161 Singapore schools receive Green Audit Awards

Channel NewsAsia 18 Apr 08;

SINGAPORE : Christ Church Secondary School has emerged as the top winner at this year's Green Audit Awards ceremony.

The school's environmentally-friendly projects have attracted quite a bit of attention.

For example, the students have come up with soaps that are made from used cooking oil, from their school canteen. The soaps are also scented with herbal oils from the school garden.

The students also came up with scented candles that can act as a mosquito-repellent.

Student Ho Jian Xiong said, "During the dengue period, when the dengue cases were very high, we actually added citronella to the aromatic candles. We publicised it during the Lantern Festival period, and during that time, when old folks were bringing their grandchildren out to light up their lanterns, they saw our candles. Grandparents are very conscientious of their family's health, so (the candles) were very popular back at that period."

Another project is a clock that is powered by not batteries but a combination of salt solution and potato skins.

Such creative and green solutions have led Christ Church Secondary to win the top award, three years in a row.

On Friday, it received the Sustained Achievement Award, which also came with a cash prize of S$100.

A total of 161 primary and secondary schools received their Green Audit Awards, which is given out by the Singapore Environment Council, to recognise schools' efforts to reduce and recycle resources.

The Green Audit Award programme was established in 2000.

It calculates the schools' usage of water and electricity, as well as the wastage generated by school facilities, such as canteens, offices, classrooms and gardens. - CNA/ms


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More Singapore motorists opt for bi-fuel cars to cut costs, save environment

Channel NewsAsia 18 Apr 08;

SINGAPORE: More motorists are converting their cars to run on two types of fuel - compressed natural gas (CNG) and regular petrol.

In Singapore, CNG conversion workshop C. Melchers-Galileo has taken the lead in converting regular cars to bi-fuel cars. It has seen a 50 per cent increase in demand since last November.

Gilbert von der Aue, sales manager at C. Melchers, said: "We started last November in this workshop. Ever since then, we've done 400 cars. We convert 80 cars per month currently, and from next month onwards we'll be doing 120 cars. We have a waiting list of about six months."

The initial outlay cost to convert a regular car is almost S$4,000. But in the long term, it will cost less to own a bi-fuel car.

"CNG is so much cheaper than petrol. It's about a third the cost of petrol. So I would save about 70 per cent if I drive on CNG instead of driving on petrol. On top of that, CNG runs cleaner so I don't have to do an oil change as often as I would if I had a petrol or diesel engine."

"It makes sense financially. You just have to pay one time but you save the environment. That's the whole reason for it," said a member of the public.

"If it's safe, if it's more economical, why not?" said another.

C. Melchers said it is targeting middle- to lower-income Singaporeans because they are the ones who will benefit the most from cost savings.

But when it comes to cars, cost is definitely not the only consideration.

"For me, I prefer performance cars. It's great to save the world, but I didn't get this car for nothing. I won't be converting soon," said a member of the public who drives a sports car.

But more may change their minds as petrol prices continue to rise. Currently, a litre of 95-octane unleaded petrol costs about S$2.08, but a kilogramme of CNG only costs between S$1.18 and S$1.24.

However, not everyone is swayed, because right now there are only two stations accessible to the public on mainland Singapore - one at Jalan Buroh in Jurong and the other at Mandai Road in the north.

Three more stations will be ready by the end of this year - at Jalan Bukit Merah, Bedok and Serangoon North. - CNA/ac


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Attenborough ends nature TV cycle, fears for future

Mike Collett-White, Reuters 18 Apr 08;

LONDON (Reuters) - David Attenborough has done more than just about anyone to teach us about our planet.

As he marks the end of his sweeping natural history television series, seen by hundreds of millions of people over 30 years, the British broadcaster is fearful of what the future holds for the Earth and its inhabitants.

"We've come to an end of a particular genre, a particular type of making programs," Attenborough told Reuters, referring to the series that began with "Life on Earth" in 1979 and ended earlier this year with "Life In Cold Blood".

"You could say that this is a survey of how the world looked and how it may not look the same in 50 years' time."

The series took Attenborough around the world and included memorable scenes like his encounter with mountain gorillas when he whispered to the camera as the animals surrounded him.

It also featured startling images from wildlife that were the result of pioneering camerawork and painstaking research. "Life on Earth" alone was watched by an estimated 500 million people worldwide, according to the BBC.

Attenborough, who began his career with the British Broadcasting Corporation in 1952, said the impact of global warming over the last 50 years meant that making the same programs today would be difficult, if not impossible.

"There are some things in that series that would be very difficult to film again, they are much more difficult to find."

He added that he did not know of a single "major" vertebrate species that had become extinct during his career, but serious risks to plants, animals and humans lay ahead.

"The plain, simple, overwhelming fact of the matter is that since I started making programs, there are three times as many people on the Earth," he said.

"It is inevitable that you are going to make huge inroads into what was wild nature and that process is going on. It's going to get worse before it gets better."

"DEEPLY DEPRESSING"

Attenborough, younger brother of film director Richard, agreed with some scientists' prediction that it was too late to reverse the impact of climate change.

"Whatever we do now the world is going to change. The question is can we slow down those changes or reduce them? One clutches at straws to try and find something in this bleak picture which is not deeply depressing."

Among those straws are the fact that governments are taking the issue seriously and popular awareness of the dangers climate change poses to the environment has spread.

"People recognize that the only conceivable way in which you'll save the life in the sea and the climate in the air is by international agreement," he explained. "It's damned difficult."

His comments came as 17 countries responsible for 80 percent of greenhouse gas emissions met in Paris to find common ground on how to thrash out a new treaty to fight climate change.

The publicly funded BBC is releasing a DVD box set of four of Attenborough's documentary series to coincide with Earth Day on April 22. The environmental awareness campaign organizes events around the world each year, and dates back to 1970.

Attenborough welcomed popular movements promoting a sustainable environment, saying young people were what counted.

"It's all very well for me crying doom and gloom, but the people who are going to suffer are my grandchildren, and my grandchildren are certainly exorcised about. They are outraged at what's happening to the wild places of the Earth."

At 81, the broadcaster said he was not about to retire, although his globetrotting filmmaking days may be over.

"Next February is the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin and I am making a program about evolution.

"(There will not be) a lot (of travel) because a great deal of the stuff one wants to show I've filmed. Ever mindful of the license holder's money and my carbon footprint, I'm not getting on to a lot of airplanes."

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


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Freshening of deep Antarctic waters worries experts

David Fogarty, Reuters 18 Apr 08;

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Scientists studying the icy depths of the sea around Antarctica have detected changes in salinity that could have profound effects on the world's climate and ocean currents.

The scientists returned to the southern Australian city of Hobart on Thursday after a one-month voyage studying the Southern Ocean to see how it is changing and what those changes might mean for global climate patterns.

Voyage leader Steve Rintoul said his team found that salty, dense water that sinks near the edge of Antarctica to the bottom of the ocean about 5 km (3 miles) down was becoming fresher and more buoyant.

So-called Antarctic bottom water helps power the great ocean conveyor belt, a system of currents spanning the Southern, Pacific, Indian and Atlantic Oceans that shifts heat around the globe.

"The main reason we're paying attention to this is because it is one of the switches in the climate system and we need to know if we are about to flip that switch or not," said Rintoul of Australia's government-backed research arm the CSIRO.

"If that freshening trend continues for long enough, eventually the water near Antarctica would be too light, too buoyant to sink and that limb of the global-scale circulation would shut down," he said on Friday.

Cold, salty water also sinks to the depths in the far north Atlantic Ocean near Greenland and, together with the vast amount of water that sinks off Antarctica, this drives the ocean conveyor belt.

This system brings warm water into the far north Atlantic, making Europe warmer than it would otherwise be, and also drives the large flow of upper ocean water from the tropical Pacific to the Indian Ocean through the Indonesia Archipelago.

If these currents were to slow or stop, the world's climate would eventually be thrown into chaos.

"We don't see any evidence yet that the amount of bottom water that's sinking has declined. But by becoming fresher and less dense it's moving in the direction of an ultimate shutdown."

Rintoul said results of the bottom water samples in the Ross Sea directly south of New Zealand and off Antarctica's Adelie Land further to the west, were a crucial finding.

"We didn't know that before we left but it's now clear that both of those regions are becoming fresher for some reason."

GLOBAL WARMING TO BLAME?

During the voyage, scientists from Australia, Britain, France and the United States measured salinity, carbon dioxide and iron concentrations as well as currents between Antarctica and Australia.

Rintoul said his team are studying if faster melting of icesheets or sea ice is the source of the fresher water but he said it was too early to tell if global warming was to blame.

Over the coming months, his team will study oxygen isotopes collected from water samples.

"Oxygen isotopes act as a tracer of ice melt and that information should help pin down exactly what the cause of the freshening is in the deep ocean," said Rintoul, of the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre.

"The leading hypothesis at the moment for why it's freshening is that the floating ice around Antarctica is melting more rapidly than in the past."

He pointed to studies showing winds around Antarctica changing because of global warming and the ozone hole.

"The most likely scenario is that those changes in winds have changed the circulation of the ocean, in particular caused more upwelling of relatively warm water from below and that could have caused the increased melting of ice around Antarctica," he said.

"The next challenge over the coming months and year will be to see just how well we can this pin down."

(Editing by Jeremy Laurence)


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A species threatened by avarice of man: the white rhino

Michael McCarthy, The Independent 18 Apr 08;

It has been coming for a long time – the first extinction of what zoologists refer to, ironically, as the Charismatic Megafauna, the group of big wild animals that have always captured our imagination, from lions and tigers to elephants and giraffes.

And if it cannot be stopped by the revolutionary technique that we report on today, the disappearance of the northern white rhino will mark a milestone in man's unhappy impact on the natural world.

It will show that, despite the most tremendous conservation efforts, some of the great beasts of the Earth simply cannot be saved.

The moment may nearly be here. The northern white rhino is a creature that is now as close to the brink of extinction as it is possible to get without toppling over, with perhaps as few as three animals left in the wild, and a tiny population of less than a dozen held in zoos across the US and Eastern Europe, which is probably non-viable from a breeding point of view.

The wild animals have the misfortune to exist in a single site, the Garamba National Park, which lies in one of the most war-torn countries in the world, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), near the border of another such ravaged land, Sudan.

The collapse of civil order in so much of Africa in recent decades has been the bane of this species, which, besides the DRC, once ranged over north-west Uganda, southern Chad, south-western Sudan and the eastern side of the Central African Republic.

As late as the early Sixties, there were thought to be about 2,000 northern white rhinos left but, during the next 20 years, poaching started to take a toll and eventually devastated the population until, by 1984, the numbers were down to 15. The poaching was driven by a specific demand – for rhino horn, which was used to make dagger handles in Yemen.

International efforts were then focused on saving the animal and, under a strictly monitored protection regime, the numbers climbed back to about 30 by 1993. But then the Rwandan genocide spilled over into civil war in the DRC, and preserving wildlife became both a much lower priority for the Congolese government and a much more dangerous affair for park wardens.

Several of the guards at Garamba have been killed in clashes with poachers, and the enforcement regime in this desperately poor country has simply not been able to prevent the rhino's slide towards extinction.


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Scientists look for link between damage to the Ningaloo reef and climate change

Scientists look for link between coral bleaching and global warming
ABC News 18 Apr 08;

Marine Scientists are trying to determine whether damage to the Ningaloo reef is linked to climate change.

Researchers believe 1.5 square kilometres of reef in Coral Bay was bleached during spawning several weeks ago.

A number of fish and clams were also killed.

Bleaching occurs when wind and ocean currents fail to disperse spawn causing a lack of oxygen in the water.

Marine Scientist Dr Chris Simpson says climate change could be causing the problem.

"It does look like it's becoming more frequent and that could possibly be related to changes in the climate and things like that where the winds aren't as strong and things like that but of course that's all very speculative at this point in time," he said.

A more detailed study of Ningaloo planned for next year may now be brought forward to assess the damage.


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Asia Dive Expo sets standards in conservation awareness

BYM news 17 Apr 08;

Asia Dive Expo 2008 (ADEX) opens today at Suntec Singapore with a bold new agenda for the regional dive community – “Save The Seas, Be A Diver”. ADEX this year focus on the need for greater awareness of marine conservation as it runs from 18-20 April 2008 at Halls 602 and 603. ADEX 2008 is opened today by Mr. Francis Lee, Chairman of Marine Roundtable Singapore Chapter.

This year has particular significance for the marine conservation movement. 2008 has been designated the International Year of the Reef (IYOR), a worldwide initiative to raise awareness of the value and importance of coral reefs. Singapore will be joining 50 countries around the world to improve understanding of the threats to these endangered reefs.

ADEX 2008 will welcome the presence and input of top international marine conservationists such as Richard Leck from the World Wildlife Fund’s Coral Triangle Program, Christine Ward-Paige from Global Shark Awareness and Julian Hyde from Reef Check.

Said Herman Ho, Managing Director of ADEX organiser TMX Show Productions Pte Ltd, "The main attraction of ADEX this year is EcoVillage @ ADEX 2008, where a combination of exciting activities including seminars, film fests, photography competitions, educational tours, ADEX auctions and ADEX merchandise.

“The activities in EcoVillage @ ADEX are designed to foster a sense of environmentalism as a way of life amongst both adults and students. All proceeds from ADEX merchandise will be donated to a major marine conservation cause, the International Year of the Reef 2008.” Herman added.

ADEX visitors can learn all about regional and even local marine conservation initiatives such as the Coral Nursery, a project launched to preserve and proliferate natural corals by The National Parks Board (NParks) and its partners Keppel Group, National University of Singapore and National Environment Agency.

Additionally, ADEX has lined up an exciting program of screenings, presentations, talks, seminars and activities which will educate and entertain on an array of dive-related subjects. Many of the films being screened earned plaudits at the Celebrate the Sea Festival, which awards the best of the dive industry’s vibrant underwater film-makers.

"In line with ADEX’s conservation theme this year, many of our presentations and screenings reflect an environmental consciousness and an awareness of the delicate nature of our planet’s marine eco-systems,” said Mr. Ho.

Aside from the educational aspects, as always at ADEX there will also be a generous number of prizes, giveaways, dollar deals and fun activities like the Scuba Tryouts where potential divers can learn the basics in a safe environment.

ADEX 2008 sees the return of regular major name exhibitors including Bauer Compressors Asia Pte Ltd., Beuchat International SA, and Coltri Sub Asia Pacific. They are joined this year by new names like Dive Junkie, EKO Asia Pacific, Innerspace Dive Explorers and OPTIMUS.

Amongst those destinations touting their pristine azure waters will be Christmas Island Tourism Association, Philippines Tourism Board, Santika – Thalassa Dive Resort, Minahasa Lagoon, Redang Kalong Resort and Walea Dive Resort.

Supporting ADEX again this year are leading dive and conservation related associations and organisations including the Diving Equipment & Marketing Association (DEMA), the British Sub Aqua Club (BSAC), Divers Alert Network (DAN), the International Association of Nitrox and Technical Divers (IANTD), Scuba Schools International (SSI), the Singapore Underwater Federation (SUF) and the Singapore Environment Council (SEC).

More about the ADEX events on the wildsingapore happenings blog.


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Best of our wild blogs: 18 Apr 08


What's wrong with an Ubin-Tekong reservoir?
on the Pulau Ubin Stories blog

Ode to Cyrene
reef in poetry on the colourful clouds blog part of the cyrene blogging carnival.

Rock filling near Cyrene with holding area off Labrador Nature Reserve from an MPA notice on the wildfilms blog

Octopus antics on Singapore shores
more about this marvellous mollusc on the singapore celebrates our reefs blog

Snail snacking Sibia
on the bird ecology blog

Monkey Poem
on the budak blog

Javan Pond Heron in flight
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Book Review: Stirring It Up
by Gary Hirshberg on the AsiaIsGreen blog

Roadkill is 93% amphibian
on the New Scientist Environment blog


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After Marina Barrage, Tekong-Ubin reservoir

Letter from Syu Ying Kwok, Straits Times Forum 18 Apr 08;

WITH the Marina Barrage near completion, this new reservoir will help to provide Singapore with enough water for the next few years. But for true water independence, Singapore must continue to look for new water sources for the next few decades, especially before 2061 when the water agreement between Singapore and Malaysia expires.

Singapore's north-east region is flanked by two large islands - Pulau Ubin and Pulau Tekong. Singapore should consider building three barrages to enclose one of the potentially largest reservoirs in Singapore - connecting Singapore to Pulau Ubin, Pulau Ubin to Pulau Tekong and Pulau Tekong to Singapore. If we can do this, the volume of this new body of water will be at least twice that of MacRitchie, Lower Peirce, Seletar and the new Marina reservoirs combined.

With these barrages in place, the growth and importance of both Pulau Ubin and Pulau Tekong will take a leap forward. Many important functions can be moved from the main island to these smaller ones, relieving much precious land resource.

Best of all, national servicemen will be able to go home faster from their training camp if a barrage is built between Pulau Tekong and the main island. The value of the coastal area around this reservoir will increase as recreational activities prolific in this largest fresh-water body in Singapore.

With dramatic changes in global weather recently, there is a new urgency to secure and store fresh-water supplies. Even though the cost of processed Newater has come down dramatically, the opportunity to create a new reservoir is still important as a fresh-water reservoir is still the cheapest source of supply. Flood control - in view of future rising water levels caused by global warming - will also be addressed with these new barrages: They will be able to protect a significant part of the coast.

As Singapore grows, we need to continue our relentless search for new water sources - and do it quickly. In the new Marina Reservoir, salinity is lower as a larger portion consists of fresh water from the river. Thus, even if we can enclose this new Tekong-Ubin reservoir, we are basically closing off a body of pure sea water and it may take decades before it becomes the more useable fresh water.

Related links

What's wrong with an Ubin-Tekong reservoir?

find out on the Pulau Ubin Stories blog

Dam idea for Tekong-Ubin reservoir more thoughts on the wildfilms blog


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Thailand promises to step up export of rice

Straits Times 18 Apr 08;

BANGKOK - THAILAND - the world's largest rice supplier - has guaranteed to export a near-record nine million tonnes of the grain this year as prices of the staple continue to soar on fears of shortages.

The Bangkok Post yesterday reported Deputy Prime Minister and Commerce Minister Mingkwan Saengsuwan as saying that Thailand could export more than that amount 'at a reasonable price'.

He pledged that the country would not take unfair advantage by raising the export price of rice.

He also told the paper the Foreign Trade Department's director-general and representatives of six Thai rice-exporting firms were going to Hong Kong and Macau to evaluate market demands and reassure international buyers that they could buy rice from Thailand.

Last year, Singapore imported 60 per cent of its rice from Thailand.

Mr Mingkwan reassured Thais that domestic demand would also be met. He said there was no need for anyone to hoard rice.

But there was little sign of the crisis abating elsewhere in the region yesterday.

In a clear sign of the strain on supplies after major exporters began to curb exports earlier this year, the Philippines yesterday managed to secure only two-thirds of the half a million tonnes of rice it had sought in tender.

A Bangladesh tender to import 25,000 tonnes of white rice closed on Wednesday without attracting any response.

And the offers which it did receive were between US$872.50 (S$1,180) and US$1,220 a tonne, sharply higher than the just over US$700 it paid last month.

There has been no let-up in the price rises, with rice futures surging 2 per cent to a record high on the Chicago futures market for the third straight session on Wednesday.

Early trading yesterday showed no let-up in price movement.

Thai 100 per cent B grade white rice, considered to be the world's benchmark, has hit US$950 per tonne, free on board - three times its price at the start of last year.

Thai PM says high rice prices helping farmers
Channel NewsAsia 20 Apr 08;

BANGKOK: Thailand's Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej on Sunday told Thais to put up with soaring rice prices because poor farmers in the kingdom were benefiting from the record highs.

"If you sacrifice and pay more for rice – a bit more, not much more – it will benefit farmers," he said during his weekly address to the nation.

The benchmark Thai variety, Pathumthani fragrant rice, was priced on April 9 at 956 dollars per tonne for export, up about 50 percent from a month earlier, the Thai Rice Exporters Association said in its price survey.

International demand for Thai rice has soared after other top exporters Vietnam and India imposed limits on exports to ensure domestic supply.

This has pushed up domestic rice costs in Thailand, which have soared in line with the export price.

Samak said the government understood that rising food and fuel costs were taking their toll on Thai families, and reassured people that the government was looking into ways of boosting incomes. He did not elaborate.

Poor farmers in Thailand say they are not all benefiting from the record prices. Few can afford storage so they sell their rice as soon as it is harvested, while the rising cost of fuel is also a problem.

Samak has previously urged the public and producers not to hoard rice, promising there would be enough for everyone in Thailand, where the revered grain is eaten three times a day and is farmed by 3.6 million families.

Samak heads the People Power Party, which swept to power in elections in December largely because of the backing of the rural poor in Thailand's northeastern region.- AFP/so


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Six-year drought nearly wipes out Australian rice output

Switch to other crops among reasons for soaring prices of rice worldwide
Straits Times 18 Apr 08;

DENILIQUIN (AUSTRALIA) - SOUTHERN Australia's Deniliquin rice mill once processed enough grain to feed 20 million people a day, but it closed in December, after six years of drought almost destroyed Australia's rice crop.

The collapse of Australia's rice production - which has fallen by 98 per cent - is one of several factors contributing to a doubling of rice prices.

Drought affects every agricultural industry here, from sheep herding to the cultivation of wine grapes.

The chief executive of the National Farmers' Federation in Australia, Mr Ben Fargher, says: 'Climate change is potentially the biggest risk to Australian agriculture.'

But it is the effect on rice that has made the greatest impact on the rest of the world.

Scientists believe it is among the earliest signs that a warming planet is starting to affect food production.

And it has already spurred significant changes in Australia's agricultural heartland.

Some farmers are abandoning rice, which requires large amounts of water, to plant less water-intensive crops such as wheat or wine grapes, while others have sold their fields or water rights, usually to grape growers.

Scientists and economists worry that the reallocation of scarce water resources away from rice and other grains and towards more lucrative crops and livestock threatens poor countries that import rice as a dietary staple.

Other countries are confronting different pressures on rice-growing land.

Manila yesterday announced a ban on converting farmland to other uses in the latest move to cut imports of rice, which have more than doubled in price since the beginning of the year.

The Philippines - currently the world's top rice importer - said the ban was aimed at property developers cashing in on a booming market by snapping up choice farmland.

A day earlier, with Manila unveiling plans to become self-sufficient in rice and other vital crops by 2010, Agrarian Reform Secretary Nasser Pangandaman had said: 'There is a need for us to review our existing guidelines.

'We have to strike a balance between food production and development.'

And in a sign of further trouble ahead, China yesterday revealed that its farmland had shrunk to near-critical levels last year.

The rush in modern China to turn traditional farming areas into industrial zones or residential areas for expanding cities was again one of the factors behind the decline, the China Daily said, citing the Land Ministry.

The ministry said the amount of arable land fell by 40,700ha to 121.73 million ha.

The government has for many years warned of a critical situation when the amount of farming land fell to 120 million ha, and it is now trying to devise ways to use what is left more efficiently.

NEW YORK TIMES, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE, REUTERS


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Road Kill: Too Many Frogs Croak

Clara Moskowitz, LiveScience.com Yahoo News 17 Apr 08;

Ribbit, ribbit, ribbit, croak. Dozens of species of frogs and other amphibians end up as road kill all too frequently, a new study finds.

Many of these species are already endangered due to habitat loss, disease, climate change and other factors, and the added threat of whizzing cars on the highway may contribute to their decline, researchers speculate. About a third of worldwide amphibian species are threatened and hundreds have already gone extinct over the past two decades alone.

Over 17 months researchers drove along 11 miles of roads in Tippecanoe County, Ind. and documented the road kill they found. The scientists counted 10,500 dead animals, of which 95 percent were frogs and other amphibians.

"On hot summer nights when it rains, there are literally thousands of frogs out there," said Andrew DeWoody, a zoologist at Purdue University in Indiana who led the study.

Amphibians are often-slimy, four-legged creatures whose body-heat is regulated by their external environment (sometimes called cold-blooded). They play a vital role in many ecosystems, both as predators of insects and as food for larger animals.

The highway victims found by the researchers included 142 eastern tiger salamanders, a finding DeWoody said was troubling.

"The absolute number might not look that large, but most of these individuals were mature, up to 10 years old," DeWoody said. "Many of them were gravid, or females bearing eggs on an annual trip to breeding grounds where they often lay 500 to 1,000 eggs. This could make a potentially big difference for the population."

Along with the thousands of amphibians the highway-trolling researchers found, there were also 79 opossums, 43 raccoons, 36 chimney swifts, 35 garter snakes and 4 white-tailed deer.

DeWoody said his official tallies were probably underestimates, because many animals are scavenged, moved or degraded beyond recognition. He estimated about five times as many animals died on the roads than his team was able to count.

To help reduce the number of road kill victims, the researchers suggest building structures such as underpasses, viaducts and overpasses to allow wildlife safe passage, as well as special fences to keep animals off roads.

The study, funded by the Joint Transportation Research Program, a partnership of the Indiana Department of Transportation and Purdue, was published online in the latest issue of the journal Herpetological Conservation and Biology.


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Turtles to be climate change canaries

WWF website 17 Apr 08;

Just as canaries help miners monitor underground gases, marine turtles are emerging as excellent indicators of the effects of climate change.

“Turtles are a really good way to study climate change because they depend on healthy beaches as well as mangroves, sea grass beds, coral reefs and deep ocean ecosystems to live”, said Dr. Lucy Hawkes, coordinator of an initiative to develop adaptation strategies for climate change impacts to turtles.

As part of the initiative, WWF launched a new website today, Adaptation to Climate Change in Marine Turtles (ACT).

“Understanding of how climate change may affect the beaches, the reef and the open ocean will not only benefit endangered sea turtle populations, but also the millions of people who live along the coastlines of the world and depend upon marine resources and environmental services.”

The public, educators, conservationists and scientists will be able to share information and projects to try to gain a better picture of how climate change will affect turtles and what might be done to combat the impacts.

According to the latest reports by the International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), our environment will be altered dramatically over the next years by increasing temperatures, increased severity and frequency of storm events and rising sea levels.

These effects could be devastating within low situated tropical areas, where the majority of the population depends on coastal resources and tourism.

The Caribbean is one such important region that is greatly threatened by climate change and is also host to globally important populations of sea turtles.

By 2010 the project hopes to understand the current state of knowledge about the impacts of climate change on marine turtles and their habitats with a global network of marine turtle and climate specialists, and make management recommendations for their conservation.

It is an initiative of WWF through a grant from the MacArthur Foundation and support from Hewlett Packard.

The website, hosting free downloads, information and latest scientific findings, can be accessed at: http://www.panda.org/lac/marineturtles/act


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Russian Mother Who Took On Oil Giant And Won

James Kilner, PlanetArk 18 Apr 08;

MOSCOW - When Russia's government announced a plan to build an oil pipeline near Lake Baikal, Marina Rikhvanova, a softly spoken 46-year-old from Siberia, could not stand by and watch.

The world's largest freshwater lake, Baikal is home to hundreds of unique species of animals and plants. "We knew we had to do something, the lake is just too important," Rikhvanova told Reuters in an intervieW

Days after she led 5,000 people in a protest against the pipeline plan in 2006, President Vladimir Putin ordered it to be rerouted away from the lake. Now, her role has been recognised with an international award from green activists.

At a ceremony on Sunday in San Francisco, Rikhvanova was presented with one of six annual Goldman Environmental Prizes -- an award some campaigners call the Nobel prize of grassroots environmental activism.

"Of course I didn't do it all myself," Rikhvanova told Reuters by telephone as she travelled to the awards ceremony.

"Greenpeace and WWF and other organisations all helped. But we had to do something locally too."

David Gordon, head of the environmental group Pacific Environment, which nominated Rikhvanova for the award, said she was being too modest.

"She really deserves this award," he said. "WWF, Greenpeace and Pacific Environment would not have been able to do this alone. It needed somebody to say 'I am local' and to stand up and take action."


CONTAMINATION RISK

Russian pipeline monopoly Transneft is building the multi-billion-dollar pipeline to supply Siberian crude to energy-hungry China and Japan. The original route had it skirting 400 metres (yards) from the lake's northern shore.

Environmentalists said a leak from a pipeline so close would have a disastrous impact on the lake.

Environmentalists credit the Irkutsk protest with persuading Putin to tell Transneft to switch course away from Lake Baikal.

Victories for civil society against big business in Russia are rare but Rikhvanova's was clear -- she had helped persuade Putin to back local activists against Transneft.

Rikhvanova trained as a biologist at the university in Irkutsk and in the 1990s set up the Baikal Environmental Wave group of local activists.

Her activism has come at a cost. Police have raided Rikhvanova's offices and last year young men armed with clubs attacked activists camping near a planned uranium plant. The attackers killed one of the activists.

Police later detained Rikhvanova's son, and accused him of being one of the attackers. He has denied acting violently. His mother says the charges against her son are part of a elaborate campaign to compromise her work.

The Goldman Prize comes with $150,000 that Rikhvanova said she will use to finance future campaigns.

She said she has a lot more work to do to protect Lake Baikal. Rikhvanova is building support against a Soviet-built pulp mill on the southern shores of the lake that has spewed toxic waste into the lake since opening around 40 years ago.

The planned nuclear plant, also in the region, will take deliveries of uranium from around the world, enrich it and then ship the fuel to atomic power stations in other countries.

"We have a lot to do and must keep going," Rikhvanova said.

(Editing by Richard Williams)


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Greenland glacial lake vanishes in warming drama

Will Dunham, Reuters 17 Apr 08;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Surface melting fueled by climate warming can trigger dramatic events on the vast Greenland ice sheet such as a lake suddenly vanishing through a crack with force of Niagara Falls, experts said on Thursday.

Rising global temperatures are expected to cause an increase in meltwater in frozen expanses like the Greenland ice sheet, and this meltwater often forms sizable lakes.

Scientists have worried that when this increase in meltwater reaches the base of the Greenland ice sheet, it could further lubricate its slide over bedrock toward the sea, causing it to shrink more quickly than expected.

But researchers at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts and the University of Washington found that while this surface melt indeed does lubricate the bottom of the ice sheet, that process by itself does not seem to be enough to cause catastrophic loss of ice sheet mass as some have feared.

Surface meltwater was responsible for only a small amount of the movement of six outlet glaciers -- those that discharge ice to the ocean -- that the scientists monitored.

In the summers of 2006 and 2007, the scientists used seismic instruments, water-level monitors and Global Positioning System sensors to study two such lakes and the motion of the surrounding ice sheet.

They also used helicopter surveys and satellite imagery to track the progress of glaciers moving toward the coast.

In July 2006, the scientists documented the sudden, complete draining of a lake measuring 2.2 square miles (5.7 sq km). The lake split open the ice sheet from top to bottom. Like a draining bathtub, the entire lake emptied from the bottom, disappearing in 24 hours -- through 3,200 feet of ice -- mostly in a 90-minute span.

"It's extremely dramatic," scientist Sarah Das of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, who helped lead the research published in the journal Science, said in a telephone interview. "The discharge during that period exceeded the flow of Niagara Falls."

As sunlight and warm air melt surface ice, thousands of so-called supraglacial lakes appear atop the Greenland ice sheet every summer. From past satellite images, scientists have known that these supraglacial lakes can disappear quickly but did not know precisely how this was occurring.

"Greenland is losing significant (ice) mass each year and it has been adding a growing contribution of ice to the ocean -- and therefore a growing contribution to sea level rise. That has been accelerating," Das said.

"What we can show from our findings is that the mechanism responsible for most of that acceleration is not from surface meltwater enhanced flow, which had been proposed as perhaps one of the mechanisms," Das said.

The University of Washington's Ian Joughin, another of the researchers, said scientists are trying to figure out the other mechanisms contributing to the current ice loss in Greenland that likely will increase as the climate warms further.

(Editing by Eric Walsh)

Icy Lake Drains Faster than Niagara Falls
Andrea Thompson, LiveScience.com Yahoo News 17 Apr 08;

In July of 2006, the frigid water of a large meltwater lake atop the Greenland Ice Sheet drained in less than two hours, cascading down through the ice sheet faster than the rushing waters of Niagara Falls.

Scientists were awed by the event. And today they explained what happened.

The water gushed all the way down to the bed of the ice sheet, through almost 0.6 miles (1 kilometer) of ice. The flood doubled the average speed of the ice sheet's slide across the bedrock underneath it.

Scientists have long suspected that surface meltwater could drain to the base of an ice sheet and lubricate the ice sheet's flow out to sea. But no one had ever observed the phenomenon - until now.

The new observations, detailed in an early online April 17 issue of the journal Science, show that while the seepage can significantly accelerate the summer movements of large stretches of the ice sheet, it has little effect on the movements of outlet glaciers, the tongues of the ice sheet that go out to the ocean where their fronts break off as icebergs.

Understanding the mechanics of ice flow has become particularly important because of the concerns that global warming, which can enhance surface melt, could cause sea levels to rise dramatically.

Rapid drain

Researchers placed monitoring instruments in and around the 2.2 square-mile (5.6 square-kilometer) glacial lake in the summer of 2006. Ten days after they left the area, a large crack developed over almost the whole span of the lake and all 11.6 billion gallons of water started to drain like a big bathtub.

"We found clear evidence that supraglacial lakes - the pools of meltwater that form on the surface in summer - can actually drive a crack through the ice sheet in a process called hydrofracture," said study team member Sarah Das of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. "If there is a crack or defect in the surface that is large enough, and a sufficient reservoir of water to keep that crack filled, it can create a conduit all the way down to the bed of the ice sheet."

These new findings showed scientists that the conduits that drain surface meltwater, called moulins, can funnel it all the way to the base of the ice and confirmed some long-held suspicions that this meltwater could enhance the seaward movement of the ice.

Slippery slope

Glaciers are like frozen, slow-moving rivers. They build up over time through snowfall, but gravity also tugs them inexorably toward the sea. Glacier speeds vary from, well, glacial, to upwards of 65 feet (20 meters) a day. Jakobshavn Isbrae has been clocked at this terrific speed.

"To influence flow, you have to change the conditions underneath the ice sheet, because what's going on beneath the ice dictates how quickly the ice is flowing," Das explained. "If the ice sheet is frozen to the bedrock or has very little water available, then it will flow much more slowly than if it has a lubricating and pressurized layer of water underneath to reduce friction."

By the same token, you're more likely to slip on a wet floor than a dry one.

Das and her colleagues found that the lubricating effect of the meltwater can double the speed in some of the broad, slow-moving areas of the ice sheet.

But the lubricating effect on the faster-moving outlet glaciers is less than scientists had previously thought, accounting for only a few percent of the movement of these glaciers.

More important to speeding up the flow of outlet glaciers is the calving of icebergs into the sea, which may also be affected by warming temperatures, said team member Ian Joughin of the University of Washington.

Das and Joughin's work shows that "we can expect the ice sheet in a warming world to shrink somewhat faster than previously expected, but [that] this mechanism will not cause greatly faster shrinkage," said Richard Alley of Penn State, who was not involved in the study.

The study was funded by National Science Foundation, NASA, and the WHOI.


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March the warmest on record over world land surfaces

Randolph E. Schmid, Associated Press Yahoo News 18 Apr 08;

Planet Earth continues to run a fever. Last month was the warmest March on record over land surfaces of the world and the second warmest overall worldwide. For the United States, however, it was just an average March, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported Thursday.

NOAA's National Climatic Data Center said high temperatures over much of Asia pulled the worldwide land temperature up to an average of 40.8 degrees Fahrenheit (4.9 degrees Celsius), 3.2 degrees (1.8 C) warmer than the average in the 20th century.

While Asia had its greatest January snow cover this year, warm March readings caused a rapid melt and March snow cover on the continent was a record low.

Global ocean temperatures were the 13th warmest on record, with a weakening of the La Nina conditions that cool the tropical Pacific Ocean.

Overall land and sea surface temperatures for the world were second highest in 129 years of record keeping, trailing only 2002, the agency said.

Warming conditions in recent decades have continued to raise concern about global climate change, which many weather and climate experts believe is related to gases released into the atmosphere by industrial and transportation processes.

The climate center said that for the 48 contiguous United States it was about average, ranking as the 63rd warmest March in 113 years of record keeping.

The average temperature for the U.S. in March was 42 degrees, 0.4 degrees below the 20th century mean.

The agency said only Rhode Island, New Mexico and Arizona were warmer than average, while near-average temperatures occurred in 39 other states. The monthly temperature for Alaska was the 17th warmest on record.

The snow pack declined in many parts of the West in March, but the Western snow pack remains the best in more than a decade thanks to heavy snowfall December through February.

For the month, nine states from Oklahoma to Vermont were much wetter than average, with Missouri experiencing its second wettest March on record.

Moderate to extreme drought remains in much of the Southeast despite rainfall in the middle of the month.


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