

The global warming, which is often most apparent in the far north, also allows the permafrost to melt, releasing still more greenhouse gases.

That creates the scenario of a "carbon bomb" or the sudden release of massive amounts of carbon into the atmosphere, similar to what happened in 1997 when peat fires broke out in Indonesia, Ferguson said.

"It hasn't happened yet. That's good, and we can stop it," she said.

Greenpeace is not calling for a total ban on logging in the boreal forest, where many small communities are dependent on the lumber, plywood and paper industries for economic survival. In fact, protecting parts of the forest will help producers in the long run, the group said.

Canada's forest industry has argued that because harvested trees are replanted, carbon released through logging is eventually recaptured as the new trees grow.

The Canadian Forest Products Association said in October that its members had agreed to make the industry carbon neutral by 2015 without having to purchase carbon offset credits.

But Ferguson said the scientific studies indicate carbon neutral logging might not be possible, and the soil in some logged areas continues to release carbon for up to a decade after the trees are cut.

"As much as we would want it to be the way it works, that just isn't what happens," Ferguson said.

(Reporting Allan Dowd, Editing by Rob Wilson)


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Floods and drought to rise due to climate change

David Chance, Reuters 9 Apr 08;

BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Flooding in temperate regions and the tropics and droughts in arid regions are likely to increase over the course of the century due to climate change, according to a study released on Wednesday.

The study by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the body which won last year's Nobel Prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, said changes in fresh water supplies would have a huge impact on humans and on the environment.

"The frequency of heavy precipitation events (or proportion of total rainfall from heavy falls) will very likely increase over most areas during the 21st century, with consequences to the risk of rain-generated floods," the report, released at the IPCC's annual meeting in Budapest, said.

"At the same time, the proportion of land surface in extreme drought at any one time is projected to increase," it said.

The report comes at a time when the price of food staples such as rice and wheat are increasing sharply due to rising demand from Asia and poor harvests due to bad weather.

In the Philippines, for example, rice is the staple food of 83 percent of the population and imports have doubled in the past decade, according to a report from investment bank Credit Suisse.

That is estimated to cost the government $1.3 billion in 2008, the bank said, as it subsidizes the difference between the world market price and the price at which rice is sold domestically.

That situation is repeated in many developing countries and will likely be worsened by climate change, Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, told journalists in Budapest.

He said by 2020, unless action was taken to mitigate the effects of climate change, 250 million people in Africa could be suffering from "water stress", which means lack of access to adequate water for drinking and agriculture.

That is a problem that will spread beyond the continent and create a major challenge for governments globally, he said.

"The risk is that these people can no longer sustain themselves and they have to find somewhere else to go," de Boer said.

(Editing by Mary Gabriel)


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NUS team makes history by finding frog with no lungs

Kalimantan find is only the 4th creature with backbones known to breathe without lungs
Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 10 Apr 08;

SINGAPORE scientists have discovered a lungless frog that breathes through its skin - a find that makes evolutionary history.

The aquatic frog is affectionately called Barbie - short for its scientific name Barbourula kalimantanensis. It was found in two mountain rivers in the heart of Kalimantan last August.http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=4322865532175731446&postID=8255826818945290547

A group of nine researchers, led by evolutionary biologist David Bickford from the National University of Singapore (NUS), found the flat, dark brown frogs with golden specks under smooth rocks in clean, cool and fast-flowing water.

Their findings are set to be published next month.

Since animals first waddled onto land eons ago, only three other creatures with backbones - two groups of salamanders and a single species of the earthworm-like caecilians - have been known to forsake their lungs.

Dr Bickford, 39, said Barbie absorbs oxygen dissolved in the water through its skin.

'The discovery is not so much a surprise to the scientific community as much as a surprise that it has taken so long to find it,' DrBickford said.

One reason could be that the frog resides deep in mountain rivers and is fully aquatic.

A fisherman first took a Barbie to Indonesian scientist Djoko Iskandar in Kalimantan in 1978. He had been searching for the animal ever since.

Part of the NUS team last August, DrDjoko co-authored the scientific paper with DrBickford.

'Djoko was near tears when we found them after all those years of searching,' said DrBickford.

The specimens the NUS team discovered were well over 50km from where the first frogs were spotted by local fishermen.

Their original wading grounds had become prime gold-mining and logging territory.

'They must have been forced upstream from their original habitats...so we got to the end of the logging road and started the search,' added DrBickford.

He hopes the find will help spur research into South-east Asian wildlife, much of which is threatened by development.

'Frogs are a clear indication of how degraded our environment is, so if people who know the terrain can help us discover what we have and preserve it, my work in conservation will be worth it,' he said.

Indonesian zoologist Indraneil Das, who studies amphibians and reptiles, said the discovery of a lungless frog could stir up national interest.

'This shows us yet another innovation by amphibians. If the findings are read by the government and if it does something about them by way of conservation...that will be a good thing for all concerned, except perhaps the gold-miners.'

Frog without lungs found in Indonesia
Michael Casey, Associated Press Yahoo News 10 Apr 08;

A frog has been found in a remote part of Indonesia that has no lungs and breathes through its skin, a discovery that researchers said Thursday could provide insight into what drives evolution in certain species.

The aquatic frog Barbourula kalimantanensis was found in a remote part of Indonesia's Kalimantan province on Borneo island during an expedition in August 2007, said David Bickford, an evolutionary biologist at the National University of Singapore. Bickford was part of the trip and co-authored a paper on the find that appeared in this week's edition of the peer-reviewed journal Current Biology.

Bickford said the species is the first frog known to science without lungs and joins a short list of amphibians with this unusual trait, including a few species of salamanders and a wormlike creature known as a caecilian.

"These are about the most ancient and bizarre frogs you can get on the planet," Bickford said of the brown amphibian with bulging eyes and a tendency to flatten itself as it glides across the water.

"They are like a squished version of Jabba the Hutt," he said, referring to the character from Star Wars. "They are flat and have eyes that float above the water. They have skin flaps coming off their arms and legs."

Bickford's Indonesian colleague, Djoko Iskandar, first came across the frog 30 years ago and has been searching for it ever since. He didn't know the frog was lungless until they cut eight of the specimens open in the lab.

Graeme Gillespie, director of conservation and science at Zoos Victoria in Australia, called the frog "evolutionarily unique." He said the eight specimens examined in the lab showed the lunglessness was consistent with the species and not "a freak of nature." Gillespie was not a member of the expedition or the research team.

Bickford surmised that the frog had evolved to adapt to its difficult surroundings, in which it has to navigate cold, rapidly moving streams that are rich in oxygen.

"It's an extreme adaptation that was probably brought about by these fast-moving streams," Bickford said, adding that it probably needed to reduce its buoyancy in order to keep from being swept down the mountainous rivers.

He said the frog could help scientists understand the environmental factors that contribute to "extreme evolutionary change" since its closest relative in the Philippines and other frogs have lungs.

Bickford and Gillespie said the frog's discovery adds urgency to the need to protect its river habitat, which in recent years has become polluted due to widespread illegal logging and gold mining. Once-pristine waters are now brown and clogged with silt, they said.

"The gold mining is completely illegal and small scale. But when there are thousands of them on the river, it really has a huge impact," Bickford said. "Pretty soon the frogs will run out of the river.

Lungless frog discovered in Borneo
Yahoo News 9 Apr 08;

A rare and primitive frog living in a remote Borneo stream has no lungs and apparently absorbs oxygen through its skin, researchers reported on Wednesday.

The aquatic frog has evolved backwards, re-acquiring a primordial trait, David Bickford of the National University of Singapore and colleagues reported.

Studying the frog could help shed light on how lungs evolved in the first place, they wrote in the journal Current Biology, adding that illegal gold mining in the area may threaten the unique species.

"The evolution of lunglessness in tetrapods (amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals) is exceedingly rare, previously known only from amphibians -- two families of salamanders and a single species of caecilian (blindworm)," they wrote.

"Here we report the first case of complete lunglessness in a frog, Barbourula kalimantanensis, from the Indonesian portion of Borneo."

The frog may be endangered because of mining activity, the researchers said.

"In August 2007, we visited ... near NangaPinoh, Western Kalimantan but found that illegal gold mining had destroyed all suitable habitats in the vicinity," they wrote. They snorkeled, waded and turned over boulders to find their quarry.

"The originally cool, clear, fast-flowing rivers are now warm and turbid. Water quality around the ... locality is no longer suitable for the species, but we were able to re-discover two new populations upstream," they added.

"We knew that we would have to be very lucky just to find the frog," Bickford said in a statement.

Animals evolved lungs when they moved from the sea to land millions of years ago. Animals have only lost this important adaptation a few times, Bickford's team said.

"The discovery of lunglessness in a secretive Bornean frog, supports the idea that lungs are a malleable trait in the Amphibia, the sister group of all living tetrapods. Amphibians maybe more prone to lunglessness since they readily utilize other methods for gas exchange," they wrote.

"This is an endangered frog that we know practically nothing about, with an amazing ability to breathe entirely through its skin, whose future is being destroyed by illegal gold mining by people who are marginalized and have no other means of supporting themselves," Bickford said.

Only animals with small body sizes, slow metabolisms and living in fast-flowing cold water where oxygen and carbon dioxide are exchanged quickly may be able to survive without lungs, the researchers said.

"We strongly encourage conservation of remaining habitats of this species," they recommended.

(Reporting by Maggie Fox; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

Lungless frog could shed light on evolution: scientist
Aubrey Belford, Yahoo News 11 Apr 08;

The discovery of a rare species of Indonesian frog that breathes without lungs could shed light on how evolution works, a scientist said Friday.

Dissection of the frog, which was found on Borneo last August, showed it breathed entirely through its skin, biologist David Bickford told AFP.

While many frogs breathe partially through their skin, the Barbourula kalimantanensis is the first to have entirely evolved away from having lungs, he said.

This runs counter to one of the key events in evolution, when animals developed primitive lungs and moved from water to land.

"Here is a frog that has reversed that trend, it has totally turned against the conventional wisdom, if you will, of millions of years of evolution," said Bickford, a biologist at the National University of Singapore.

The frog appears to have shed its lungs over millions of years to adapt to its home in the fast-flowing cold water rivers in the island's rainforests, Bickford said.

Cold water contains more oxygen, making it possible to breathe through skin, he added.

Only three other amphibians -- two species of salamander and a worm-like creature called a caecilian -- are known to have evolved to breath without lungs.

"It's like a cookie, it's almost completely flat. So initially when you pick it up in the water you know this thing is strange," said Bickford.

"It's surprisingly cute, you know, like a bulldog is cute. It's one of those things that is so ugly, it's cute."

While many animals have organs they no longer use -- such as the human appendix -- evolution normally works on the principle of "if it's not broke don't fix it," Bickford said.

"Most things we don't use don't get lost... so there had to be a big negative side-effect of having lungs for them to be lost."

Bickford believes lungs may have made the frog's ancestors too buoyant in the fast-flowing water, increasing their risk of being swept away.

The downside, Bickford said, is that the frog cannot survive on land or even in still water.

Indonesian scientist Djoko Iskandar, who accompanied Bickford on the expedition, first heard about the strange-looking creature 30 years ago and had been searching for it ever since.

He said that every time he went to Borneo he found habitats had been destroyed by industry, with pollution to rivers from gold mining apparently making it impossible for the frogs to breathe.

"We think that a little bit of pollution will affect the skin, and the skin is more important than for other species," said Iskandar, a scientist at the Bandung Institute of Technology in Indonesia, adding that even a small amount of pollution could be devastating.

Hundreds of new species of insect, animal and plant have been discovered on Borneo, with a find every month on average, conservation group WWF has said.

Other recent exotic discoveries include poisonous "sticky frogs," "forest walking catfish" able to travel short distances out of water and the transparent "glass catfish".

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Bizarre Frog discovered in Borneo Has No Lungs

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Big Fish Move: Wisma Atria to Underwater World

Catch of the day
Straits Times 10 Apr 08;

Marine biologist Linda Tjhin, 34, armed with two nets, chases a school of fish inside the Wisma Atria aquarium.

She was one of three people who spent the morning yesterday catching over 100 fishes that will be moved to Underwater World Singapore.

Shoppers were invited to take photos over the weekend at the 22-year-old aquarium in the mall's basement, before it is removed to make way for more retail space.


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Banking on less paper wastage

Using e-statements can also reduce expenses for firms
Letter from Alan Allan, Today Online 10 Apr 08;

There is an urgent need for each of us to play a part in helping to fight global climate change and the public banking sector can lead the way.

Lately, I learnt that OCBC does not provide options for consumers to receive electronic statements.

Not only that, the monthly paper statements are sent together with brochures for some of the bank's other products.

On top of that, there is usually an extra sheet with just the account holder's name printed on it and a few lines about some promotion. What a waste of paper.

The design format of the statement ought to be changed too. There could be less space between the lines and unnecessary information could be deleted.

Is it necessary to have four lines of information for each Nets payment made?

If one million people in Singapore has an account with a bank, that means at least one million sheets of paper go to waste each month, or 12 million sheets of paper per year.

Paper, a precious commodity, is the biggest source of waste going into landfills, and is also the most common form of waste.

Recycling still means energy is needed to reprocess materials and this in turn generates more carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas.

Using less paper means saving energy, water, trees and the chemicals needed in the manufacturing process.

Trees are important because they prevent soil erosion and pollution.

They also absorb carbon dioxide from the air and turn it into oxygen.

Some people subscribe to the "cut one and plant two" practice, but it is not the same as a young tree does not perform as well as an old, mature tree.

Anyone can tell the difference between the shade of an old, mature tree and a young one.

Reducing paper usage will also cut down the expenses of a company like OCBC, not to mention its big part in reducing global warming.


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Euston Quah suggests investing in agricultural R&D to cut food prices

Channel NewsAsia 9 Apr 08;

SINGAPORE: One way to ensure that there is no short supply of staple food like rice in the future is to invest more funds into research and development (R&D) into the agricultural sector. This is what governments should do, according to an environment analyst.

The analyst added that there should not be any price control of food staples like rice in Singapore as importers may be discouraged from boosting its supply.

Prices of food staples like rice and soya bean have been going up because of different reasons, such as climate change which affects crops and thus reduces supplies. Higher oil prices have also resulted in higher transport costs.

So to alleviate the situation and ensure that there is no supply shortage in the future, an environment economist said governments must look at conducting more R&D in the agricultural sector now.

Associate Professor Euston Quah, Head of Economics Division at Nanyang Technological University, said: "It has been quite some time now, as far as I'm aware of new technologies into production of food crops. So that's one way where governments can help, especially the richer countries in terms of this type of funding."

Professor Quah explained that an agricultural revolution between the 18th century and the end of the 19th century saw a massive and rapid increase in agricultural productivity and vast improvements in farm technology.

This had resulted in super yields for farmers. He said this is something that might benefit an increasing global population.

For now, he said governments can also look at allocation of land for cultivation of necessary food crops and enforce guidelines to ensure sufficient crops. There should also be a co-ordinated effort globally to look into alternatives for biofuels.

Professor Quah continued: "As you know, the problem with biofuels is that notion that somehow it's cleaner than the fossil fuels. That has resulted in the demand for crops such as sugar cane, soya bean and so on and that in turn affects the price of these crops."

In view of increasing rice prices in Singapore, Professor Quah said consumers can learn to switch to other alternatives such as potatoes or other tubers. He added that the government must also ensure there are no hoarders of rice as this will create unnecessary demand.

Professor Quah, who is also against price controls, said: "I don't think that is the solution. I think that is something that will distort the market and would create a disincentive for our importers of rice..."

Higher food prices are expected to continue for most of this year. So while consumers can expect to pay more for commodities like rice, they can at least be assured that the supply will not be affected any time soon.

According to Professor Quah, this is because the bans imposed by some countries on their rice exports only apply to low-grade rice and Singapore imports only high-grade rice. - CNA/vm


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Singapore, Indonesian firms to build $55m power plant

By 2010, up to 800 tonnes of wood waste will be turned into electricity daily
Jessica Cheam, Straits Times 10 Apr 08;

SINGAPORE is getting a new power plant that will be able to service a town the size of Bishan by recycling wood waste into energy.

Home-grown Biofuel Industries yesterday announced beefed-up plans for the $55 million Jurong power plant it would develop jointly with Indonesian firm PT Medco Power Indonesia (MPI).

Biofuel had announced a smaller facility in August last year but chief executive Eugene Lee said plans expanded once MPI, a power-plant developer, entered the picture.

Construction of the 1.16ha facility will be handled by local firm Industrial Power Technology. It will start in the middle of this year and take two years to complete.

By 2010, up to 800 tonnes of wood waste - about 60 per cent of Singapore's daily output - will be collected from construction and horticultural activities and used as feedstock for the plant. The electricity will be transmitted directly to the national grid.

Biofuel currently exports its wood waste to neighbouring countries as feedstock.

The new plant signals the entry of a major Indonesian player into Singapore's energy generation market.

MPI is a unit of MedcoEnergi, which is listed on the Jakarta and Luxembourg stock exchanges. It generated revenue of US$982 million ($1.36 billion) last year.

MedcoEnergi's core business is oil and gas exploration and production, while MPI owns and operates gas-fired and geothermal power plants in Indonesia. MedcoEnergi also has operations in the United States, Libya and Oman.

MedcoEnergi president-director Fazil Alfitri said the Biofuel joint venture was a good opportunity to expand MPI's operations in the region.

'Size-wise, it's not too big, so the risk is manageable. The payback will not be in the short term, as this is a long-term investment for us,' he told The Straits Times. 'It also strengthens our position as a major green energy player.'

MPI is in negotiations with 'several lenders' over financing of the project.

The plant is expected to generate up to 135,000 carbon credits, thanks to the reduction of carbon emissions. These credits can be monetised via the United Nations' Clean Development Mechanism programme.

With current prices ranging from 8 euros ($17.40) to 12 euros, the credits could translate into about $2.3 million to $3.5 million.

Biofuel chairman Er Kwong Wah said MPI will bring its expertise and financing capability to the table. He added: 'This will help Biofuel to leapfrog into the power game.'

The new plant will be one of the largest privately owned power generators in Singapore.

A similar facility - IUT Global's 3MW plant to recycle food waste - is under construction.


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