Best of our wild blogs: 18 Aug 08


N. Sivasothi updates on the marine conservation community
video clip of his talk during the launch of International Year of the Reef on the singapore celebrates our reefs blog

Reclamation works at Sentosa continues
from an MPA notice on the wild shores of singapore blog

Bugs by the beach
a look at intertidal insects on the annotated budak blog

Baby blue eyes
on the budak blog

Changi shore with lunar eclipse
on the wonderful creations blog

The Life History of the Yamfly
on the butterflies of singapore blog

Nest decorated with plentiful silk/floss
from Bird Ecology Study Group blog


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Behind world food crisis is a world water crisis

WWF website 18 Aug 08;
WWF Director General James Leape will tell the opening session of World Water Week in Stockholm that a world water crisis is a key factor behind current global anxieties over faltering food supplies and rising food costs.

"Behind the world food crisis is a global freshwater crisis, expected to rapidly worsen as climate change impacts intensify," Mr Leape said. "Irrigation-fed agriculture provides 45 per cent of the world’s food supplies, and without it, we could not feed our planet's population of six billion people."

Many of the world's irrigation areas, however, from wealthy to less developed nations, are highly stressed and drawing more water than rivers and groundwater reserves can sustain.

Freshwater food reserves are also declining in the face of the quickening pace of dam construction and unsustainable water extractions from rivers.

"Millions of people depend on freshwater fisheries as a major food source," Mr Leape said. "Freshwater food stocks can provide up to 80 per cent of dietary protein for the 60 million people of the Mekong basin, for example. And that's just one river."

WWF is taking a major role in World Water Week to highlight a host of other water related problems and their potential solutions.

Faltering river systems are increasing conflict, reducing power production, weakening important aquatic transport networks and increasing health risks - not least through reduced performance in transporting and naturally treating wastes.

Wetlands in particular play a major role in reducing disaster impacts and in climate regulation, with peatlands covering just 3-4 per cent of world land area but containing an estimated 25-30 per cent of the carbon in terrestrial vegetation and soils. Release of this stored carbon would be enough to raise global temperatures by 2-3ยบ C.

"Freshwater systems are home to around 40 per cent of all the species on earth," Mr Leape said. "And our impact is shown by the fact that we are losing these species faster than any other."

Mr Leape said the world was a long way from being ready for a worsening water crisis, with profligate water use still the rule rather than the exception, protection and management schemes for only a minority of freshwater reserves and effective protection and management for only a minority of schemes.

"A global treaty for co-operatively managing rivers and lakes that cross or form borders is still languishing in limbo more than a decade after being approved by a clear majority in the United Nations," Mr Leape said.

WWF will spend the week in Stockholm outlining solutions to the water crisis grounded in its work with governments, business and communities world wide.

"Water management for human needs alone is damaging the natural systems we all depend on," Mr Leape said. "No management is even worse.

"Maintaining the health of freshwater ecosystems has to become one of the major aims of freshwater management generally."

WWF is to present studies showing the water footprint of the UK and conference hosts Sweden extends to some of the driest and most under-privileged areas of the world - but both water exporting and water importing areas can do much to reduce their demand on water resources.

"We are also concerned that the world continues to mainly discuss adaption to climate change rather than doing it," Mr Leape said. "We have been doing it, all over the world, and we have found that that improving the health of freshwater ecosystems now makes a great contribution to improving their resilience to climate impacts in the future.

"It is ironic that currently it is not foresight and planning but major natural disasters that lead to significant efforts to repair damaged rivers and wetlands. Foresight and planning now will reduce the risk and damage from future extreme weather events, while having many economic, social and environmental benefits."

Of the world's total water resources, 97.5 per cent is salty and of the remaining but mainly frozen freshwater, only one per cent is available for human use.

"Even this tiny proportion, however, would be enough for humans to live on earth if the water cycle was properly functioning and if we managed our water use wisely," Mr Leape said.


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Malaysian project will 'block Johor Straits'

Satiman Jamin, New Straits Times 18 Aug 08;

JOHOR BARU: Residents of Kampung Mohd Amin here are questioning the rationale of continuing with the Lido Boulevard project when the scenic bridge project may be revived. The century-old village will be affected as it is situated opposite the stretch of Lido Beach which is the proposed project site.

Lido Boulevard, a high end residential and commercial project, will be built on a reclaimed stretch of the Johor Straits, with reclamation work due to start next month, leaving just 50m of waterway on some stretches.

Kampung Mohd Amin Umno youth chief Saiful Adli Jamian, 38, said the Lido Boulevard development would negate the benefits of a bridge as there would no longer be a waterway.

He said the most important impact of a bridge, strategically and environmentally, would not be realised with the Lido Boulevard blocking the Johor Straits.

"If the Lido Boulevard project is allowed to proceed next month, it will only strengthen Singapore strategically.

"Vessels passing by the Johor Straits will have to enter Singapore's water."

Saiful said the Lido Boulevard project should be reconsidered due to many factors, including the impact on the environment, local community and future developments, especially if the government anticipated that the bridge project would be revived.
"If the project is to proceed, they might as well extend the reclamation works of Lido Boulevard and create a second causeway to Singapore because Malaysian territorial waters will not be there anymore."

He said extending the Lido Boulevard project to Singapore would create a 2.4km-wide causeway, a cost-saving alternative to the bridge with the same environmental and strategic costs to Malaysia.

Saiful said the loss of Pedra Branca to Singapore on May 23 should have made the government more alert in safeguarding Malaysia's interests when making decisions which involved the republic.

"A bridge built after Lido Boulevard will mean Singapore controlling the waterways and shipping in the area, with Johor having voluntarily discarded the Johor Straits by dumping millions of tonnes of sands to build luxury condominiums," he said.

Menteri Besar Datuk Abdul Ghani Othman said on Friday that the state government had made preparations to accommodate the construction of the Johor Baru-Singapore bridge if the project was revived.

Some old articles about Lido Boulevard

Johor To Get RM2.7 Billion Garden City
Bernama 27 Nov 07;

JOHOR BAHARU, Nov 27 (Bernama) -- Central Malaysian Properties Sdn Bhd (CMP), linked to tycoon Tan Sri Vincent Tan, is to develop a RM2.7 billion integrated residential cum commercial waterfront city here.

Menteri Besar Datuk Abdul Ghani Othman tonight launched the Lido Boulevard project, which will be one of the biggest private finance initiatives to date in the Iskandar Development Region (IDR).

Coming up on a 49.371ha beachfront just outside Johor Baharu's central business district, it is designed to be the garden city of the south.

The privatisation project awarded last Aug 30 is a joint venture between CMP and State Secretary, Johor (Inc), an investment holding company of the state government which is also the landowner.

The Lido Boulevard, with a gross development value of RM2.7 billion, is CMP's flagship development and will be financed through shareholder funds and other internal financial arrangements.

The company will commence sales early next year.

"This development will not only change the Johor Baharu skyline but also raise our city's profile internationally," Abdul Ghani said at the launch.

"The idea is to design and reposition Johor Baharu as an international gateway to Malaysia, with a myriad of iconic buildings and top-notch public amenities and facilities."

The project, to be developed in phases, will stretch nearly 2.4 km along Lido Beach from the present Lot One shopping mall to the office of the Harbour Master.

"The development blueprint is based on the theme of a garden city, with landscaped gardens, water fountains and park-like facilities which will account for nearly a quarter of the entire development area," said CMP managing director Datuk Chan Tien Ghee.

The development will have four main components - luxury condominiums, waterfront office suites, a hotel and a shopping mall.

There will be eight blocks of high end condominiums of between 18 and 26 floors each offering 914 units.

There will be another eight blocks of waterfront office suites, a 296-room hotel-cum-serviced residence and a three storey waterfront retail complex with some 74,322.40 sq m of floor space.

Incorporated within the mall will be an international sized ice skating rink and a 32-lane bowling alley.

Chan later presented to Abdul Ghani a cheque for the RM1 million CMP Humanitarian and Environmental Fund which will be used to deal with any social and environmental issues that arise from the project.-- BERNAMA


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Huge gatherings of whale sharks discovered in Gulf of Mexico

Scientists believe whale sharks regularly congregate off Mississippi and Louisiana coasts
Jim Tharpe, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution 15 Aug 08;

Scientists have become increasingly convinced that huge gatherings of giant whale sharks occur with clockwork regularity in the northern Gulf of Mexico off the coasts of Mississippi and Louisiana.

Scientist Eric Hoffmayer, who is trying to unravel the mysterious “aggregations,” said that as many as 100 of the bus-sized sharks have been spotted feeding in clusters at three separate areas about 40 to 100 miles offshore.

“We have lots of reports of 30 or 50 animals in one place,” said Hoffmayer, a scientist with the University of Southern Mississippi’s Gulf Coast Research Laboratory in Ocean Springs, Miss. “They are obviously gathering for a reason. But right now we are not sure what that is, or how they know to show up at these spots.”

Whale sharks, a key attraction at the Georgia Aquarium, are the planet’s biggest shark and can grow to more than 45 feet long. They are generally solitary, ocean-roaming creatures. Nobody knows how many exist. But there are a handful of locations around the globe where the polka-dotted, filter-feeding sharks congregate in large numbers to feast on plankton or fish eggs.

The northern Gulf aggregations, which occur from June through September, would be a major new discovery if scientists can confirm that they are occurring at regular, predictable intervals.

Hoffmayer recently discussed his findings with Georgia Aquarium researchers at the Second International Whale Shark Conference on Isla Holbox, Mexico. The downtown Atlanta aquarium is funding whale shark research in the plankton-rich waters off Holbox, a narrow strip of land alongside the Yucatan Peninsula north of Cancun that attracts hundreds of whale sharks each summer in one of the world’s largest aggregations.

Bruce Carlson, the aquarium’s chief science officer, said aquarium researchers are just beginning to talk with Hoffmayer and his associates about their findings. The aquarium is the only fish tank outside Asia to house whale sharks.

“There is already collaboration in terms of information sharing, and there will probably be more in the future,” Carlson said.

Confirming the aggregations is a difficult task. Scientists are confronted with a species that can wander across oceans solo, then suddenly appear in large groups to feed.

Hoffmayer enlists the help of fishermen, oil rig workers and pilots. He asks them to report the time, date and duration of whale sharks sightings, recording the sharks’ GPS coordinates and the number and size of sharks they see.

His group has created its own whale shark Web page, connected to his lab’s Web site, where whale shark observers can record their sightings. Hoffmayer’s group also has tagged a few whale sharks with satellite transmission devices.

Florida-based shark scientist Robert Hueter, whose Holbox research is partially funded by the aquarium, said he is intrigued by the northern Gulf aggregations and thinks they could somehow be related to the sharks he has observed off Holbox.

Hueter and his assistants, John Tyminski and Mexico-based biologist Rafael de la Parra, have placed about 700 visual tags on whale sharks off the Yucatan over the last few years. Those plastic identification tags let scientists know where the sharks were first spotted and — if they are resighted — where they travel to.

“None of the tags have been resighted in the northern Gulf,” Hueter said. “That doesn’t mean none of the sharks have traveled there. The tags could have been shed or they might not have been seen. But after tagging 700, you think they’d have spotted something up there.”

Hueter said one whale shark tagged off Holbox with a satellite transmitting device did move northwest from the Yucatan to an area off the Texas Coast. Hueter, director of the Center for Shark Research at Sarasota’s Mote Marine Laboratory, said he envisions future collaboration with Hoffmayer on his findings.

“When you talk about a species that travels thousands of miles and knows no political boundaries, collaboration between scientists is essential,” Hueter said.

Hoffmayer’s work has been mostly a labor of love, since he does not have a consistent funding source for his whale shark research. “It’s piecemeal,” he said.

He theorizes the big sharks get together in the northern Gulf to dine on massive concentrations of fish eggs; bonita, skipjack and tuna spawn in the area. Like Hueter, he believes the northern Gulf gatherings could somehow be connected to whale shark aggregations near Holbox, which occur at roughly the same time of year.

The Holbox whale sharks have spawned a booming ecotourism business for the small island, where fisherman have learned how to turn a buck hauling tourists offshore to snorkel with the gentle giants. Whale shark aggregations also have created ecotourism businesses in Australia, the Philippines, Belize and a few other locales.

So far, however, the northern Gulf whale shark gatherings are known only to a few scientists, pilots, charter boat captains and oil rig workers who have glimpsed the natural phenomenon far from the sight of land.

A boat approaching one of the aggregations on a calm day would probably first see the dorsal fins and huge tails of the sharks sticking out of the water. The sharks swim slowly and quietly near the surface, their huge mouths agape to take in tons of seawater from which they collect the tiny marine organisms and fish eggs they eat.

Occasionally, the sharks feed vertically, which means they stop in one spot and angle their bodies at 45-degrees, sucking in water near the surface and hoovering in their tiny prey.

Hoffmayer said that until recently scientists believed whale shark encounters in the northern Gulf were rare. In 2002, he said, scientists discovered two whale sharks in a school of yellowfin, blackfin and skipjack tuna.

“We wanted to know what the whale sharks were doing in a school of tuna,” he said.

Hoffmayer asked some local offshore fishermen if they had ever encountered whale sharks. Their answer stunned him.

“They said, ‘We see whale sharks all the time,”’ he recalled. “These guys see a lot of stuff out there, and they never think to contact us, and we had not been contacting them.”

Hoffmayer published a 2005 paper on the initial sightings and has continued to gather evidence to support his theory, enlisting fishermen and helicopter pilots who serve the Gulf’s 3,500 oil rigs.

Hoffmayer said that in 2006 a tuna fishing boat returned with video of 100 or so whale sharks it happened upon in the northern Gulf. That was two weeks after Hoffmayer and his researchers encountered a group of 16 whale sharks in the same area.

“A third of our sightings are of groups of animals,” he said. “We had a sighting of 30 or so a few weeks ago off the coast of Texas.”

One theory, Hoffmayer said, is that the whale sharks are initially widely dispersed in the northern Gulf, lazily feeding on plankton.

But, he said, they might somehow know when to congregate in fish spawning areas, where they would be able to gorge on nutrient-rich eggs.

Many fish species spawn on certain phases of the moon’s cycle, Hoffmayer said.

Perhaps the big sharks are guided by the lunar phases. But like many things about whale sharks, no one really knows.

“How do 30 animals know to show up for what is a 12-hour [spawning] event?” he asked. “Now that’s a wonderful mystery. It’s what we’re trying to figure out.”


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Asia's bane: energy inefficiency

Omkar Shrestha, for The Straits Times 18 Aug 08;

ASIA has two-thirds of the world's poor and needs economic growth to tackle this problem. But the more it grows, the more energy it will use - and the more ravaged its environment will become. This will in turn hurt the very people that economic growth is meant to help. But their lot would worsen if there is no economic growth. How does one square this circle?

A solution seems far away, given the scale of the problem. China alone has 135 million people living below the poverty line and one billion Asians have no access to electricity. Of the 1.7 billion Asians who are of working age, about 500 million are underemployed or unemployed. Without gainful employment, they will threaten social stability. Economic growth is thus vital for Asia's survival.

While the region has taken phenomenal strides towards reducing poverty, its growth has been energy-intensive. China, which supplied all of its own energy needs until 1993, now relies on imports for half. For India, the figure is 70 per cent. Asia's consumption of the world's Total Primary Energy Supply jumped from 13.3 per cent in 1973 to 25 per cent in 2003.

Wastefulness has made the problem worse. In 2006, China was 5.5 times less energy-efficient than Japan and 3.5 less than the United States. Economic growth based on such intensive and inefficient use of energy - mainly from fossil fuels - is unsustainable.

The waste is due to several factors - poor transmission lines, high pilferage, unmetered connections, ageing generators and poorly maintained plant equipment. Apart from the infrastructure issues, inappropriate policies have also led to energy inefficiency, as have weak legal protection for investors.

With Asia's greater use of energy, its share of the world's greenhouse gas emissions has also risen - from 8.7 per cent in 1973 to 24.4 per cent in 2003. Although the region's carbon dioxide emissions remain low at the per capita level, climate change will have an immediate and devastating effect on the region. Nearly 40 per cent of Asians live within 100km of the sea coast, making them highly vulnerable to the rising sea level and flooding. New studies indicate that the sea level could rise by 1.5m by the end of the century - considerably higher than the 43cm rise forecast in the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report.

Given what is at stake, the search for a solution to Asia's energy problems cannot be entrusted to the invisible hand of the market. Nothing will suffice except the combined efforts of economists, ecologists, scientists, businessmen and civil society members brought together and driven by a strong political will.

There is also a need for intensive research to find environment-friendly energy sources apart from hydrogen fuels and solar and wind power. The world cannot wait till its supply of fossil fuels dries up before searching for a substitute.

But innovations require risk capital. China and India may be major energy consumers but they have spent only meagre amounts on energy research and development. In 2006, global energy R&D amounted to US$510 billion (S$723 billion), of which China contributed 0.3 per cent and India 0.1 per cent.

Energy R&D expenditure needs to be significantly increased. The recent emergence of philanthropists interested in climate change is a welcome source of funds to turn innovations into economically viable solutions.

On the policy side, governments need to limit energy subsidies to carefully identified groups, crack down on pilfering and connections without meters - and persuade people to pay their bills. Such measures will encourage the private sector to invest in energy efficiency, delivering adequate rates of return on such investments while reducing carbon dioxide emissions.

Energy, economic growth and the environment each presents a problem to the people of Asia. To solve any one of these problems, Asians will have to solve all three.

The writer is a visiting senior research fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, Singapore


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Cockroach King reigns as pest-killers discuss climate change

Claire Truscott, Yahoo News 17 Aug 08;

More than 100 of Southeast Asia's hardiest bugs measured up this week in Bangkok, where experts met to discuss new ways of controlling the pests, which they say are a major contributor to global warming.

On the sidelines of this year's Pest Summit, insects vied for the title of King Cockroach and Termite Queen, with the winning owners winning a 10,000 baht (300 dollar) prize.

The American Cockroach competition was won by a 4.2 centimetre (1.65 inch) specimen, giving him the title of King, with a 7.1 centimetre termite queen winning her division.

But the chairman of the August 13-15 summit said the competition itself was an important exercise in pest control, while other highlighted the bugs' role in climate change.

"Each cockroach produces 600 babies in their lifetime and we have more than 100 entrants, so our success to date is that we are reducing 60,000 cockroaches without using any chemicals at all and that's the beauty of it," Suchart Leelayuthyotin, director of the Thailand Pest Management Association, told AFP.

"The termite queen is like an egg-laying machine... So with every queen we get rid of 100,000 termites immediately," he added.

The winning cockroach was a city slicker, found a week earlier in Kuala Lumpur by female resident Yeap Beng Keok, while the termite was dug up in a Thai army camp in southern Khao Lak.

"We went out with the soldiers and a lot of them helped us because we know them," 20-year-old Chaiamon Chantarapitak from pest management team Union of Unicor Group told AFP.

"I didn't think we had a winner because a lot of people brought big ones and there were many almost as big as this one.

"The prize money is fine but we spent quite a lot of money to get it," Chaiamon added.

More than 600 insect killers and entymologists from Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand convened in a Bangkok hotel for the biannual event to share their knowledge of the latest killer chemicals and techniques. The industry is worth an estimated 3.5 billion dollars this year to Thailand alone.

But this year's summit brought with it a global message -- insects cause climate change.

Suchart said bugs are one of the main contributors to global warming because of the CO2 they emit when passing wind.

"Every termite will emit CO2 from their gut because when they consume the wood and digest it they get wind," Suchart explained.

"With every degree the global temperature rises, the life cycle of each bug will be shorter. The quicker the life cycle, the higher the population of pests," Suchart said.

If the fight against climate change seems impossibly huge, Suchart admitted the war on bugs is at least as hard.

"We know very well we'll not be about to win the war against insects. They have been here much longer than us. Cockroaches were here 350 million years ago," he said, adding that the problem was increasing.

"We used to live plain and simple -- a wall was a simple brick wall. But now we have decorated walls that insects hide behind," Suchart said, advising that the only way to fight bugs at home is through good sanitation and ventilation.

If Suchart's expertise on the insect world seems considerable, it was not always so.

He admitted his expert role came about more through accident than design.

"I am a professional bug killer by accident," he told AFP. "I applied for a job in the late 1960s and was given a choice between marketing and what my poor English thought was "press control". It turns out it was pest control, and here we are."


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Summit targets world water issues

Matt McGrath, BBC News 17 Aug 08;

While global attention has recently focused on energy and food, a global summit this week in Stockholm, Sweden, will tackle the key issue of water.

The World Water Week meeting starts on Sunday and will hear renewed calls to solve growing challenges of sanitation, climate change and drinkable supplies.

Sanitation in particular is one of the most important global issues.

The organisers say lack of adequate sanitation is a scandal that costs the lives of 1.4m children every year.

Investing in this area, say scientists, is the most cost effective health intervention the world could make.

Water scarcity

While global concerns about energy and food are real, experts say that tackling key water issues is more fundamental to the world and long-term sustained action is needed urgently.

The 2,500 experts will be considering whether the world will have enough water resources to cope with rising populations.

By 2025, 1.8bn people will be living in regions with absolute water scarcity.

But getting political agreement on how to share or protect water seems to be as far away as ever.

Any discussion on water issues will also have to address climate change.

It is only recently that scientists have been able to work out the impacts of rising temperatures on the water cycle.

Sanitation and hygiene in focus at World Water Week
Pauline Conradsson Yahoo News 16 Aug 08;

As the world races to find solutions to the planet's climate woes, some 2,500 experts meet in Stockholm this week to put the spotlight on one of the most pressing issues, that of water resources, at World Water Week.

The theme of this year's annual gathering is sanitation and hygiene issues.

Almost half of the world's population lacks proper toilet facilities, a situation that can have dire consequences on public health and which poses a challenge to resolve since water is becoming an increasingly scarce resource.

Climate change, soaring population numbers and the rapid economic development of Asia and Africa have all put a strain on the world's water supply.

Twenty percent of the planet's population in 30 countries face water shortages, a figure that is expected to hit 30 percent by 2025, according to the United Nations which has declared 2008 the International Year of Sanitation.

The meeting, which opens Monday and is entitled "Progress and Prospects on Water: For a Clean and Healthy World," will focus in particular on the dangers that the lack of adequate toilets and hygiene facilities presents to 2.6 billion people.

"It's not very popular to talk about toilets and excrement and where to go when you are menstruating. This is something that makes people feel uncomfortable," Stephanie Blenckner, spokeswoman for the Stockholm International Water Institute that is organising the event, told AFP.

"Five thousand children die every day of diarrhoea because of a lack of hygiene and sanitation and nobody really cares," Blenckner said, stressing that educating decision-makers about these issues was a priority.

Among those attending the various workshops, seminars and plenary sessions will be scientific experts as well as representatives of major corporations, non-governmental organisations and government.

Another theme to be discussed will be the impact that mankind's activities are having on the environment.

"We have to understand that what we eat and the products we buy have an immediate implication for the availability of the world's water resources," Blenckner said.

And the planet's natural resources are expected to come under increasing pressure as efforts to combat poverty result in rising demand for goods, food and services, which also puts a strain on waste management.

As a result, talks will focus on how sanitation, water supply, ecosystem management and economic development can all be coordinated.

On Tuesday, delegates will devote their discussions to Asia, which represents 60 percent of the world's population and whose rapid economic development is having enormous consequences on water resources.

The amount of water available per person in Asia today represents about 15 to 30 percent of what was available in the 1950s.

Blenckner pointed out that even Europe was not spared water problems, noting that "surprisingly ... 20 million Europeans need access to safe and affordable sanitation."

Concrete solutions will be discussed during the week, as well as how human behaviour can be changed to improve the situation.

"Now we've stopped discussing whether or not there has been climate change, or where or who has been contributing to it," Blenckner said.

"Now it's all about: it's there and we have to live with it and the question is, okay what to do? How to adapt," she said.

World Water Week, first organised in 1991, has over the years become one of the most important rendez-vous for water issues. It will be officially opened on Monday by British Professor Anthony John Allan, the winner of the 2008 Stockholm Water Prize.


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