Mangrove planting helps Filipino seaweed farmers in crisis

Dyborrhae Jewel M. Reyes, ABS-CBN Zamboanga 14 Feb 09;

ZAMBOANGA CITY -- Arnold Suyco has been a seaweed farmer for 15 years. This year, he noticed that demand for dried and fresh seaweeds from buyers has been declining.

As a result, Suyco said prices of seaweeds fell from P105.00 per kilo of dried seaweeds last year to P35 per kilo this week. At this price, he said he will not have enough income to support his daily expenses at home.

The National Economic and Development Authority (NEDA) earlier warned seaweeds would be one of the export industries that will be affected by the global economic slowdown other than the rubber and the coconut industries.

Fortunately for Suyco, concerned citizens have thrown him a lifesaver.

On Friday, Suyco thanked uniformed and civilian members of the Police Center for Aviation Security (PCAS), plus members of an environmentalist group, who planted "propagules" of mangrove trees in a 5-hectare artificial mangrove area.

PCAS Chief Supt. Danilo Abadiano said their activity was a pre-Valentine offering for their love of nature.

"I guess you can call it that; that your concern for the environment benefits not only nature but also the people who live off these products from mangrove areas," Abadiano said.

Suyco said he is no longer worried about not being able to earn from his seaweed farm.

Because of the past rehabilitation efforts of the government and concerned civic groups to replenish the wetlands, they can still feed their families through other species found in mangrove areas.

Suyco said he has now learned that concern for the environment can be helpful during times of crises.

Kabuhi Mindanao, a non-government organization that attends to mangrove replanting, said the standard wetlands area of a city or a province only reaches to three to four per cent of its total area.

But through mangrove replanting, it said man is able to help replenish fish sanctuaries. Mangroves also help improve the quality of seaweeds and propagate fishpond products.

The artificial mangrove forest in barangay Mampang in Zamboanga City used to be a desert. But in the 1990s, the 5-hectare area was transformed into a productive area with hundreds of plant and animal species.


Read more!

Best of our wild blogs: 14 Feb 09


Smooth-coated Otter in Sungei Buloh mangroves
on Otterman speaks

Strange anemone from Pulau Semakau identified!
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Last Seagrass Monitoring!
on the labrador blog

Ubin for GPS exploring
on Ubin.sgkopi

Pests
on the annotated budak blog and cocked

Slim Sreedharan is in town
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Bring Your Own Utensils (BYOU)
on the Zero Waste Singapore blog


Read more!

Singapore to mark Earth Hour

The target is to get 1m people here to switch off lights on March 28
Amresh Gunasingham & Liaw Wy-Cin, Straits Times 14 Feb 09;

THE Global Earth Hour is gaining traction here.

Its growing list of supporters this year includes Deputy Prime Minister and Coordinating Minister for National Security S. Jayakumar.

Pledging his support, Professor Jayakumar said: 'Climate change is one of the most serious long-term challenges facing humankind. An enduring global solution must involve the combined effort of governments, businesses, NGOs (non-governmental organisations), and individuals.'

Earth Hour, which started in 2007, is an annual event aimed at getting as many individuals, households and businesses around the world to turn off their lights and electrical appliances for one hour to bring awareness to climate change and conservation.

This year, tertiary institutions and a number of businesses islandwide will shut off exterior lights for an hour from 8.30pm on March 28. Residents are also encouraged to switch off their lights at home.

The target is to get a million people in Singapore to 'switch off'. This is Singapore's first official participation in the event, organised by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).

More than a billion people from 1,000 cities around the world are expected to take part this time round.

A spokesman for WWF said that participating in Earth Hour provides a 'united global message' to individuals, businesses, politicians and governments that climate change affects, and is the responsibility of, the global community.

The inaugural Earth Hour, which took place in Sydney on March 31 two years ago, saw more than two million people and 2,000 businesses across the city taking part.

Last year, it swelled to 50 million people from 35 countries worldwide.

Prof Jayakumar said Earth Hour 2009 would help promote public awareness of the importance of addressing climate change.

Property developer CapitaLand was one of the few Singapore companies to take part last year.

'In 2008, CapitaLand's proactive initiatives to reduce, reuse and recycle enabled us to cut electricity and water consumption and avoid the equivalent of about $2 million in utility costs in Singapore alone,' said its group president and chief executive Liew Mun Leong. This year, CapitaLand is involving more of its properties here and overseas in the event.

SingTel is also getting into the act.

Mr Olivier Carnohan, SingTel's head of eBusiness, said customers will receive an insert in their bills - made of recycled paper - informing them of Earth Hour and encouraging them to participate. An SMS will also be circulated as a reminder.

The National University of Singapore (NUS) plans to hold a candlelight vigil involving up to 2,000 students. Said Mr Loo Deliang from NUS' office of environmental sustainability: 'We hope this spreads awareness of the climate change campaign and promotes the idea that every individual counts.'


Read more!

Buildings in Singapore doll up their facades with lights

Bright ideas for the city
Buildings in Singapore doll up their facades with lights, adding sparkle to architecture along the way
tan yi hui, Straits Times 14 Feb 09;

It could soon look like it is Christmas all year round in downtown Singapore: More buildings have pretty lights integrated into their design, instead of using them only as accessories during the festive season.

A new building in Selegie Road which literally dazzles is Wilkie Edge, a 12-storey development comprising office and retail space and serviced apartment units.

Designed by award-winning local firm Woha, it has a $3.5-million facade featuring a combination of high- and low-resolution LED display screens, a silver skin of perforated aluminium and a textured curtain wall in louvres and glass.

The display screen uses one row of LED lights per square metre which are projected onto the wall rather than onto the street. All this comes together in an energy-saving solution to produce an effect that is 'soft and transparent, like watercolour', says a spokesman for CapitaCommercial Trust (CCT), which owns the complex.

LEDs, or light-emitting diodes, are semiconductor diodes that emit light when an electric current is passed through. They consume less power than conventional fluorescent lights.

The spokesman adds: 'This design is better than just having the most up-to-date, largest and brightest LED screen, which becomes outdated very quickly and consumes huge amounts of power.'

While Singapore is nowhere near the brash neons of Hong Kong and Japan or the lovers' glow of Paris, such LED installations and display screens mean it is bye-bye to boring spotlights and signage.

And it is about time, too. This architectural trend has been around for a decade overseas, industry experts tell Life!.

Another building here to have seen the light is Palais Renaissance in Orchard Road. It boasts the world's first double-skin glass facade with built-in threedimensional, colour-changing LED light pattern.

The upscale mall started its $16-million renovations in June last year and the facade was completed in December. According to City Developments Limited, which owns Palais, the facade alone costs $8 million.

Three layers of lights come on and off alternately to create rhythmic patterns of blue, purple and green behind glass panels with white, square ceramic patterns.

The 'dancing' lights are by the award-winning architectural lighting designer Hiroyasu Shoji, whose work includes the Mikimoto Ginza Headquarters, an icon in Tokyo.

Says chief architect Seiya Muraki of Kajima Design Asia who was behind the mall's overall new design: 'When architecture is required to express much more nowadays, it's not surprising that lighting is incorporated.'

The new Palais uses nearly 15,000 computer-controlled LED lights but only 20 per cent are switched on at any one time, therefore conserving electricity.

LED lights are also eco-friendly because they last 50,000 to 100,000 hours, generally 50 times longer than traditional fluorescent lights.

A light touch in Orchard and Bugis

The rise of these sparkly facades in architecture design is in line with the Urban Redevelopment Authority's (URA) Lighting Masterplan, which was announced in 2006. It was the Government's call to light up the city.

The plan targets the Civic District - the area around Fullerton Hotel and the Padang, the Central Business District (CBD) and the Marina Bay area. According to URA, within the Civic District and CBD, lights mostly shone onto building facades to brighten the architecture.

However, in areas such as Orchard Road, Bras Basah and Bugis, lights can be incorporated into the building design.

At the other end of Orchard Road, The Cathay also displays a light touch.

After undergoing extensive renovations, the 70-year-old landmark reopened its doors in March 2006 and showed off a glittery face. The new look was the result of a $100-million collaboration between Tange Associates Japan and RDC Architects in Singapore.

According to a Tange spokesman, colour panels visible from the exterior are located inside the building, while throbbing LED lights line the external curtain wall.

The facade lighting of The Cathay is subtle, complementing the design's 'urban skin' concept - a glass layer wrapping the top half of the structure, which makes the building seem transparent.

Look out also for boutique mall Paragon, which underwent a $45-million makeover at the start of last year. Its new look can already be seen but it is not completed yet.

The facade lighting will be seen in its full glory only at the end of this month. It comprises LED lights housed within layers of aluminium panels and fritted glass, which is chemically toughened glass with a ceramic base.

In the 'arts and heritage' district at Bugis, the bright new spark is Iluma, which is billed as an 'urban entertainment centre'.

Also designed by Woha, it has a custom-made innovative media facade comprising a scale-like layer of diamond-shaped lights. It is touted as a world's first. A Woha spokesman says its dramatic effect will be showcased at the project's public opening in the second quarter of this year.

Despite these developments, do not expect Singapore to turn into a Shinjuku.

According to URA, glittering screens and flashing images of advertisements on building facades are still limited to areas with 'high levels of pedestrians and street activities, such as Orchard Road, Chinatown and Bras Basah-Bugis'.

A URA spokesman says: 'While advertisement signs can contribute to the colour and vibrancy of the streetscape, their proliferation can also have a negative impact on the character of the area.

'URA's guidelines ensure that the signs are mounted on the building facades and are at a level where they can relate to and contribute to the street activities and not negatively impact on the city skyline.'


Read more!

Shroud not linked to current hot spots in Sumatra

Smoke's in the air
Straits Times 14 Feb 09;

A SMOKY shroud lingered over parts of the island yesterday, prompting many Singaporeans to ask if the dreaded haze was back.

But the National Environment Agency (NEA) said yesterday light winds were behind the shroud that stretched over the city skyline, as well as parts of the East Coast, Toa Payoh and Potong Pasir.

A spokesman said the light winds had resulted in an accumulation of dust particles in the air.

He added that - based on the latest satellite pictures, which showed seven hot spots in Sumatra but no significant smoke plumes - it was unlikely the haziness had stemmed from there.

He said smoke from lallang fires, one on Thursday and another yesterday, could have contributed to the particle accumulation as well.

The 24-hour air-quality reading on the Pollutant Standards Index at 4pm yesterday was within the 'good' range, NEA noted.

Said scientist Goh Kee Chuan, 42, who had noticed the smoky shroud yesterday while at his home in Potong Pasir: 'I'm asthmatic, so I'm a bit concerned.'

'I will carry around my inhaler just in case,' Dr Goh added.

Hot spots - the result of traditional burning methods used in Indonesia to clear land for growing crops - are the main culprits behind the haze that plagues the region almost every year around the middle of the year.

As for the weather forecast over the next few days, NEA said: 'The light wind conditions are expected to persist for a day or two.

'There is a possibility that we may experience some slight haziness during this period of light wind conditions.'

Slight haze in Singapore, but PSI reading within good range
Hoe Yeen Nie, Channel NewsAsia 13 Feb 09;

SINGAPORE: Is the haze back in Singapore? Well, some people might be forgiven for thinking so.

The view over Toa Payoh estate on Friday afternoon was hazier than what most would expect. Downtown, the central business district was an equally gloomy sight.

According to the National Environment Agency (NEA), the hazy view was due to light wind conditions, resulting in a build-up of dust particles in the air.

Bushfires in Singapore in the past two days might have also contributed to the haze.

NEA said there is no indication the haze originated from forest fires in Indonesia.

It added that the PSI reading is within the good range, but the slight haze may persist for the next day or two.

- CNA/ir


Read more!

Singapore State Lands Act amended and updated

Straits Times 14 Feb 09;

PARLIAMENT yesterday passed the State Lands (Amendment) Bill, which made several changes to the law and updated archaic language in it.

Associate Professor Ho Peng Kee, Senior Minister of State for Law and Home Affairs, listed the amendments in the law regulating the occupation and alienation of state land.

Key among them was a change to Section 10. This allows the minister to vest in the Government of any estate or interest in land for the purposes of implementing the provisions of any international convention, treaty or agreement to which Singapore is party.

Section4, which provides for the settlement of any difference in compensation through arbitration, was also amended to update archaic language and references.

For example, it deleted the reference to the appointment of umpires in arbitration, which was rendered obsolete by the enactment of the Arbitration Act in 2001.

References to old modes of transport - horses, buffalos, bullocks and carts or wagons - were also removed.

Another change was in Section7, which makes it clear that only officers of the Collector of Land Revenue authorised by him in writing - not just his officers as stated previously - may have access to lands that are the subject of a grant or a state lease.

A new Section3A was also introduced to clarify the ways that state land, which are alienated or otherwise disposed of, may be alienated, leased or licensed.

The three ways it specified were:

One, as a parcel of the surface earth, all substances under it, and so much of the airspace above as reasonably necessary for its use or enjoyment;

Two, as a parcel of airspace or subterranean earth, whether or not held apart from the surface of the earth; and

Three, only down to such depth below the surface earth as the President may direct.

KOR KIAN BENG


Read more!

The Lynx effect: One woman's quest to save a species

The Independent 13 Feb 09;

Europe's most endangered mammal has been pulled back from the brink of extinction and it's all thanks to one woman, as Elizabeth Nash reports from El Acebuche, Andalusia

You would be lucky to see the shy, elusive Iberian lynx, Europe's most endangered mammal, in the wild. The 250 or so wild lynxes that remain after decades of depredation of their habitat hide deep in the protected scrubland of Spain's south-western corner, and shun human contact.

But you may just glimpse the agile and astute creature, twice as big as a domestic cat but half the size of the more common Eurasian lynx, crouching at night by the road that borders Andalusia's Doñana National Park, poised to dart across.

The roadsides here are cleared of vegetation to make the lynx more visible to motorists, and high fences discourage it from venturing outside its terrain. But being run over remains the main cause of mortality.

The second is the lack of prey, principally rabbits, forcing lynxes to brave the perilous roads in search of new sources of food.

Thirty years ago, thousands of lynxes, distinguished by their handsome tufted ears and bushy side-whiskers, roamed southern Spain and Portugal. By the late Nineties, numbers had dropped below 150 and the Iberian lynx (lynx pardinus) was declared the world's most endangered feline, at imminent risk of dying out. Electric fences, farmers' traps, heedless hunters, forest fires, careless drivers, intensive farming, fatal disease among rabbits, and uncontrolled road-building and urban development combined to drive this unique and beautiful Iberian feline, symbol of a complex interdependent ecosystem, to the brink of extinction. "If the lynx does become extinct, it will be the first cat to die out since the sabre-toothed tiger 10,000 years ago," warned Peter Jackson, the World Conservation Union's cat specialist.

The decline was halted at the turn of the millennium, in a rare spasm of concerted action by national and regional authorities, boosted by conservancy campaigns such as that of the Worldwide Fund for Nature, WWF, amid mounting public awareness of the treasure that would be irrevocably lost.

Rarely seen in the wild, now you can observe the lynxes' most intimate actions, captured on screens monitored day and night by scientists who five years ago started breeding lynx pardinus in captivity.

The government-sponsored captive breeding centre at El Acebuche deep in the Doñana's protected parkland, a former hunting-ground, has been unexpectedly successful. It started with four lynxes – three females and a male – weaklings that would have perished in the wild. Today, 56 lynxes roam a spacious, fenced scrubland area identical to their natural habitat but with the dangers excluded. Next year, scientists will start gradually releasing them into the wild. As a result, scientists now dare to believe the Iberian lynx may survive after all.

Astrid Vargas, a vivacious, fast-talking Puerto Rican, quit the US for Spain in 2003 to join the Coto Doñana's biological station, and direct the breeding of lynxes in captivity. "The lynx was in a downward spiral; it would have died out without urgent action," Dr Vargas, 43, said this week in the modest, single-storey monitoring centre. "I really do believe it's possible to save the lynx, but it's a huge challenge. It's time-consuming, extremely intensive work."

She glances constantly at a battery of screens linked to 20 cameras that record every snuffle and mew, every gambol and leap of the felines in her charge. She moves the camera to zoom in on lynx action. A mature female steps out for an exploratory stroll: it's Saliega, "Sali", who captured Spaniards' hearts in 2005 by producing the first three lynxes in captivity. Sali pounces on a rabbit, which convulses in a desperate death agony before flopping motionless in the lynx's jaws. "We introduce rabbits into the enclosure so the lynxes learn to hunt their prey just as they would in the wild. We don't want the cubs to see people around them, so we keep human contact to a minimum to prevent them becoming domesticated, and intervene only at moments of life or death."

Another screen records a cuddlier scene, of two young cubs playfully cuffing each other with their fat paws, then sitting as poised and predatory as little tigers, tufted ears cocked, tails flicking, slanted green eyes alert and glittering. "The main aim is to prevent the species dying out," Dr Vargas says. "The next important step is to preserve their natural habitat, and finally prepare the lynxes for their eventual release into the wild."

It is the mating season, and the team of eight biologists who watch the lynxes' every move, day and night, are on maximum alert. They have found that lynxes are extremely sexually active, copulating up to 80 times in two or three days during the week the females are in season. The rest of the time they sleep. Dr Vargas attributes the sexual intensity to levels of oestrogen and testosterone among captive lynxes 35 times higher than other felines, "perhaps a survival mechanism for a species in danger". The lynx reaches puberty at two, sexual maturity at three. They are sexually active from January to June, but usually copulate only in January or February. Gestation lasts 63 to 66 days, followed by lactation of three-and-a-half to four months.

The critical moment is in the cubs' seventh week of life, when they become aggressive and competitive and fight each other, sometimes to death. Three years ago, the nation mourned when the weakest of Sali's first litter was pounced upon by a stronger sibling and ripped to pieces in a fratricidal frenzy. "We feared this would happen," Dr Vargas said then. "Lynxes usually produce litters of three or four, but only the strongest two survive."

Since then, 18 fights have broken out. "But we've been able to break them up. They are not competing for food; they fight with a full stomach. We thought they might be competing for access to dwindling mother's milk as part of the weaning process. But we found that after fights a hierarchy is established and dominance imposed, and we now think that's what triggers the fighting. It happens in the wild too." Aged from 80 to 180 days the cubs learn to chase live prey. "The dominant animals hunt soonest."

These behavioural traits, logged and analysed as the breeding programme progresses, fascinate Dr Vargas, who says she has been surrounded by animals since childhood. Before coming to Spain she helped save the American black-footed ferret from extinction, and spent four years in Madagascar working with the golden-crowned sifaka, a kind of lemur.

But protecting the animal is only part of what is needed. "Captive breeding is a tool, not the solution," Dr Vargas says. "We can't keep animals in cages for ever. We have to prepare them for the wild, and prepare a habitat where they can survives. It's no good breeding all these lynxes, then releasing them to their death. Our priority is to prepare areas for their reintroduction into the wild. We need 10,000 hectares of good Mediterranean scrubland with a good supply of wild rabbits, and the threats removed: no big roads, and no big towns. This doesn't exist yet, but we can prepare it."

Time is pressing. The first lynxes are due to be freed into the wild next year, with between 20 and 40 young animals available for release every year from 2011. They cannot be kept captive because of the risk of genetic weakening in future generations through inbreeding.

"I came here because of my commitment to the lynx; it's a jewel among animals," Dr Vargas says. "I'm optimistic that if we get help from everyone involved we can save it."


Read more!

Countryside in danger as natural heritage forgotten

Britain is in danger of losing native wildlife because the younger generation do not remember what the countryside used to look like, according to a new study.

Louise Gray, The Telegraph 13 Feb 09;

While the older generation are able to name common natural sights of the past that have now become a rarity, such as flocks of starlings, they have not passed on their knowledge to their children, researchers found.

Scientists fear this "generational amnesia" could affect the country's ability to protect wildlife because younger people do not realise what has been lost.

The survey, conducted in a village in Yorkshire, also found "personal amnesia", where people fail to notice animals and plants declining even in their own life time, and therefore do not realise the importance of conservation.

There has been a wealth of anecdotal evidence about the young failing to recognise species like skylarks or elm trees that would have been a common sight for their grandparents or even parents.

However a study by Imperial College London published in Conservation Letters is the first evidence of the phenomenon.

The survey asked 50 people in Cherry Burton, Yorkshire, what they thought the three most common birds were in the village. Whereas all the generations were able to name the current most common species today – wood pigeon, blackbird and starling, only the older generation knew that 20 years ago wood pigeons are starlings dominated the skies alongside feral pigeons .

Few people from any generation were able to correctly identify the birds that have declined over the last 20 years – sparrows and starlings.

Professor E J Milner-Gulland, co-author of the paper, said she feared people will more readily accept a degraded environment, if they do not know the diversity that existed in the past. Once common plants like cornflowers or cowslips and birds like skylarks, grey partridge or chaffinches have endured a steady decline over recent decades.

She called on older generations to pass on information, in the same way the elderly have been encouraged to pass on social history about living through World War II.

"People of a new generation do not realise something is missing. It is really important because how can you get people behind conservation action if they do not know what they have lost?"

Tom Oliver, head of rural policy at the Campaign to Protect for Rural England said the research proved people are failing to notice the degradation of the countryside. He said it made it more important than ever to protect the landscape for future generations.

"You would not deprive your children of what you had and therefore you should not deprive anyone," he said.


Read more!

Living near trees 'makes people live longer and feel happier'

Kate Devlin, The Telegraph 13 Feb 09;

Leafy streets also encourage a lower crime rate and a more "civilised" atmosphere, even in poor areas, researchers found.

They believe that living close to parks and other green spaces is "essential to our physical, psychological and social well-being".

"Nature calms people and it also helps them psychologically rejuvenate. They are better able to handle challenges which come their way," said Prof Frances Kuo, from the University of Illinois, who led a review of studies into the effects of trees and parklands.

The research also shows that people have happier relationships and perform better in tests when they live in tree-filled neighbourhoods.

Other studies showed that health levels could be "predicted by the amount of green space within a one-mile radius".

Research in Japan also found that older people lived for longer when their homes were within walking distance of a park or other green space.

Prof Kuo said: "In our studies, people with less access to nature show relatively poor attention or cognitive function, poor management of major life issues, and poor impulse control."

She added: "The relationship between crime and vegetation is very clear: the more trees, the fewer crimes.

"It actually encourages people to use the spaces outside their homes which provides a natural form of surveillance.

"In fact, the data seem to indicate that if you have a landscape where you introduce well-maintained trees and grass, people will find that a safer environment."

One study showed that the presence of trees could cut crime by as much as seven per cent, according to the research presented at the American Association for the Advancement of Science conference (AAAS) in Chicago.

Children with attention deficit disorders also behaved better after a walk in a park compared to those who exercised indoors or in treeless areas, the review found.


Read more!

Four Arrested in Jakarta for Selling Body Parts of Endangered Animals

Fidelis E. Satriastanti, The Jakarta Globe 13 Feb 09;

Four traders from Rawa Bening market in Jatinegara, East Jakarta, were arrested on Thursday for selling body parts of endangered animals, an activist said on Friday.

The arrest was carried out by officials from the Forestry Ministry, the Natural Resources and Environment Task Force of the Jakarta Police, the Special Response Police Forest Task Force and Wildlife Forum, an umbrella organization for nongovernmental groups that promote environmental causes.

“We have been monitoring the traders for a year based on information provided by the public,” said Pramudya Harzani, spokesman for the Jakarta Animal Aid Network.

He said they were forced to ask for police help after the Natural Resources Conservation Agency failed to make a move more than a year after they reported the traders.

“We reported the case to the police force, and they responded quickly,” he said. “Experts are currently trying to confirm if the goods indeed came from endangered animals.”

Rawa Bening market is known for its precious stones and jewelry, but vendors in the market also sell items like traditional daggers, stones and animal parts that have superstitious value for some people.

The body parts of animals like elephant and tigers supposedly promote sexual vitality and increase physical strength, according to local superstitions.

Under the 1990 Law on Natural Resources and Ecosystem Conservation, the arrested traders could face a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a fine of Rp 100 million ($8,500) for engaging in the trade of endangered animals that are protected by legal measures.

However, Irma Hermawati, coordinator of the Wildlife Advocacy Institution, said that current efforts to apprehend illegal dealers were inadequate, because the main sources still remained untouched.

“So far, we have only managed to get to one end of the supply chain,” she said. “We were hoping that the arrested traders would divulge the names of their suppliers and the heads of their operations, but so far they haven’t.”

Awriya Ibrahim, the director of investigation and forest protection at the Forestry Ministry, said the case against the traders was very strong because they were caught in the act of selling the contraband items.

“We will let the police carry on with the investigation by themselves,” he said.

“However, the investigation should be thorough, because there have been instances when lawbreakers were not punished adequately.”

Awriya cited a previous case when his office caught a ship trying to smuggle live turtles to China from East Kalimantan Province. The smugglers got three-year prison sentences.

A number of traders who were convicted of selling 13 tons of dead pangolins in South Sumatra Province were sentenced to only 15 months each.

Awriya said the South Sumatra traders should have been given heavier sentences because the animals that they were trying to sell were already dead.

“The [current] investigation should be done properly, because the judges consider only sound evidence,” he said.

Irma said that her group conducted four raids in 2008, but the practice of selling the body parts of endangered animals continued unabated.

“A month or two after the raids, the vendors start to sell the items again,” she said.

Irma also criticized the buyers of the contraband items.

“As long as there is strong demand, there would also be supply,” she said.

Body parts of protected animals confiscated
Agnes Winarti, The Jakarta Post 14 Feb 09;

The high demand and supply for products made from protected animals was again revealed Thursday, after a raid confiscated dozens of body parts of Sumatran tigers, spotted leopards, bears and elephants.

The parts were sold at the Rawa Bening precious stone market in East Jakarta.

“The body parts of the protected animals were sold for mystic practices,” Pramudya Harzani from Jakarta Animal Aid Network (JAAN) told The Jakarta Post on Friday.

“The findings from the Rawa Bening market are evidence that there is still a high level of demand for the animals.”

The raid confiscated dozens of skins, feet, nails, skulls, tails, teeth of the spotted leopard (Panthera pardus), Sumatran tiger (Panthera tigris sumatrae) and bear (Helarctor malayanus), as well as a stuffed spotted leopard. Several ivory products were also confiscated.

The estimated value of the confiscated items is over Rp 130 million (US$10,830), ranging between Rp 150,000 for a small Sumatran tiger skin and Rp 15 million for a keris (dagger) with a handle and sheath made of ivory.

“The body parts were from five Sumatran tigers, two spotted leopards and two elephants,” Pramudya said.

“Since 2007, animal rescue centers have performed fewer raids and campaigns due to a lack of funds. Thus, trade in protected animals, both dead and alive, has increased over the past two years.”

Thursday’s raid at the market was performed by the police, Forestry Ministry and Jakarta Wildlife Forum — which includes the World Conservation Society (WCS), International Animal Rescue (IAR), JAAN, Lembaga Advokasi Satwa (Lasa), and Profauna — after the groups started monitoring illegal trade at the market in April last year.

It is estimated that 23 kiosks, out of 250 precious stone traders, at the market sell the body parts of protected animals, killing seven Sumatran tigers on average per month.

After the raid, four traders with the initials DP, MR, MZ and SF were named as suspects.
Pramudya said that not many suspects caught were sentenced.

“Many cases of illegal animal trading are regarded insignificant. The cases never reach the courts.”

Lasa director Irma said that even if cases reached trial, the convictions were much more lenient than the regulations.

A press release made available by Profauna on Friday said Jakarta was one of the destinations where tiger parts are smuggled.

The arrest of the suspects at Rawa Bening market in Jakarta was expected to cause a deterrent effect to illegal trading, the release said.

According to the 1990 Indonesian Wildlife Act, trade of protected animals like the Sumatran tiger is prohibited. Offenders face up to a five years’ imprisonment and Rp 100 millions in fines.


Read more!

Penguins starve as climate ups swim time: study

Yahoo News 12 Feb 09;

CHICAGO (AFP) – Penguins nesting off Argentina's coast are starving because changing ocean patterns have forced their mates to swim 25 miles (40 kilometers) farther than they did a decade ago to find food, researchers said Thursday.

"They also have to swim another 25 miles (40 kilometers) back, and they are swimming that extra 50 miles (80 kilometers) while their mates are back at the breeding grounds, sitting on a nest and starving," said Dee Boersma, a University of Washington biology professor.

Overfishing, pollution and climate change have contributed to the loss of fish stocks near the Punta Tombo animal preserve about 1,000 miles (1,600 kilometers) south of Buenos Aires, Boersma said.

The colony has shrunk by more than 20 percent to 200,000 breeding pairs from 300,000 pairs 22 years ago.

Penguins are returning to their breeding grounds later in the year and in poorer condition to breed. Once there, the longer trips for food significantly lessens the chances that they will successfully reproduce.

Some of the penguins living have migrated up to 250 miles (400 kilometers) further north to find better breeding grounds.

Those that remain have also had problems with rain flooding their nests, which threatens the survival of eggs and small chicks.

Boersma, who is also director of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Penguin Project, will present her findings Friday at the American Association for the Advancement of Science's annual conference.

Penguins in Peril, Research Shows
livescience.com Yahoo News 13 Feb 09;

Penguins are on the verge of a precipitous decline, one conservation group warns.

A combination of changing weather patterns, overfishing, pollution, and other factors have conspired against the aquatic, flightless birds , according to a long-running study conducted by the Bronx Zoo-based Wildlife Conservation Society.

The study's findings were presented today by University of Washington professor and WCS scientific fellow Dr. P. Dee Boersma at the American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting in Chicago.

Boersma, director of the Wildlife Conservation Society's Penguin Project, has recently published two papers documenting some of the serious challenges faced by Magellanic penguins at a colony she has studied for more than 25 years at Punta Tombo, a wildlife reserve some 1,000 miles south of Buenos Aires, Argentina. The papers appeared in the February issues of the journals Marine Ecology Progress Series, and Ecological Monographs.

Boersma's data reveal that penguins at Punta Tombo are traveling farther to find food than they did just a decade ago due to changing ocean conditions and overfishing-particularly of anchovies, a favorite penguin food.

This has forced some penguins to attempt to nest outside of protected areas where they often fall prey to predators.

Meanwhile, changing weather patterns have also led to increased instances of heavy rains, which have caused high mortality of penguin chicks in five of the last 25 years.

All told, penguin numbers at Punta Tombo have declined by more than 20 percent in the last 22 years, from 300,000 to just 200,000 breeding pairs, Boersma said.

"Penguins are having trouble with food on their wintering grounds and if that happens they're not going to come back to their breeding grounds," she said. "If we continue to fish down the food chain and take smaller and smaller fish like anchovies, there won't be anything left for penguins and other wildlife that depend on these small fish for food."

Of the world's 17 species of penguins 12 are rapidly declining Boersma added.

Penguins facing longer commute for food: expert
Julie Steenhuysen, Reuters 12 Feb 09;

CHICAGO (Reuters) - A penguin species found in Argentina is under threat because climate change is forcing the birds to swim farther to find food, researchers said on Thursday.

Climate change has displaced fish populations, so Magellanic penguins must swim "an extra 25 miles further from the nest for fish," University of Washington professor Dee Boersma told reporters at the American Association of the Advancement of Science meeting in Chicago.

While that might not sound like much, she said that while the penguins are swimming an extra 50 miles, their mates are sitting on a nest and starving.

"They are racing against their own physiology," Boersma told the meeting.

The penguins, which live on Argentina's Atlantic coast, are also laying their eggs three days later, she said.

"That means their breeding season is really short now and the chance of their chicks leaving at the wrong time, when there is not food out there, is getting greater and greater," she said.

Last summer, Boersma reported that the Punta Tombo colony she tracks about 1,000 miles south of Buenos Aires has fallen by more than 20 percent in the past 22 years, leaving just 200,000 breeding pairs.

She said some younger penguins are now moving their breeding colonies north to be closer to fish, but, in some cases, this is putting them on private, unprotected lands.

Twelve out of 17 penguin species are experiencing rapid population declines, she said.

Boersma, who has tracked Magellanic penguins in their breeding colony for the past 25 years, said they serve as a barometer of the effects of climate change.

"They keep us abreast of what is happening, not only in the ocean, but on land," she said.

"We really have to reduce our impacts," she said. "If we don't, both penguins and humans will suffer."


Read more!

UK's ex-science chief predicts century of 'resource' wars

James Randerson, The Guardian 13 Feb 09;

The Iraq war was just the first of this century's "resource wars", in which powerful countries use force to secure valuable commodities, according to the UK government's former chief scientific adviser. Sir David King predicts that with population growth, natural resources dwindling, and seas rising due to climate change, the squeeze on the planet will lead to more conflict.

"Future historians might look back on our particular recent past and see the Iraq war as the first of the conflicts of this kind - the first of the resource wars," he told an audience of 400 in London as he delivered the British Humanist Association's Darwin Day lecture.

Implicitly rejecting the US and British governments' claim they went to war to remove Saddam Hussein and search for weapons of mass destruction, he said the US had in reality been very concerned about energy security and supply, because of its reliance on foreign oil from unstable states. "Casting its eye around the world - there was Iraq," he said.

This strategy could also be used to find and keep supplies of other essentials, such as minerals, water and fertile land, he added. "Unless we get to grips with this problem globally, we potentially are going to lead ourselves into a situation where large, powerful nations will secure resources for their own people at the expense of others."

King was the UK government's chief scientific adviser in the run-up to the start of Iraq war in March 2003, but said he did not express his view of its true motivation to Tony Blair. "It was certainly the view that I held at the time, and I think it is fair to say a view that quite a few people in government held," said King, who is now director of the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment at Oxford University.

However, before the war loomed he had made an effort to persuade the Bush administration to adopt more climate-friendly policies. "I went into the White House in 2001 to persuade them that de-carbonising their economy was the way forward. I didn't get much shrift at that time. What I can tell you is that, if I had managed to persuade the government of America that investing (instead of going into Iraq) in de-carbonising their economy with roughly a tenth of [the estimated $3 trillion the US spent on the war], they would have managed it."

Commenting on the idea of "resource wars", Alex Evans, of the Centre for International Co-operation at New York University, who last month wrote a report on food security for the Chatham House thinktank, said he believed King was right, but overly pessimistic. "You always get conflict over the allocation of scarce resources," he said. "The question is whether it is violent conflict ... If the political system can't cope, that's when it gets violent."

King's lecture - Can British Science Rise to the Challenges of the 21st Century? - also warned politicians not to allow the financial crisis to distract them from tackling climate change. "I would like to see [in] every speech Gordon Brown makes on the fiscal crisis, that he also includes the global warming crisis," he said, but added: "It's fine for the prime minister to make a good speech on climate change, but you need all members of the cabinet, because reducing carbon by 80% by 2050 will require every part of government to respond."

King summed up by saying that with growing population and dwindling resources, fundamental changes to the global economy and society were necessary. "Consumerism has been a wonderful model for growing up economies in the 20th century. Is that model fit for purpose in the 21st century, when resource shortage is our biggest challenge?"


Read more!

'CO2 reduction treaties useless'

Sarah Mukherjee, BBC 12 Feb 09;

A new report says treaties aimed at reducing CO2 emissions are useless.

The Institution of Mechanical Engineers report says we have to accept the world could change dramatically.

It also says we should start planning our major infrastructure now to accommodate more extreme weather events and sea level rises.

While not against attempts to reduce emissions, the report's authors say we should be realistic about what can be achieved with this approach.

Realism

International diplomats and environment campaigners have, for years, been pursuing an international agreement to reduce carbon emissions.

In its present incarnation it is called the Kyoto Protocol.



This treaty runs out in 2012, and negotiations are carrying on at the moment to replace it - negotiations which will culminate in a meeting in Copenhagen later this year.

The authors of the report are not optimistic about the outcome:

"The new agreement's most basic premise will be to try and limit the negative man-made effects on our climate system for future generations.

"In other words, the agreement will aim to reduce global CO2 emissions by mitigation.

"However, the existing Kyoto Protocol has, to date, been a near total failure, with emissions levels continuing to rise substantially."

While the report's authors point out that the Institution, like many scientific bodies, has a strong belief that we need "to reduce CO2 to secure long-term human survival", they also say that we should be realistic about what we can achieve.

And "even with vigorous mitigation effort, we will continue to use fossil fuel reserves until they are exhausted."

Climate proofing

If climate change scientists' predictions are correct, the world will look very different if we are unable or unwilling to stop using fossil fuels to the extent we are doing today.

Sea level rises could be seven metres in the UK by 2250, which, unchecked, could inundate much of London, East Anglia and other coastal areas.

We may have to accept, they say, that we will need to abandon some parts of the country, and spend significant amounts of money defending others.



2250 may seem like an unimaginably long time away, but the report's authors point out that parts of the London Underground system that are still in use were built in the 1860s, and today's engineers are facing projects the lifetime of which will extend into 2100.

The majority of existing infrastructure, they say, will continue to be operational for at least another 100-200 years.

The "climate proofing" the institution recommends extends into almost every construction.

For example, towns and cities, they say, should be planned to adjust street layouts to correspond with the prevailing winds, maximising ventilation and cooling.

The location of many power stations may have to be reconsidered, as they are often in coastal areas.

And railways were often placed in river valleys to make the most of low gradients.

The report's authors say that while they support efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, they are "realistic enough to recognise that global CO2 emissions are not reducing and our climate is changing so unless we adapt, we are likely to face a difficult future."

Model sees severe climate change impact by 2050
Michael Kahn, Reuters 12 Feb 09;

LONDON (Reuters) - Current efforts to limit greenhouse gas emissions will do little to ease damaging climate change, according to a report issued Friday that predicts Greenland's ice sheets will start melting by 2050.

A computer model calculated that if carbon dioxide emissions continue to grow at the current rate over the next 40 years, global temperatures will still rise 2 degrees Centigrade compared with the beginning of the Industrial Revolution.

This would push the planet to the brink, sparking unprecedented flooding and heatwaves and making it even more difficult to reverse the trend, according to the report from the Institute of Mechanical Engineers in Britain.

"Indeed organizations such as the European Union believe that an increase of 2 degrees Centrigrade relative to the pre-industrial climate is the maximum acceptable temperature rise to prevent uncontrollable and catastrophic climate change," the report said.

The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a group of hundreds of scientists, says its best estimate is that global temperature will increase this century by 1.8 to 4 degrees Celsius.

Temperatures have already risen by about 0.7 degrees Celsius since before the Industrial Revolution.

The researchers from the engineering group used the 1.9 percent average annual increase of carbon dioxide emissions over the past 25 years for their model and assumed that rate would continue until 2050.

"What we are saying is that even with mitigation there will be significant changes in the climate," said the Institute's Tim Fox, who helped write the report.

The computer model also calculated effects over the next 1,000 years, predicting that by the end of the first decade of the 22nd century, atmospheric carbon dioxide would be four times the pre-industrial level even with a decreasing rate of emissions.

Temperatures would continue to rise. By the year 3000 there would be little left of Greenland's ice sheets and the circulation of the Atlantic ocean would be fundamentally altered.

"This temperature increase will have global consequences, with nearly all regions experiencing their own particular climate-related challenges," the report reads.

(Reporting by Michael Kahn; editing by Maggie Fox and Andrew Roche)


Read more!

UK National Grid to pipe carbon dioxide emissions under North Sea

The company is planning to develop a £2bn transport and storage network so it can collect carbon and store it overseas

Robin Pagnamenta, Times Online 13 Feb 09;

National Grid is drawing up plans for a new business unit that will pipe carbon dioxide emissions from UK power stations for storage in geological formations beneath the North Sea, The Times has learnt.

National Grid believes the business, dubbed National Grid Carbon, can play a major role in the company's long-term growth by serving UK power plants fitted with carbon capture and storage (CCS) equipment.

Chris Train, the director of network operations, said that the group is developing plans to construct a £2 billion carbon transport and storage network around the Humber estuary in Yorkshire, where five of Britain's largest coal and gas-fired power stations are located.

“National Grid would provide the gathering system to collect the carbon and store it offshore,” he said. “Our expertise is very much in running safe and effective pipeline networks, so the transport and storage of carbon fits in very well with that.”

He said that National Grid, operates Britain’s high-voltage electricity transmission and gas distribution networks, planned investment in the long term that could amount to “several billion pounds”. He added that the system could be operational within three years.

“When you look at the UK's carbon emission targets and the need for future power generation, this could play a huge part of the UK's plans to have a competitive energy industry,” Mr Train said.

The Government hopes that CCS, which remains an untested technology on a commercial scale, can play “a critical role in helping the UK” to meet legally binding obligations to cut carbon emissions by 20 per cent by 2020.

Mr Train said the proposed Humber network would handle gaseous carbon dioxide emitted from coal and gas-fired stations such as Drax, Eggborough, Ferrybridge and Killingholme.

The captured carbon would be fed through National Grid's pipeline network and pumped to storage sites in old gasfields in the North Sea, where permeable rocks which originally contained gas are well suited to the permanent storage of carbon.

He said National Grid planned to be ready to operate its first carbon pipeline system within three years, in time to meet a Government deadline of having Britain's first commercial-scale CCS-equipped power plant operational by 2012.

National Grid is thought to be in talks with the major generators in the Humber region, including E.ON, Drax Power and Scottish & Southern Energy, as well as Yorkshire Forward, the regional development agency, about the plan, which Mr Train said could be replicated at other locations around the UK where clusters of coal-fired power stations exist, including Scotland and East Anglia.

About 60 million tonnes of carbon dioxide per year are emitted from power plants and other industrial sites around the Humber estuary - making it the region with the biggest carbon dioxide (CO2) output in Europe.

Mr Train said that capturing and storing all that carbon would be equivalent to taking 20 million cars off the road.

He said that a technical team from National Grid was working with academics at Newcastle University to study methods of storing and moving carbon by pipe while a commercial business development team was examining different ways that the new unit could be structured and financed.

Where possible, National Grid plans to use existing pipes and North Sea infrastructure formerly used to transport natural gas.

“CO2 is a very different gas from methane,” said Mr Train. “If you compress it, it becomes solid very quickly. But this is a great opportunity to reuse existing infrastructure. We are using the investments we have already made to develop the energy industry of the future.”


Read more!

'Crazy ideas ' to fight global warming revealed by scientists

Covering Greenland in blankets to stop the ice sheets melting, "tree bombs" to regenerate forests and sending a giant sunshade into space are just some of the ideas being proposed by scientists to save the planet from global warming.

Louise Gray, The Telegraph 13 Feb 09;

As further evidence emerges of the threat of climate change, scientists around the world are developing tools to try to stop the temperatures rising.

The science known as "geo-engineering" is considered dangerous by some for interfering with the world's delicate ecosystems, however advocates claim that it could "save the world" from catastrophic global warming.

A new series on Discovery Channel from this Sunday looks at some of the methods being proposed by scientists around the world.

Iain Riddick, series producer, said the scientists may have outlandish ideas but they are all respected in their field.

"Whether you agree climate change is caused by man or not the climate is changing. The question is should we stand back and let it happen or look at possible ways to mitigate the effects through engineering?" he said.

"These are eight crazy ideas which might just save the planet."

However Robin Webster of Friends of the Earth said it was dangerous to rely on untested science.

"We cannot afford to close our eyes to new ideas but the fear is politicians see geo-engineering as the magic bullet that will get us out of trouble and take attention away from making difficult choices to cut carbon emissions now. We need to look at tried and tested technologies like renewables that work and can start reducing the threat climate change now."

Ways to save the planet:

1. Wrapping Greenland

Dr Jason Box, a glaciologist from Ohio State University, proposes wrapping Greenland in a blanket. By covering the valleys that form darker areas, therefore attracting the sun's heat, he hopes to significantly slow the melting of the glacier.

2. Hungry ocean

Dr Brian von Herzen of the The Climate Foundation and marine biologists at the University of Hawaii and Oregon State University believe that the ocean could absorb much more carbon dioxide from the atmosphere by creating plankton blooms. This is done by mixing the nutrient rich water in the colder depths of the ocean with the warmer surface water by placing huge wave-powered pumps on the swells of the North Pacific.

3. Space sun shield

Professor Roger Angel, who helped create the world's largest telescope, believes the power of the sun could be reduced by placing a giant sun shield in space. The 100,000 square mile sunshade would be made up of trillions of lenses that reduce the sun's power by two per cent.

4. Raining forests

Consultant environmental engineer Mark Hodges believes forests could be generated by dropping "tree bombs" from a plane. The seedlings are dropped in a wax canister full of fertiliser that explodes when it hits the ground and grows into a tree. The method has already been used to regenerate mangrove forest in Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina.

5. Infinite Winds

Fred Ferguson, a Canadian engineer specialising in airships, has designed a wind turbine that will use the constant winds that exist at 1,000 feet to produce renewable energy.

6. Brighter World

Stephen Salter, an Edinburgh University engineer, believes that clouds can be created to protect the world from the power of the sun. He proposes forming clouds above the ocean by sending salt into the atmosphere.

7. Orbital power plant

Former Nasa physicist John Mankins believes the world could have a never-ending source of power and reduce carbon emissions by sending thousands of satellites into space to gather the sun's power and then beam them down to earth as a microwave.

8. Fixing carbon

David Keith, 2006 Canadian Geographic Environmental Scientist of the Year, believes he can create a machine that sucks in ambient air and sprays it with sodium hydroxide and then expels it as clean air. The carbon from the air will be captured and stored underground.


Read more!