Best of our wild blogs: 3 Feb 09


14 Feb (Sat): The Battle of Pasir Panjang Commemorative Walk
Registration now open on the Habitatnews blog

Free Talk on Nudibranchs: A Night With Dr Richard Willan
14 Feb (Sat) on the Pulau Hantu blog

Lost in Ubin
on Ubin.sgkopi

Chek Jawa on Google Earth
on Ubin.sgkopi

Google Earth - now with time travel!
on the Deadpoet's Cave blog

Discovery on Ubin
on the discovery blog

Wildfacts updates: Some strange snails and a curious clam
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Indian Cuckoo in comfort behaviour
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

My First Common KingFisher!
on the Brandon Photography blog

Damsel before dark
on the annotated budak blog and Half a Blue Bird and Hoppy Bird

2 Feb is World Wetlands Day
on the wild shores of singapore blog

A Game of Cat and Fish
How to Restore the Balance in Sustainable Fisheries Management, on the Pulau Hantu blog


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Indonesia and Singapore agree on new boundary

Erwida Maulia, The Jakarta Post 3 Feb 09;

After almost four years of negotiations, Indonesia and Singapore have agreed on a new maritime boundary.

The new border, which will split the two neighbors in the west, will be the first agreed upon since the two countries last signed a border agreement back in 1973.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono told a press conference here Monday that while the two countries had agreed on the central segment of their territorial sea boundary 36 years ago, only recently had they reached an agreement on the western segment of the boundary.

Discussion over the eastern segment will start as soon as the agreement on the western boundary is signed, said Foreign Minister Hassan Wirajuda.

“The central segment of the territorial sea boundary between Indonesia and Singapore was agreed upon in 1973 — 36 years ago,” Yudhoyono said after presiding over a Cabinet meeting.

“After that, there were no more discussions, and we only resumed the pending negotiations in February 2005.”

He added that with a clearer boundary between the two countries, it was expected that Indonesia could further explore economic development in its territories near the boundary, which includes the Batam, Bintan and Karimun free trade zones in the Riau Islands.

The agreement is also expected to boost economic ties between Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia, as well as the three neighbors’ security cooperation in safeguarding the Malacca Strait.

Departing from previous concern, Hassan said, Singapore, which has been actively reclaiming its shoreline, finally agreed not to use its southern reclaimed shoreline as the basis to determine the border.

The median line that forms the western segment of the boundary between the two nations was finally drawn from Indonesia’s Nipah Island and Singapore’s original Sultan Shoal Island, Hassan said.

He added Singapore had earlier refused to talk about the eastern segment boundary, citing the country’s border dispute with Malaysia.

However, with the International Court of Justice deciding last year to grant Singapore sovereignty over the disputed Pedra Branca rocks, recognized by Malaysia as Batu Puteh, negotiations over the final segment of the boundary might soon resume after the signing of the agreement on the western segment boundary, the foreign minister said.


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"So, how many trees have you planted, Daddy?"

They're young, they're green, they're militant ... they are the eco kids re-educating their parents

Michael Odell, The Observer 1 Feb 09;

One day last October I found my five-year-old daughter, Rosa, leafing through my passport, which I'd left on the kitchen table in readiness for a work trip. She was studying it with a frown and I assumed she was upset by the boggle-eyed menace of the photo-booth portrait. But she was actually closely scrutinising several pages of blood-red immigration stamps marking multiple entries to the United States of America. The ensuing conversation went something like this:

"How many times have you been on a plane to America?"

"About 40."

"And how many trees have you planted?"

"No trees."

"I'm going to tell Miss White."

For the past year, my three children and I have been living in Redland, a leafy middle-class enclave of Bristol. A 2008 survey conducted by marketing company CACI found it to be the greenest place in the UK. This means that eight in 10 people in the area counted themselves as "enthusiastic greens", compared with the less apocalypse-averse people of Basildon, Essex, where four in 10 count themselves as "environmentally unconcerned".

I moved here from Brixton in south London. I was not ready for the culture shock of an ultra-green existence. Everything is recycled. Whistling men in a green truck take it away on Thursdays. Stuff that I would put on eBay is offered around Redland in a spirit of green neighbourliness. I am writing this article on an office chair sourced from the pavement outside. There was one of those giddy notes saying, "Please help yourself!" attached to it. I'm wearing socks from one of the charity shops on nearby Whiteladies Road, which are better stocked than the new £500m Cabot Circus shopping centre in the centre of town. OK, so the buses are rubbish, but guilt levels among local drivers mean you might be offered a lift. Twice before Christmas I got approached by eco kerb-crawlers: "I just feel less guilty carrying someone else in the car," one of them told me. And he seemed genuinely disappointed that I only lived 200 yards away.

Yes, this is a green world, and the ozone layer sits a little thicker over Redland.

And then, of course, there is school. Miss White is Rosa's year one teacher at St Peter & St Paul's RC Primary School. In the past year, I have noticed Rosa has begun to recycle and energy-save and spout eco policy with exquisite fervour and zealotry. In the past six months I have been confronted by Rosa, who's like a recalcitrant, chubby-cheeked mayoress of an eco-town, over the following issues: energy-saving light bulbs (I use them in hallways but not in rooms where I actually want light instead of that jaundiced low-energy syrup); paper recycling; turning off the tap when I brush my teeth; carrier bags. And plane journeys.

I have begun to feel there are larger forces at work. I suspect I am a pawn in a covert re-education programme. I fear "pester power" is being organised to leverage pro-environmental awareness in parents - we are being bullied by a generation of pint-sized "eco-worriers". A friend of mine who agonised about remaining anonymous for fear of upsetting her son's school told me how, as part of environmental awareness, all the children in her boy's class had their lunch boxes inspected for high food-miles products and non-recyclable packaging. I know a Brixton parent concerned about her son's school's walk-to-school initiative because it is dangerous. I know a father who was apoplectic when his daughter was asked by a teacher to account for the carbon footprint arising from two foreign holidays.

Miss White is lovely. She has done a great job with Rosa's numbers and with her spelling. But I have started to wonder whether she now has a hand in choosing what tomatoes I eat, how long I spend in the shower and whether I can go to work by plane.

"It's a difficult area," she tells me. "I probably have influenced the class on the subject of carrier bags, because we've looked at pictures of them in the sea. And I may have told them that for Mrs Colley's [the school secretary's] last birthday we bought her a donkey in Africa instead of a conventional present. But they're so young I would never push an idea or preach. They are aware of the issues and actually they are often ahead of me."

I know some of Rosa's eco ideas come from the BBC series Pippin, where a bearded collie dog enthusiastically recycles. Others come from the book Teach Your Granny to Text, published last year by We Are What We Do, a former London community action group and now a self-styled social change movement. Its previous book, Change the World for a Fiver, was a best-seller and the new book is written by children, listing 30 ways they can improve life and the environment including "Walk your dad" and "Test your teacher".

Rosa also has a copy of How to Turn Your Parents Green, by Bristol-based writer James Russell, which states: "Only you can make the Groans [grown-ups] behave, because only you can make their lives a misery if they don't." The book suggests a levy of fines for anti-environmental infringements: 20p for every degree the home thermostat is set over 20C, 10p for every high-energy light bulb used, and so forth. In a signature moment, which perhaps illustrates the topsy-turvy power dynamic of our family, I had to read the more difficult passages of this book to Rosa first, before she could then launch her ideological war and start fining me.

In many ways, her school is quite laid-back, but it has stepped up its commitment to the environment with an application for eco-school status. The Eco-Schools programme was established after the 1994 Rio Earth Summit and now 50% of UK schools subscribe to the programme, whereby pupils audit for energy and water waste, collect litter, or even, in one case, grow their own food and sell it at a local market. They can then apply for bronze, silver and green flag awards.

Rosa's last school, St Bonaventure's, gained the coveted green flag in 2007. When I went back to meet the eco co-ordinator, Morwenna Thomas, the eco-reps of Class 2T were impressively mobilised. They told me about the Golden Boot awarded weekly to each class with the most people who walk to school. They've also produced their own reusable shopping bag and are working to get local shops on the Gloucester Road to give up plastic bags altogether.

But what really struck me about the children was their presentation and debating skills and how confidently they carry the eco message home. Eleven-year-old Layla Hall said that she is firm about making her family cook one evening meal, rather than four separate ones, to save energy. Eight-year-old Rose Bailey has taken it upon herself to lobby her brother to switch off his Xbox, even though sometimes he doesn't listen and "throws her on to the sofa".

Morwenna Thomas says the school's green flag status has been achieved with huge parent support. Even so, there is a political line that cannot be crossed.

"There is a point where environmental thinking crosses over into the political and you have to navigate that carefully. I don't want children carrying guilt because their parents won't or cannot afford to buy fairtrade fruit. And I don't think they should feel guilty if their parents really cannot let them walk to school because it's too far. A subject like the third runway at Heathrow just isn't age appropriate. That might be a subject for secondary school. We focus on little things."

At St Bonaventure's there is an impressive array of recycling apparatus. There is also a Silver Shoe award for the class who try hard to walk to school but don't make the Golden Boot. And there are also lots of crucifixes. I remind myself that St Bonaventure's and St Peter & St Paul's are Catholic schools. I find myself wondering whether environmentalism is seen as a scientific or religious issue.

"Our position is that we look after the world because God created it and it would be rude and ungrateful to mess it up. It is our responsibility to help look after it," Morwenna says.

The idea of pester power usually has negative connotations. For example, the TV regulator Ofcom banned a great deal of junk-food advertising during children's viewing times in 2007, so that parents weren't nagged into buying bad food. But eco-pestering has been neatly re-branded as "reverse socialisation", whereby children educate their parents on what's happening in the world. And it seems to have official backing. David Miliband, the former environment secretary, has stated: "Children are the key to changing society's long-term attitudes to the environment", and the Eco-Schools programme is part-funded by Defra.

Andrew Sutter runs Eco-Schools in the UK. He says he recently received a frustrated email from a mother whose child had stopped her vacuuming. "This child said she did it too much and used up too much electricity. It can be shaming to parents when children assert themselves, but I don't think it is a bad thing. Children are more powerful in getting these ideas across than either politicians or the media. They see footage of the polar bears dying and their reaction is, 'That is wrong. What can I do?'"

Professor David Uzzell from Surrey University has 30 years' experience as an environmental psychologist. His objection to reverse socialisation is less ideological. He simply says that it doesn't work. His research paper Children as Catalysts of Environmental Change looked at children in the UK, Portugal, Denmark and France. "The key finding," he notes, "was that children do not work as shock troops for environmental change. Coming home and proselytising is not the answer. It only works in a specific type of household where the environment is deemed a suitable topic for discussion at the dinner table and where parents are willing to play pupil and allow the child to play teacher. Basically, well-informed, middle-class families."

Frank Furedi, professor of sociology at the University of Kent and author of the forthcoming book The End of Education, objects on more fundamental grounds: "Mobilising children to police their parents' behaviour used to be something you only found in totalitarian societies. I grew up in Eastern Bloc Hungary and I remember children being encouraged to tell teachers if their parents listened to rock'n'roll." Furedi argues that the curriculum is being used as a "policy outlet".

"It's as though the politicians are saying: 'The parents won't change fast enough, let's get the children'," he says.

Yet maybe it's a policy that's working. In 2008 the UK Social Investment Forum conducted a poll of 1,500 parents which showed that 24% of parents cited their children as a key green motivator. Only 2% took their cue from politicians.

When I was growing up in the 70s I don't remember any ideological ideas being served at school and taking them home. The Nine O'Clock News came on and my family sighed. World view was delivered top-down. I waited until my teens before I embraced generationally divisive issues such as nuclear disarmament, the Falklands War and anti-apartheid.

Today, children are being mobilised far earlier. Sometimes it occurs to me that we're nurturing the most knowing and idealistic generation of kids. For a start, all human knowledge, for better or worse, is available to them through the internet. They won't smoke. They are wary of alcohol. They will recycle. But are they really thinking, or just acting like super-virtuous eco-bots? And are we right to worry them with so much at an early age? Judith Shard, mother of Rachel and Joel, has her concerns: "I support and encourage my children when they come home from nursery or school with ideas about how to save the environment, but they should not be made to bear the burden created by their ancestors."

I have two other children. Tommy is eight and Caitlin is 11. Environmental concerns have had less suction with them. Tommy likes dinosaurs and football. He accepts it's too late to save the dinosaurs and concentrates on his game. Caitlin has dutifully planted a few bulbs at the school gardening club. She wrote a poem for her teacher, Mrs Brogan, on the environment, but as she reaches pre-teen age, I notice there are powerful competing consumer instincts. A proliferation of teen tech (iPod, mobile phone, laptop), constructed under unknown wage rates in China and the Far East, have made eco soap-boxing more difficult. Also, the temptation of cheap clothes from Primark separate the sheep from the Oxfam Namibian goats. This Christmas marked a turning point. Her friend Ellen gave her a pencil case made entirely from recycled juice cartons. Caitlin gave Ellen a slice of unadulterated aspirational teen Americana, a DVD of Camp Rock.

"I do care, but I can't think about the environment all the time," she says when I ask her about it. Actually, I find it easier to talk to her about eco behaviour now she is experiencing real dilemmas and making difficult choices.

Rosa's eco epiphany has chimed with a five-year-old's scarily reductive thinking. If I get on a plane, I am killing a penguin. I accept I have been on a lot of planes. I accept that my counter-argument, "I don't really enjoy take-off or the food", is wearing a bit thin. Maybe I will plant a couple of trees. But the other day I wore a coat around the house, rather than putting on the central heating. Then I mulched the previous day's tea bags into the brown recycling box and turned on my solar-powered radio to hear that a third runway at Heathrow had just been approved. I felt like I was a part of some ridiculously tokenistic game.

"I think you have every right to feel miffed," Andrew Simms, policy director for the New Economic Forum, reassures me. "I think the government is acting like an inconsistent parent. Gordon Brown is making grand gestures about the UK leading the way on climate change and encouraging children to recycle, yet on major policy issues such as Heathrow, he slips the leash and does something entirely different. It undermines people's resolve - and that's terrible."

So while Gordon green lights nuclear power plants and third runways, the battle for the planet is being fought over domestic minutiae in a neo-Orwellian nightmare in my own home. Rosa reckons a two-minute shower with the temperature dial set at "medium" is ecologically sound. I think certain treats are inviolate and I ignore her.

But I sense a presence through the shower door as I hum and scrub. Small Daughter is watching me.

Rachel Shard, 5

"When I grow up I want there to be some of the world left for us"

"My brother Joel has a puzzle book which shows bears and wolves in the jungle. I try and tell him that bears and wolves and other animals in the jungle might die if we don't look after them. There are lots of things which threaten them. Litter's one. Litter blocks up the jungles and the animals suffer. I know that water is needed, too. We do Water Aid at our school. And sometimes we all share a bath at home.

Cato Tallis-Lock, 12

"I think my parents listen to me about the environment"

"I came up with the idea "Walk Your Dad" for the book Teach Your Granny To Text with my friend Edward. Both our dads work at home sitting at computers. We felt they needed more exercise. At school there is someone to tell you to do PE or swimming, but working at home there is less opportunity to exercise. Encouraging our dads to walk was about health and about the environment. I'm protective of the environment. I check if the lights are on and if the TV is on standby. Small things around the house make a difference, like turning off the tap when you're brushing your teeth. The big stuff is harder, though. We do go on aeroplanes, but not for short journeys. We drove to Spain last summer. I think my parents listen to me about the environment. But they do stuff anyway. If there was a child whose parent wasn't listening to them about the threat of global warming I'd say, show them a website which shows CO2 emissions.

Sunneka Deocampo, 8, Brighton

"I like growing seeds. I am growing an avocado to eat"

"I was born in a jungle. I don't remember it, but my mum has told me. I was surrounded by coconuts and flowers. I like growing seeds and I think if we grew more food and ate it that might be good for the earth. I am growing an avocado to eat. It's about the size of a satsuma now, maybe a bit bigger. You put it near the sun. You water it. It takes ages just to grow one, though. I don't know where my school dinner comes from. We need a lot of food in the school and I could never make that much. Mr O'Shea is my teacher and we talk about the environment in class. I turn off taps that are running. I pick up litter. I know cars are not good.
I live near the sea and I know if oil gets in it that isn't good for the birds. My sister Taneesha is seven. We made our own recycling box and we put our paper in it. I hope it helps. Mr O'Shea says it helps. My mum says it will help.


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On trail of Seletar cat killer

Dozens of cat carcasses found in bags buried at roadside
Teh Jen Lee, The New Paper 3 Feb 09;

THEY looked like ordinary trash bags lying along Seletar Road, waiting to be picked up by the waste collection truck.

But they contained the bodies of cats, carefully sealed in plastic containers or bags.

It is understood that there could be up to 45 cat carcasses in the bags.

They were dug up by the police, after getting a call.

It's not known who killed the cats. Or why. Or how.

But it appears to have been the worst mass killing of cats that Singapore has seen (see report on facing page).

There are few clues, and it is not even clear yet exactly when the cats died.

It is illegal for anyone but trained veterinarians to put down any animal in Singapore.

The New Paper was tipped off by the Society of Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (SPCA) about the grisly finds.

SPCA understands that a woman caller, believed to be a resident of Seletar estate, had alerted the police to the stench.

SPCA took some of the dead cats to the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) Animal & Plant Health Laboratory to see if a post-mortem can be carried out.

Three of them, said executive officer Deirdre Moss, 'were in a white plastic box securely taped on all sides'.

She said: 'The SPCA is urgently appealing for witnesses to come forward, who may have seen any persons burying the bags in the different locations along Seletar Road.'

Following the examination of the three bodies, the SPCA veterinary report found that the cats were likely to have been dead for at least a week.

Further investigation would be necessary by way of a post-mortem to establish the cause of death.

The police informed SPCA around 8.20pm on Thursday night that '45 dead cats had been buried in the vicinity of 1 Stratton Place, along Seletar Road, within Seletar estate'.

Holes in the ground

When The New Paper went to Seletar Road on Friday morning to investigate, we found 13 bags lying along the road. They were in three separate locations within a distance of 500m.

This was after the SPCA had removed some of the carcasses.

Near the bags were holes that had been recently dug up, measuring about 30cm deep.

Someone had taken the trouble to bury the cats. But why? And how did the animals die? Was it painfully?

Ms Moss said: 'The cats have been dead for a number of days and this may hamper establishing the cause of death for these animals.'

The stench of the decomposing bodies was overpowering.

With plastic bags acting as gloves, The New Paper team opened up one of the black plastic bags found at the end of Seletar Road, near a construction site.

We found a dog-food plastic bag inside, that had been taped securely. When we opened that bag, we found another layer of red plastic.

But at the bottom of the bag we opened, we could see some dark brown liquid that had possibly seeped out from the decomposing body.

By then, the smell had become unbearable and we decided to stop because if the liquid spilled out, the stench would have affected the surrounding residential area.

A Bangladeshi construction worker who declined to be named said the police were there at 9am on Friday, but he didn't know what they were looking for.

'I didn't hear anything about dead cats,' he said.

Said a 36-year-old Sri Lankan domestic helper living across from where the bags were found, who gave her name only as Mala: 'It was very smelly this morning. While I was watering the plants around 7am, I could smell something but I didn't know what it was.

'I've never seen people keep cats around here.'

Her employer, Mr Kish Ranai, 50, told The New Paper that his neighbours had called the police because they had noticed the foul smell.

'The first time I smelled it was yesterday evening when the police were around and they were digging up the bags. I didn't know that they contained cat carcasses,' he said.

'I've been a resident here for more than 15 years and it's the first time something like this has happened. It's cruel. Those culprits must be dealt with.'

He wondered aloud why the cats were not sent to SPCA to be put down humanely.

The New Paper's efforts to speak to the neighbour who called the police were unsuccessful.

Mr Justin Chiam, 20, a jogger who happened to be passing by, noticed the strong stench.

'It's my first time jogging here and I noticed the smell immediately. This is animal cruelty,' he said.

A spokesman for AVA said they received a total of 10 cat carcasses submitted by SPCA on Friday.

Preliminary examination indicated that all 10 carcasses were in a highly decomposed state. Post-mortem examination is still ongoing.

AVA will investigate all reports of animal cruelty.

For an investigation to be meaningful and productive, the report should be accompanied by sufficient evidence that an act of animal cruelty has been committed and information that could lead to the identity of the perpetrator, said AVA.

Witnesses willing to testify in court against the perpetrator will help in the prosecution.

Anyone found guilty of animal cruelty can be fined up to $10,000 or jailed 12 months or both.

Members of the public can contact the SPCA at 62875355 extension 9.

Ms Moss said: 'We're desperately hoping that someone will come forward and shed some light on this horrific find.'

MYSTERY 1

Who called and left details about dead cats?

MYSTERY 2

Why bury them in a row along a road within sight of others? Killer ignored dump at construction site nearby.

MYSTERY 3

Why were so many bags used to wrap dead cats?

MYSTERY 4

Where did all the dead cats come from?

Previous cases of cat abuse

DECEMBER 2006

A cat was found hung from a staircase railing with a blue nylon string tied around its neck.

Residents at Block 245, Simei Street 5 called the police after they saw the cat hanging between the sixth and seventh floor.

The incident happened on 29 Dec. It was the second time in a week that a cat had been tortured.

On Christmas Eve, a cat was found bleeding from its mouth and nose at Yishun Ring Road.

The SPCA was informed and the injured cat was taken to a veterinarian to be put to sleep. SPCA executive officer Deirdre Moss said: 'It was in extreme pain and suffering from respiratory distress.'

AUGUST 2007

A cat was discovered at the West Coast Car Mart with its head and front legs cut off.

The SPCA offered a $1,000 reward for information leading to the apprehension of the cat killer who likely struck early in the morning.

The cruel act was likely done by someone skilled with a knife, indicated by the clean cuts on the cat's body.

As there was very little blood at the scene, it is also likely that the killer had cut up the cat somewhere else before dumping its body in public, said Ms Moss.

MAY 2008

Seven vicious attacks on cats in Pasir Ris prompted animal lovers to offer a $10,000 reward for information. They also started patrols around the neighbourhood.

The sum of money has been pledged by SOS Animals, the Cat Welfare Society, the SPCA and an unnamed family in Aljunied.

The first attack was discovered on 2 May at Pasir Ris Street 21. Two cats found dead there were believed to have been dunked in thinner.

A third cat found there, also dunked and barely alive, had to be put down.

Ten days later, residents found three cats dying of stab wounds in Pasir Ris Town Park. A fourth cat was dead with a fractured jaw.


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Golf club and MacRitchie Reservoir boundary

More signages needed?
Lin Yanqin, Today Online 3 Feb 09;

WITH the fenceless boundary between the Singapore Island Country Club’s (SICC) golf course and MacRitchie Reservoir sometimes not apparent to the casual visitor, better markers could be put up, say some members of the public.

The comments come following the spat on Sunday between a few SICC members and eight trespassers, which ended with one of them in hospital. Police are investigating.

Signboards along the perimeter of the course warn users to “beware of golfers teeing off”, disclaiming the club’s liability for any injuries.

Said Nature Trekker (Singapore) head Ben Lee: “It might not be clear because the signages can be missed. Some Singaporeans also do have a habit of trespassing, so the signs could also warn people of the penalties of trespassing.”

:Today: reader Mariann Maes felt that the club could be more “proactive” in looking out for the welfare of those passing by the course. She wrote to :Today: in a letter: “How on earth could joggers and walkers possibly scan the entire golf area constantly, each time they pass the SICC? Shouldn’t it be the golfers’ responsibility to check if the coast is clear before they tee off in that direction?”:

Mr Lee also felt that the club’s staff could be more cordial to those unwittingly straying past or close to the boundary. To avoid any potentially-unpleasant encounters, he has stopped leading walks from MacRitchie to Lower Pierce Reservoir, as it requires one to enter the course for a short stretch.

But regular jogger Loo Zhen Hoong, 24, said the club’s members and staff are used to the sight of joggers along the course. “We wave at them and say good morning,” he said. “To me, it’s clear enough where the boundary lies.”

Another jogger said that it was possible to trespass as the open boundary extended over a long distance. “Signs can help. But nobody will want to see fences, it will spoil the environment,” he said.

Today contacted SICC yesterday morning, but the club could not reply by press time.


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Saving bats in the UK

Bats: lesser is more
Forget scary movies, Julian Rollins finds a man who loves to care for bats.
Julian Rollins, The Telegraph 30 Jan 09;

For anyone brought up on Hammer Horror, it makes sense that a bat hunt takes you to a castle dungeon. But it's a surprise to find that if there is a fear factor, it's vertigo that comes into play.

On one of the coldest days of the year we wobble up ladders to a door in an 800-year-old keep that opens onto what once was the ground floor. There our guide, bat expert Dr Henry Schofield, briefs us about our quarry, the rare lesser horseshoe bat.We are to keep our voices down and cannot stay long – human body heat can interrupt the sleep of the dungeon's occupants. "Look out for press-ups," he says. "If they start doing upside down press-ups then it's time to go."

Apparently the press-ups are a sign that the bats are waking, a process that takes at least 10 minutes. In those minutes a bat will burn up 10 days' worth of its irreplaceable energy reserve, which can be fatal.

Another climb, this time down a rusty, iron ladder, get us into the dungeon. But when Dr Schofield's torchlight plays over the vaulted ceiling there's not a bat to be seen and after a search he can find only 15 animals tucked deep inside holes in the keep's walls.

"Never work with children and animals," he says, ruefully. The majority of the colony has, he thinks, moved on in search of slightly warmer accommodation.

The name should come as a clue, but up close a lesser horseshoe bat is surprisingly small. In hibernation its wings are tightly wrapped around a body that's just four centimetres (1½in) long.

To Dr Schofield though, it is a little gem and our castle stands in a valley that is a treasure house. He likes to keep the exact location secret; mid Wales has lots of castles and plenty have bat colonies, but only a few have lesser horseshoes.

But that looks set to change. While Britain's bats tend to be a cause of conservation concern, the lesser horseshoe is bucking the trend.

After about 60 years of decline, the past few have seen the lesser's population on the up and up. That has to be largely down to the dedication of Dr Schofield and his employer, the Herefordshire-based Vincent Wildlife Trust. Now 51, Dr Schofield has devoted years to discovering, and then catering for, the needs of the lesser horseshoe.

With friends he set up a voluntary bat group in Clwyd in the Eighties. His interest in bat conservation might have remained a hobby if he had not then got together with wealthy natural historian Vincent Weir.

Weir set up the Vincent Wildlife Trust (VWT) in 1975 as his own pet conservation project and in 1990 offered Henry Schofield a job as its bat man. That gave him the chance to give up his teaching job and devote his time to bats.

He soon discovered that while lesser horseshoes have no shortage of caves, mines, even dungeons, to hibernate in, they struggle to find summer accommodation. Over time he has identified the features of a good summer roost: it should be a stone building that's at least 100 years old, have a slate roof and big, open access points.

Just the sort of thing that in recent years has been a good development prospect. Luckily for lesser horseshoes, Weir had deep pockets and the VWT has bought bat buildings as quickly as Dr Schofield and his colleagues could find them.

It now owns, or looks after, 40 properties, including old cottages, churches, coach houses and barns. All are preserved in a state of "managed" dereliction.

From the castle we travel to see one of the reserves, an old coach house close to a country mansion. Or to be more precise, the top floor of a coach house.

When the VWT took over, the roof was a summer home to 250 lesser horseshoe mothers and their young. Since then, more
than £100,000 has been spent re-roofing the building, adding predator-proof entrances and draught-proofing. It is now used by 750 bat mothers each year, but the estate's owner says he's largely unaware of the presence of his neighbours upstairs.

Weir stepped down as VWT chairman in 2007 and in future the charity will not be able to spend as freely. But Dr Schofield is optimistic and believes that there's now a blueprint for "his" bats to coexist with humans.

"If we've done anything over the years it's to show that there doesn't have to be a conflict," he says. "Bats and people can share buildings and get along quite well with a bit of give and take."

• For more information on the Vincent Wildlife Trust visit www.vwt.org.uk.

LUCKY HORSESHOES

• The greater and lesser horseshoe bats are members of the Rhinolophidae family. They get their name from their horseshoe-shaped noses, thought to help with echolocation.

• The lesser horseshoe has a wing span of up to 25 centimetres (10in), but weighs less than nine grams (⅓oz). It eats flying insects.

• In flight, a bat's heart beats at around 1,000 beats a minute. During hibernation, that drops to just 100 beats a minute.


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Many New Species Discovered In Hidden Mozambique Oasis With Help Of Google Earth

ScienceDaily 1 Feb 09;

Space may be the final frontier, but scientists who recently discovered a hidden forest in Mozambique show the uncharted can still be under our noses. BirdLife were part of a team of scientists who used Google Earth to identify a remote patch of pristine forest. An expedition to the site discovered new species of butterfly and snake, along with seven Globally Threatened birds.Scientific surveying Mount Mabu -- Mozambique - found a wealth of wildlife including Pygmy Chamelons. (Credit: Julian Bayliss / Kew)

The team were browsing Google Earth – freely available software providing global satellite photography – to search for potential wildlife hotspots. A nearby road provided the first glimpses of a wooded mountain topped by bare rock. However, only by using Google Earth could the scientists observe the extent of woodland on the other side of the peak. This was later discovered to be the locally known, but unmapped, Mount Mabu. Scientific collections and literature also failed to shed light on the area.

“This is potentially the biggest area of medium-altitude forest I’m aware of in southern Africa, yet it was not on the map”, related Jonathan Timberlake from the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (RBG Kew), who led the expedition. “Most Mozambicans would not even have recognised the name Mount Mabu.”

Following scoping trips, a team of 28 experts from the UK, Mozambique, Malawi, Tanzania, Belgium, Ireland, and Switzerland ventured into it last autumn. They included scientists from BirdLife. The group was able to stay in an abandoned tea estate where the road ended, but had to hike the last few kilometres into the forest to set up camp. They had to contend with steep terrain and dense vegetation.

Inside, they found a wealth of wildlife, including three new species of butterfly and an undiscovered species of adder. The scientists believe there are at least two novel species of plant and perhaps more new insects to identify. They took home over 500 samples. “The phenomenal diversity is just mind-boggling”, exclaimed Jonathan Timberlake. Despite civil war from 1975 to 1992 ravaging parts of Mozambique, the landscape was found virtually untouched.

The site also proved to be important for birds, especially Endangered Thyolo Alethe Alethe choloensis, which is common throughout. “This may be the most important population of Thyolo Alethe known”, remarked Dr Lincoln Fishpool, BirdLife’s Global IBA Co-ordinator, who joined the expedition. “At other sites, forest is rapidly being lost or much of the habitat is sub-optimal”. There were six other Globally Threatened birds among the 126 species identified. Of these, Vulnerable Swynnerton's Robin Swynnertonia swynnertoni is particularly significant - bridging a large gap between known populations. Mozambique’s only endemic species, Near Threatened Namuli Apalis Apalis lynesi, was also seen. This was the first record of it away from nearby Mount Namuli.

Conserving Mount Mabu is now a priority. The forest’s value as a refuge to villagers during the war has thus far helped to protect it, along with poor access and ignorance of its existence. However local people are returning to the area and Mozambique’s economy is booming. There is a risk the forest will come under pressure to be cut for wood or burnt for crop space.

RBG Kew is working to protect the forest, as part of ongoing efforts with the Mozambique government. BirdLife has plans to recognise it as an Important Bird Area (IBA), “Mount Mabu effortlessly qualifies as an IBA”, said Dr Fishpool. Ground-level measures could be most effective conservation for the immediate future: “Remoteness is currently its best protection. We hope to work alongside the local tea-estate managers who are conservation-sympathetic and want to maintain the status quo of the forest”.

As for Google Earth, Jonathan Timberlake says the digital imagery has helped scientists realise more about the world. It may reveal further unnoticed pockets of diversity, especially in areas like Mozambique or Papua New Guinea. “We cannot say we have discovered all the biodiversity areas in the world”.

The expedition was led by RBG Kew and involved scientists from the Mozambique Agronomic Research Institute and the Mulanje Mountain Conservation Trust in Malawi, as well as BirdLife International. It was funded by the Darwin Initiative.
Adapted from materials provided by Bird Life International.


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Ten new amphibian species discovered in Colombia

Yahoo News 2 Feb 09;

BOGOTA (AFP) – Scientists announced Monday the discovery of 10 amphibian species in Colombia potentially new to science, including an orange-legged rain frog, three poison frogs and three transparent "glass" frogs.

During a three-week expedition in Colombia's northwestern Tacarcuna hills in the Darien Gap bordering Panama, scientists identified about 60 species of amphibians, 20 reptiles and almost 120 species of birds, many of them apparently unique to the area."Without a doubt this region is a true Noah's Ark," said Jose Vicente Rodriguez-Mahecha, Conservation International's scientific director in Colombia.

"The high number of new amphibian species found is a sign of hope, even with the serious threat of extinction that this animal group faces in many other regions of the country and the world."

The expedition, led by CI herpetologists and ornithologists from Colombia's Ecotropico Foundation, yielded potentially new species of amphibians, including three glass frogs, whose transparent skin can reveal internal organs, a harlequin frog, two rain frogs and one salamander.

The group said Colombia has one of the most diverse amphibian communities in the world, with 754 species currently recorded.

"Scientists consider amphibians important indicators of ecosystem health," the group said in a statement. Many species are impacted by climate change.

"With porous, absorbent skin, they often provide early warnings of environmental degradation caused by acid rain, or contamination from heavy metals and pesticides that can also harm people."

The scientists found large mammals, such as the endangered Baird's tapir, white-lipped peccary and four species of monkeys -- Geoffroy's spider monkey, Geoffroy's tamarin, the white-throated capuchin and the mantled howler monkey.

Other findings included Central American species never before recorded in northern South America, including a salamander, a rain frog, a small lizard and a snake.

"Once more we confirm we are leaders in natural diversity and not only in our region but in the world. Without a doubt this discovery represents a great milestone for science and human health," Colombian Environment Minister Juan Lozano said in a statement.

Ten New Amphibian Species Discovered In Colombia
Deborah Zabarenko, PlanetArk 2 Feb 09;

WASHINGTON - Ten new species of amphibians -- including three kinds of poisonous frogs and three transparent-skinned glass frogs -- have been discovered in the mountains of Colombia, conservationists said Monday.

With amphibians under threat around the globe, the discovery was an encouraging sign and reason to protect the area where they were found, said Robin Moore, an amphibian expert at the environmental group Conservation International.

The nine frog species and one salamander species were found in the mountainous Tacarcuna area of the Darien region near Colombia's border with Panama.

Because amphibians have permeable skin, they are exposed directly to the elements and can offer early warnings about the impact of environmental degradation and climate change, Moore said. As much as one-third of all amphibians in the world are threatened with extinction, he said.

"Amphibians are very sensitive to changes ... in the environment," Moore said in a telephone interview. "Amphibians are kind of a barometer in terms of responding to those changes and are likely to be the first to respond, so climate change ... impacts on amphibians heavily."

Amphibians also help control the spread of diseases like malaria and dengue fever, because they eat the insects that transmit these ailments to people.

The new species discovered in Colombia include three poison frogs, three glass frogs, one harlequin frog, two kinds of rain frogs and one salamander.

'NOAH'S ARK' IN COLOMBIA

The expedition that turned up the new amphibians also recorded the presence of large mammals like Baird's tapir, which is considered endangered in Colombia, four species of monkeys and a population of white-lipped peccary, a pig-like creature.

"Without a doubt this region is a true Noah's Ark," said Jose Vicente Rodriguez-Mahecha, the conservation group's scientific director in Colombia.

"The high number of new amphibian species found is a sign of hope, even with the serious threat of extinction that this animal group faces in many other regions of the country and the world," Rodriguez said in a statement.

The area where the new species were found has traditionally served as a place where plants and animals move between North and South America. While the terrain is relatively undisturbed now, its landscape faces threats from selective logging, cattle ranching, hunting, mining and habitat fragmentation.

Between 25 and 30 percent of the natural vegetation there is being deforested.

Moore said protecting the Tacarcuna area where these amphibians were found could also benefit local people by preserving an important watershed.

"We don't go in there and try and tell them to protect the forest for frogs," Moore said. "It's more a case of working with them to find more sustainable long-term solutions that will protect these resources that are ultimately benefiting them."

(Editing by David Storey)

See-Through Frogs Discovered
livescience.com Yahoo News 3 Feb 09;

Ten newfound species of amphibians - including a frog with spiky skin and three varieties of frogs with transparent skin - have been discovered in the mountains of Colombia.

The new species were found on a recent expedition led by herpetologists from Conservation International and ornithologists from the Ecotrópico Foundation in Colombia's mountainous Tacarcuna area of the Darien, near the border with Panama.

Over a period of three weeks, the scientists identified approximately 60 species of amphibians, 20 reptiles and almost 120 species of birds, many of them apparently found nowhere else in the world.

Of the 60 documented amphibians, the potentially new species include three glass frogs of the Nymphargus, Cochranella and Centrolene genera; three poison dart frogs in the Dendrobatidae family (Colostethus, Ranitomeya and Anomaloglossus genera); one harlequin frog of the Atelopus genus; two species of rain frogs of the Pristimantis genera; and one salamander of the Bolitoglossa genus.

Colombia holds one of the most diverse amphibian communities in the world, with 754 species currently recorded.

Amphibians are considered important indicators of ecosystem health because their porous, absorbent skin makes them highly susceptible to pollution and climate change. Many frog and amphibian species around the world have suffered die-offs in recent years because of a lethal fungus that infects their skin and spreads quickly between geographic areas.

"Without a doubt this region is a true Noah's Ark," said Jose Vicente Rodriguez-Mahecha, scientific director of Conservation International-Colombia. "The high number of new amphibian species found is a sign of hope, even with the serious threat of extinction that this animal group faces in many other regions of the country and the world."

The expedition also recorded the presence of large mammals such as Baird's tapir (Tapirus bairdii), whose closest relatives include horses and rhinoceroses, and which are listed on the IUCN Red List as endangered in Colombia.

The biologists also found four species of monkeys, including Geoffroy's spider monkey (Ateles geoffroyi), Geoffroy's tamarin or red crested bare-faced tamarin (Saguinus geoffroyi), white-throated capuchin or Gorgona white-fronted capuchin (Cebus capucinus), and the mantled howler monkey (Alouatta palliata). Populations of the white-lipped peccary (Tayassu pecari), which resembles a furry pig, also were found.

Other surprising findings included the presence of Central American species recorded for the first time in the northern area of South America, including a salamander (Bolitoglossa taylori), a rain frog (Pristimantis pirrensis), a small lizard (Ptychoglossus myersi) and a snake not yet identified.


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New Google Ocean Takes Google Earth Beyond the "Dirt"

Christine Dell'Amore, National Geographic News 2 Feb 09;

Exploring the oceans no longer requires a wetsuit.

Ocean in Google Earth, which launched today, builds on the free, popular 3-D mapping software Google Earth by allowing users to navigate underwater in unprecedented clarity.

New "layers" to the satellite-based software include topographic maps of the seafloor; locations of shipwrecks and algal blooms; and even maps of the tiny phytoplankton that provide the bulk of the ocean's food chain.

Within the layers, users can explore multimedia features that combine data and maps with videos, quizzes, and other interactives.

The new fish-eye view—accessible via a free upgrade—aims to provide a public platform for users to talk about the oceans, said John Hanke, director of Geo Products at Google.

"It really is a means... [of] raising geographical awareness of oceans and … the pressures that are being put on life in the ocean," he added.

Into the Blue

The idea first came to well-known marine biologist Sylvia Earle at a conference in Madrid a few years ago, when she addressed Hanke during a presentation.

"I just blurted it out," Earle, a National Geographic explorer-in-residence, recalled. (National Geographic News is owned by the National Geographic Society.)

"I said, I hope someday, John, you'll finish [Google Earth]. You've done a great job with the dirt, but there's all that water out there—the world is blue."

Seventy-two percent of the Earth is covered by oceans.

Hanke said that Earle's comments "got under our skin—it doesn't make sense that the information stops at the coastline."

Earle, who narrates the introductory video, suggested from the start that the program go beyond maps: "You need to be able to touch and dive in and see what's there," she said.

The resulting product is a vibrant panorama, from videos of bluefin tuna on the hunt to quizzes about sea life—from leopard seals to nudibranchs.

Clicking on the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean layer, for instance, combines maps of the region with videos and Web links showing reefs' colorful denizens.

In addition to National Geographic, several well-known marine institutions and initiatives, such as the Census of Marine Life (a ten-year effort to catalog marine organisms), Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Monterey Bay Aquarium, and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution have contributed data.

Why the Ocean Matters

For Earle, Google Earth's high-tech porthole to the oceans has an urgent import: The seas' health is declining, and less than one percent of the world's marine waters are protected.

"This is another major breakthrough in showing the people of the world why the ocean matters," Earle said.

For instance, "the ocean provides the oxygen we breathe, much of the food the world eats, and drives the climate we need to survive—but it is still largely a mystery," Tom McCann, spokesperson for the nonprofit organization Ocean Conservancy, said in an email.

"We hope the addition of Ocean in Google Earth will inspire more people to explore the seas they depend on every day," added McCann, whose organization has provided Google data about marine reserves in the Pacific Ocean.

The new program will also make on-the-ground conservation work easier, added Enric Sala, a marine ecologist and National Geographic fellow.

"It allows us to [get] critical information … in almost real time, in a way that is so much more exciting than dry written reports," Sala said.

"We are now using a jet instead of a bicycle. ..."

Google Earth allows web users to explore world's oceans in 3D
A new Google Earth tool will enable internet users to embark on a virtual, three-dimensional tour of the world's oceans.
Claudine Beaumont, The Telegraph 2 Feb 09;

The Ocean tool combines renderings of underwater terrain with expert content from marine biologists and oceanographers, allowing web surfers to swim around virtual underwater volcanoes, watch videos about exotic marine life, read about nearby shipwrecks, and contribute photos and videos of their favourite diving spots.

Google said that humans had only ever explored around five per cent of the world's oceans, which cover more than 70 per cent of the earth's surface and contain 80 per cent of all life.

Eric Schmidt, Google's chief executive, said the launch of Ocean in Google Earth provided an opportunity to change people's perspective about the importance of the oceanic ecosystem in the overall health of the planet.

"In discussions about climate change, the world's oceans are often overlooked, despite being an integral part of the issue," he said. "Biodiversity loss in our oceans in the next 20 to 30 years will be roughly equivalent to losing an entire Amazon rainforest, but this goes unnoticed because we can't see it."

The Ocean feature is included in the newest version of Google Earth. As users zoom in on the ocean they will see a dynamic water surface, which they can then "dive" beneath to navigate the sea floor. Areas available for exploration include the Mid-Ocean Ridge, the world's longest underwater mountain range, which stretches 50,000km around the globe.

Many of the world's leading scientists, researchers and ocean explorers have contributed to the fact files, videos and information sheets within the tool. There is even new and unseen footage from the archives of Jacques Cousteau, as well as the ability to track satellite-tagged sea animals, such as whales.

Sir David Attenborough hailed the launch of Ocean in Google Earth, describing the ability to explore the seas as a "privilege".

The latest version of Google Earth includes a new "time travel" feature that allows users to observe recent changes to areas or landmarks that have previously been captured by the search giant's satellites.

It means internet users can watch sports stadiums used in the recent Olympics and World Cup taking shape, as well as monitor the rapid melting of the Grinnell Glacier in Montana, and the desertification of Lake Chad in Africa.


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UK Government green guru Sir Jonathon Porritt calls for two-child limit

One of the Government's leading environmental advisers, Sir Jonathon Porritt, has called for British couples to have no more than two children to stop the planet becoming overpopulated.

John Bingham, The Telegraph 2 Feb 09;

He accused parents with more than two offspring of being "irresponsible" and criticised green groups for shying away from the issue in debate.

But family campaigners likened his remarks to China's one-child policy and suggested they could encourage a further rise in abortions.

His comments were also dismissed as "absolutely barmy" by the Conservative MP Ann Widdecombe, who said that Britain's problem was not too many children but too few.

The former Green Party politician, who is now chairman of the Government's Sustainable Development Commission, accused other environmentalists of "betraying" their members by not openly voicing calls for people to limit the number of children.

"I am unapologetic about asking people to connect up their own responsibility for their total environmental footprint and how they decide to procreate and how many children they think are appropriate," he said.

"I think we will work our way towards a position that says that having more than two children is irresponsible.

"It is the ghost at the table, we have all these big issues that everybody is looking at and then you don't really hear anyone say the "p" word," - a reference to population.

Pointing to the example of Singapore, where efforts to limit people to two children had to be abandoned, Miss Widdecombe said: "At a time when we have all the worries of too elderly a population, depending on fewer and fewer people of working age, it seems an absolutely ludicrous proposition."

Josephine Quintaville, founder of the pro-life group Comment on Reproductive Ethics (Core), said that past efforts to limit the size of families had led to girls being ill-treated or abandoned.

"This seems to be the same old thing: save the world but kill a human."

She added: "As far as I understand it, it is the most affluent nations that are doing the most damage to the world, not the countries that have got the most children."

Andy Atkins, executive director of Friends of the Earth said: "It is the impact of the people who are alive today that will determine whether we can meet the immediate climate change challenge.

"There is a debate to be had about population - and Friends of the Earth is currently reviewing its position on this issue.

"We welcome Jonathon Porritt's contribution to this topic."


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Population: The elephant in the room

John Feeney BBC Green Room 2 Feb 09;

Uncontrolled population growth threatens to undermine efforts to save the planet, warns John Feeney. In this week's Green Room, he calls on the environmental movement to stop running scared of this controversial topic.

It's the great taboo of environmentalism: the size and growth of the human population.

It has a profound impact on all life on Earth, yet for decades it has been conspicuously absent from public debate.

Most natural scientists agree our growing numbers and our unchecked impact on the natural environment move us inexorably toward global calamities of unthinkable severity.

They agree the need to address population has become desperate.

Yet many environmentalists avoid the subject, a few objecting strongly to any focus on our numbers.

Some activists insist acting to influence population growth infringes on human rights; they maintain that it is best to leave the problem alone.

Let's dispense with this confused notion right now.

Yes, there have been past abuses in the name of "population control".

There have been abuses of health care and education too, but the idea of reacting by abandoning any of these causes is absurd.

We can learn from past abuses, reducing the likelihood of fresh problems arising in the future.

In fact, those working on population issues have done so. Today, they recognise that the methods with the best track records of reducing population growth are, by their nature, respectful and promoting of human rights.

They include educating girls and women in developing countries to help empower them.

This is achieved by providing more options, using media strategies to make them aware of alternatives regarding family sizes and family planning.

Those who oppose talking about the world's population are obstructing the further provision of such services and resources.

Last chance saloon

Fundamentally, we need to ask what is the greater threat to human welfare: the possibility that humane efforts to address population growth might be abused, or our ongoing failure to act to prevent hundreds of millions, even billions, dying as a result of global ecological collapse?

It's no far fetched possibility. Increasingly, environmental scientists insist we have overshot the Earth's carrying capacity.

I believe they are right; the proof is everywhere. Our inability to live as we do, at our current numbers, without causing pervasive environmental degradation is the very definition of carrying capacity overshoot.

Overshoot, we know, is followed by population decline. As we have learned form other species, this manifests itself initially with a crash.

For humanity, this portends a potential cataclysm exceeding anything in our history.

Our chance to avert such an outcome depends on our ability to address our numbers before nature reduces them for us.

There's no other way out. Merely reducing per capita consumption, for instance, won't do it.

After all, per capita consumption levels multiply with population size to determine our total resource consumption.

Just look at the data from the Global Footprint Network group. They estimate that we'll remain in overshoot unless we also address population.

Solutions do not spring from silence. We must bring population back to the centre of public discussion.

We need to break through the taboo to encourage not just a few voices but all those with relevant expertise to speak out on the subject loudly and often.

Recently I wondered what would happen if all the scientists - and everyone else considered a scholar of the population issue - spoke out all at once.

Would it help to weaken the taboo now shackling the subject, pushing it closer to centre stage?

Would it bring the matter enough attention to begin generating new or more widespread solutions?

Might it prompt a deeper examination of our ecological plight?

The Global Population Speak Out campaign has brought together over 100 voices from 19 countries, all pledging to speak out publicly on the population issue throughout the month of February, 2009.

Many now recognise the urgency with which we need to halt the human-caused degradation of Earth's natural environment.

Can we break down a taboo that has for years blocked the path toward that goal?

Dr John Feeney is an environmental writer based in Boulder, Colorado, US

The Green Room is a series of opinion articles on environmental topics running weekly on the BBC News website


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Riddle of Liberian insect plague

BBC News 2 Feb 09;

A devastating plague of caterpillars ravaging part of West Africa is not armyworms, as previously believed, but an unidentified species, experts say.

A UN emergency co-ordinator told the BBC the insects in Liberia and Guinea were very different from armyworms.

He said experts had noted the insect has distinct feeding patterns, life cycle, habits, movement and appearance.

Specialists are studying the pest to find a way of controlling the swarm, which has affected 400,000 residents.

As well as devouring crops, the infestation has polluted water sources with faeces.

'Flabbergasted'

UN Food and Agriculture Organisation emergency co-ordinator Tim Vaessen said insect experts had realised the species was not armyworm during a field trip to Bong County in Liberia last week.

While armyworms feed on ground cereal like millet, rice or sorghum, he said, the unidentified insect favours munching the leaf of the Dohama tree.

Mr Vaessen said the unknown species' cocoons are found on the surface beneath ground leaves, whereas armyworm casings are buried in the soil at a depth of several centimetres.

He also said the mystery caterpillar appears to rear up, making half circles in the air as it moves forward, which the armyworm does not do. The wings of its moth also appear different.

Mr Vaessen told the BBC News website: "Our experts in the field spoke to villagers who said they'd seen this type of caterpillar before. They said they'd put leaves under trees and burned them to suffocate the caterpillar with smoke.

"But the villagers said they've never seen it in such large numbers before, they're really flabbergasted."

The FAO has sent pictures of the insect to experts at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture in Benin and at Cardiff University as part of efforts to help identify the species.


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Brasil rainforest razed so cattle can graze

Brazil's attempt to double its share of the global market for beef will carry a heavy environmental cost, report warns

Michael McCarthy, The Independent 31 Jan 09;

Scenes like this, with vast tracts of Amazonian rainforest razed to make way for cattle, are to become more common in Brazil as it continues its drive to expand its beef export industry, according to environmentalists.

Green activists say that country's determination to double its share of the world beef market is likely to undermine its new targets for halting Amazon rainforest destruction and reducing carbon emissions.

The South American country has the world's largest cattle herd and is already the biggest beef exporter on the planet. Now the Brazilian government is seeking to boost its share of the world beef market from 30 per cent to 60 per cent in the next decade.

Most of this growth will come in Amazonia, on pastureland created by cutting down rainforest, according to a report released today by Greenpeace. The cattle industry will be the main driver of deforestation, it argues.

And deforestation will mean, the environment group says, that Brazil will not be able to curb its massive carbon dioxide emissions – 75 per cent of them coming from deforestation. It is already the planet's fourth-biggest greenhouse gas emitter after China, the United States and Indonesia. This is despite the fact that in December last year the Brazilian government introduced targets for reducing deforestation by 72 per cent by 2017, as a part of a national climate-change action plan.

Although it has long been known that cattle ranching, which has been expanding continuously since the early 1970s, has been a principaldriver of rainforest destruction in Brazil, the Greenpeace study, entitled "Amazon Cattle Footprint", is thought to be the first detailed assessment of the scale of its impact.

The report uses innovative satellite-mapping techniques to expose direct links between new cattle farms and forest destruction in one of the largest Amazon states, Mato Grosso. One map, for example, reveals the location of industrial-sized slaughterhouses within the state, and shows how they have become the epicentres of major forest destruction as land is cleared to make way for pasture.

Between 1996 and 2006, the report says, the area of pastures in the Amazon grew by approximately 10 million hectares – an area the size of Portugal – to accommodate a vast expansion of the Brazilian cattle herd, which now numbers about 65 million animals.

Between 2002 and 2006, 14.5 million of the total of 20.5 million animals added to the herd were in the Amazon, which now holds about 40 per cent of the national herd, the report says.

It adds that according to Brazilian government data, in 2006 there were three head of cattle in the Amazon for every human inhabitant. Just under 80 per cent of the deforested Amazon is now used for cattle grazing.

"The Brazilian government needs to get a grip on the cattle industry before it completely undermines the country's chances of tackling climate change," said Sarah Shoraka, Greenpeace's forests campaigner. "Right now, huge swathes of rainforest are being cut down to feed the global appetite for beef and leather. As these new maps show, there's a clear link between the location of new cattle ranches and the destruction of the Amazon rainforest.

"Stopping this expansion offers the best chance of fighting climate change in Brazil, but we need the government to step in before it's too late."

The Amazon basin holds the largest tropical forest in the world, and is the most diverse ecosystem on Earth, playing a vital role in ensuring the region's water supplies, regulating rainfall, and keeping the world'sclimate in balance.

Continued cattle expansion will also have devastating impacts on the Amazon's unique ecosystem and could displace millions of indigenous people, the Greenpeace report says.

In 2006 another major driver of deforestation, soya bean cultivation, has been partly curbed: after pressure from environmentalists, soya growers agreed to a moratorium on growing on newly deforested land. It is likely that the Brazilian cattle industry will now come under similar pressure.

Luis Felipe Carvalho, the secondsecretary at the Brazilian embassy in London, said last night that Brazil did not believe that doubling cattle production would undermine its target to reduce deforestation. It was hoped to use intensive farming techniques to produce more cattle in future from a smaller area of land. "Doubling the cattle industry does not necessarily mean doubling the land the cattle industry uses. We hope to increase productivity, not just the size of the area farmed," he said.


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Awareness drive to protect mangroves in Mumbai

Pamela Raghunath, Gulfnews 2 Feb 09;

Mumbai: Mumbai is doing little to protect its mangroves that surround the metropolis and only awareness as well as an effort to learn the significance of these wetlands can save these hardy plants from being destroyed, say environmentalists.

As concerned nature lovers observe World Wetlands Day today by hosting various awareness programmes for young and old alike, environmentalists claim that Mumbai has lost 40 per cent of all its mangroves in the past decade or so. This is largely due to reclamation for housing, encroachment by slums, sewage treatment and garbage dumps.

In the land-starved metropolis reeling under skyrocketing real estate prices, land mafia is out to grab land wherever possible, and quite often mangrove areas fall under their clutches.

Recently, when Mumbai Police was busy grappling with the terror attack on the night of 26/11, some persons were burning down 58 acres of mangrove forests near Manori creek in the north west coast of Mumbai. Local people reported they had seen nearly 100 trucks dumping garbage and debris on the site.

"This cannot happen without the local authorities not knowing about it," says Rishi Aggarwal, Honorary Joint Secretary, Mangrove Society of India, Mumbai Chapter. "We plan to meet the Environment Secretary of Maharashtra with many more issues such as this to stop the destruction of mangroves," he says.

The worst affected area in Mumbai is the entire western front. In the early 90's, mangroves existed largely in the Thane creek, Mahim, Versova, Gorai and Ghodbunder with sporadic patches in places such as Bandra, Malabar Hill and Colaba. The Sewri mangroves on the eastern front attract flamingoes every year. The only area where mangroves have thrived is Carter Road, Bandra, where they have actually grown in the past 10 years due to participation of local citizens' groups.

Local participation is essential, says Elsie Gabriel, who founded the Young Environmentalists Programme Trust. "Today, over 500 city students participated in our Wetlands Day inter-school essay writing competition at Powai to learn about how the Earth's marshes, lakes and rivers are vital to human life," she said.

Around 20 of the 35 species of mangroves found in India have been identified along the Maharashtra coast and 15 of these species are found in Mumbai.


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Too much to whalers and not enough to conservation

in IWC proposals on Japanese whaling: WWF
WWF 2 Feb 09;

Gland, Switzerland – Two “compromise packages” to end the deadlock on so-called scientific whaling are too much of a compromise according to WWF.

The packages, announced today by IWC Chairman William Hogarth, would either phase out Japan’s scientific whaling programme in the Southern Ocean in exchange for Japan being allowed to take a unspecified number of minke whales off its coast in the North Pacific or would allow Japan’s scientific whaling programme to continue in the Southern Ocean if it adheres to annual limits set by the IWC’s Scientific Committee.

“WWF is glad to see the IWC taking steps toward ending the deadlock on commercial whaling, and to ending commercial whaling under the guise of science once and for all, but these compromise packages give too much to the whalers and not enough to whale conservation,” said Dr. Susan Lieberman, director of WWF International’s Species Programme.

“What is needed is a plan to put an immediate halt to all scientific whaling, which simply has no place in the 21st Century,” added Lieberman.

The package makes no mention of other whaling nations Iceland and Norway, which whale under objection to the IWC’s commercial whaling moratorium. Iceland recently announced a quota of 100 fin whales – an endangered species – which is a dramatic increase its original self-assigned quota of nine. They also almost doubled their quota of minke whales.

“No package will heal the IWC if it deals exclusively with one whaling nation and ignores the rest,” added Lieberman. “The world’s whales will not be saved until all governments commit to their conservation together. It is time to bring the IWC into the 21st century—as a whale conservation organization”

The current membership of the IWC is approximately evenly divided between whaling and non-whaling nations, resulting in a political deadlock which makes it impossible to secure the ¾ majority of votes needed to make major changes such as putting an end to Japan’s scientific whaling.


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Plight of the humble bee

Native British bees are dying out — and with them will go flora, fauna and one-third of our diet. We may have less than a decade to save them and avert catastrophe. So why is nothing being done?

Richard Girling, Times Online 1 Feb 09;

Midwinter. In a garden not far from the sea in Plymouth, there is a splash of pale sunlight and a sound both familiar and strange. Familiar, because if we close our eyes and think of English gardens it’s the sound that fills our heads. Strange, because now it should be silent.

The drone of a bee.

It is a buff-tailed bumble, Bombus terrestris, a worker pottering among late-flowering fuchsias, heathers and mahonias like the ghost of summers past. All the textbooks say it should be dead. Only queens overwinter in holes in the ground. Yet here it is, at 200 wing-beats a second, energetically hawking the beds for nectar. And it is not alone. The man in whose garden it flits, Dr Mick Hanley, a lecturer in terrestrial ecology at Plymouth University, has recorded them in December and January all the way along the south coast as far east as Ramsgate. Others have found them as far north as Shropshire, Leicestershire and even North Wales.

Weird, you might think, but not something we should worry about. But aberrant behaviour in nature, especially when it happens suddenly, is rarely a sign of systemic good health. A bee in winter is no more proof of a thriving ecosystem than a flake of snow is disproof of global warming. The world is going haywire. If the very worst scenarios are to be believed, then the Plymouth bee is an early pathfinder en route not just to its own Armageddon but to our own.

Think of summer. Meadows and gardens daubed with so much colour it looks as if some giant hand has gone berserk with a paintbrush. Now expunge that picture and think of another. This time the giant hand has mislaid every pigment save brown and olive. There are no blooms, no insects, no birds. No visible wildlife of any kind. No fruit. No sound other than the mechanistic din of humankind harvesting fungi and the approaching cries of battle.

The first picture is a poetic fiction, a received vision of England as it never was, an idyllic land of apple-cheeked rustics singing in harmony with a bountiful Nature. The second is a piece of bleak futurology that assumes the process of environmental degradation will be irreversible, leaving hollow-cheeked starvelings to follow the rest of the world’s fauna across the Styx. The creature that links the two visions — by its abundance in the first and absence from the second — is the same that now buzzes unseasonably among the dripping foliage of our winter gardens. The bee.

“The” bee, of course, is a gross oversimplification. There are many species of bumble as well as of honeybee. Or there were. In the bounteous days of teeming hedgerows and fields of clover, Britain had 25 kinds of bumble, all merrily gathering nectar and pollinating plants and trees. Three of these already have vanished, and seven more are in the government’s official Biodiversity Action Plan (Uk Bap) as priorities for salvation.

It’s the same right across Europe, and the reasons everywhere are the same — changes in agricultural practice that have replaced historic mixed farmscapes with heavily industrialised monocultures in which wild animals and plants are about as welcome as jackals in a pie factory. Insects in particular have been targets of intense chemical warfare. We are, at the eleventh hour, learning from our mistakes, but patching nature back together again is exponentially more difficult than blowing it apart.

Most people do now get the point about honeybees. Following the multiple crises that continue to empty the hives — foulbrood, varroa mites, viral diseases, dysfunctional immune systems, and now the mysterious but globally devastating colony-collapse disorder (CCD) — it is understood that the true value of Apis mellifera lies not so much in the sticky stuff that gives our favourite insect its name as in the service it provides as a pollinator of farms and gardens. If you add retailers’ profit to farm gate prices, their value to the UK economy is in the region of £1 billion a year, and 35% of our diet is directly dependent on them. It is an equation of stark simplicity. No pollination: no crops. There is nothing theoretical about it. The reality is in (or, more accurately, not in) the hives. The US has lost 70% of its honeybee colonies over the past two winters. Losses in the UK currently are running at 30% a year — up from just 6% in 2003.

But fewer people realise that bumbles, too, are important not just to some remote, bug-ridden process called “ecology”, of interest only to bearded men in anoraks. Growers of beans, oilseed rape and fruit especially have reason to feel alarm at their disappearance. So vital are they to the productivity of the fields, and so lethal the pressures on them, that farmers are having to import captive-bred reinforcements, many of them southern-European species raised in Slovakia. The total annual influx is reckoned at some 100,000 nests, each containing a queen and 200 workers, priced around £50 a time.

As the example of honeybees shows, this is a strategy of literally incalculable risk. International trade in honeybees has spread pests and diseases that imminently threaten their survival. In November 2007 the then food-and-farming minister, Lord Rooker, declared in the House of Lords that if things went on as they were, the honeybee in the UK would be extinct within 10 years. The situation since then has worsened, so at the best estimate the 10 years have shrunk to eight.

For bumbles, too, time is running out, and nobody knows whether the introduction of alien bees will delay the end or bring it closer. The signs are not encouraging. In the US, wild-bumblebee numbers have collapsed dramatically since the 1990s — they have been killed by parasites carried by European species brought in to pollinate greenhouse crops such as tomatoes and peppers.

“There is a high likelihood of interaction between wild and commercially reared bees at flowers,” says Dave Goulson, professor of biological sciences at the University of Stirling and a world expert on bumblebees. This creates the ideal conditions for what ecologists call “pathogen spillover”. Nor is disease the only risk. There is also the “grey-squirrel effect”, in which native species are driven out by more aggressive foreigners. This is happening in Japan, where, ironically, imports of Bombus terrestris — the same bumblebee now humming in southern England — have escaped and are outbreeding the locals. And it may already be happening in the UK.

As in Japan, the aliens are better foragers and breed more rapidly than the natives, whose health and territory they threaten, while there is no guarantee that the immigrants themselves will not be poleaxed by local infections. This is bad news for more than just the bees themselves. In the complex world of inter-species relationships developed over millennia, small changes can have massive effects. In addition to his general theory of relativity, Albert Einstein had a specific theory about the relativity of man and bee. “If the bee disappears off the surface of the globe,” he is supposed to have said, “then man would only have four years of life left.”

If other scientists are more cautious, it is only in terms of the timescale.

On the face of it, the midwinter appearance of Bombus terrestris looks encouraging — a harbinger of the all-year summers that optimists look forward to. But this is precisely the problem. Contrary to what one might expect, says Goulson, a warming climate will not set the hedgerows buzzing. “Bumblebees evolved in the Himalayas. They are unusual among insects in that they don’t like warm weather.” Their thick fur coat is an aid to survival in a cool climate but an energy-sapping body-broiler in the heat. “This is why the southern hemisphere has no bumblebees.”

Once upon a time, for example, the great yellow bumblebee, Bombus distinguendus, which thrives in the cold and wet, was common throughout Britain. Now it has been driven so far northwards that it occurs on the mainland only within half a mile of the extreme north coast of Caithness and Sutherland. “So,” says Goulson, “it can go no further. It is probably doomed as a result of climate change.” Other species, too, are shrinking into local redoubts. The shrill carder bee, Bombus sylvarum, is now limited to the Somerset Levels, Salisbury Plain and the Thames Estuary, where much of its habitat is on brownfield sites and impossible to protect. Since 1980, the formerly common large garden bumblebee, Bombus ruderatus, has been recorded at fewer than 10 sites in the UK.

And so it goes on. As the entire insect world is being forced inexorably northwards, it may be hoped that other pollinators from southern Europe may be sucked into the vacuum behind them. Hoped, but not expected. Bumblebees are not like migrating birds — they do not fly for hundreds of miles between remote habitats. They are more like mammals, needing a continuous corridor of suitable habitats to move through. Without a linked route up through France, they are more likely to die out where they are.

Even if new species did arrive, they would be unable to take on all the work of the old. Many bumblebees, including all those under threat, are specialist feeders that depend upon — and pollinate — particular groups of plants. By the miracle of evolution, some species have developed long tongues, with which they can reach the nectar of deep-throated flowers. Without them, the plants could not reproduce. The incomers can offer no solution: their tongues are too short. The first casualties of the bumblebee exodus, therefore, will be some of the best-loved British wild flowers such as foxgloves, irises, red clover, comfrey, toadflax, tufted vetch… Soft fruit, oilseed and bean crops would also take a hit.

And that is the thin end of the long-term catastrophe that now stares us in the face. You take one brick out of the ecological wall, others crumble around it. Then more crumble, on and on until the edifice collapses. Ecologists call it an extinction vortex. You lose bees, you lose plants. You lose plants, you lose more bees. Then more plants, then other insects, then the birds and animals that depend on them and on each other, all the way up the food chain. But never mind animals — if you stretch the process far enough, you’re talking about humans.

The more extravagant, ocean-boiling scenarios of climate science have drama on their side, but the entomologists in their quiet way are just as scary. In his book The Creation, the world’s most celebrated biologist, E O Wilson, has spelt out what would happen if the vortex swallowed insects. “People need insects,” he says, “but insects do not need us. If all humankind were to disappear tomorrow, it is unlikely that a single insect species would go extinct, except three forms of human body and head lice… In two or three centuries, with humans gone, the ecosystems of the world would regenerate back to the rich state of near-equilibrium that existed ten thousand or so years ago… But if insects were to vanish, the terrestrial environment would soon collapse into chaos.”

Flowering plants would go first, then herbaceous plants, then insect-pollinated shrubs and trees, then birds and animals and, finally, the soil. Wilson corrects the generally held misapprehension that the principal “turners and renewers” of the soil are worms. That distinction more properly belongs to insects and their larvae. Without them, bacteria and fungi would feast on the decaying plant and animal remains, while — for as long as it was able to support them — the land would be recolonised by a small number of fern and conifer species. The human diet would be wind-pollinated grasses and whatever remained to be harvested from a fished-out sea. It would not be enough. Widespread starvation would shrink the population to a fraction of its former size.

“The wars for control of the dwindling resources, the suffering, and the tumultuous decline to dark-age barbarism would be unprecedented in human history.” Wilson concedes that we might survive quite happily without body lice and malarial mosquitoes. Otherwise, he says: “Do not give thought to diminishing the insect world. It would be a serious mistake to let even one species of the millions on Earth go extinct.”

But here again is a parallel with global warming. Changes have taken place that cannot be reversed, and further change is unstoppable. Unlike global warming, however, loss of insects has not inspired national governments or the UN to take expensive action to forestall it. The plight of the honeybee has been well documented if not well understood. The causes of colony-collapse disorder, in which bees disappear without trace from their hives, are debated as fiercely as the causes of climate change, with opinion dividing along very similar fault-lines determined often by vested interests.

Bee farmers and the European parliament blame arable farmers for killing or poisoning their bees with GM crops and careless use of insecticides. The arable farmers say their critics don’t know what they are talking about. Others suspect viruses, parasites or fungi. Some even blame radiation from mobile telephones for disrupting the insects’ navigational systems. Many think it likely that a combination of factors is at work — pesticides perhaps weakening the bees’ immune systems and rendering them defenceless against common pests and diseases (though again the arable boys won’t have it). Tim Lovett, president of the British Beekeepers’ Association (BBKA), suspects a combination of varroa mites, viruses and a vicious parasite called Nosema ceranae, a microsporidium that occupies some strange biological niche between animal and plant.

What all outside the government are agreed upon is that more money is needed for research. Until recently the UK government committed only £1.2m a year to the bee industry, most of which was spent by Defra’s own National Bee Unit on site inspections, though in January it announced another £400,000 a year for research.

“The government blames poor beekeeping,” says Lovett. “But there is absolutely no reason to suppose that standards in the last few years have got worse. On the contrary, they have got better because beekeepers are aware of the problems.” The BBKA argues that effective research into prophylactics and treatments for bee disease would cost £8m over five years — which, given the economic returns from improved crop yields and the knock-on benefits of jobs and taxation on profit, has all the hallmarks of a bargain. But nothing is certain. The economic cavalry may or may not arrive before the last honeybee flops onto its back, and it may or may not do the trick if it does.

With bumblebees the situation is even worse. Beyond their inclusion in the Biodiversity Action Plan, where they are just seven among 1,149 listed species ranging from mosses to whales, the government offers no direct funding for their protection. Artificial nitrogen fertilisers mean there is no need for the old-fashioned rotation crops, most importantly clover, that they used to forage on, and herbicides have eliminated most of the wild alternatives. Their nesting sites have gone too. Some species live in dense grass above ground; others prefer underground cavities — typically abandoned rodents’ nests. The removal of hedgerows and unploughed field margins has put paid directly to the upstairs bees and indirectly to the downstairs ones by starving out the voles and mice that create their homes. Any that do find nesting places are likely to have them smashed by farm machinery or zonked by pesticides.

Even that is not the end of it. Many surviving populations of bumblebees are small and isolated. This results in inbreeding, which weakens the gene pool and increases the threat of extinction. Goulson reports that the highly virulent small hive beetle, Aethina tumida, whose larvae have devastated tens of thousands of honeybee colonies in the US and Canada, has spread into bumblebee nests, along with deformed-wing virus (which has the effect implicit in its name and is carried by mites). The small hive beetle has not yet appeared in the UK but it has reached other parts of Europe, and its transmission here via imported bees is a matter of “when”, not “if”.

Good news? There is a little. Government subsidies are available to farmers who replant hedgerows, restore grassland or sow wildflower strips. This is for “biodiversity”, but bees will get some benefit. But it is nowhere near enough. “Most bumblebees,” says Goulson, “cannot be conserved by managing small protected islands of habitat within a sea of intensively farmed land. Large areas of suitable habitat are needed to support viable populations in the long term.”

If the worst happens and Lord Rooker’s requiem for the honeybee reaches its solemn conclusion some time around 2017, the burden of responsibility heaped upon the bumblebee will be unsupportable. Bookmakers would give very long odds against the survival of long-tongued bumblebees and the plants that depend on them, and even longer odds against their short-tongued cousins filling the void left by honeybees. Given that a bumblebee nest contains only a few hundred insects, while a honeybee hive contains thousands, it would require a population explosion on the scale of a biblical plague.

Already, says Goulson, crop yields are beginning to suffer. Bald spots are appearing at the centres of bean fields where bumblebees are failing to penetrate. As in so many other aspects of global life, it is China that lights the way ahead. In Sichuan province, the most important crop is pears, which depend on pollination by bees. But there are no bees. A blunderbuss approach to pesticides has all but wiped them out. Result: thousands of villagers have to turn out with paintbrushes to pollinate the trees by hand. “It’s just about possible in a country where labour is cheap,” says Goulson, “but it wouldn’t work in Europe.”

Bombus terrestris meanwhile chugs happily along the Channel coast, following its scrambled instincts and ignoring the calendar. Not since the sirens tempted Odysseus has a mellifluous sound raised such a lethal echo.


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China blames pollution as birth defects rise: state media

Yahoo News 31 Jan 09;

BEIJING (AFP) – Every 30 seconds a baby is born with physical defects in China, partly due to the country's deteriorating environment, state media said, citing a senior family planning official.

The figure, reported by the China Daily in its weekend edition, adds up to almost 1.1 million in a year, or about seven percent of all births in the world's most populous nation.

"The number of newborns with birth defects is constantly increasing in both urban and rural areas," said Jiang Fan, vice-minister of the National Population and Family Planning Commission, according to the paper.

She did not give a figure for the increase in the prevalence of birth defects in recent years.

A report in the Hong Kong-based Ta Kung Pao newspaper last month gave a lower figure for birth defects, saying they showed up in four to six percent of all births in China.

The factors behind birth defects are "very complicated", Hu Yali, a professor at the Affiliated Drum Tower Hospital of Nanjing University in east China, told the Beijing-leaning Hong Kong paper then.

She said research suggested 10 percent of birth defects were caused by environmental pollution, while 25 to 30 percent were due to genetic factors, and the rest were due to a mixture of both, according to the Ta Kung Pao.

North China's coal-rich Shanxi province, a major source of toxic emissions from large-scale chemical industries, has recorded the highest rate of birth defects, the China Daily said in its weekend edition.

"The problem of birth defects is related to environmental pollution, especially in eight main coal zones," said An Huanxiao, the director of Shanxi provincial family planning agency, according to the paper.

Pan Jianping, a professor of the Women and Child Health Research Office under Xi'an Jiaotong University, warned that the increasing rate of birth defects among Chinese infants would soon become a social problem.

"It will influence economic development and the quality of life," he was quoted as saying.

"Economic pressure is very heavy for families raising babies with physical defects, particularly for those who live in poor rural areas," he said, according to the paper.


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