Best of our wild blogs: 24 Sep 08


Say "NO" to Turtle Eggs!
a Malaysian campaign, you can help too on the Idiosyncrasies blog shared by Marcus Ng

Young writers inspired by Ubin and Chek Jawa
on the flying fish friends blog

Brood care in Malkoha
A collaboration with a photographer on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Pasir Panjang works continue
near Cyrene Reefs and massive reclamation next to Labrador and Sentosa on the wild shores of singapore blog

Kusu pilgrimage season starts soon
road to Marina South Pier closed 29 Sep-28 Oct on the wild shores of singapore blog

Moth pose
leads to ID on the moth mania blog

Save the vampire fish
ugly but important on blogfish


Read more!

Changes at the Green Volunteers Network: an email from Grant Pereira

From an email from Gran Pereira dated 24 Sep 08 to all members of the Green Volunteers Network

Moving on….

Earlier this year, Singapore Environment Council had a new Chairman and a change in the Board of Directors. There have been changes and a refocusing of SEC’s goals. The result of these changes resulted that the projects and ongoing activities of GVN do not fit into the new SEC profile. The Green Volunteers Network is being closed down.

Due to my commitments with schools, my last day with SEC and as Head of The Green Volunteers Network will be 31st December 2008. I intend to carry on with projects that I started like mangrove replanting and clean-ups, Orang Utans and Elephant conservation, S.P.R.O.U.T.S, fun tree climbing, overseas eco trips and a few other fun and interesting projects that are now in the pipeline.

In January 2009, I shall be joining Nature Society (Singapore) and one of my main responsibilities will be to build up a volunteer base to carry on with the above activities and do new one on our own or together with schools, NGOs and other like-minded interested green groups.

This sub-group of Nature Society will be known as “The Green Volunteers”. SEC is now in the process of transferring the Ubin Green House to Nature Society and I shall be in charge of running it – so in this area nothing has changed.

True environmental volunteers serve the environment and under whatever banner we do this worthy work is really not important. I hope you and your friends will continue working with us. If you have an interesting project or idea, I would love to hear from you. Please email me at grant@singapore.com.

Although GVN will be a new kid on the block we are bursting with ideas and enthusiasm. The only thing we will be low on are funds, so if you know of any potential donor or sponsor please let me know. Nature Society is an Institute of Public Charter and can issue tax exempt receipts for donations. If you can send your personal donations, make out crossed cheque to Nature Society (Singapore), post to me c/o: Singapore Environment Council 1 Cluny Road House 3 Singapore 259569. Mark envelope “private” on reverse of cheque write NSS/Green Volunteers – Thanks.

I shall also look into organizing company outings, family days etc with an environmental theme and perhaps include a CSR angle, so please contact me if you have such an event coming up and also want to do something for our environment.

PASIR RIS MANGROVE CLEAN-UP, SATURDAY 29TH NOVEMBER (2.30 PM TO 5.30 PM)

Probably our last activity together as GVN volunteers. Need about 20 hard working volunteers who don’t mind getting their feet wet and hands dirty and very sweaty. This is not beach cleaning but mangroves so expect to be really dirty and muddy. Meet 2.30 pm Pasir Ris MRT station control. We supply gloves, trash bags and Phua Chu Kang boots. Email Grace grace@sec.org.sg your name and mobile number if you can to help.

You bring sunblock lotion, insect repellent, plenty of drinking water, spare T-shirt and a sense of humour.

I’M AWAY….

September 24th to 30th
October 5th to 25th

Thank you for volunteering with us and look forward to your continue staunch support for The Green Volunteers in 2009.

Salud, salud, salud

Grant W. Pereira
Head
Green Volunteers Network
(www.gvn.com.sg)

Singapore Environment Council
(www.sec.org.sg)


Life as light as a feather
Duty as heavy as a mountain


Read more!

World's largest biodiesel plant on Jurong Island is "in administration"

Natural Fuel unit under administration
Conrad Raj, Today Online 24 Sep 08;

LISTED Australian company Natural Fuel, which is building the world’s largest biodiesel plant on Jurong Island,said its 50-50 joint venture with Babcock & Brown Environmental Investments is in administration.

The company said the directors of the joint venture, Natural Fuels Australia Limited (NFAL), decided to appoint the administrators, Peter Walker and Steven Sherman fromaccounting firm Ferrier Hodgson, last Friday, following the withdrawal of funding support by Babcock, with the effect that the Sept 30 repayment date for NFAL’s secured loan to Babcock would not be extended.

NFAL and its subsidiary, Natural Fuel Darwin (NFD) own and operate Australia’s largest biodiesel plant in Darwin, which can produce 122,500 tonnes of biodiesel fuel and 12,250 tonnes of glycerine a year. Natural Fuel stressed that its own financial position remains “sound” and that the appointment of administrators to NFAL and NFD “will not adversely affect it”.

Natural Fuel pointed out it is likely to make further provisions for the impairment of its secured loan to NFAL. The total amount of the loan was not stated, but it disclosed that it had to provide A$30.3 million($36 million) in its 2007 financial statements and that as at 30 June, the loan was valued at A$13.8 million.

Natural Fuel said it will stop providing further funding for NFAL, to focus on its wholly-owned A$130 million biodiesel production facility in Singapore.


Read more!

It Takes Just One Village to Save a Species

Phil McKenna, The New York Times 22 Sep 08;

CHONGZUO, China — Long ago, in the poverty-stricken hills of southern China, a village banished its children to the forest to feed on wild fruits and leaves. Years later, when food stores improved, the children’s parents returned to the woods to reclaim their young.

To their surprise, their offspring had adapted to forest life remarkably well; the children’s white headdresses had dissolved into fur, tails grew from their spines and they refused to come home.

At the Nongguan Nature Reserve in Chongzuo, Guangxi province, the real-life descendants of these mythical children — monkeys known as white-headed langurs — still swing through the forest canopy.

As the langurs traverse a towering karst peak in a setting out of a Chinese landscape painting, they appear untouched by time and change, but it is remarkable that they and their tropical forest home have survived. In 1996, when the langurs were highly endangered, Pan Wenshi, China’s premier panda biologist, came to study them in Chongzuo at what was then an abandoned military base. This was at a time when hunters were taking the canary-yellow young langurs from their cliff-face strongholds, and villagers were leveling the forest for firewood.

Dr. Pan quickly hired wardens to protect the remaining animals but then went a step further, taking on the larger social and economic factors jeopardizing the species. Dr. Pan recognized the animal’s origin myth as legend, but he also believed that alleviating the region’s continuing poverty was essential for their long-term survival.

In the 24-square-kilometer nature reserve where he has focused his studies, the langur population increased to more than 500 today from 96 in 1996.

“It’s a model of what can be done in hot-spot areas that have been devastated by development,” said Russell A. Mittermeier, the president of Conservation International. “Pan has combined all the elements — protection, research, ecotourism, good relations with the local community; he’s really turned the langur into a flagship for the region.”

Part of what makes Dr. Pan’s achievements so remarkable is the success he is having compared with the fate of primates elsewhere. According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s most recent Red List, nearly half of the world’s 634 primate species and subspecies are in danger of extinction. “If you look at the Red List, Asia has by far the highest percentage in the threatened categories,” Dr. Mittermeier said.

When Dr. Pan arrived in Guangxi, the challenges of studying langurs, much less protecting them, seemed insurmountable. He and a student spent their first two years living in collapsing cinder block barracks with no electricity or running water.

At that time, the langur’s population was in freefall, dropping from an estimated 2,000 individuals in the late 1980s to fewer than 500 a decade later. Historically, local farmers had occasionally killed langurs for food, but then teams of outside hunters began taking a serious toll on the population.

“In the 1990s, the Chinese economy started booming, and those with money — governors, factory owners, businessmen — all wanted to eat the wildlife to show how powerful they were,” said Dr. Pan, 71.

A breakthrough in protecting the species came in 1997 when he helped local villagers build a pipeline to secure clean drinking water. Shortly thereafter, a farmer from the village freed a trapped langur and brought it to Dr. Pan.

“When you help the villagers, they would like to help you back,” he said.

As self-appointed local advocate, Dr. Pan raised money for a new school in another village, oversaw the construction of health clinics in two neighboring towns and organized physicals for women throughout the area.

“Now, when outsiders try to trap langurs,” Dr. Pan said, “the locals stop them from coming in.”

But the villagers were still dependent on the reserve’s trees for fuel.

“If I told them they can’t cut down the trees, that wouldn’t be right,” Dr. Pan said. “They have to feed their families.”

In 2000, he received a $12,500 environmental award from Ford Motor Company. He used the money to build biogas digesters — concrete-lined pits that capture methane gas from animal waste — to provide cooking fuel for roughly 1,000 people.

Based on the project’s success, the federal government financed a sevenfold increase in construction of tanks to hold biogas. Today, 95 percent of the population living just outside the reserve burn biogas in their homes.

As a result, the park’s number and diversity of trees — the langurs’ primary habitat and sole food source — has increased significantly.

“When I first came, the hillsides were very rocky,” Dr. Pan said. “Now it’s hard to see the rocks and even harder to see the langurs because of all the trees.”

Nearly all money for Dr. Pan’s development projects has come from outside the region, but his efforts have not gone unnoticed by local officials. In 2001, the county government built a research center in the reserve with accommodations for Dr. Pan and his students, a guesthouse and a yet-to-be completed education center to showcase the region’s biodiversity.

Still, those who would like to exploit the scenic beauty of the park remain. One recent proposal included a five-star hotel that would turn the would-be education center into a gambling hall and cockfighting pavilion.

In 2002, when Dr. Pan inaugurated the Chongzuo Eco-Park, a small part of the Nongguan Nature Reserve that is open to the public, he had a quote from the ancient Chinese philosopher Mencius carved into stone at the front gate. The phrase, “In an ideal society, everyone should work for the well being of others,” was a subtle reminder to local officials that the park should not be misused for their own financial gain. But the quote also reminds those looking to protect the langurs that they must consider the area’s human community.

“This is the most important thing we can do,” Dr. Pan said. “If the villagers can’t feed themselves, the langurs don’t stand a chance.”

Dr. Pan is a charismatic leader who is as quick to lead his students into the field under grueling conditions as to don a langur costume at local festivals to raise awareness about the species.

He got his start in wildlife conservation in 1980 studying the giant panda in Sichuan province with the biologist George Schaller of the Wildlife Conservation Society, based at the Bronx Zoo. Mr. Schaller left China in 1985, but Dr. Pan spent 11 more years in the field, and his resulting work proved instrumental in conserving critical panda habitat.

Yet his greatest achievement may well be what he has passed on to the next generation. In 1991, he founded Peking University’s department of conservation biology — now the Center for Nature and Society — one of the first institutions in China dedicated to studying and protecting endangered species.

Currently staffed by 10 of Dr. Pan’s former students, the department conducts fieldwork on everything from dolphins in the South China Sea to snow leopards on the Tibetan Plateau.

Dr. Pan became interested in langurs in the early ’90s after reading “Sociobiology: The New Synthesis,” a groundbreaking book by Edward O. Wilson, the Harvard biologist, environmentalist and writer. It suggested that certain social behaviors were evolutionarily advantageous. Dr. Pan wanted to test Dr. Wilson’s ideas in the field, but needed a more gregarious species than the panda, which lives primarily in solitude.

He has been studying langurs since 1996 and has observed numerous cases of infanticide — where an adult male that had taken over a family group killed all newborns sired by the prior reigning male. The primary intent of infanticide is not to kill, but to induce nursing females to start ovulating quickly and thus increase the usurping male’s chances of reproducing. Infanticide had been documented in other species, but he was the first to observe it in white-headed langurs.

Based on observations of male langur succession events that did not involve infanticide, Dr. Pan suspects the animal’s reproductive strategy may be evolving to include negotiated settlements between males. In such cases, two males have divided adult females and territory among themselves without killing any newborns.

“I’d like to know how closely related the males are,” says Patricia C. Wright of Stony Brook University in New York of Dr. Pan’s latest observations, “but it opens up a lot of interesting theoretical possibilities.”

Back in Chongzuo, Dr. Pan led a small group into a meadow of tallgrass surrounded by limestone karsts. Above them, a family of langurs leaped across a forested cliff face toward a rock ledge where they would spend the night. He hopes descendants of these monkeys will spread beyond the reserve to repopulate nearby mountains just as other scientists will continue the work he has started.

“I cannot do all of the conservation work that is needed here in China,” Dr. Pan said, “but my students and many others will continue toward this goal.”


Read more!

WWF demands official investigation into two elephants` deaths

Antara 24 Sep 08;

Banda Aceh, (ANTARA News) - The Indonesian chapter of WWF (World Wildlife Fund) is asking Indonesian authorities to investigate the death of two Sumatran elephants (Elephas maximus sumatranus) in Southeast Aceh district, Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam (NAD) province, a spokesman said.

"This is important. To prevent a negative interpretation of what happened, the authorities should investigate the death of the two Sumatran elephants so that the cause of their death is clearly established," WWF Indonesia Deputy Team Leader Dede Suhendra said here Tuesday.

An official investigation would effectively prevent the public from having misconceptions about wildlife conservation in Indonesia, he said.

If the investigation showed the death of the protected animals was the result of a deliberate act, the authorities should enforce the law against those responsible, Suhendra said.

He said the case which happened in Southeastern Aceh could become a lesson to everybody on how to solve conflicts between animals and humans. "It is time to implement the conflict mitigation protocol in Aceh," he said.

"The mitigation conflict protocol is a reference for solving conflicts between animals and human beings. The program has been applied for a long time and it has also become the policy of the Forestry Ministry," he said.

Meanwhile, Irsadi Aristora, executive director of NAD province`s Save Nature`s Flora and Fauna (Silfa), said the Natural Resources Conservation Service (BKSDA) should be responsible for the two elephants` death in the Mount Leuser National Park (TNGL).

He said the BKSDA had been conducting a wild elephant catching operation since September 12, 2008. In the operation, elephant tamer teams succeeded in capturing two elephants which were later known to have died on September 14 and 20, 2008.

Aristora said the operation was a violation of the law because no veterinarians had been involved in it. The elephants were believed to have died from drug overdoses and therefore, the police must investigate the case thoroughly, he said.(*)


Read more!

Newly discovered sharks swimming into troubled waters

WWF website 23 Sep 08;

Recent research by Australian and international researchers revealed that confusion between separate species of sharks and rays meant that new, rare or endangered species may have been mistaken for a similar looking, but more common species and inadvertently taken by fishermen.

Indiscriminant fishing and the shark fin soup trade are key threats facing around 100 new shark and ray species discovered recently off the coasts of Australia.

The discoveries, by Australia’s leading scientific research organization CSIRO, will be considered by 60 of the world’s leading shark experts in Sydney this week.

“It is a major scientific breakthrough,” said WWF-Australia fisheries manager Peter Trott.

The Oceania Chondrichthyan Society’s opening workshop, hosted by WWF-Australia, will help set the agenda for future research on the new species.

Many of the species are elusive or live in remote and isolated places like Australia’s Coral Sea, a world-renowned marine predator hotspot, and they include one so rare that the only example was found in the belly of another shark.

Recent research by Australian and international researchers revealed that confusion between separate species of sharks and rays meant that new, rare or endangered species may have been mistaken for a similar looking, but more common species and inadvertently taken by fishermen.

“We are literally fishing in the dark when it comes to sharks and rays,” said Trott. “In many cases we simply do not know what species we are plucking from Australian waters.

“We now need to know what changes in management are needed to conserve these animals, and that is what the experts will try to answer.”

Various shark species cull injured and sick animals from the ocean and thus play an important ecological role. Without such shark species the oceans would be teeming with dead and dying fish.

Yet millions of sharks are killed each year by humans, with many killed deliberately for their fins which are made into shark’s fin soup. This practice is cruel and wasteful as the fins are cut off and the rest of the shark is thrown back into the sea.

Mr Trott said he expected the scientists to urgently call for more funding to research sharks and for stronger fisheries management to identify those sharks that were caught by commercial fishers.

“Sharks play a crucial role in the balance and health of marine ecosystems,” he said. “They are slow-growing, long-lived and produce few young, which leaves them extremely vulnerable to overfishing.

“We cannot afford to lose sharks from our oceans. If we cannot afford to manage them properly, then it might be best to leave them alone.”


Read more!

UN urges protection for seabirds from fishing nets

Louise Gray, The Telegraph 22 Sep 08;

An innovative system originally designed to stop whales and seals from stealing fish has proved so effective in protecting rare birds like the albatross from becoming entangled in fishing nets that the UN has urged all fishing fleets to introduce similar measures.

In longline fishing, which targets fish such as tuna, swordfish and billfish, boats trail long lines bearing as many as 2,500 baited hooks. Seabirds following the vessel dive for the bait and, in the absence of protection, become hooked.

However the Chilean longline fishing fleet have introduced the so-called "umbrella system" in which the hooks are set in bunches shrouded by cone-shaped net sleeves that prevents birds from taking the bait when the longlines are dropped overboard.

Although originally designed to reduce whale predation, the umbrellas have been very effective.

As a result of the umbrella system the number of birds killed by fishermen in Chile dropped from 1,600 kill, including 1,500 albatrosses, in 2002 to none in 2006.

The Food and Agricultural Organisation of the UN are now calling for other fishing fleets to introduce similar measures.

Francis Chopin, FAO senior fishery officer, said: "With industry and government working as partners, the impacts of fishing can be greatly reduced".

An expert consultation was organised by FAO in Bergen, Norway, earlier this month to help countries more effectively implement the International Plan of Action (IPOA) for Reducing the Accidental Catch of Seabirds in Longline Fisheries.

Among the key "best practices" guidelines suggested by the meeting was extending safeguards from longline to trawl and gillnet fisheries in areas of high seabird density.

In the absence of safeguards, the impacts of fishing on populations of already endangered seabirds may be significant. Particularly at risk are seabirds such as albatrosses, of which 18 of the 22 species are listed as endangered.


Read more!

'Climate-proof' crop hunt begins

Mark Kinver, BBC News 23 Sep 08;

A global search has begun for food crops with traits that are able to withstand changes to the climate.

The project, co-ordinated by the Global Crop Diversity Trust, is searching national seed banks for "climate proof" varieties, including maize and rice.

The team will screen seeds for natural resistance to extreme events, such as floods, droughts or temperature swings.

They hope the strains will help protect food production from the impacts of climate change.

The trust says a lack of readily available and accurate material severely hinders plant breeders' efforts to identify material that can be used to develop crop varieties that will cope with future conditions.

"Our crops must produce more food, on the same amount of land, with less water, and more expensive energy," explained the trust's executive director, Cary Fowler.

"There is no possible scenario in which we can continue to grow food we require without crop diversity."

The $1.5m (£750,000) scheme will provide grants for projects that will screen developing nations' seed collections.

Open acccess

The gene hunt is the latest stage in the organisation's ongoing process of conserving the diversity of the world's food crops.

Over the past few years, it has convened a series of meetings that brought together leading experts for each of the main food crops, such as wheat, rice, lentils and maize.

Each meeting was set the task of identifying the best conservation strategy for each of the crops.

"The experts have, among other things, helped us identify which are the most important seed collections in terms of genetic diversity," Mr Fowler told BBC News.

"This has provided us with the scientific foundation for almost everything else we do."

The information has helped the trust, which is also responsible for the "Doomsday seed vault" in the Arctic, pinpoint the exact characteristics needed to ensure that crops have the best chance of thriving in the future.

Mr Fowler said one example was whether a plant displayed a good degree of heat resistance during its flowering period.

This was a time when a plant would be experiencing increased stress, he said, yet very little data had been gathered on this part of the organisms' lifecycles.

Over the next 12-24 months, the project's researchers hope to build up a comprehensive profile of the various "climate-proof" traits and in which crops they are found.

"Then it is a matter of getting these varieties containing those valuable traits into breeding programmes," Mr Fowler explained.

He added that all the data would be made available to everyone - both public and private organisations - in an online database.

"Plant breeders will be able to go online and type their search criteria, then up pops the details of the samples that match the breeders' requirements, such as drought tolerance or heat resistance."

Developing crops that will be able to produce higher yields and cope with climate change is one avenue that is also being explored by the biotechnology sector.

Campaigners in favour of genetically modified organisms (GMOs) hope that developments in this area will lessen public opposition to GM food.

When asked whether he was concerned that the information gathered by the trust could be used to produce commercial GM crops, Mr Fowler said: "We don't have a horse in that race.

"Agriculture is facing a lot of challenges, and diversity holds a lot of the keys to meeting those challenges.

"I wish I had a crystal ball good enough to see what agriculture is going to need 100 years or 500 years from now, but I don't.

"All I would say is that the people involved in fighting the pro-GMO or anti-GMO battle don't have that crystal ball either - the best we can do is conserve all the options."


Read more!

Speculators make food too costly for the poor

Aekapol Chongvilaivan, Straits Times 24 Sep 08;

THE figures are enough to make anyone lose his appetite. The world food price index has increased 86 per cent since 2000, according to the International Monetary Fund. The average world maize price has climbed 25.1 per cent above last year's level, wheat by 88.5 per cent and soya bean by 59.6 per cent.

The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) estimates that 854 million people worldwide are suffering from hunger. Economic principles would seem to suggest that it is a case of too many mouths chasing too little food. 'It is estimated that probably 100 million more people have fallen into extreme poverty,' says Mr Olivier De Schutter, the UN Special Investigator on the Right To Food.

Sharply soaring oil prices, growing populations in some large developing countries such as China and India, and global warming and climate change have also contributed to the crisis.

But according to the FAO, the world's food supply is at least 1.5 times the current level of demand, and the growth rate of world food production has been persistently higher than global population growth over the past few decades.

So what is pushing 100 million more people back into hunger, malnutrition and poverty?

The answer is simple: The poor cannot afford the food on the shelves. Skyrocketing food prices have inflicted misery on the two billion people worldwide who earn less than US$2 (S$2.80) a day. As it is, they already spend more than 70 per cent of their income on their daily food bill.

It has been suggested that the real culprit for food price inflation may be the energy security policies adopted by large food-producing countries. Political concerns about energy security, it has been said, have triggered an international biofuel craze, inducing farmers around the world to stop growing food in favour of agrofuel crops.

At first glance, the figures seem to bear this out. For example, a third of the maize grown in the United States goes to ethanol production and half of the European Union's vegetable oil goes to biodiesel. The Thai government recently introduced an energy security programme to promote palm oil production, make gasohol available at petrol stations and require diesel to be mingled with biodiesel.

But a closer look would reveal that the impact of biofuels is not that straightforward. There is no evidence that world food production - according to the World Bank's World Development Indicators - is declining. That stands to reason, given the expansion of industrial food production in developing countries and the rapid advancement of agricultural technology.

The corporate monopolisation of the world food market holds the key to the real impact of the expansion of biofuel production. The world commodity trade system has hitherto been dominated by three companies: Archer Daniels Midland, Bunge and Cargill. The dramatic growth of the biofuel industry has entailed excessive hoarding and pre-emptive buying, thus driving cheap food from markets.

The biofuel boom has also lured investors and speculators into commodity futures markets as a hedge against the fluctuation of commodity prices. A recent report by the World Bank indicates that the biofuel stampede accounts for 75 per cent of the increase in world food prices.

The global food crisis calls for a new approach to energy security policy, one that would prevent aggressive speculation in the world food market and promote competition in the global food system. What leaders need to do now is not to increase the amount of food - there is enough - but make it affordable for everyone.

The writer is a fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.


Read more!

Thailand and China to launch monsoon study

Yahoo News 23 Sep 08;

Thailand and China will sign an agreement this week to launch a three-year study of climatic changes in the Andaman Sea so they can better predict monsoon patterns, an official said Tuesday.

Some experts have blamed global warming for increasingly unpredictable and severe weather in Southeast Asia.

"The aim is to understand the changing of monsoons," said Somkiat Khokiattiwong, a researcher at the Marine Biological Centre in Thailand's southern Phuket island.

"The Andaman is the birthplace of the monsoon. The study may also be able to help us understand cyclone patterns," he told AFP from Phuket.

The two annual monsoons in Thailand have increasingly brought floods and droughts to the kingdom. At least 16 people were killed in Thailand this month after monsoon rain waters swept away thousands of homes.

China will finance the deployment of buoys off the Andaman coast to collect data that will be analysed by scientists from both countries, Somkiat said.

The memorandum of understanding will be signed Friday between his agency and China's First Institute of Oceanography in Beijing.


Read more!

"Chemical Equator" Divides Hemispheres - Scientists

Yahoo News 24 Sep 08;

SINGAPORE - Scientists have discovered a "chemical Equator" that divides the polluted air of the Northern Hemisphere from the largely uncontaminated atmosphere of the Southern Hemisphere.

Researchers from Britain's University of York found evidence for an atmospheric chemical line about 50 kilometres (30 miles) wide in cloudless skies in the Western Pacific, with levels of carbon monoxide four times higher on the northern side.

The discovery will provide clues to help scientists model simulations of the movement of pollutants in the atmosphere more accurately, and to assess the impact of pollution on climate, the researchers said in a statement in Singapore on Tuesday.

Previously, scientists believed that a cloudy Pacific region where the trade winds meet formed a barrier between the Northern Hemisphere and the clearer air of the Southern Hemisphere.

"Powerful storms may act as pumps, lifting highly polluted air from the surface to high in the atmosphere where pollutants will remain longer and may have a global influence," said Dr Jacqueline Hamilton, of the University of York. (Reporting by Neil Chatterjee; Editing by David Fogarty)


Read more!

Greenland: roar of melting glacier sounds climate change alarm

Slim Allagui Yahoo News 23 Sep 08;

Flying low over the vast, white expanse of Greenland's Ilulissat glacier, one of the biggest and most active in the world, the effects of global warming in the Arctic are painfully visible as the ice melts at an alarming rate.

The helicopter lands on a granite cliff overlooking the Ilulissat ice fjord, or Kangia in Greenlandic, offering a magnificent, panoramic view of elaborate ice formations as they float towards the sea at a rate of two meters (yards) an hour, spilling massive icebergs into the open water.

Off in the distance, huge boulders of ice break off of the imposing Ilulissat glacier, more commonly known by its Greenlandic name Sermeq Kujalleq, creating a thunderous roar as the glacier recedes in one of the planet's most striking examples of global warming.

"The ice in some places on the coast is now melting four times faster than before," says Abbas Khan, a Dane who studies the movements of Greenland's glaciers at the Danish Space Centre.

The Ilulissat glacier and icefjord have been on UNESCO's world heritage list since 2004 and is the most visited site in Greenland, its ice and pools of emerald-blue water admired by tourists and studied by scientists and politicians around the world.

The glacier is the most active in the northern hemisphere, producing 10 percent of Greenland's icebergs, or some 20 million tonnes of ice per day.

But the glacier is in bad shape, experts warn.

Recent estimates by US scientists who study NASA's satellite images daily show that it is rapidly disintegrating.

It has shrunk more than 15 kilometres (9.3 miles) in the past five years, and is now smaller than it has ever been in the 150 years of observation and topographical data.

According to professor Jason Box and his team from the department of geography at Ohio State University, the Ilulissat glacier may not have been this small in 6,000 years.

Radars, satellites and GPS tracking have shown that the glaciers in Greenland's southern and western parts are now melting twice as fast as they did two or three years ago, and four times as fast on the east of the island, according to professor Soeren Rysgaard of the Greenlandic Institute of Natural Resources.

"Less ice around Greenland facilitates and accelerates the calving process where chunks of ice break off the glaciers and spill into the sea," Rysgaard said.

The melting ice is both a consequence and a cause of global warming: ice reflects heat, as opposed to water which absorbs it and warms up the climate, thus causing more glaciers and snow to melt.

In the village of Ilulissat, 250 kilometres (155 miles) north of the Arctic Circle, colourful wooden houses line the shores of Disko Bay, its waters dotted with icebergs bathed in the golden light of the late summer sun.

The 4,500 residents have seen the effects of global warming with their own eyes.

Fishermen and hunters say the ice has become thinner in the past decade.

"We can't fish and hunt like before. That's a fact," says Erik Bjerregaard, the manager of a local hotel who like many other locals has his own dogs for sleddog treks each winter.

In the port, one of Greenland's biggest for shrimp and halibut fishing, shrimp fishermen have to go further and further afield in order to get a decent catch, while halibut are threatened by an increasing number of whales.

"Because of the warmer climate, there are more and more whales, like the humpback whale which is a big eater of plankton," says fisherman Karl Thomasson, noting that halibut also feed on the ever-scarcer plankton.

According to the US National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC), the size of the Arctic ice cap hit a low this year of 4.52 million square kilometres (1.75 million square miles) on September 12.

That is close to the record low of 4.13 million square kilometres registered last year, and far from the around 7.7 million observed each year from 1979, when the NSIDC began taking satellite images of the ice, to 2000.

Researchers have calculated that Greenland's glaciers will this year throw up to 220 cubic kilometers (52.7 cubic miles) of ice into the sea, contributing to a rise of the world's sea levels.


Read more!

Arctic 'methane chimneys' raise fears of runaway climate change

Researchers say evidence suggests that the frozen seabed is perforated and is starting to leak methane, but other scientists urge caution

Arctic scientists discover new global warming threat as melting permafrost releases millions of tons of a gas 20 times more damaging than carbon dioxide

James Randerson, guardian.co.uk 23 Sep 08;

Scientists claim to have discovered evidence for large releases of methane into the atmosphere from frozen seabed stores off the northern coast of Siberia.

A large injection of the gas - which is 21 times more potent as an atmospheric heat trap than carbon dioxide - has long been cited by climate scientists as the potential trigger for runaway global warming. The warming caused by the gas could destabilise permafrost further, they fear, leading to yet more methane release.

But climate experts have expressed caution at the claims, which have yet to be published in a peer reviewed scientific journal.

Methane release from stores of so-called gas hydrates, that can form on land or under the sea, is not new to researchers. Huge quantities are known to exist in the Arctic, but special circumstances would need to exist for significant releases to occur.

"Methane release has been known for a number of years now," said geologist Dr Lorenz Schwark at the University of Cologne, Germany. "There are various areas around the world that have been studied in detail."

He said the process of methane release from hydrates had been filmed by robotic vehicles off the coast of Vancouver Island in Canada, for example.

"The problem is that in the Russian or in the Siberian Arctic on land and in the sea there is very little coverage by hard data and there are hardly any measurements. And therefore there is a lot of speculation going on."

In most cases, methane released from the sea bed is consumed by micro-organisms as it bubbles up to the surface. But if it is released quickly enough it could make it into the atmosphere.

"The most likely process where this happens - and there is geological evidence that it has happened in the past - is when the methane gas hydrate layer in the sediment destabilises on a slope. And then we have a slope failure, a landslide underwater," Dr Schwark said.

"As long as the scientists in the Siberian Arctic are not able to report very strong increases in submarine landslides and slope failures, I wouldn't expect that the release into the atmosphere is so severe that it is really very serious at the moment," Schwark added.

The scientists who have studied methane levels along Russia's northern coastline are aboard the Russian research ship Jacob Smirnitskyi.

Örjan Gustafsson of Stockholm University in Sweden told the Independent newspaper in an email from the vessel: "An extensive area of intense methane release was found. At earlier sites we had found elevated levels of dissolved methane.

"Yesterday, for the first time, we documented a field where the release was so intense that the methane did not have time to dissolve into the seawater but was rising as methane bubbles to the sea surface. These 'methane chimneys' were documented on echo sounder and with seismic [instrument]."

At some locations he said concentrations of the gas were 100 times the background level. These anomalies were documented in the East Siberian Sea and the Laptev Sea, covering several tens of thousands of square kilometres.

Gustafsson added: "The conventional thought has been that the permafrost 'lid' on the sub-sea sediments on the Siberian shelf should cap and hold the massive reservoirs of shallow methane deposits in place.

"The growing evidence for release of methane in this inaccessible region may suggest that the permafrost lid is starting to get perforated and thus leaking methane."

Estimates for the amount of carbon locked up in the hydrates vary from 500 to 5000 gigatonnes. Scientists predict that warming will release some of these deposits, but modelling the temperature rise that would trigger significant releases has proved extremely difficult.


The methane time bomb
Steve Connor, The Independent 23 Sep 08;

The first evidence that millions of tons of a greenhouse gas 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide is being released into the atmosphere from beneath the Arctic seabed has been discovered by scientists.

The Independent has been passed details of preliminary findings suggesting that massive deposits of sub-sea methane are bubbling to the surface as the Arctic region becomes warmer and its ice retreats.

Underground stores of methane are important because scientists believe their sudden release has in the past been responsible for rapid increases in global temperatures, dramatic changes to the climate, and even the mass extinction of species.

Scientists aboard a research ship that has sailed the entire length of Russia's northern coast have discovered intense concentrations of methane – sometimes at up to 100 times background levels – over several areas covering thousands of square miles of the Siberian continental shelf.

In the past few days, the researchers have seen areas of sea foaming with gas bubbling up through "methane chimneys" rising from the sea floor. They believe that the sub-sea layer of permafrost, which has acted like a "lid" to prevent the gas from escaping, has melted away to allow methane to rise from underground deposits formed before the last ice age.

They have warned that this is likely to be linked with the rapid warming that the region has experienced in recent years.

Methane is about 20 times more powerful as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide and many scientists fear that its release could accelerate global warming in a giant positive feedback where more atmospheric methane causes higher temperatures, leading to further permafrost melting and the release of yet more methane.

The amount of methane stored beneath the Arctic is calculated to be greater than the total amount of carbon locked up in global coal reserves so there is intense interest in the stability of these deposits as the region warms at a faster rate than other places on earth.

Orjan Gustafsson of Stockholm University in Sweden, one of the leaders of the expedition, described the scale of the methane emissions in an email exchange sent from the Russian research ship Jacob Smirnitskyi.

"We had a hectic finishing of the sampling programme yesterday and this past night," said Dr Gustafsson. "An extensive area of intense methane release was found. At earlier sites we had found elevated levels of dissolved methane. Yesterday, for the first time, we documented a field where the release was so intense that the methane did not have time to dissolve into the seawater but was rising as methane bubbles to the sea surface. These 'methane chimneys' were documented on echo sounder and with seismic [instruments]."

At some locations, methane concentrations reached 100 times background levels. These anomalies have been seen in the East Siberian Sea and the Laptev Sea, covering several tens of thousands of square kilometres, amounting to millions of tons of methane, said Dr Gustafsson. "This may be of the same magnitude as presently estimated from the global ocean," he said. "Nobody knows how many more such areas exist on the extensive East Siberian continental shelves.

"The conventional thought has been that the permafrost 'lid' on the sub-sea sediments on the Siberian shelf should cap and hold the massive reservoirs of shallow methane deposits in place. The growing evidence for release of methane in this inaccessible region may suggest that the permafrost lid is starting to get perforated and thus leak methane... The permafrost now has small holes. We have found elevated levels of methane above the water surface and even more in the water just below. It is obvious that the source is the seabed."

The preliminary findings of the International Siberian Shelf Study 2008, being prepared for publication by the American Geophysical Union, are being overseen by Igor Semiletov of the Far-Eastern branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences. Since 1994, he has led about 10 expeditions in the Laptev Sea but during the 1990s he did not detect any elevated levels of methane. However, since 2003 he reported a rising number of methane "hotspots", which have now been confirmed using more sensitive instruments on board the Jacob Smirnitskyi.

Dr Semiletov has suggested several possible reasons why methane is now being released from the Arctic, including the rising volume of relatively warmer water being discharged from Siberia's rivers due to the melting of the permafrost on the land.

The Arctic region as a whole has seen a 4C rise in average temperatures over recent decades and a dramatic decline in the area of the Arctic Ocean covered by summer sea ice. Many scientists fear that the loss of sea ice could accelerate the warming trend because open ocean soaks up more heat from the sun than the reflective surface of an ice-covered sea.


Read more!