Best of our wild blogs: 24 Nov 08


Common Kingfisher catching a prawn
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Do giant clams trap divers' feet?
a myth explained on the Psychedelic Nature blog

Holemates
on the annotated budak blog

A rare gem
on the annotated budak blog

Narcondam Hornbill sighted
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Heritage to rubble in just a few days
on the Postcards from Seletar blog

Sungai Pulai mangroves featured in new book
on the wild shores of singapore blog

War on snares continues: Zero-tolerance
on the Bornean Sun Bear Conservation blog

Two-tailed hunter
on the annotated budak blog


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Stocking aquariums might be endangering Florida's reefs

Stocking aquariums with marine life is becoming profitable; but despite care used by divers, it could be costly for our reefs

David FleshlerSunSentinel.com 24 Nov 08;

At a depth of 95 feet, in a silent world illuminated in shades of dark violet, Jeff Turner takes a net in each hand and begins to hunt. Gliding along the ocean floor, he snares a Cuban hogfish, a rock beauty fish and several sponges.

He takes half an hour to bring the fish to the surface and uses a hypodermic needle to extract air from their swim bladders, preventing them from bursting in the unfamiliar low-pressure environment. Like a bounty hunter — and unlike the typical commercial fisherman — he wants his quarry alive.

Turner, who lives in Parkland and operates a high-end aquarium design business, is one of about 130 highly skilled divers whocomb the reefs of southeastern Florida to supply pet stores and aquarium hobbyists with tropical fish, undersea plants and other forms of marine life. But the business has changed in ways that some scientists fear could threaten the reefs, despite the care exercised by divers.

With the growing popularity of living reef aquariums, divers have begun going after the unglamorous crabs, snails and other invertebrates that eat algae, consume dead things and filter water. Scientists, state wildlife officials and many of the divers worry that the removal of vast numbers of these species for home aquariums could upset the ecology of Florida's reefs.

"There has been a change in consumer demand," said Jessica McCawley, a biologist with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. "People used to just keep a fish in a tank with some dead coral. They want invertebrates now, especially the cleanup crew: snails, crabs."

The invertebrate catch for the aquarium trade has risen steadily, with divers landing 117,889 crabs in 1994, for example, compared with 1.8 million this year.

The commission will consider quotas for several of these species at its meeting Dec. 4 in Key West. Worked out in consultation with people in the business, the rules would set bag limits for a variety of species, for example, establishing trip limits of 400 emerald crabs, 2 gallons of the snail Lithopoma tectum and 200 Condylactis anemones.Turner, one of the divers advising the commission, said limits were important to protect the reefs as the market changes.

"The proposals for invertebrates are needed," he said. "There's a whole set of new species being listed, and this is essential for conservation."

But the state's limits may not be enough to protect the reefs, said Andrew Rhyne, a biologist at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island and the New England Aquarium who has studied the Florida aquarium dive business.

"What scares me is we don't know anything about the effect of removing 2 1/2 million hermit crabs from their habitat," he said.

"There might not be any effect. But you don't know. The emerald crabs are scraping the bottoms of the corals and keep the algae off them. Now will these corals live without the crabs?"

He said there's a lack of scientific research behind the rules and insufficient ability to enforce them.

"If you remove the emerald crabs from the system, will it collapse?" he asked. "We don't know. You all are doing a very large-scale experiment."

Diving to supply home aquariums can be a lucrative business, with the limited number of state-issued licenses fetching up to $30,000 on the open market. The aquarium divers concentrate on the reefs that run from Martin County to the Keys. Several divers interviewed said the proposed restrictions would not cost them too much business and they support the restrictions in order to protect the reefs.

"We don't want to eliminate any of these species," said Bill Parks, a diver in Boynton Beach. "We want them there for people to see. We're dealing with a fishery where most species are not migratory. If you go into an area and fish them, we need to let them recover."

Clay Jackson, editor of Freshwater and Marine Aquarium magazine, said the vast majority of saltwater fish and invertebrates sold in pet stores are caught in the wild because, unlike freshwater species, they're difficult to farm. As hobbyists have become more sophisticated and technology has improved, he said many people rely on species caught in the wild to create aquariums that reproduce highly specific ecosystems, such as a Caribbean rubble zone or tropical seagrass.

"I think the state of Florida is doing the right thing," he said. "These invertebrates are becoming more and more popular. You get them in your tank, and they don't live forever.... I don't think there's a problem at this point, but they're putting these in place so it won't become a problem in the future."

Photographer Carey Wagner contributed to this report.


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Focus on mangrove areas: new book on Sungai Pulai Forest Reserve

Zazali Musa, The Star 24 Nov 08;

JOHOR BARU: The richness and uniqueness of the Sungai Pulai Forest Reserve has been documented in a coffeetable book entitled Biodiversity of Sungai Pulai, Ramsar Site, Johor.

The book was published by the Earth Observation Centre of the Faculty of Social Science and Humanities, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM).

UEM Land Bhd sponsored the publication of 1,500 copies of the book with a RM100,000 contribution.

It will be distributed to academic institutions, public libraries and schools in Gelang Patah under the Smart School project.

UEM Land is the developer of the Nusajaya township covering 9,712.45ha and designed to have a population of 500,000 over the next 20 years.

The book project started in 2002 and involved the Johor government, Department of Environment, Forestry Department, Fisheries Department and other agencies.

“It is written as a joint contribution to boost public awareness on invaluable natural habitats and resources,’’ said co-author Assoc Prof Dr Norhayati Ahmad, who is also chairman of the Langkawi Research Centre’s Institute of Environment and Development.

The 97-page book is divided into five chapters — Mangrove Forests in South Johor, Mangrove Flora, The Herpetofauna — amphibians and reptilians, The Birds and The Mammals.

Also present was co-author Wan Juliana Wan Ahmad, a lecturer at UKM’s School of Environmental Science and Natural Resource Studies, Faculty of Science and Technology, and UEM Land corporate communication general manager Karimah Tan Abdullah.

The Sungai Pulai Forest Reserve is the largest mangrove area in Johor and the second-largest in the peninsular covering 9,126ha from Jeram Batu in the north to Tanjung Piai in the southwest and Tanjung Pelepas in the southeast.

It was the first mangrove forest to be gazetted by the state, in 1923, and is managed by the state Forestry Department in supplying forest products, especially wood for charcoal making.

The reserve was listed as a Ramsar Site on Jan 31, 2003, a wetland of international importance together with Tanjung Piai and Pulau Kukup.

There are three other Ramsar sites in Malaysia — Pahang’s Tasik Bera (Nov 10, 1994), the Kuching Wetlands National Park (Nov 8, 2005) and the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetland in Sabah (Oct 28, 2008) — among 1,822 Ramsar sites worldwide.

Norhayati said that mangroves in most Malaysian coastal waters had suffered heavily from illegal logging, clearing of upland vegetation and land reclamation.

This has resulted in the disappearance of large mangrove areas.

It is estimated that, between 1980 and 1990, 12% of the country’s mangrove forests disappeared while in Johor it decreased by 46% from 1955 to 1998.

"The Sungai Pulai mangrove forest is important in preventing coastal erosion and protecting local inhabitants against storms and wave surges," said Norhayati.

She said the tsunami of 2004 was an important lesson as the felling of mangrove trees, which act as a buffer zone in coastal areas, allowed the waves to travel several kilometres inland.

Mangrove forests are breeding sites for marine creatures like fishes, crabs, prawns and shellfish. It provides a sanctuary for these creatures to hatch and grow before returning to the open sea.

Norhayati said that for every 0.4ha of forest destroyed, fish harvesting was reduced by up to 304kg, making fishermen no longer able to fish.

"Conservation should go in tandem with development to benefit the community and ecosystem in the long run," she said.
More links

and MORE articles about Sungei Pulai on the wildsingapore news blog.


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WWF letter to the Editor: Mabul oceanarium development

WWF 24 Nov 08;

WWF-Malaysia refers to the recent news of plans to further develop Mabul Island through the construction of a 200-room chalet, research centre and oceanarium. WWF-Malaysia strongly disagrees with this plan.

A study carried out on Mabul Island and its surrounding marine ecosystems and coastal waters revealed that 85% of the island has already been cleared for village-housing, school-house and budget home-stay accommodation to five-star resorts. 80% of the coral reefs sites surrounding Mabul Island are used by all operators for muck-diving and 50% of the coral reefs, based on the agreement between the diving sector and the villagers, are open to fishing.

As a hub for the tourism industry in Semporna, Mabul Island has the potential to act as a coral reef management centre. This is an important feature in realising the aims of the Sabah Development Corridor Plan to develop marine adventure tourism and marine fisheries industry. Recognising this, WWF-Malaysia’s Semporna Priority Conservation Area of the Sulu-Sulawesi Marine Ecoregion (SSME) is facilitating a collaborative management of coral reefs with its stakeholders.

WWF-Malaysia has discovered that the stakeholders of Mabul Island very much value their marine resources and agree that the quality of ground and coastal waters have been affected. In addition, there has been loss of wilderness aspects, and the health of coral reefs which have been negatively influenced by the high resource use. In view of this, the stakeholders have decided to set the limits of change for Mabul as the island is already under strain.

The reef-flats close to shore are waded-in every day at low tide to glean for sea urchins, seashells, and other marine resources. The edge of the reef is fished with hook-and-line for fishes and squids. Coastal waters surrounding Mabul Island are partly polluted by inadequate waste-water treatment and poor solid waste management to handle the land-based sources of pollution from villagers and resorts.

Tourists have complained of crowdedness on the island since two years back which indicates a growing loss of the wilderness value. The resources of Mabul Island – the land, the coral reefs and the coastal waters – are already heavily used.

WWF-Malaysia would also like to stress that artificial reefs do not bring more fish for people to eat. By allowing young fishes to grow to maturity through protection of their natural habitat, fish numbers will increase. Damaged coral reefs and their resident fish populations can recover simply by stopping the threats that plague them. The Sugud Island Marine Conservation Area off Sandakan in partnership with the Sabah Wildlife Department and a private sector demonstrated this successful recovery of damaged reef, without the aid of artificial reefs, through research, monitoring and management.

A management plan for Mabul Island and its resources will be prepared by the stakeholders to regulate development and resource use. This is also in line with meeting governmental standards and their own standards for sustainable tourism and coral reef fisheries.

WWF-Malaysia continues to support the State Government of Sabah and the SSME Committee of Malaysia in the conservation and sustainable resource use of the coral reefs for tourism and coral reef fisheries. With the increase in loss of habitats and ecosystems services, all stakeholders of ecosystems need to pull together to prevent further loss of ecosystems.

From: Dato' Dr. Dionysius S.K. Sharma D.P.M.P., Executive Director/CEO, WWF-Malaysia

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Dubai's Atlantis hotel opening marred by dolphin row

The world's most lavish hotel has been condemned by environmentalists for shipping dolphins from the South Pacific to the Middle East to stock a marine attraction.

Charles Starmer-Smith, The Telegraph 20 Nov 08;

The £950 million Atlantis hotel, which officially opens on Thursday, has been built by Sol Kerzner, a South African hotelier, on the Palm Jumeirah island in Dubai.

It boasts that its dolphin facility – Dolphin Bay – will be the first rescue and rehabilitation centre for injured or stranded dolphins in Dubai.

But the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society (WDCS) has claimed that 24 bottlenose dolphins, used to stock the pools, were bought from a dealer in the Solomon Islands.

The WDCS claim that the dolphins, which had originally come from the waters surrounding the Solomon Islands, will now be used to entertain guests, who will be able to pay to swim with them. A 90-minute "shallow water interaction" experience with the dolphins costs visitors from around £75.

The row follows an order issued last month by the government of the United Arab Emirates to free a 13ft whale shark from a huge tank in the lobby of the 1,539-room hotel, after an international outcry.

Environmentalists claimed that the owners of the Atlantis hotel had disregarded international permit laws after capturing the shark in shallow waters off the Gulf coast in August and then used it as a display for hotel guests.

"It's outrageous and hypocritical that Atlantis is claiming to be committed to conservation and to have a rescue and rehabilitation centre when they have supported the trade in dolphins by buying these animals," said WDCS captivity campaigner, Cathy Williamson.

She added that life expectancy is shorter for animals in captivity and interaction with humans, such as the swimming with dolphin experiences offered at Dolphin Bay, puts the animals at risk of injury and infections.

Juan Vasquez, legal officer for CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora), who looked at the legal issues surrounding the export of dolphins from the Solomon Islands, said that the species was not endangered but that for some people their export was an ethical issue.

A spokeswoman for Atlantis said it was entirely committed to the welfare of all marine life at the resort.

"The dolphins in residence at Dolphin Bay came from an existing facility in the Solomon Islands called the Solomon Islands Marine Mammal Education Centre. During the year they have been in residence in Dubai, two calves have been born, a sign of excellent acclimation and good health," she said.

"Dolphin Bay's 4.5 hectare lagoon maintains a covered and sound blocked area which was created to safeguard the animals from inclement weather. This area will be utilised during the Grand Opening evening for the assured safety and comfort of the animals."

Marine expert and author Tim Ecott has been investigating the dolphin trade for several years.

"The morality of captive dolphin encounters for tourists is complex. Strictly speaking this species is not endangered, and Atlantis invests a lot of money in giving them a high standard of veterinary care and welfare," he said.

"But people pay a lot of money to swim with dolphins – and this has generated a business in capturing and selling dolphins to places like Atlantis. It's up to tourists to decide whether they want to exploit an intelligent species in this way."

The row will cause further embarrassment to the resort owners ahead of the star-studded launch party tomorrow, which includes Oprah Winfrey, Robert DeNiro, Janet Jackson and the Duchess of York among its guests, as well as performances from singer Kylie Minogue.

The Solomon Islands Marine Mammal Centre was not available for comment.


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New dolphin species identified in Australia

Science Alert 24 Nov 08;

Marine mammal experts have uncovered a new species of dolphin in Australian waters, challenging existing knowledge about bottlenose dolphin classifications and highlighting the country's marine biodiversity.

The researchers, from Macquarie University and Monash University, used genetic methods to identify the new dolphin species, and have had their findings published in November's edition of the journal Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.

Dr Luciana Möller, of the Marine Mammal Research Group and the Molecular Ecology Lab at Macquarie University's Graduate School of the Environment, led a study which found that the coastal bottlenose dolphins from southern Australia should in fact be classified as a new species, rather than considered one of the recognised bottlenose dolphin species.

There are currently two recognised species of bottlenose dolphins and both are found in Australian waters: the common bottlenose dolphin generally found in Australia's offshore waters, and the Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphin, found in coastal waters.

Dr Möller said that it is difficult to distinguish between some species of bottlenose dolphins using only external body features.

"This group to which bottlenose dolphins belong includes several species that have differentiated relatively recently in evolutionary time and therefore it is difficult to distinguish or understand relationships between them based on morphology alone," she said.

The new coastal bottlenose dolphin will be the second dolphin species found only in Australia. Dr Möller says this discovery has important implications for the species and for marine science in general.

"In the current biodiversity crisis, when we are losing so many animal species, it's very exciting to find out about these unique Australian dolphins," she said.

"They should be given special conservation attention due to their limited distribution to coastal waters of southern Australia. Due to their coastal habitat, these dolphins are also more likely to face threats such as pollution, overfishing and entanglement in nets."

Using DNA analysis, the researchers found that the new species was more closely related to the Fraser's dolphin, which is found mostly in the deep waters of the Pacific Ocean.

Dr Möller said her research team's findings demonstrated how important DNA studies are to uncovering hidden marine diversity.

"It suggests we still have a lot to learn about how many marine species are out there," she said.

New dolphin species revealed by genetic test
Emma Young, New Scientist 23 Nov 08;

A new, third species of bottlenose dolphin has been discovered in the waters off southern Australia. It is only the second new dolphin to be discovered in 50 years.

Luciana Möller of the Marine Mammal Research Group at Macquarie University in Sydney, Australia, and her colleagues were studying populations of what they thought were Indo-Pacific and common bottlenoses in southern waters.

DNA analysis, though, revealed that most the animals living close to the shores of the states of Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania were in fact a new species, belonging to a new genus. "They look very like the Indo-Pacific species, but genetically they're very different," says Möller.

The team has called the new species the Southern Australian bottlenose. It is awaiting a scientific name after a formal description.

The Southern Australian bottlenose dolphin is only the second new dolphin to be discovered in 50 years (Image: Macquarie University)

Based on their genetic analyses, the researchers think it is in fact more closely related to the Fraser's dolphin, which lives in deep waters mostly in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Möller says that since dolphins diverged only between 5 million and 2 million years ago, different species can look morphologically very similar.

Given the animal's apparent preference for coastal waters subject to pollution, fishing and other potential threats, its status now needs urgent further investigation, she says.

The last new dolphin to be discovered was the Australian snubfin, in 2005. Before that, it was the Fraser's dolphin, in 1956.


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Fiji reefs hit by climate change

Otago Daily Times 24 Nov 08;

Climate change and a starfish outbreak have shrunk coral reefs near Fiji, forcing locals to change their lifestyle.

A new study, published in Global Change Biology, has found that from 2000-2006 the size of coral reefs around Fiji's remote Lau Islands contracted by about 50 percent.

Dr Nick Graham from James Cook University, who took part in the study, says fishing and habitat disturbance are having a big impact.

"The area was disturbed by a crown of thorns starfish outbreak in about 2000 and then, the subsequent year, there was also a coral bleaching event associated with climate change," Graham said.

"We were pretty shocked at just how severe the impact was." He said so-called "bottom up" pressure from habitat changes was reducing the number of small fish, while "top down" pressure, from fishing, reduced the availability of larger fish.

The local population has fallen and people have changed their diet.

"Their actual dependence on protein, on fish resources, has reduced," Graham said.

"The population size on the islands has gone down. They seem to be getting more and more involved with land-based agriculture.

"And the price of tanoa bowls, which they traditionally carve in those islands, has gone up greatly." Locals fishing around the five islands surveyed has been cut back by an average of about 40 percent, he said.

Climate change hurt the reefs because warmer water stressed the coral, causing it to bleach and ultimately die, he said.

Graham said it was uncertain whether the crown of thorns outbreak was a result of climate change, too, although studies had linked outbreaks to increases in nutrients in the water or overfishing of starfish predators.

He said there were lessons to be learned from the study for the management of other reefs, including Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

"We really need to start carefully managing our reefs for both looking after habitat as well as trying to reduce fishing and that really means trying to reduce as many local stresses on the system as you can," he said.

"Because coral bleaching is caused by global warming, which is a global threat, it quite easy to stand back and say `there is nothing we can do then'.

"In reality if you can reduce as many of the local pressures and impacts on the coral reef system, it has got a much better chance of rebounding and recovering," Graham said.

Reef fish face double danger
Science Alert 25 Nov 08;
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies

The world’s coral reef fish are caught in a double whammy of intensifying fishing pressure and spreading reef destruction, a team of leading international coral scientists has warned.

In a new paper in the journal Global Change Biology the team from five international institutions warns of dangers to future fish populations from the combination of top-down fishing pressure and bottom-up habitat degradation.

A major research program carried out off Fiji’s Lau islands has investigated the impacts on fish and corals as human and environmental forces interact and intensify in all the world’s tropical oceans.

“On the one hand you have reefs being hit with events such as coral bleaching and Crown-of-Thorns starfish (COTS) attacks leading to a loss of the dominant Acropora corals. This mainly affects the smaller coral-dependent fish and small herbivores,” says Dr Shaun Wilson of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies at James Cook University, and the Department of Environment and Conservation in WA. “And on the other, you have fishing methods, targetted at the larger predatory fish like emperors, coral trout and snappers,” he explains.

In the Fiji study, the team found coral cover had declined off some of the Lau islands by as much as 50 per cent between 2000-06, due mainly to bleaching and a COTS plague. However the number of large fish had showed signs of recovery off islands where human numbers and fishing activity had decreased. While previous studies have looked at fishing pressure and habitat decline independently, this is the first major study of its type to analyse their combined impact and attribute their effects on different fish groups.

“Over-exploitation and climate change are two major drivers of global environmental change and are responsible for local extinctions and declining ecosystem services,” the team says. “Overall, fishing continues to have an influence on Fijian fish communities; however, habitat loss is currently the overriding agent of change on some reefs” they conclude.

The team is concerned for what all this may mean for human communities throughout the Pacific, the Asian Coral Triangle and Indian Ocean who depend on coral reefs for their food and economic survival. Reefs are estimated to support around 500 million people in Asia, the Pacific, the Indian subcontinent, Middle East and Africa.

They conclude that climate-induced coral losses could have significant effects on fish populations – even on remote reefs in the Pacific where there is little or no fishing pressure.

However the Fiji study also showed some encouraging trends as well: reefs which had been badly hit by COTS in 2000 showed signs of coral recovery over the six year period, and fish populations showed improvement wherever local fishing pressures had declined, Dr Nick Graham said.

“In Fiji the fishery is often controlled by the local community under traditional governance, which means there is more scope to restrict the fish catch or the use of unsustainable methods than in places where ownership over the reefs are less clear,” he adds.

“This suggests strongly that devolving the power to control fisheries to local people is one of the best ways to put the management of the reef and its fish on a sound footing.”

The main conclusion from the research is that coral reef fish everywhere are under sustained pressure from above and below, and the key to ensuring their survival is to manage local pressures to reefs so that they can better withstand the effects of climate change.


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Animal rights group slams Cambodia monkey trade

Reuters 23 Nov 08;

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - An animal rights group says Cambodia is flouting international conventions by allowing the cruel capture of monkeys for research in the United States and China.

A report to be released on Monday by the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection (BUAV) says thousands of long-tailed macaque monkeys are taken from the wild each year and kept in cruel conditions before being exported.

Thousands more are raised on monkey farms in conditions so far removed from nature that they are traumatized for life, it says.

While the long-tailed macaque is not endangered, the group says the unregulated trade is already having an effect on population numbers and leading to a degrading of Cambodia's jungles.

"People around the world will be shocked by the findings of the BUAV investigation and to learn of the suffering inflicted on Cambodia's monkeys," said Michelle Thew, chief executive of the organization.

"At a time when there is growing international concern over the plight of primates, we urge the Cambodian government to protect its indigenous macaque population."

Apart from humans, the macaque is the world's most widespread primate and includes 22 species ranging from Africa to Japan.

They are highly intelligent and adapt well to living in urban areas where they frequently earn a love-hate relationship with locals on account of their mischievous ways.

The report says nearly 10,000 monkeys were exported from Cambodia last year -- mostly to laboratories and primate dealers in the U.S. and China.

International conventions discourage the use of captured wild animals for research, preferring second-generation breeding stock instead, but BUAV says this is widely ignored in Cambodia.

The report said as many as eight out of 10 macaques trapped in the wild died before reaching the laboratory as a result of poor treatment, handling or trauma.

The BUAV has called on the Cambodian government to better regulate the industry and to ban the capture of wild animals.

It also urges the U.S. and European Union to prohibit imports of captured wild animals and to press for better conditions at monkey breeding centers.

(Writing by David Fox; Editing by Bill Tarrant)


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Australians return 11 stranded whales to sea

Yahoo News 23 Nov 08;

HOBART, Australia – Rescuers returned 11 pilot whales to sea Sunday, a day after a pod of 64 mothers and calves were found stranded on a beach in southeastern Australia, wildlife officials said.

A team of 15 government officers and 60 volunteers worked to transport the whales from Anthony's Beach, where they were found Saturday, to a beach with deeper waters 7.5 miles (12 kilometers) away on the island state of Tasmania.

Tasmania Parks and Wildlife Services manager Chris Arthur said the whales, which measured up to 9.8 feet (three meters) long, were successfully returned to sea at high tide Sunday afternoon.

Rescuers said they hope the whales will rejoin another migratory pod once they swim back into the Bass Strait, which separates the island of Tasmania from southern Australia.

Satellite tracking devices were placed on some of the whales and a reconnaissance plane would check their progress on Monday, Arthur said.

When the stranded whales were found, 52 had already died and one died overnight Saturday despite volunteers spending the night pouring water over the animal to keep it from overheating.

On Sunday morning, the surviving whales were hoisted in large slings into specially equipped trucks to be driven to Godfrey's Beach. Volunteers dragged the slings into the water and waited with the whales for high tide to help them out to sea.

Arthur said samples for scientific research had been taken from the dead mammals and a mass burial would be arranged.

Strandings are not uncommon in Tasmania, where the whales pass by on their migration to and from Antarctic waters. It is not known why whales get stranded.

Pilot whales are members of the dolphin family but are considered to behave more like whales. Because of their social nature and the fact they travel together in large groups, mass strandings can occur.

Australian rescuers free 11 whales after mass stranding
Yahoo News 23 Nov 08;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Australian rescuers Sunday saved 11 stranded whales by moving them by road to another beach and dragging them out to sea, an official said.

A pod of 64 pilot whales, most of them females and calves, beached on Anthony's Beach on the southern island of Tasmania on Saturday.

Fifty-two of the giant animals died after the stranding but 12 surviving whales were looked after overnight by rescuers, Chris Arthur of Tasmania's Parks and Wildlife Service told AFP.

Rescuers placed nets around the animals, which measured between 3-5 metres (yards) and weighed up to 1.5 tonnes, on Sunday morning and manually hauled them onto car trailers to take them to another beach.

"We used specially built car trailers, which we were able to put up to two whales in each. And we transported those animals 17 kilometres (11 miles) to Godfrey's Beach," Arthur said.

The animals were then carefully dragged back into the water by about 70 rescuers. Arthur said the release went well and satellite trackers were placed on some of the whales to keep track of their progress.

But Arthur said one animal died as the rescue team was attempting to put it back into the water.

"We kept 12 of them alive, kept them going, and then we only lost one transporting them and getting them into the waters."

Samples will be taken from the deceased whales for scientific purposes and authorities were in the process of negotiating what to do with the bodies, Arthur said.

Whale strandings are not uncommon in Tasmania, and there are a number of such occurrences each year, Arthur said.

A number of theories have been put forward as to why whales strand themselves, but the phenomenon remains a subject of scientific debate.

Australian rescuers save 11 whales after mass stranding
Reuters 23 Nov 08;

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian wildlife rescuers on Sunday said they successfully returned a small number of pilot whales to the ocean after a mass stranding in Tasmania.

Chris Arthur, who coordinated the rescue effort, said 11 of the 64 animals found stranded on the island's north coast on Saturday were released after a day-long effort which involved relocating them by road to another beach.

Environmentalists said it was unusual to save any whales after such a mass stranding

"We have successfully released 11 animals out to sea," Arthur told Reuters by telephone. "The last one went out less than 20 minutes ago."

While the possibility that the animals would strand themselves again could not be ruled out, he said, the hope was that they would instead join up with other pilot whales in the ocean. Some the whales have been tagged and aerial reconnaissance is planned to check on their progress.

"We have had a reasonable outcome. They will form a small pod. We have given them the best chance they have got," said Arthur, a regional officer with the Tasmanian state parks and wildlife service.

This maternal pod of 64 long-finned pilot whales, around one-third of them juveniles, were found stranded on Saturday along a stretch of Anthony's Beach at Stanley on the island's northwest coast, a site where repeated strandings have occurred in the past.

Pilot whales are among the smaller whales, typically up to about five meters in length and dark with a grey underbelly. Their relatively small size may have helped rescuers save them, environmentalists said.

Although most of the pod could not be saved, a team of around 65 people battled throughout much of Sunday to move 12 survivors, including both adults and juveniles, 17 kilometers by road in trailers to nearby Godfrey's Beach to try to return them to the sea. One whale died during the operation.

Mass strandings of whales occur periodically in Australia and New Zealand for reasons that are not entirely understood. Theories include disturbance of echo-location, possibly by interference from sound produced by human activities at sea, a spokeswoman for the environmental group Greenpeace told Reuters.

In a statement, the state government said satellite trackers had been placed on some of the released whales and a reconnaissance plane would fly over the area on Monday to check on the whales' progress. Samples are to be taken from the dead whales and a mass burial organized.

Although wildlife officials and volunteers have often tried to save stranded whales, relatively few attempts have been successful.

(Editing by David Fox)


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'Pirates of compassion' prepare to take on Japanese whaling fleet

Jerome Taylor, The Independent 23 Nov 08;

Kicking back in a comfy brown armchair and sipping from a grande soya latte at the back of a Richmond coffee shop, Steve Roest doesn’t look much like a pirate. Most people in the area simply know him as the Green Party’s parliamentary candidate for Twickenham.

The only give away as to his piratical alter-ego is a logo on the upper left hand side of his black t-shirt which features a toothy skull crossed with a trident and a shepherd’s staff.

But unlike Somalian cutthroats who are currently causing chaos in the Gulf of Aden in their search for western hostages and oil tankers, Mr Roest quarry is rather different. He is after Japan’s internationally despised whaling fleet.

This week the 42-year-old property developer will fly towards Australia to join a controversial band of eco-activists who for the past five years have played an often dangerous game of cat and mouse in the frozen waters of the Antarctic where Japan heads each summer to hunt for whales despite international condemnation.

The battle is always a David versus Goliath affair. On one side is Japan’s vast whaling fleet lead by the Nisshin Maru – an 8,000ton “research vessel” where hundreds of harpooned minke and fin whales will be butchered, packaged and frozen during the three month hunt. On the other side is the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, an anti-whaling fleet comprised of just a single ship: a converted 885-ton fishing vessel called the MV Steve Irwin.

If previous years are anything to go by things will get dirty. The 32 crewmembers, which include three British citizens this year, will stop at nothing to ensure that the Japanese harpooners miss their targets. In the past activists have thrown rotten butter bombs to contaminate the decks where the whales are cut up, deployed steel cables to foul the ship propellers and have even resorted to ramming vessels using a 7-foot hydraulic steel “can opener”. The Japanese have responded with flash grenades, the odd live round and accusations that the activists of Sea Shepherd are “eco-terrorists”.

“The suggestion that we are eco-terrorists is ridiculous but I have no problem with the term pirates,” says Mr Roest. “We like to call ourselves pirates of compassion. Either that or sea cops, legally operating under the United Nations’ World Charter for Nature.”

The next three months will be a major test for anyone onboard the Steve Irwin, which was renamed in honour of the late Australian television presenter who was intending to join one of Sea Shepherd missions before he died. On 1 December the vessel will leave Brisbane harbour and motor towards the Southern Ocean to try and intercept the Japaense fleet.

“It’s a small boat and there will be a lot of us crammed together in very difficult and icy conditions,” says Mr Roest, seemingly unperturbed by the prospect of three months in the Southern Ocean where the water temperature rarely gets above -5C. “We’ll also be up against boats that are much bigger and more numerous than our own but I can’t wait to get there.”

Founded by Canadian national Paul Watson in 1977, Sea Shepherd have long been regarded as one of the more radical conservation groups working to combat ethically dubious and often illegal fishing practices in the world’s oceans. Watson was one of dozens of activists who helped found Greenpeace in the early 1970s but was later thrown out for breaking the group’s non-violent ethos during a protest against seal hunters and spent much of the past three decades adrift from the mainstream environmental movement.

But his recent operations against Japan’s whaling fleet over the past five years have earned the group renewed and increasing praise. For the past three years the Japanese whalers have been forced to return to harbour with less than half their expected catch. Although commercial whaling was halted in 1986 Japan is permitted to conduct whaling in the name of scientific research but critics say their hunt is just a front for commercial whaling.

“Since 1986 the Japanese have not released a single peer-reviewed piece of research that has come through its lethal whaling operations,” says Mr Roest. “What the Japanese are really up to is thinly disguised commercial whaling.”

This season the Japanese hope to catch 900 minke and 50 fin whales but Sea Shepherd hope to disrupt their operations so badly that they will be forced to return empty handed. This year, however, Sea Shepherd will be on their own. Greenpeace, which still has a frosty relationship with its more radical incarnation, usually sends the Esperanza, a ship that documents whaling activities but refrains from the sort of tactics employed by Watson. But this week the environmental group announced it was instead concentrating on campaigning for two Japanese activists who face jail next year for jail intercepting whale meat stolen by crew from the whaling factory ship Nisshin Maru in a trial which Amnesty International says is politically motivated.

Speaking to the Independent yesterday from the deck of the Steve Irwin, Watson was characteristically critical of the movement he once helped found.

“Obviously the more boats targeting the Japanese the better but Greenpeace have never really been that helpful to us anyway,” he said. “They’ve never shared co-ordinates of the Japanese fleet with us. With or without their help we will do everything we can to stop the whalers killing whales.”

As for Mr Roest, a qualified dive instructor who will be driving one of the fast inflatable boats used to harangue the Japanese fleet when their spotted, he believes direct action is the only way to stop this year’s whale kill.

“The more you get involved in the environmental movement the more you understand just how large the problem is,” he said. “The fact is that in thirty years no-one has been harmed on either side by Sea Shepherd. Everything you do has an element of risk, even crossing the road has its risks, but if you’re ensconced on an 8,000 ton vessel the risk is very small. But nothing compares to the risk we face of losing these beautiful sea creatures that are on the brink of extinction.”


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Locusts poised to destroy Australia's crops

After the worst drought in a century, farmers face threat of insect swarms up to four miles long and more than 500 feet wide

Kathy Marks, The Independent 23 Nov 08;

It's a hard life raising crops in Australia, as farmers often remind the 85 per cent of Australians who live on the coast. Recent rains in New South Wales provided a bit of relief from the worst drought in a century, but now those living on the land face another challenge: locusts.

Swarms of the crop-munching insects are sweeping across drought- affected areas and feasting on grass and weeds sprouting at roadsides following the rain. In western New South Wales, near the country town of Condobolin, a swarm measuring four miles long by 560 feet wide was spotted last week.

The extra food could increase the number of eggs that the locusts lay, with the next generation expected to begin hatching in mid-December. That is a nightmare prospect for farmers as they prepare to harvest their crops, in some cases for the first time in several years, after successive crop failures caused by the drought.

The Australian Bureau of Meteorology, meanwhile, is forecasting a swelteringly hot summer that will add to farmers' woes, as well as increasing the likelihood of bushfires and their ferocity. On the coast, amid rising ocean temperatures, record numbers of jellyfish have been recorded, along with giant schools of baby sharks.

The locusts have been sighted in plague numbers across large areas of New South Wales, where the state government has distributed enough chemicals to spray nearly 200 square miles on hundreds of properties. The state's primary industries minister, Ian Macdonald, said that many hoppers, or juveniles, would grow wings over the next few weeks, so it was important to control numbers before that happened. Nine locust-busting planes are also on standby to treat the swarms if they grow larger or thicker. At the moment, they are rated as low or medium density.

Mr Macdonald sought to reassure farmers, saying there was no need to panic. "We are monitoring the situation," he said. "It's important to realise that most of the state's crops are in the final stages of maturity and close to harvest, so are brown in colour. Fortunately this means they are not as attractive to locusts, which prefer green plants." He warned, however, that "anything growing at this point of time would be attacked fairly severely by locusts".

The insects are notoriously voracious, swarming through an area and consuming everything in sight, particularly green vegetation. There are stories of them eating green clothes hanging on washing lines, stripping green paint off walls or water tanks, and destroying green shade-cloth. Adult locusts can travel more than 400 miles in a single night's flight, and they lay up to 50 eggs each at one time.

This year's outbreak is forecast to be the worst since 2004, when locusts bred furiously following floods and went on to devastate crops in two states. In 2001, swarms containing 100 billion insects were recorded. Australian authorities battling the pests have sometimes been assisted by good fortune. In the past, large numbers have perished after landing in the ocean by mistake.

Mr Macdonald said: "We're calling on farmers to remain very vigilant and to keep checking their properties, because if we do get further hatching and further development of locusts, these swarms could end up quite large and pose further problems."

One farmer, Selwyn Geddes, told Country News website that he had no time to spray the insects because he was too busy harvesting. "At one end of the paddock we have sheep and at the other we have hoppers," he said.


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Fuel from food? The feast is over

Arthur Max, Associated Press Yahoo News 23 Nov 08;

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands – In future years we may look back at the Great Mexican Tortilla Crisis of 2006 as the time when ethanol lost its vroom.

Right or wrong, that was when blame firmly settled on biofuels for the surge in food prices. The diversion of American corn from flour to fuel put the flat corn bread out of reach for Mexico's poorest.

Two years later, the search is on for ways to keep corn on the table rather than in the gas tank. Moving away from food crops, the biofuel of the future may come from the tall grass growing wild by the roadside, from grain stalks left behind by the harvest, and from garbage dumps and dinner table scraps.

Carlo Bakker's tiny biofuel operation, World Mobile Plants, avoids edibles. He says his mini-refinery, loaded into a 40-foot shipping container on a flatbed truck, roams South Africa making biodiesel fuel from used cooking oil, or from sunflower seeds or the jatropha shrub, which grows in poor soil with little water. He says he plans eventually to use organic household waste as well.

Bakker says one mobile unit can make 260,000 gallons per year, which he sells for the equivalent of US$3.79 per gallon, on a par with regular diesel prices.

"We don't compete with the food chain," Bakker said during a biofuels conference in Amsterdam. "We see opportunities not only to make money but to help people."

Governments encouraged the switch to alternative fuels in recent years to lessen dependence on imported oil. But producers are taking a hard look at the food crops used as raw material for these so-called first-generation biofuels. After all, they too had to pay more as prices spiked.

"They got burned. They don't want to go through that problem again," said Vicky Sharpe, director of Sustainable Development Technology Canada, which administers a US$1 billion Canadian government fund to invest in clean technologies.

Universities, corporate research laboratories and startup companies are pouring millions of dollars into finding ways to break down woody or grassy biomass for cellulosic ethanol — or second-generation biofuel — that would unshackle ethanol from the volatile food market.

"You will see a movement from first- to second-generation biofuels, because the second generation uses waste streams. They don't enter the food-versus-fuel debate," said Sharpe. "This is just stuff that would be wasted otherwise."

But second-generation technology is still young, and Sharpe believes commercial plants are still several years away.

Food prices rose steadily for the past three years until they peaked last June. Before they retreated, the World Bank said corn prices had tripled since January 2005. Rice and wheat weren't far behind.

Around the world, the poor — U.N. figures say the number of undernourished is approaching 1 billion — protested that they were hungrier than ever. Food riots erupted in 18 countries, from Bangladesh to Haiti. Some 75,000 Mexicans marched in their capital, accusing the government of "stealing tortillas." Some countries imposed export bans to hoard their grain stocks.

World grain harvests had soared, reaching a record 2.3 billion tons last year. But demand continued to grow, not only for biofuel but for animal feed to satisfy an increasingly meaty diet for the growing middle class in India and China.

Just how much influence biofuels had on food prices is debatable. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said biofuel production was responsible for just 3 percent of the global price increases. It said the real culprits were oil prices, which pushed up fertilizer and transportation costs, and the sharp drop in the dollar's value.

On the high end, a World Bank report in June calculated that 70-75 percent of the price rise was due to biofuels and the cascading effect they had on grain stocks, export bans and investor speculation.

"The moderation of global prices over the last few months is scant consolation to the millions who are still facing high domestic prices and have cut back on eating nutritious food and investing in their child's schooling," a World Bank report said in October.

Energy policies played a role. The European Union last year mandated a 10 percent biofuel mix in transport fuels by 2020, and the U.S. set a production target of 36 billion gallons of ethanol by 2022 — compared with 6.5 billion last year, which already consumed almost one-quarter of the U.S. corn crop.

The EU mandate is being reconsidered, and calls are being heard in Washington to rethink the U.S. goal.

Some producers say critics unfairly lump all biofuels together.

"You should look at biofuels as separate kinds of fuel," says Uwe Jurgensen, head of the Association of Dutch Biofuels Producers.

Brazil's massive ethanol industry, based on sugarcane grown on just 1 percent of its arable land, has little impact on edible sugar.

Biodiesel, the biofuel of choice in Europe, is made largely from rapeseed grown on disused land, Jurgensen said. Only 40 percent of the crushed rapeseed is refined into biodiesel, while the rest is processed into the food chain as animal feed.

Blaming biofuels for exploding food prices "was an easy argument. Either you eat or you drive. If you look at it a bit further, you see that is not the case," Jurgensen said, speaking at a gleaming, soon-to-be-open US$110 million biodiesel factory at Rotterdam port.

Peter van der Gaag agrees. The head of BER-Rotterdam, building a plant in the port city to convert 350,000 tons of wheat a year into ethanol and gas, said just 2 to 3 percent of the world's wheat goes toward ethanol. How much impact can it have on the price of bread? he asked.

"Biofuels are certainly not to blame for poverty, but it is easy for environmentalists to give a bad name to biofuels," he said.

In fact, environmentalists are skeptical of even nonfood biofuels, which consume scarce water and are sometimes cultivated on fertile cropland.

"If biofuels were grown on degraded land, that could be a good thing. But it has to be seen with a lot of caution," said Frauke Thies, a Greenpeace campaigner for renewable energy. "We are not opposed to biofuels in principle, but the practices of today are not sustainable."

Even as scientists work on second-generation answers, foodstuffs are likely to remain in the fuel chain for years to come because of government subsidies. In the United States, biofuels have been getting tax credits since 1978. Globally, the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization estimates governments supported biodiesel and ethanol with up to US$12 billion in 2006.

Last year, 139 U.S. ethanol plants produced fuel equal to 5 percent of U.S. gasoline consumption. As of July, however, just 33 cellulosic ethanol plants were in the pilot or demonstration phase.

Corn ethanol costs US$1 a gallon to make, but cellulosic fuel from stalks, leaves and straw costs US$5 to US$6. It requires the injection of enzymes to convert plant matter into sugars that are then fermented into ethanol.

Michigan State University's Mariam Sticklen is one scientist trying to reduce that cost, to about US$2 a gallon, by genetically engineering crops to produce their own enzymes.

"It's still early days," she said, "but the world needs a no-food-for-fuel policy."


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