Best of our wild blogs: 25 Nov 08


Private Lives: An Exposé of Singapore’s Mangroves Book Launch
on the Raffles Museum News blog

Raffles Lighthouse coral cover
on the Blue Water Volunteers blog

Evidence for multiple species of Sunda colugo
on the Raffles Museum News blog

Hunting for freshwater bugs at Singapore Polytechnic
on the Water Quality in Singapore blog

Explore Singapore! At RMBR
on the Raffles Museum News blog

Cockatoos and Yellow Oleander
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Farm to frog
on the annotated budak blog


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Protect Singapore's mangroves and economic growth

Shobana Kesava, Straits Times 25 Nov 08;

EXPERTS should study whether more of Singapore's mangrove forests are worth protecting under conservation laws, said Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Yaacob Ibrahim yesterday.

He said the National Parks Board (NParks) and university researchers need to evaluate whether it is possible to preserve mangroves without threatening economic development.

Dr Yaacob was responding to questions from The Straits Times during the launch of a new book about local mangroves.

Singapore has lost 90 per cent of its mangroves since independence, and only one site has been gazetted for protection: the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve on the island's north shore.

Mangroves are home to thousands of unique plants and animals, with new discoveries being made every year. But the forests are threatened by retail, industrial and housing developments.
Their role was highlighted in the book, Private Lives: An Expose Of Singapore's Mangroves (above), which was launched yesterday.

The title is a guide to the plants and animals found in the mangroves, and calls for their conservation.

Professor Peter Ng, director of the Tropical Marine Science Institute and an editor of the book, said at the unveiling that more of Singapore's mangroves need to be protected.

He noted that mangroves on the northern shores are different from those in the south.

'Rivers make the waters in the north far less salty than waters in the south, which give the plants and animals very different characteristics,' he said.

However, Professor Leo Tan, the National University of Singapore's director of special projects, who conceptualised a three-year census of marine species at Pulau Semakau, said it would be premature to pick a site for protection on the mainland.

'Sungei Buloh's 130ha is a substantial amount of land. We have to consider the large pristine sites that are already being protected in firing ranges on our southern islands.'

Dr Lena Chan, deputy director of the National Biodiversity Centre at NParks, said there are other ways to protect mangroves besides gazetting them for conservation.

'We can also designate them as nature areas, like the mangroves in Pasir Ris Park, Pulau Tekong or the mangrove in Sungei China, which was recently incorporated as a nature area within Admiralty Park,' she said.


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Tower farms may be the answer to Singapore's future food needs

It's time to grow upwards
Teh Jen Lee, The New Paper 25 Nov 08;

WITH food prices going up and imported food scares happening so often, is there a way to make Singapore more food-sufficient?

Yes, if Singapore is prepared to 'grow up'. That means building more sky-scrapers - to plant crops.

Even big countries will have to do that in the next 50 years because the earth's population is projected to hit almost 9.5 billion people, and there's not going to be enough land to grow food.

In a study, Professor Dickson Despommier of Columbia University in New York found that in the future, crops will have to be grown vertically, in huge towers right in the heart of cities.

Harvests grown in such tower farms will not be damaged by adverse weather. The use of soil-free cultivation methods will also result in much higher yield: Five to 30 times higher than on traditional farms.

Prof Despommier was quoted in the October issue of Discovery Channel Magazine: 'In 2050, 80 per cent of the world's population will be city dwellers. So by producing everything this population needs on the spot, we will reduce greenhouse gas emissions because there will no longer be any need to transport the food from the country to the city.

'By moving the farms into urban centres, we can give the numerous natural areas we have transformed into fields back to the earth. Whole forests will be able to grow back using the carbon dioxide that we are releasing into the atmosphere.'

Not only will these vertical farms feed people, they will also produce water and energy.

The concept has attracted investors and the first prototype could be built in the eco-city of Dongtan, China, in 2015.

What do local farmers think of such high-tech farms?

Gardenasia director Kenny Eng, who was selected by the Royal Agriculture Society of the Commonwealth to attend a next-generation agriculture conference in New Zealand last week, said: 'Vertical greening or farming is not new. Years ago, I came across similar ideas where they were stacking containers instead of building a tower.

'For such concepts to become reality, there must be public awareness - acceptance of such a farming method and the willingness to support it.'

There is also a need to train new age farmers for such tasks.

Miss Wan Xiao Xi of Jurong Frog Farm, 25, who was also selected for the conference, said: 'The future of farming here can only take a leap forward if our Government starts to prioritise the importance of self-sustenance in our country.'

Mrs Ivy Singh-Lim, president of the Kranji Countryside Association, said the vertical farm concept is 'very interesting'.

Singapore can start by creating food gardens all around HDB flats and even on the rooftops. She thinks a certain portion of food should be produced locally because there may come a time when other countries don't want to export food due to poor harvests caused by global warming.

Money not enough

'There will come a day when we may not be able to import food, no matter how much money we have,' she said.

'Look at all the western and developed countries - the governments there ensure that their farming communities are kept alive.

'Surely there's a message there that we can learn from. Or are we waiting for a food crisis to hit us like the financial crisis? You can print money overnight but you can't grow food overnight.'

When asked about vertical farming, a spokesman for the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority said: 'AVA strongly encourages our local farmers to apply agri-technology to improve farm productivity. The technology must be economically viable, and the produce must be safe and price competitive when compared with similar produce that are imported or produced locally using other methods.'

Not enough land, so rich countries grow outwards
Deals to help secure food supply; critics say they push out farmers from poor states
The New Paper 25 Nov 08;

AS rich nations and corporations grapple with high food prices and land scarcity, they are finding solutions to their problems in poor states.

According to The Guardian, rich governments are buying up the rights to millions of hectares of agricultural land in developing countries.

Their moves are motivated by the need to secure their long-term food supplies. And now farmers at these poor countries are worried.

Mr Jacques Diouf, the head of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, has warned that the rise in land deals could create a form of 'neo-colonialism' where poor states produce food for the rich at the expense of their own hungry people.

Rising food prices have already set off a second 'scramble for Africa', said the British daily.

This week, South Korean firm Daewoo Logistics said it plans to buy a 99-year lease on 1,000,000 ha in Madagascar. It aims to grow 5 million tonnes of corn a year by 2023, and produce palm oil from a further lease of 120,000 ha of land.

'These deals can be purely commercial ventures on one level, but sitting behind it is often a food security imperative backed by a government,' said Mr Carl Atkin, a consultant at Bidwells Agribusiness, a firm helping to arrange some of the international land deals.

Madagascar's government said that an environmental impact assessment would have to be carried out before the South Korean deal could be approved, but it welcomed the investment.

'In the context of arable land sales, this is unprecedented,' Mr Atkin said. 'We're used to seeing 100,000 ha sales. This is more than 10 times as much.'

At a food security summit in Rome, in June, there was agreement to channel more investment and development aid to African farmers to help them respond to higher prices by producing more.

But governments and corporations in some cash-rich but land-poor states, mostly in the Middle East, are trying to guarantee their own long-term access to food by buying up land in poorer countries.

According to diplomats, the Saudi Binladin Group is planning an investment in Indonesia to grow basmati rice, while tens of thousands of hectares in Pakistan have been sold to Abu Dhabi investors.

Arab investors have also bought direct stakes in Sudanese agriculture.

The president of the UEA, Mr Khalifa bin Zayed, has said his country was considering big agricultural projects in Kazakhstan to ensure a stable food supply.

Even China has begun to explore land deals in South-east Asia.

Laos, meanwhile, has signed away between 2 million and 3 million hectares of its viable farmland.

Eager buyers generally have been welcomed by sellers in developing world governments who are desperate for capital in a recession.

'If this was a negotiation between equals, it could be a good thing. It could bring investment, stable prices and predictability to the market,' said Mr Duncan Green, Oxfam's head of research.

'But the problem is, in this scramble for soil, I don't see any place for the small farmers.'

Mr Alex Evans, at the Centre on International Cooperation, at New York University, said: 'The small farmers are losing out already. People without solid title are likely to be turfed off the land.'


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Pedal power is the way to go in Singapore

Goh Sui Noi, Straits Times 25 Nov 08;

IF YOU think cycling is a slowpoke's way of getting around, think again.

Company director Lee Eng Hwee, 48, shaved several minutes off his usual travelling time by car when he cycled to work. Enough time for him to take a shower before getting behind his desk at the same time as if he had driven to work. Not only did he beat the peak-hour jams, but he also saved $500 a month in petrol during the year that he cycled to work.

As for systems analyst Subbusamy Sivakumar, 34, cycling to work is more convenient than taking the bus.

'If I take the bus, I have to wait 10 minutes, and then the journey is another 10 minutes,' he explained. If he cycles, it takes just 10 minutes to get from his Tampines flat to his place of work, the Changi General Hospital in Simei.

The clammy weather does not bother him because the trees along the way provide shade. His only concession to the heat is removing his tie for the journey.

Many Singapore residents are taking to the bicycle as a mode of transport for various reasons, not least to save money, particularly during these lean times.

For Mr Louis Wee, 39, who owns a bicycle shop in the East Coast area, delivering goods on his bicycle to nearby places helps him to cut costs.

For housewife Ong Siew Lian, 52, it's the freedom of movement that she enjoys on her second-hand bicycle, the exercise she gets and the time she saves that motivate her to cycle everywhere within her Tampines estate. She also has better control of her time, she said, as taking the bus can mean a wait of five to 15 minutes.

And for retiree Sia Teck Cheng, 67, of Sembawang, it's simply a matter of dollars and cents. 'I have no money to take the bus,' he told The Straits Times.

Then there is Mr John Teo, 36, an IT manager who cycles from his Bedok home to his office in Marina Square during the school holidays when he does not need to take his two boys to school. He cycles to beat the traffic jams, but also 'to do my part for the environment', he said.

The Government has recognised the growing popularity of cycling as a mode of transport. The Land Transport Masterplan states that the Government will facilitate cycling as a transport option to 'bring commuters to major transport nodes'. This includes providing better bicycle parking facilities around MRT stations and bus interchanges; allowing foldable bicycles onto buses and trains on a trial basis; close short gaps between park connectors and transport nodes; and installing appropriate road signs to alert motorists to the presence of cyclists.

But the Government has no plans to encourage cycling for transport in a big way. Asked why by the Straits Times, the Land Transport Authority's replied:

'Singapore aims to have a land transport system that can move people, goods and services seamlessly and efficiently.

'Public transport (buses and trains) is a more efficient mode of transport in moving large masses of people, relative to cycling.'

One argument offered by government officials is that Singapore's hot and humid climate is not conducive to cycling. Even with facilities such as bicycle lanes, Singaporeans will not take to it. Moreover, bicycle lanes in land-scarce Singapore is not cost-effective. It is physically not feasible to set aside dedicated road space for bicycles.

Yet bicycle paths will make it so much safer for the many cyclists already on the road. Chinese national Zhang Chengquan, 38, a shipyard worker who cycles to work every day, finds going on the road unsafe but going on the footpath an inconvenience to pedestrians.

In Tampines, cyclists have welcomed the 3km of cycle tracks built by NParks as part of its project to link up its parks. 'I don't have to worry about colliding with pedestrians,' said Madam Ong.

She usually cycles on footpaths for safety reasons. 'I'm afraid to go on the road,' she said.

Cycling on footpaths is an offence punishable by composition fines of $20. But it appears the traffic police have closed an eye to this widespread practice in housing estates.

In Tampines, there is a trial to allow cyclists to go on footpaths. 'The trial...is to make sure that those using footways will cycle safely and responsibly so as not to endanger pedestrians,' said Tampines GRC MP Irene Ng.

However, pedestrians are unhappy with sharing footpaths with cyclists. A Tampines resident, in a letter to the ST online forum, called for 'no cycling' zones in heavy pedestrian traffic areas like wet markets.

Ms Ng noted that her town council has embarked on a project to provide 2.3km of cycle paths and that it is working with the Land Transport Authority to provide another 7km of such paths.

Another option would be to widen the innermost lanes of roads so cyclists are not squeezed off the road, especially by lorries. Cyclists note that traffic lanes here are too narrow to allow big vehicles to pass cyclists safely.

Education of pedestrians, cyclists and motorists is another way to make cycling safe. Legislation to put the onus on motorists to look out for and give way to slower traffic - that is, pedestrians and cyclists - will make for safer roads.

Another issue for cyclists is theft of bicycles which, they say, happens frequently. Sembawang resident Azmi Buang, 44, has had three bicycles stolen in seven years. He will not leave his bicycle at MRT station cycle parks for several hours on end as part of a commute.

Mr Sivakumar, who has had a bicycle stolen from the void deck, suggested that closed-circuit TV cameras be installed at void deck bicycle park areas to deter theft. Mr Wee suggested that enclosed bicycle parks with security guards be set up, with cyclists paying a small fee for their use.

The Government has reacted passively to such demands for facilities by cyclists.

Yet, with the issue of global warming and climate change gaining urgency, actively encouraging pedal power may be the way to go in Singapore. The island is small and compact enough, and flat enough, for cycling to be a viable mode of transport.

Thoughtful urban planning so that work, school and play are localised and travel distances shortened would be one way to encourage cycling.


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Tapping the best ideas in water management in Singapore

Liaw Wy-Cin, Straits Times 25 Nov 08;

CAMBODIAN army generals whose home taps have run dry because they refused to pay their water bills are likely to get angry when asked to make good on what they owe - angry enough to hold a gun to your head.

Ask Mr Ek Sonn Chan, who heads the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh's water supply authority.

He has had a gun held to his head a few times in the past 15 years for standing up to these generals and insisting that everyone pay a fair rate for their water.

Singapore's ambassador-at-large Tommy Koh yesterday held up Mr Ek's efforts to rebuild the city's war-ravaged water system as an example of good governance.

Professor Koh, who also chairs the Asia-Pacific Water Forum's governing council, was speaking at the launch of a new programme on leadership in water governance organised by the Institute of Water Policy in Bukit Timah.

The two-week programme, attended by 20 officials from public water agencies in 13 countries, will feature discussions on water policy issues.

The programme participants will also visit the NEWater Research Centre, Changi Water Reclamation Plant and the Marina Barrage.

The participants are expecting to pick up knowledge in areas ranging from the technical to the social - from how to desalinate water more cheaply to ways of identifying the poor in a community so that subsidies can be given to them.

The Institute of Water Policy running the programme was launched by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong five months ago, during the first Singapore International Water Week.

Clean drinking water and proper sanitation are making their way up the agenda of many countries now facing ballooning urban populations.

But the problem is often not the availability of water so much as managing it - as in how to distribute it fairly to all who need it, said Mr Michael Barrow of the Asian Development Bank, which provides loans and technical assistance to Asian and Pacific countries for their development.

The chief executive of national water agency PUB, Mr Khoo Teng Chye, told Singapore's water story to the participants yesterday - how the island overcame its lack of natural water supply, the limited space it has for use as water catchments as well as how it has strengthened its self-sufficiency in water over the decades.

Mr Khoo said the PUB hoped to find out about the water challenges faced by the programme participants' countries so it can build itself up as a regional centre of knowledge and training in water management.

Asked if the global economic downturn could see governments scaling back on water projects, he said this could, in fact, be a good time for rapidly growing countries to stimulate the economy by launching infrastructure, sanitation, sewage and anti-pollution projects.

'This is a good opportunity for infrastructure to catch up, and for Singapore companies looking for business opportunities in the region. For example, China is going to be spending more money on water development,' he said.


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Turtle nesting sites in Malacca threated by coastal reclamation

Disturbed home
Hilary Chiew, The Star 25 Nov 08;

Nesting sites of hawksbill turtles in Malacca are under threat by coastal reclamation work.
THE narrow strips of beach and the murky water of the Malacca coast are hardly enticing for beach-goers. But for the hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata), these less-than-attractive stretches of sandy and rocky seafront are where they lay their eggs.

For time immemorial, the disconnected beaches from Padang Kemunting to Kuala Linggi, near the border with Negri Sembilan, has been the nesting haven of this endangered species and it is the largest known population in Peninsular Malaysia and second most important in the country after the cluster of islands called Turtle Islands in Sabah.

The Malacca turtle population averages 200 to 300 nests a year while in Sabah the number is 500 to 600 nests. DNA research has shown that they are genetically a different stock from the Sabah and Terengganu populations.

Just like the other three species of marine turtle that nest in Malaysia, the hawksbill is threatened by poaching of its eggs, loss of nesting beaches and incidental capture in fishing nets. On top of all that, the beautiful markings on the hawksbill’s carapace makes them a target for commerce. .

In Malacca, the premier nesting site is under imminent threat from reclamation and inshore tin-mining. These activities are expected to have an irreversible impact on the migration route and nesting habitats of the turtles.

Deputy state secretary Datuk Zainal Hussin said the total size of coastal reclamation is about 1,908ha stretching from Kuala Linggi in the district of Alor Gajah to Serkam, Jasin, in the south. He said in an e-mail reply that the development is based on the Macro Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) for the Coastal Land Reclamation Project in Malacca that was approved by the Department of Environment in 1999.

World Wide Fund for Nature-Malaysia (WWF-M) questioned the soundness and relevance of the Macro EIA which was produced nearly 10 years ago.

“Since then, the coastline has undergone massive changes. Each reclamation project proposed in the state should be subjected to a Detailed Environmental Impact Assessment (DEIA) and the Macro EIA can serve as a guide to the DEIAs.

“DEIAs will provide for detailed assessment of physical changes (via hydraulic studies) to the nesting beaches, such as accretion and erosion and increase in turbidity, which will impact the turtles and their habitat.

“If the ongoing reclamation projects do indeed erode these nesting beaches, who will be responsible for the high costs of mitigating measures? Will the party responsible allocate sufficient budget for this purpose?” asked WWF-M executive director Datuk Dr Dionysius Sharma.

WWF-M is concerned that lights during dredging operation at the tin-mining site of Kuala Sg Baru will severely disorient hatchlings and render them more vulnerable to prey.

Sharma said the mining operation should not coincide with the annual nesting season of the hawksbills from March to September as the near-shore waters adjacent to nesting beaches are highly utilised by the turtles during the inter-nesting period.

While local fishermen are worried about the loss of fishing grounds, they are less concerned about the turtles. Some believe that the marine reptile will “simply move to another beach”, as they were told by certain quarters about the leatherback turtles of Rantau Abang in Terengganu.

Sharma said it is an unfounded belief that displaced turtles can easily relocate themselves and adapt to reclaimed beaches or other beaches, more so in Malacca where suitable nesting beaches are limited due to the highly developed coast.

Adverse impact such as suitability of sand for nesting, compacted sand and scarp formation at reclaimed areas will interfere with the nesting process.

Besides the coastal nesting belt, hawksbill turtles are also nesting on Pulau Upeh, 1.5km off the shore of Klebang. The small island accounts for 25% of the state’s total nesting.

Since 2006, a collaborative conservation programme between the Fisheries Department and WWF-M has intensified the ex-situ and in-situ turtle protection efforts in the state.

At the 500m-long Padang Kemunting-Pengkalan Balak beach, one of the key nesting sites along the Malacca coast, the department operates a small hatchery where eggs delivered by licensed egg-collectors are incubated. Eggs deposited on Pulau Upeh, however, are left in their natural state, hence requiring patrolling to prevent poaching.

WWF-M programme leader Lau Min Min said two teams of patrol personnel monitor the beaches and Pulau Upeh between 8.30pm and 5am during the peak season of April to August. Patrol on the coastal beach also helps to deter harassment of nesting turtles on those highly accessible beaches. For example, Padang Kemunting and Pengkalan Balak are dotted with holiday chalets and eateries that are a source of light, noise and garbage pollution.

Then there is the uncertainty of the future of conservation work on Pulau Upeh once Tenaga Nasional Berhad succeeds in selling it off.

“TNB has been very selective in identifying the potential purchaser to ensure the intended purpose to own the island will not deviate from its original purpose as resorts,” assured a TNB spokesperson.

The utility company has supported the conservation programme by allowing access to the island but decided to sell the island after its initial plan to utilise it as a staff training centre fell through. Earlier, the state had expressed interest to preserve Pulau Upeh as a wildlife sanctuary.

Zainal dismissed the concern of adverse impact on the species, saying that there is already the hawksbill conservation centre at Pengkalan Balak.

Sharma pointed out that the Malacca Fisheries (Turtle and Turtle Eggs) Rules 1989 expressly provides for the establishment of turtle sanctuaries. The protection of turtle habitats is absolutely crucial, but no nesting beaches in Malacca have been gazetted as sanctuaries.

Legal protection of these beaches are justified and necessary, especially in view of the fact that the National Physical Plan classifies marine turtle nesting beaches as being Environmentally Sensitive Area (ESA) Rank 1, which means that development and agricultural activities are not allowed on those beaches, he added.

He urged the state government to reassess current and planned projects, taking into consideration the needs of hawksbill turtles and marine resources in the state.

“We also call on the government to hasten the adoption of the National Integrated Coastal Zone Management plan which will act as a guide to states on coastal zone development,” said Sharma.


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Dolphin Population Stunted By Fishing Activities, Study Finds

ScienceDaily 24 Nov 08;

Despite broad "dolphin safe" practices, fishing activities have continued to restrict the growth of at least one Pacific Ocean dolphin population, a new report led by a researcher at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego has concluded.

Populations of dolphins in the Eastern Pacific were expected to increase in abundance after successful regulations and agreements were enacted to reduce dolphin deaths as a result of fishing "bycatch," cases in which animals are caught unintentionally along with intended targets.

But the new study, published in the October issue of Marine Ecology Progress Series, reveals that negative impacts from fishing activities remain.

Instead of reducing numbers through direct mortalities, the study by Katie Cramer of Scripps Institution of Oceanography and Wayne Perryman and Tim Gerrodette of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA's) Southwest Fisheries Science Center shows that fishing activities have disrupted the reproductive output of the northeastern pantropical spotted dolphin. The researchers note that reproductive output of the eastern spinner dolphin also declined, but a direct link to fishing effort was inconclusive.

"The results of this study clearly show that depleted dolphin populations have failed to recover in part due to a decline in reproductive output, and that fishing has had an effect on reproduction," said Cramer, a graduate student researcher in the Scripps Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation. "This shows that the fisheries indeed are still having an impact."

The new conclusions are based on broad surveys conducted by NOAA Fisheries Service between 1987 and 2003 designed to assess the size and health of dolphin populations in the eastern Pacific Ocean. The surveys included military reconnaissance camera images of more than 20,000 animals.

Cramer, who participated in helicopter surveys between 1998 and 2003, and her colleagues used the image database to analyze entire dolphin schools, focusing in particular on mother-calf pairs.

The scientists compared the data with the number of fishing events in which a dolphin school is chased by speedboats and encircled in a large "purse-seine" net in order to capture the large yellowfin tuna that often swim with dolphin schools. While such fishing led to high dolphin mortalities after purse-seine fishing was launched in the eastern tropical Pacific in the 1950s, bycatch deaths declined by the end of the 1990s due to new fishing techniques that ensured that dolphins are eventually released from the nets alive.

Yet despite mortality reductions, dolphin populations have not recovered at a rate expected since bycatch was reduced.

Using the aerial photographic database, Cramer and her colleagues found a strong link between the amount of fishing and reproductive output in a given year for the dolphin population most heavily targeted by the fishery, the northeastern pantropical spotted dolphin. Both the proportion of adult animals in the photographs with a calf, and the length at which calves disassociated from their mothers (a measure of the length at which the calves stop nursing), declined with increasing fishing effort.

Together, the results showed that fishing had a negative impact on calf survival rates and/or birth rates. This could be caused when fishing operations separate mothers from their suckling calves, interfere with the conception or gestation of calves or a combination of the two.

"The link between fishing activity and ... reproductive output indicates that the fishery has population-level effects beyond reported direct kill," the authors write in their report.

What remains unknown is the exact mechanism leading to reduced reproductive output. This question is currently being investigated by researchers at NOAA Fisheries' Southwest Fisheries Science Center in La Jolla.


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Oceans Ten Times More Acidic Than Thought

Helen Scales, National Geographic News 24 Nov 08;

Increasing levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere may make Earth's oceans more acidic faster than previously thought—unbalancing ecosystems in the process, a new study says.

Since 2000, scientists have measured the acidity of seawater around Tatoosh Island off the coast of Washington state. The acidity increased ten times quicker than climate models predicted.

The research also revealed the corrosive effect of acidic oceans could trigger a dramatic shift in coastal species and jeopardize shellfish stocks.

"The increase in acidity we saw during our study was about the same magnitude as we expect over the course of the next century," said study co-author Timothy Wootton, a marine biologist from the University of Chicago.

"This raises a warning flag that the oceans may be changing faster than people think," he said.

Increased carbon dioxide emissions from human activities have led to a 30 percent rise in ocean acidity in the past 200 years.

(Related: "Acid Oceans Threatening Marine Food Chain, Experts Warn" [February 17, 2007].)

When atmospheric carbon dioxide dissolves in the oceans it forms carbonic acid, which in turn has a negative impact on marine life.

Laboratory studies show that as seawater acidity increases, the calcium carbonate shells and skeletons of many marine species, such as hard corals, sea urchins, and stony seaweeds.

A Shifting Balance

Wootton and colleagues built models of an ecosystem based on field data of how species interact along Tatoosh Island's rocky shores.

Surprisingly, in a scenario of increasing acidity, not all species with calcium carbonate shells faired badly.

Instead, a shift took place: Larger mussels and barnacles suffered, leaving smaller barnacles and some calcium-based seaweeds better off.

In nature, "species are competing for space, they are eating each other, it's an incredibly dynamic system," said James Forester, a Harvard University ecologist who co-authored the study in this week's journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"When you change the playing field—in this case by altering acidity—you can get unexpected responses," he said.

"Mussels usually dominate the ecosystem because they are good at overgrowing and crushing out other species that grow on the rocks," said co-author Wootton.

"But when the mussels decline, it means other species—no matter whether or not they have a shell—can do better," he said.

An acidity-driven shift in coastal ecosystems could spell disaster for shellfish industries that rely on mussels and other similar species, Wootton warned.

Nancy Knowlton is a marine biology professor at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, who was not involved in the study.

She pointed out the importance of adopting an "enemy of my enemy is my friend" approach when trying to understand the effects of ocean acidification on whole ecosystems.

While the field surveys did show an overall decline in mussels, the predictive models were needed to hunt for longer-term changes.

"There is inertia in the system because many of these species live for a long time," said co-author Wooton.

"The little changes we see in the dynamics of the ecosystem may magnify over time."

A Wider Pattern?

These are the first data on ocean acidity from temperate—rather than tropical—waters. No one knows whether similar rapid changes are taking place elsewhere.

"The rules might be quite different on Tatoosh Island," Wootton suggested.

"There could be mechanisms going on in the waters around our island that are unique.

"We really need to get more data from other sites away from the equator to see what patterns are there," he added.

Marine biologist Knowlton said, "This is typical of so many climate studies—almost without exception things are turning out to be worse than we originally thought."

Marine life faces 'acid threat'
BBC News 25 Nov 08;

Man-made pollution is raising ocean acidity at least 10 times faster than previously thought, a study says.

Researchers say carbon dioxide levels are having a marked effect on the health of shellfish such as mussels.

They sampled coastal waters off the north-west Pacific coast of the US every half-hour for eight years.

The results, published in the journal PNAS, suggest that earlier climate change models may have underestimated the rate of ocean acidification.

Ocean pH

Professor Timothy Wootton from the department of ecology and evolution, University of Chicago, in Illinois, says such dramatic results were unexpected as it was thought that the huge ocean systems had the ability to absorb large quantities of CO2.

"It's been thought pH in the open oceans is well buffered, so it's surprising to see these fluctuations," he said.

The findings showed that CO2 had lowered the water pH over time, demonstrating a year-on-year increase in acidity.

The research involved taking daily measurements of water pH levels, salinity and temperature, off the coast of Tatoosh island, a small outcrop lying in the Pacific Ocean, just off the north-western tip of Washington state, US.

As well as measuring physical factors, the health of marine life present in the coastal ecosystem was also tracked.

Professor Wootton says biological factors were missing from previous models of ocean climate systems - and that life in the ocean, or in this case on the ocean edge, can also affect seawater pH.

"Over a short time, biology is affecting pH, through photosynthesis and respiration, but current models don't include biological activity as part of the story," he explained.

Calcium carbonate

Every summer, Professor Wootton returned to the same sites on Tatoosh island's windswept coasts, to look at the abundance and distribution of life at the water's edge. He was especially interested in barnacles, algae and the dominant species, the Californian mussel.

The mussel has a calcium carbonate -based shell, which can be weakened or even dissolved by exposure to acid. Professor Wootton says the increase in acidity may be responsible for the decline in mussels noted in the study.

"Patterns show the chances of mussels being replaced are higher than for species without calcified shells," he said.

Other species quickly move into the space previously occupied by the mussels - though one of these species, the barnacle, also has calcified shells.

To explain this apparent anomaly, Professor Wootton says the decline of the dominant species allows a window where another species may thrive - though he expects this to be temporary as the interloper too will eventually be affected by the increasing acidity.

"In the short term, the long term decline is offset by the release from competition," he explained.

Chemical oceanography

The researchers say they were surprised that the plants and animals in their study are so sensitive to CO2 changes. These organisms live in the harsh inter-tidal zones, they may be submerged under water, exposed to the sun, then lashed by waves and storms.

Professor Wootton says the most troubling finding is the speed of acidification, with the pH level dropping at a much greater rate than was previously thought.

"It's going down 10 to 20 times faster than the previous models predicted," he says.

The research team are now working together with chemical oceanographers to see how their coastal observations can be matched with large scale observations, to try to explain why the decline in pH levels seems to be happening so quickly.

"We actually know surprisingly little about how ocean acidity is changing over time, we need a broader network of measurements," said Professor Wootton.

Acidic seas threaten coral and mussels

Impact of rising carbon dioxide levels far worse than previously thought
Steve Connor, The Independent 25 Nov 08;

Rising carbon dioxide levels are increasing acidity in the oceans 10 times faster than scientists thought, posing a greater threat to shell-forming creatures such as coral and mussels.

An eight-year project in the Pacific has found that rising marine acid levels will challenge many organisms, because their shell-making chemistry is critically dependent on a less acidic, more alkaline environment. The study monitored seawater pH levels at the north-east Pacific island of Tatoosh off Washington state in the United States.

Timothy Wootton, from Chicago University, said scientists found that acidity levels increased at more than 10 times the rate predicted by computer models designed to study the link between atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide and ocean acidity.

Atmospheric carbon dioxide levels have increased by about 100 parts per million since the start of the industrial revolution and are now at their highest point in at least 650,000 years.

About a third of man-made carbon dioxide emissions has dissolved into the oceans. As carbon dioxide dissolves in seawater, it forms carbonic acid, which lowers the ocean's alkalinity and pH level, making it more acidic.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicted last year that most coral reefs would disappear by the century's end because of rising temperatures and ocean acidity.

However, this latest study, published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, suggests that the rate of ocean acidification may be far higher than the rate used by the IPCC scientists in their assessment of future prospects for shell-forming marine creatures such as corals.

Professor Wootton said: "An alarming surprise is how rapidly pH has declined over the study period ... These data point to the urgency of obtaining a globally extensive set of ocean pH data through time, and suggest that our understanding of ocean pH may be incomplete.

"The results showed that variation on ocean pH through time was most strongly associated with increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide, which supports the prediction that increasing release of CO2 to the atmosphere leads to ocean acidification."

The study was unusual in that it looked at acidity in the ocean's intertidal region, inhabited by shell-forming creatures such as barnacles and mussels. Professor Wootton said there was a shortage of data on ocean acidification, especially in non-tropical regions, which this study addressed.

"Our study reveals the strongest negative impacts of declining pH are on several species of particular importance – large calcifying mussels and goose barnacles. This finding illustrates several reasons why the effects of declining ocean pH are of general concern, as these species create critical habitats for other coastal species, are important players in coastal nutrient processing, and reflect the more general risks to shellfish harvesting."


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Southern Ocean changing but still major CO2 sink: study

David Fogarty, Reuters 24 Nov 08;

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - The Southern Ocean has proved more resilient to global warming than previously thought and remains a major store of mankind's planet-warming carbon dioxide, a study has found.

Oceans absorb a large portion of the extra CO2 released by mankind through burning fossil fuels or deforestation, acting as a brake on climate change, and the Southern Ocean is the largest of these "carbon sinks."

Previous research has suggested the vast ocean between Australia and Antarctica was losing its potency because climate change had affected its currents and increased powerful westerly winds.

The latest study compares ship-based measurements of the ocean since the 1960s and more recent data from hundreds of robotic floats. The analysis shows the Southern Ocean has maintained its ability to soak up excess carbon despite changes to currents and wind speeds.

"It's a positive thing. It's one thing it looks like we don't have to worry about as much as we thought," said Steve Rintoul of the Center for Australian Weather and Climate Research, part of a team researchers that also included scientists from the Institute for Marine Research at the University of Kiel in Germany.

Rintoul said the data showed, as had earlier studies, the Southern Ocean was becoming warmer, and also fresher. The study was published this week in Nature Geoscience.

He said with data on salinity and temperature, the team could measure density of sea water and how that density changed from one place to another in relation to how fast water was moving between two places.

"By looking at the density we could say something about the way the major currents were or were not changing.

"And this was the surprise. We found that the currents had not changed. They had shifted their position, they'd shifted closer to Antarctica but not become stronger or weaker."

GIANT FLYWHEEL

Scientists are closely studying the Southern Ocean for any changes in the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, a vast body of water that runs west to east around the continent from about 40 degrees south and driven in part by powerful westerly winds blowing on the ocean's surface.

The current acts like a giant flywheel for world's weather.

"The current is closer to Antarctica now than it was in the previous decade but it's carrying about the same amount of water," Rintoul told Reuters from Hobart in southern Australia.

Carbon dioxide is absorbed by the Southern Ocean's turbulent surface layer and then carried to the depths by circulation patterns.

It is also absorbed by billions of tiny phytoplankton and other organisms, which fall to the ocean bottom when they die.

Some of the carbon-rich water from the depths rises near Antarctica, releasing CO2, while further away from the continent, it sinks again because it is less dense. Overall, though, the ocean absorbs much more than it releases.

"Our results suggest that that part of the circulation, the upwelling near Antarctica and the sinking further north, has also not changed."

Previous research suggested the faster winds blowing on the surface increased the upwelling of the deep carbon-rich water.

Rintoul said it was hard to tell what would happen to the ocean in the future largely because computer climate models weren't powerful enough to take into account the impacts of small-scale turbulence or eddies.

These help shift the circumpolar current to the south but not change its strength.

He said the same computer models suggested the circumpolar current should have sped up because of the stronger winds and caused more CO2-rich water to upwell from the depths.

"The point of this study is that we don't see that."

(Editing by David Fox)


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Ramsar Recognition For Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands

Haslin Gaffor, Bernama 24 Nov 08;

KINABATANGAN, Nov 24 (Bernama) - Nature lovers in Malaysia, especially those in Sabah have welcomed the announcement that the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands have been recognized as a Ramsar site.

The recognition is significant, as the wetlands comprise rarely-found coastal mangrove swamps and peat jungles.

This recent development would add impetus for efforts on conserving the worlds almost extinct animal species like the Sumatran rhinocerous, proboscis monkey and pygmy elephants.

The recognition was announced at the 10th conference of the Ramsar Convention signatories on wetlands held at Changwon, South Korea last Oct 28. Ramsar Convention Deputy Secretary General Dr Nick Davidson presented the certificate of recognition to Sabah Biodiversity Centre (BSC) Director Abdul Fatah Amir.

Any wetlands that obtained the recognition would be able to obtain assistance from the Ramsar Fund for implementation of biodiversity conservation programmes.

The Ramsar Convention is an informal name accorded on the convention on wetlands that have international significance, particularly concerning habitats of water fowls.

The Ramsar Secretariat shares its headquarters with the World Conservation Union in Gland, Switzerland.

CONSERVATION EFFORTS

For the SBC, that took shape only last May, the recognition accorded on the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands as a Ramsar site is the agency's maiden experience towards implementing biodiversity conservation programmes in Sabah.

According to Abdul Fatah, the SBC was established under the Sabah Biodiversity Council as a result of the Borneo Biodiversity and Ecosystems Conservation Programme II that involved the collaboration between the Sabah government and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).

He said SBC played a significant role in moving and coordinating the operations of agencies in Sabah in the biodiversity conservation aspect.

According to Abdul Fatah, the primary objective behind the setting up of the SBC was to work towards achieving the Ramsar recognition for the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama wetlands.

"This had been achieved", he said.

"We have planned several biodiversity programmes at this Ramsar site including that on managing, developing information system and formulating rules and regulations in this area," he said.

He said achieving the Ramsar recognition for the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands was a momentous moment as the wetlands comprises of coastal mangrove swamps and peat jungles rarely found in the world.

"It is also the home of almost extinct wildlife like the Sumatran rhinocerous, Borneo pygmy elephant and proboscis monkey", he told Bernama during a media visit to the wetlands recently.

During the visit, journalists were taken in a boat ride along the Kinabatangan River to view the biodiversity there.

BIGGEST RAMSAR LOCATION IN MALAYSIA

He said the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands was the first Ramsar site in Sabah and the biggest in Malaysia.

The area is Malaysia's sixth Ramsar site. It spreads over more than 78,803 hectares (ha) of peat jungles and mangrove swamps at the east coast of Sabah.

The Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands has three forest reserves -- Trusan Kinabatangan Reserve Forest (40,471 ha), Kulamba Wildlife Forest Reserve (20,682ha) and Kuala Maruap-Kuala Segama Forest Reserve (17,650ha).

Hence, the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands was significantly larger than the other five Ramsar locations in Malaysia that measure a total of 55,355 ha, he said.

The other Ramsar sites in Malaysia are the Taman Negara Wetlands Kuching (Sarawak), Pulau Kukup (Johor), Sungai Pulai (Johor), Tanjung Piai (Johor) and Tasek Bera in Pahang.

BENEFIT FOR VILLAGERS

The recognition of the Lower Kinabatangan-Segama Wetlands as a Ramsar site is good news to the residents who stay in areas fringing the jungles there.

Among the villages located near this location are Kampung Abai, Kampung Sri Ganda, Kampung Mumiang, Kampung Tidung and Kampung Dagat.

The headman for Kampung Abai, Jamal Ingeu, 58, said the new status of the wetlands would augur well for the conservation and protection of the coastal mangrove and peat jungles and the wildlife habitat there.

He said the wildlife at the wetlands was important, as it is an attraction for tourists and nature lovers.

The tourists came to view closely the Borneo pygmy elephants, proboscis monkey and Orang Utan.

"This is also good for villagers like us who are fishermen and who depend on the mangrove swamps and rivers at the wetlands in this newly-declared Ramsar site", Jamal told Bernama.

He said the wetlands provided the fishermen with crabs, fish and prawns enabling them to earn a living.

There are some 200 people in this village, the majority of them being fishermen.

Jamal also said the villagers should refrain from chopping down trees in the wetlands to make the traps and snares for the aquatic life there.

They should be using traps made from plastics instead of wood, he added.

LIVELIHOOD OF FISHERMEN

Kampung Mumiang headman, Basrah Putrah, 60, said the Ramsar recognition accorded on the mangrove jungles near the village enables stricter enforcement by the authorities to curb encroachment and illegal felling of trees in the area.

"Mangrove jungles at this Ramsar site have to be protected for the conservation of the fish crab and prawn habitats.

"This is important as the fishermen here are depending on this area for their livelihood," he said, adding that the village has a population of some 400, most of them fishermen.

-- BERNAMA


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South Korea Builds City From Sea At Wetland's Expense

Jon Herskovitz, PlanetArk 25 Nov 08;

BUAN - South Korea is betting a multi-billion dollar land reclamation project about seven times the size of Manhattan will lift the economy but environmentalists say it could be one of the country's biggest ecological blunders.

The Saemangeum land reclamation project uses a 33-km (20.5 mile) sea dyke to reclaim an area of 400 square kms (155 sq miles), turning coastal tidelands that are key feeding areas for globally threatened birds into land for factories, golf courses and water treatment plants.

"This project is not about protecting the environment. It is about economic development. And we will do that in an environmentally sound way," said Park Hyoungbae, an official with the Saemangeum development authority.

The authority said the project, built at a cost of nearly $3 billion, will bring industry to North Jeolla, a province that has traditionally been the agricultural breadbasket of the country but lacks modern industry.

Developers will start construction of an industrial zone next year, offering sweeteners like free land leases for 100 years for selected industries and a free economic zone that offers tax breaks to attract foreign investors, who can stay in a village planned just for them.

They will replace natural wetlands with artificial ones and turn riverbeds into man-made lakes. They will build a park along the road on the sea dyke and try to attract tourists with a theme park, convention centre and even perhaps a casino.

"Saemangeum will turn Korea into a much happier place," said an announcer on a promotional video for potential investors.

The province, which runs from the middle of South Korea to the west coast, is dotted with small farms that grow grain and raise pigs, boasts a mid-sized port that serves China across the Yellow Sea and is home the historic city of Jeonju, once the capital an ancient Korean kingdom.

Saemangeum has drawn the attention of developers in other parts of Asia, which conservationists said could lead them to try to duplicate the engineering feat in South Korea for their own massive land reclamation projects.

BUREAUCRATIC INERTIA

South Korea originally launched the project for the estuary, about 200 kms south of Seoul, decades ago when its economy was struggling, food was short and reclamation seemed like a good way to increase farm land in the mountainous and cramped country .

After years of legal wrangling and changes in how to use the land, construction started on the project in 1999 with hundreds of thousands of boulders the size of compact cars dumped into the Yellow Sea estuary to form the dyke that was completed in 2006.

Area farmers have questioned the need for the project, saying there is no one left to work the land due to a population drop while major domestic industry has often stayed away due to a lack of infrastructure.

Critics said the project stayed alive due to bureaucratic inertia and because it created construction jobs in the area that has provided the strongest political support for left-leaning presidents who ruled from 1998 to 2008.

The current conservative president, Lee Myung-bak, who used to run Hyundai's construction arm, has also thrown his support to the project, saying it will help regional development and stimulate his country's export-driven economy that is on the ropes due to the global slowdown.

"Saemangeum's ecological importance seems to be more valued abroad," said Yoon Sang-hoon of the conservation group Green Korea.

"The government is calling this environmentally friendly, but just planting a few trees that have since died does not make it a green project," Yoon said.

ENDANGERED SPECIES

Wetlands such as Saemangeum help in flood control, prevent soil erosion and can remove, as well as store, greenhouse gases from the Earth's atmosphere, according the US Environmental Protection Agency.

One of North Asia's biggest recent projects to reclaim land from tidal wetlands was in Japan's Isahaya Bay, in the southwest of the country. It has proven to be a disaster, leading to drops in sea water quality and poor soil on land, according to research reports from Japanese academics.

In June, a Japanese court ordered the government to open the sluice gates at Isahaya, shut in 1997, saying the project has caused harm to fisheries and damaged the region's environment.

Even though there is still water flowing occasionally through sluice gates at Saemangeum, the project has already taken its toll on the environment by destroying wetlands and pushing endangered species toward extinction, conservation groups said.

Migratory birds travelling between Russia and Alaska in the north to New Zealand and Australia in the south congregate for often their only refuelling stop at Yellow Sea tidal flats to feast on shellfish and other food.

A study released last month by conservation groups Birds Korea and Australasian Wader Studies Group recorded a decline of 137,000 shorebirds, and declines in 19 of the most numerous species, from 2006 to 2008 at Saemangeum.

The study indicated that the critically endangered Spoon-billed Sandpiper and the endangered Spotted Greenshank were being pushed to extinction by the loss of wetlands.

"We anticipate the declines will not only continue but become more obvious in other species," said Nial Moores, a British-born conservationist and director of Birds Korea.

(Additional reporting by Kim Junghyun)


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Australian officials say rescued whales now safe at sea

Yahoo News 24 Nov 08;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Wildlife officials Monday said rescue efforts had saved 11 whales from a mass stranding on an Australian beach, with the animals now swimming freely in deep water and unlikely to return to land.

Some 64 pilot whales, many of them mothers and calves, were found stranded on Anthonys Beach on the southern Australian island of Tasmania on Saturday.

Fifty-three of the animals died but rescuers worked throughout the weekend to save the rest, eventually hauling 11 of them on to specially-modified vehicles and driving them to a nearby beach for release into the sea.

Tasmania's Parks and Wildlife Service said satellite tracking devices which had been fitted to five of the rescued whales indicated that the animals were now swimming freely in deep water in Bass Strait.

"While this is good news, we will monitor the wider area with an aircraft," spokesman Chris Arthur said in a statement.

Wildlife officials said they were delighted the 11 rescued whales had regrouped in the water and said it was likely that they would also join up with humpback whales in the area.

"Not only have they survived being put back in the water after their traumatic ordeal but they've also found each other and are travelling with each other," the Department of Primary Industries and Water's David Pemberton said.

He said the tracking devices had proven that the rescue efforts, which involved swooping huge nets around the beached animals and hauling them on to vehicles and then releasing them at another beach, had been successful.

"For the first time in Australia, we have now got data which tells us that they are doing okay -- it is fantastic and incredibly exciting," Pemberton told national news agency AAP.

"In Tasmania, we deal with most whale strandings reported in Australia and previously, rescue attempts have been something of a hope and a prayer.

"Now we know that the rescue efforts are well worth it -- we have the evidence that tells us so."

Whale strandings are not uncommon in Tasmania but why they occur remains a subject of scientific debate.

Officials said autopsies will be carried out on the dead whales, which measured up to three metres (10 feet) in length.

Whales rescued from Australian beach join pod
Yahoo News 24 Nov 08;

HOBART, Australia – A group of whales rescued from an Australian beach have joined a larger pod in deep waters — a sign they are doing fine after their ordeal, an official said Monday.

Rescuers tagged five of eleven pilot whales they plucked from the beach in southern Tasmania state Sunday with satellite tracking devices so they could follow the animals' progress.

It was the first time tracking devices had been used in a whale rescue in Australia.

By Monday morning, the tagged whales had found a larger pod of whales and were swimming east toward migration routes know to be used by humpback whales, said wildlife officer David Pemberton.

"Not only have they survived being put back in the water after their traumatic ordeal but they've also found each other and are traveling with each other," said Pemberton, who is from Tasmania's Department of Primary Industries and Water.

"Previously, rescue attempts have been something of a hope and a prayer," Pemberton said. "Now we know that the rescue efforts are well worth it, we have the evidence that tells us so."

Whales that become beached are sometimes known to return in confusion to dangerously shallow waters after being freed, dismaying rescuers.

When the 64 stranded mothers and their young were found on Saturday, 52 had already died and one died overnight despite volunteers spending the night pouring water over the animal to keep it from overheating.

Dozens of volunteers and government wildlife officers used giant slings to hoist the 11 survivors into trucks and drive them to a deep-water beach in Tasmania. They were released Sunday afternoon, some 7.5 miles (12 kilometers) away on Tasmania's northwest coast.

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.


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Python-Packed Cars Seized in Cambodia

Stefan Lovgren, National Geographic News 24 Nov 08;

Two wildlife smugglers transporting hundreds of live turtles and pythons jammed into the backs of cars have been arrested by Cambodian officials.

The drivers were apparently heading to neighboring Vietnam to sell the animals—many of them rare—to the region's illegal wildlife markets.

The November 9 seizure by a special Cambodian government task force comes on the heels of two other raids on wildlife smugglers in Malaysia.

Cambodia has long been considered a hot spot in the booming illegal wildlife trade, with many of its animals regularly siphoned off to Vietnam and on to China to be eaten or used in traditional medicine.

But large wildlife seizures such as the one in November may signal a positive shift in Cambodia's fight against traders, said Nick Marx, the Cambodia Wildlife Rescue Director for the conservation group Wildlife Alliance.

Animals are being rescued there every week, and larger busts may happen once or twice a month, Marx said.

Reptile Loot

The smugglers were stopped in Kâmpóng Chhnǎng Province in central Cambodia while heading east toward Vietnam.

In the two vehicles' trunks, officials found 1,069 pounds (485 kilograms) of live wildlife, including three species of turtles—yellow-headed temple turtles, Malayan snail-eating turtles, and Asiatic softshell turtles—that are listed as either endangered or vulnerable on the International Union for Conservation of Nature's Red List of Threatened Species.

Slow-growing turtles are particularly vulnerable to poaching, experts say, and wildlife traders can wipe out entire populations in a river or lake with one shipment.

The loot also included king cobras, reticulated pythons, and Burmese pythons.

The animals were packed into bags and metal tins and kept on blocks of ice to prevent them from overheating.

The smugglers, two Cambodian men in their late 20s, were arrested by authorities.

The animals, thought to have come from protected areas in Battambang Province in western Cambodia, were released into a protected area near Tonle Sap Lake in the country's central region, according to Wildlife Alliance.

Informant Network

Before the most recent bust, task force officials were tipped off about two Toyotas loaded with wildlife.

The government task force—called the Wildlife Rapid Rescue Team—relies on a countrywide network of informants, who alert them to potential smuggling activities.

"When we receive information, we have to react extremely quickly," Marx said.

"Animals are often in transit, and if we don't reach them before they reach the border we're not able to rescue them."

The Wildlife Alliance-backed group of eight military police and four forestry officials has rescued some 32,000 animals in Cambodia since the task force was set up in 2001.

Big-Market Business

Though still traditionally accepted in Cambodia, wild meat consumption has declined dramatically in the country in recent years.

"A lot of the traders that used to sell wildlife meat [to Cambodians] have stopped," Marx said.

But the Southeast Asian country remains an important source of animals for the regional wildlife trade, and traders operating there are becoming increasingly sophisticated, conservationists say.

"It's a professional, big-market business run by people who know what they're sourcing and know where they're selling it," said Colin Poole, director of the Asia program for the Wildlife Conservation Society.

With a 12-person task force to cover a country the size of the U.S. state of Missouri, smugglers often manage to escape into neighboring countries, using tricks such as switching cars to avoid detection.

Cambodia is also part of the Association of Southeast Nations Wildlife Enforcement Network, or ASEAN-WEN, which was formed in 2005 to combat the illegal wildlife trade.

But Cambodia has had little involvement with the network so far, according to Marx of Wildlife Alliance.

"This is a regional problem, and so we need to be addressing it on a more regional basis," he said.

"A stronger connection with ASEAN-WEN … [would] be a big step forward, as it will mean that traders can still be arrested and animals rescued even after they leave the country."


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Back from the brink: herring fishermen hail conservation success

Scottish fleet safeguards its future as depleted fish stocks rise again
Paul Kelbie, guardian.co.uk 23 Nov 08;

A few years ago the Scottish pelagic fishing fleet was on the edge of extinction. Over-fishing of herring and mackerel, the main targets of pelagic (open-sea) fishing, threatened to put the livelihoods of hundreds of fishermen in danger and bring financial hardship to many north-east coastal communities.

However, after several years of effort it appears herring and mackerel are once again back on the menu for consumers as stocks of both species have been, or are about to be, declared sustainable. This summer the Scottish pelagic fleet became the first in the world to win the right to carry the coveted Marine Stewardships Council eco-label for herring and it is expected that the mackerel fishery will follow suit in the new year.

While fears continue for other fish stocks within the North Sea the multi-million pound boats of the Scottish pelagic fleet operating out of Fraserburgh, Peterhead and Shetland are reaping the harvest of years of conservation co-operation. Although unused for some 10 months a year, the state-of-the art vessels can catch their designated quotas of mackerel or herring within weeks, a sure sign the crewmen claim, that there are once again plenty of fish in the sea.

'Mackerel is now one of the biggest fish stocks in the UK,' said Derek Duthie, Secretary of the Scottish Pelagic Sustainability Group which represents about 25 boats, each with a crew of around 15 men. 'As an industry we recognise people don't just take what we see for granted, as far as how many fish there are in the sea and how sustainable they are, so we have been working on having our fisheries assessed by a certifying body under the Marine Stewardship Council standard.

'We had a North Sea herring fishery certified in May, and we expect our mackerel fishery to be certified early in 2009 - that assessment has been done and is going through its public phase of accreditation.

'It is an independent assessment of whether or not the industry can be sustainable and it looks into the scientific assessment of the stock and into the actual fishery itself and whether it has any adverse effects on the environment or the wider marine ecosystem.'

Mackerel is the second most valuable stock to Scotland's fishing communities with retail sales of fresh and frozen products worth more than £90m in the past year. However the true worth is probably many times more when the economic spin-offs from the processing, haulage and subsidiary marine industries are taken into account.

Although the mackerel catch has always enjoyed high export sales, home-grown consumers are increasingly turning to the fish. Mackerel has become popular among British consumers largely as a result of the health benefits to be gained from eating the oily fish rich in Omega 3. 'Mackerel as a dish is becoming extremely popular, consumption is definitely increasing,' said Nicki Holmyard of trade body Seafood Scotland.

Fortunately for consumers there are likely to be even more mackerel on supermarket shelves next year as, following independent confirmation that stocks are increasing, crews will get an increase of almost 33 per cent in the total allowable catch for mackerel in the north-east Atlantic and North Sea, taking it to some 605,000 tonnes.

However, even then the fishermen are unlikely to be at sea for more than about eight weeks over the year as they maintain their attempts to conserve stocks.

'Most of the boats and businesses are run by families with the next generation coming along behind us. We are in it for the long term, not for a quick buck,' said Alex Wiseman, owner of Kings Cross pelagic vessel and Chairman of the Scottish Pelagic Fisherman's Association. 'We don't want to be fishing mackerel for two years and then have nothing left.'


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Forest protection plan could displace millions, say campaigners

Livelihoods of 60m indigenous people at risk from plans to tackle climate change by protecting forests, says Friends of the Earth
Alok Jha, guardian.co.uk 24 Nov 08;

International proposals to protect forests to tackle climate change could displace millions of indigenous people and fail to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, according to environmentalists.

Friends of the Earth International (FoE) will argue in a report to be published on Thursday, that plans to slow the decline of forests, which would see rich countries pay for the protection of forests in tropical regions, are open to abuse by corrupt politicians or illegal logging companies.

Forests store a significant amount of carbon and cutting them down is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions — currently this accounts for around 20% of the world's total.

Deforestation also threatens biodiversity and puts the livelihoods of more than 60 million indigenous people who are dependent upon forests at risk.

Working out a way to protect forests will be one of the key issues discussed next week in the United Nations climate change summit in Poznan, Poland, which marks the start of global negotiations to replace for the Kyoto protocol after 2012.

Government representatives at the meeting will consider the adoption of the Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (Redd) mechanismin which richer countries pay to maintain forests in tropical regions to offset their own emissions.

The idea was based on Nicholas Stern's 2006 review of the economics of climate change. Stern said that £2.5bn a year could be enough to prevent deforestation across the eight most important countries. But Stern also argued that, for such a scheme to work, institutional and policy reforms would be required in many of the countries that would end up with the protected forests, such as Indonesia, Cameroon or Papua New Guinea.

FoE agrees that forests could be included in climate change targets but argues that, in its current form, Redd is fraught with problems. In its report, the group says that the proposals seem to be aimed at setting up a way to generate profits from forests rather than to stop climate change.

"It re-focuses us on the question, who do forests belong to? In the absence of secure land rights, indigenous peoples and other forest-dependent communities have no guarantees that they'll benefit from Redd," said Joseph Zacune, a climate and energy coordinator at Friends of the Earth International. "There's increased likelihood of state and corporate control of their land especially if the value of forests rises."

During the climate talks next week, Zacune said FoE will lobby for forests to be kept out of carbon markets and that land rights are enforced as the basis of any future forest policy. "We want some kind of mechanism to stop deforestation," said Zacune. "If there was to be any agreement, it would have to be developed through a joint process with other relevant forest conventions and human-rights instruments like the UN declaration on the rights on indigenous peoples."

Redd also has no clear definition for what a forest is — the FoE report highlights that the UN includes single-species plantations, such as those grown for palm oil or other agriculture agriculture, which are often grown in areas that have been cleared of virgin rainforests.

"Even at their very best, they store only 20% of the carbon that intact forests do. In Brazil, they're now talking about 'net deforestation', and this probably means designing Redd and forest policies to match the amount of trees being cut down due to the expansion of plantations," said Zacune.

FoE's conclusions echo those of the Rights and Resources Initiative, an international coalition of global NGOs which has argued that the rush to protect forests could have unintended consequences. In two reports published in July, the Rights and Resources Initiative said that the money aimed at protecting trees might end up in the hands of central government officials in areas of the world where they were closely tied to illegal logging and mining activities.

"It is widely acknowledged that poor governance and corruption also need to be addressed if deforestation is to be stopped," said the FoE report. "The question is whether Redd can address these issues and how it links to existing established processes intended to deal with illegal deforestation (which includes illegal logging and illegal forest conversion to agriculture). Furthermore, would the use of a Redd fund rather than carbon markets improve governments' ability to reign in such illegal activities?"

Zacune said that the best way to manage forests was to devolve the responsibility to localm people — an idea proposed by Tuvalu. "The idea is that they would provide incentives for protecting and retaining their forests. It's the communities and indigenous people who have managed the forests for generations that should be in control of the forest."

The FoE report also argues that protecting forests should not become a way for rich countries to pay their way out of reducing their emissions. "If governments are serious about tackling climate change, deforestation must be stopped once and for all," said Zacune. "To do this we need to tackle the consumption of agrofuels, meat and timber products which is driving deforestation and support good governance of forest resources."

Tony Juniper, a sustainability adviser to the Prince's Rainforests Project, a group set up by the Prince of Wales to work out way to fund forest protection, said there was no single solution to the complex challenge posed by tropical deforestation. "There are clearly dangers in raising finance via a tradable commodity from forest carbon, but there are also dangers in closing off options that could make a positive difference assuming adequate safeguards are put in place. It is also important to remember that the market is one approach among several possible funding mechanisms. For example, major finance could be mobilised via the auctioning of pollution credits under the European Union's Emissions Trading Scheme, or through taxes on aviation fuel for example."


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Water resources dwindling in Australia's 'food basket': report

Yahoo News 24 Nov 08;

SYDNEY (AFP) – A new report revealed on Monday the devastating effect of settlement, irrigation and Australia's long-running drought on one of the country's biggest rivers.

The assessment of the Murray-Darling Basin -- known as the "food basket" of Australia because of its high level of farming -- found that water flowing to the mouth of the Murray River had dropped from more than 12,000 gigalitres a year 200 years ago to below 5,000 gigalitres.

"Integrating the flow impacts down through the connected rivers of the basin shows that total flow at the Murray mouth has been reduced by 61 percent; the river now ceases to flow through the mouth 40 percent of the time," it said.

The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation report found that the basin, which covers more than one-seventh of mainland Australia, has been subjected to extensive clearing of native vegetation.

Water flows along the basin's three rivers -- the Darling, the Murray and the Murrumbidgee -- had been impacted by the construction of dams and the diversion of water for irrigation, stock and domestic uses, it said.

The report's lead author Tom Hatton said flows to the Murray's mouth could be down by 80 percent by 2030 unless changes were made.

The report found that while the impact of climate change was uncertain, water availability across the entire basin was more likely to decline than to increase over the next two decades.

The Murray-Darling Basin generates more than 40 percent of the gross value of Australian agricultural production and uses 60 percent of all irrigation water in the country.


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