Best of our wild blogs: 29 Mar 09


Earth Hour Singapore blogged
on Dee Kay Dot As Gee and Butterflies of Singapore blog and manta blog

You try eating a deflated balloon
on the faerieimps blog

Manado versus Singapore
on the blooooooooooo blog

TeamSeagrass at Chek Jawa
on the teamseagrass blog and wild shores of singapore blog and the annotated budak blog

Common Three Ring - A Cinderella of Butterflies
on the Butterflies of Singapore blog

Check out why Kusu Island is so popular with tourists
on the Lazy Lizard's Tales blog

Grey-throated Babbler eating a moth
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Visit to Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve
on the Manta Blog

Spider hunting at Sungei Buloh
on the wild shores of singapore blog and blooming mangroves

Mozzies & Bollywood
on the Urban Tropical Ecology 2009 blog and pulau semakau trip

Orange-breasted Trogon copulating
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog


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Another dugong dies in waters off Johor

New Straits Times 29 Mar 09;

PASIR GUDANG: Dugong deaths in the waters off Johor are occurring again.
Two of the marine herbivores, which are listed as protected species and considered a part of Johor's heritage, have been found dead over a span of a week.
Since the much-publicised death of a baby dugong named Si Tenang in 1999, no less than 12 dugong carcasses had been found in Johor waters till 2004.

On Friday, a male dugong, weighing about 300kg, was found floating in the waters off a village in Tanjung Langsat about 5pm.

Fisherman, Aris Abu Bakar, 46, at first thought the three-metre mammal was a bunch of plastic bags.

"I was shocked to discover it was a dugong.

"In my 30 years as a fisherman, this is the first time I have come across a dugong."

Aris, who informed the state Fisheries Department, said there were wounds on the dugong's belly.

On Tuesday, a dead dugong, also weighing 300kg, was found floating near the Sungai Pok Besar jetty in Gelang Patah.

A Fisheries Department spokesman said the waters off Johor were abundant with benthic seagrass, which was the main diet of the dugongs.

The dugongs' migratory path stretches from Sungai Johor, along the coastline eastwards and cuts across to the inland shore of Pulau Sibu, where rich meadows of seagrass are found.


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Singapore observes Earth Hour, many buildings switch off lights for an hour

Timothy Ouyang, Channel NewsAsia 28 Mar 09;

SINGAPORE : Thousands of people across Singapore observed Earth Hour on Saturday, as individuals at home and organisations switched off their lights for an hour.

Many parts of Singapore were plunged into darkness, as the lights went off at 8.30pm Singapore time, and remained off until 9.30pm.

Earth Hour is a global initiative by the World Wide Fund for Nature to raise awareness of climate change. It is the second year that Earth Hour is being observed in Singapore.

Various hotels across the Marina Bay area switched off their lights at 8.30pm sharp.

Even the Singapore Flyer took part in observing Earth Hour this year.

The Fullerton Hotel dimmed its lights at 8.30pm sharp, while over at Raffles Place, the colourful lights outlining the Maybank building were switched off as well.

Downtown at Orchard Road, shopping malls also joined in to play their part in raising awareness of global warming and climate change.

More than 10,000 people pledged to take part in Earth Hour this year, and more than 450 businesses also said they would switch off their lights.

Earlier, on Saturday evening, hundreds of people gathered at the Esplanade Park for a picnic. Some of them told Channel NewsAsia that they were there to show support for Earth Hour, while others just wanted to have some fun.

Singapore is of one of the many countries in Asia that have joined the world in switching off its lights for 60 minutes. Altogether, some 83 countries are expected to observe Earth Hour this year. - CNA/ms

Having good, green fun in the dark
Over 2,000 people show up at Esplanade Park to celebrate Earth Hour by candlelight
Amresh Gunasingham, Straits Times 29 Mar 09;

It was candle power yesterday when Singaporeans and foreigners gathered downtown to mark Earth Hour.

More than 2,000 people turned up at the Esplanade Park. The event was organised by the World Wide Fund for Nature.

When The Sunday Times visited the park at 7pm, a steady stream of people had started trickling in, armed with mats and food.

As natural light faded away, families and friends huddled around lit candles. They clapped and cheered at free entertainment provided by local bands and DJs from Gold 90.5FM.

Corporations such as Nokia, NEC, Philips and SingTel had tents displaying their environmentally friendly practices.

Said trader Kenneth Kua, 45, who was there with his wife and 14-year-old son: 'We're seeing so many natural disasters around the world. Hopefully, an event like this can raise awareness and bring the global community together to slow down the effects of climate change.'

Another visitor Junaidi, 28, a financial controller from Indonesia, said: 'Even if it's just for one hour, if everyone can participate, it is a good start.'

There were some who were disappointed by the turnout. Ms Claudia Prawitsch, 33, a financial controller from Austria who has lived here for the past six years, said:

'We have more than four million people in Singapore. Many people do not believe climate change is a serious issue.'

Still, campaign manager Carine Seror, for whom the event was the culmination of six months of planning, said the response was fabulous.

'To see people getting excited over something so simple as switching off their lights for one hour, is incredible,' she said. She noted that even if only a handful of people take the message home 'to say let's do something from now on, that would be a success'.

Miss Earth Singapore 2009 Ivy Leow, 25, who attended the Esplanade Park event, agreed: 'Some people may choose not to do it today, but the event is still a start.'

Elsewhere, many companies and hotels also switched off building-facade and non-essential lighting from 8.30pm to 9.30pm.

At the Ritz-Carlton hotel, guests at the Greenhouse eatery dined in candlelight. Mr Leo Song Tong, 52, a senior manager, was there with his three children to celebrate his wife's 48th birthday.

'The idea is good but we found it a bit too dark to eat our food,' he said.


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World switches off to save planet in "Earth Hour"

Reuters 28 Mar 09;

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Lights went out at tourism landmarks and homes across the globe on Saturday for Earth Hour 2009, a global event designed to highlight the threat from climate change.

From the Sydney Opera House and Harbour Bridge to the Eiffel Tower in Paris and London's Houses of Parliament, lights were dimmed as part of a campaign to encourage people to cut energy use and curb greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuels.

Organizers said the action showed millions of people wanted governments to work out a strong new U.N. deal to fight global warming by the end of 2009, even though the global economic crisis has raised worries about the costs.

"We have been dreaming of a new climate deal for a long time," Kim Carstensen, head of a global climate initiative at the conservation group WWF, said in a candle-lit bar in the German city of Bonn, which hosts U.N. climate talks between March 29 and April 8.

"Now we're no longer so alone with our dream. We're sharing it with all these people switching off their lights," he said as delegates and activists sipped bluish cocktails.

The U.N. Climate Panel says greenhouse gas emissions are warming the planet and will lead to more floods, droughts, heatwaves, rising sea levels and animal and plant extinctions.

World emissions have risen by about 70 percent since the 1970s. China has recently overtaken the United States as the top emitter, ahead of the European Union, Russia and India.

BILLION PEOPLE TAKE PART

The U.N. Climate Panel says rich nations will have to cut their emissions to a level between 25 and 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 to avoid the worst effects of warming. Developing nations will also have to slow the rise of their emissions by 2020, it says.

Australia first held Earth Hour in 2007 and it went global in 2008, attracting 50 million people, organizers say. WWF, which started the event, is hoping one billion people from nearly 90 countries will take part.

"The primary reason we do it is because we want people to think, even if it is for an hour, what they can do to lower their carbon footprint, and ideally take that beyond the hour," Earth Hour executive director Andy Ridley told reporters at Sydney's Bondi Beach.

In Asia, lights at landmarks in China, Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines were dimmed as people celebrated with candle-lit picnics and concerts.

Buildings in Singapore's business district went dark along with major landmarks such as the Singapore Flyer, a giant observation wheel.

Other global landmarks that switched off their lights included the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, the Reserve Bank in Mumbai, the dome of St Peter's Basilica in Rome, Egypt's Great Pyramids and the Acropolis in Athens.

(Reporting by Reuters bureau; Writing by Jon Boyle)

Antarctica to Pyramids — lights dim for Earth Hour
Rupa Shenoy, Associated Press Yahoo News 29 Mar 09;

CHICAGO – From an Antarctic research base and the Great Pyramids of Egypt to the Empire State Building in New York and the Sears Tower in Chicago, illuminated patches of the globe went dark Saturday for Earth Hour, a campaign to highlight the threat of climate change.

Time zone by time zone, nearly 4,000 cities and towns in 88 countries joined the event sponsored by the World Wildlife Fund to dim nonessential lights from 8:30 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. The campaign began in Australia in 2007 and last year grew to 400 cities worldwide.

Organizers initially worried enthusiasm this year would wane with the world focused on the global economic crisis, said Earth Hour executive director Andy Ridley. But he said it apparently had the opposite effect.

"Earth Hour has always been a positive campaign; it's always around street parties, not street protests, it's the idea of hope, not despair. And I think that's something that's been incredibly important this year because there is so much despair around," he said.

Crowds in Times Square watched as many of the massive billboards, including the giant Coca-Cola display, darkened. Steps away, the Majestic Theater marquee at the home of "The Phantom of the Opera" went dark, along with the marquees at other Broadway shows.

Mikel Rouse, 52, a composer who lives and works nearby came to watch what he called "the center of the universe" dim its lights.

"C'mon, is it really necessary? ... All this ridiculous advertising ... all this corporate advertising taking up all that energy seems to be a waste," Rouse said.

In Chicago, one of 10 U.S. Earth Hour flagship cities, a small crowd braved a cold rain to count down as Gov. Pat Quinn flipped a 4-foot-tall mock light switch that organizers had to brace against high winds. A second later, the buildings behind him went dark.

"I don't see why people shouldn't always turn off the lights," pondered 15-year-old Chicagoan Tyler Oria, who was among those gathered.

More than 200 buildings pledged to go dark in the city, including shops along the Magnificent Mile.

"No matter what your individual beliefs are about climate change, energy efficiency is something everyone can understand in this economic environment," said WWF managing director Darron Collins, who helped Chicago officials organize for the night.

The Smithsonian Castle, World Bank, National Cathedral and Howard University were among several buildings that went dark for an hour in the nation's capital.

"This was the first year that Washington, D.C., became an official Earth Hour city," said Leslie Aun, WWF spokeswoman.

In the Chilean capital of Santiago, lights were turned off at banks, the city's communications tower and several government buildings, including the Presidential Palace where President Michelle Bachelet hosted a dinner for U.S. Vice President Joe Biden.

The two leaders and dozens of guests dinned at candlelight.

In Mexico City, the city government and business owners turned off all "nonessential" lights at more than 100 buildings, including 31 city buildings and monuments and 17 hotels.

In San Francisco, lights on landmarks like the Golden Gate Bridge were set to be turned off, along with the city's well-known Ghirardelli Square sign. The Las Vegas Strip turned down its glitz by extinguishing pockets of neon outside casinos while some witnesses alerted their friends on Twitter.

U.N. Secretary Ban Ki-moon called Earth Hour "a way for the citizens of the world to send a clear message: They want action on climate change."

An agreement to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012, is supposed to be reached in Copenhagen, Denmark, this December, and environmentalists' sense of urgency has spurred interest in this year's Earth Hour.

In Bonn, WWF activists held a candlelit cocktail party on the eve of a U.N. climate change meeting, the first in a series of talks leading up to Copenhagen. The goal is to get an ambitions deal to curb emissions of heat-trapping gases that scientists say are dangerously warming the planet.

"People want politicians to take action and solve the problem," said Kim Carstensen, director of the global climate initiative for WWF, speaking in a piano bar bathed by candlelight and lounge music.

China participated for the first time, cutting the lights at Beijing's Bird's Nest Stadium and Water Cube, the most prominent 2008 Olympic venues. In Bangkok, the prime minister switched off the lights on Khao San Road, a haven for budget travelers packed with bars and outdoor cafes.

In Rio de Janeiro, the iconic Christ the Redeemer statue that watches over the city of 6 million was darkened, along with the beachfront of the famed Copacabana and a few other local sites.

Earth Hour organizers say there's no uniform way to measure how much energy is saved worldwide.

Earth Hour 2009 has garnered support from global corporations, nonprofit groups, schools, scientists and celebrities — including Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett and retired Cape Town Archbishop Desmond Tutu.

McDonald's Corp. planned to dim its arches at 500 locations around the U.S. Midwest. The Marriott, Ritz-Carlton and Fairmont hotel chains and Coca-Cola Co. also planned to participate.

In the Chicago suburb of Blue Island, Eli Rodriguez, 41, owner of a Mexican restaurant called Tenochtitlan switched off not only the lights but also the television, which was playing a NCAA tournament basketball game.

"Everybody was happy I did it," Rodriguez said. "They support this. They understood."

But after a few seconds, he turned the game back on and kept the lights dim.

___

Associated Press writers around the world contributed to this report.

Landmarks go dark for world climate campaign
Yahoo News 28 Mar 09;

NEW YORK (AFP) – From Sydney Harbour to the Empire State Building, cities and world landmarks plunged into darkness as a symbolic energy-saving exercise unfolded across the globe.

The pyramids at Giza in Egypt, the Acropolis in Athens and the Houses of Parliament in London cut their electricity as part of "Earth Hour," a worldwide call for action to avert potentially devastating climate change.

Some 371 landmarks were due to power down worldwide, including the Eiffel Tower, Niagara Falls, the Las Vegas casino strip and Beijing's "Bird's Nest" Olympic stadium.

The switch-off was due to end in Honolulu, capital of the US state of Hawaii.

The global event began dramatically as Sydney's iconic Opera House and Harbour Bridge plunged into darkness on Saturday night, killing their lights for an hour, followed later by the glittering Hong Kong waterfront.

Millions of people turned out in Sydney, while Melbourne, Australia's second-largest city, came to life with a pedal-powered concert and others enjoyed moonlit picnics and barbecues.

The global grassroots movement began in Sydney two years ago, when 2.2 million people switched off their lights. Earth Hour has since grown to include 3,929 cities, villages and localities across the globe.

"It is a very positive, hopeful campaign," Andy Ridley, the event's director, told reporters in Sydney.

"We want people to think, even if it is for an hour, what they can do to lower their carbon footprint and take that beyond the hour."

Ridley said he was aiming for one billion participants, hoping the event would send a resounding message to world leaders about significant emissions cuts.

Scientists have warned that global warming caused by burning fossil fuels on a massive scale could devastate the planet, hitting the poorest countries hardest with floods, droughts and disease.

Sceptics criticized the event as little more than empty symbolism, with Danish professor Bjorn Lomborg claiming the use of candles during the hour could produce more emissions than electric lights.

But United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a video message earlier this month that "Earth Hour is a way for the citizens of the world to send a clear message. They want action on climate change."

Lights in the "city that never sleeps" began going dark at 8:30 pm (0030 GMT) at some of New York City's most renowned buildings and landmarks, including Broadway theaters, the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building and the signs of several big firms, including Coca-Cola's in Times Square.

In Washington, campuses of major universities and several embassies flipped the switch. People gathered at Freedom Plaza, which has an unobstructed view of the US Congress, to watch the lights dim on nearby buildings and hotels.

In London, the lights went off at the Houses of Parliament and the famous electronic billboard at Piccadilly Circus.

In Paris, hundreds of monuments and buildings, from the Louvre and Notre Dame Cathedral to the Arc de Triomphe, all went dark. For safety reasons, the lights on the Eiffel Tower were switched off for only five minutes.

Elsewhere across Europe, St Peter's Basilica in Rome and the Greek parliament in Athens were all plunged into darkness, while entertainers danced in front of the Romanian parliament in Bucharest.

In Egypt, the Giza pyramids, the Cairo Tower and the Alexandria Library on the Mediterranean all went dark.

In the United Arab Emirates, which has the highest per capita energy consumption in the world, Dubai's iconic sail-shaped seven-star Burj al-Arab hotel turned off its nightly multi-colored light show.

Mountaineers planned to raise an Earth Hour flag on the 29,000-foot (8,848-meter) summit of Everest, the planet's highest point.

The lights went dark in downtown Manila, as they did in the world's tallest completed skyscraper, the Taipei 101 building.

In South Africa, Table Mountain was to be seen only by starlight for an hour. And the Weekender newspaper reported that one couple would turn the lights down on their marriage at a vineyard near Cape Town.

A United Nations-led conference in the Danish capital later this year is meant to approve a new global warming treaty for after 2012, when the Kyoto Protocol for cutting carbon emissions expires.

Cities switch off for Earth Hour
BBC News 28 Mar 09;

Major cities and global landmarks have been plunged into darkness as millions of people switched off lights for an hour to protest against climate change.

The initiative, Earth Hour, was begun in Sydney two years ago by green campaigners keen to cut energy use.

Correspondents say the aim is to create a huge wave of public pressure to influence a meeting in Copenhagen later this year to seek a new climate treaty.

Critics describe the event as a symbolic and meaningless gesture.

The switch-off was planned to take place in more than 3,400 towns and cities across 88 countries, at 2030 in each local time zone.

Earth Hour was launched in 2007 as a solo event in Sydney, Australia, with more than two million people involved. Last year's event claimed the participation of 370 cities.

Organisers said they wanted to demonstrate what people can do to reduce their carbon footprint and save energy, thus drawing attention to the problem of climate change.

China debut

This time Sydney was one of the first places to switch off. The BBC's Nick Bryant described a city where skyscrapers were hard to make out against the night sky.

Hours later, Beijing's most prominent Olympic venues, the Bird's Nest and Water Cube, went dark. China is taking part for the first time, with major cities like Hong Kong, Shanghai and Guangzhou also dimming their lights.

Other locations due to take part this time include Edinburgh Castle in Scotland, St Peter's Basilica in Rome, Paris' Eiffel Tower, the Egyptian Pyramids and New York's Empire State Building.

Fast-food giant McDonald's has pledged to dim its "golden arches" at 500 locations, while celebrities such as actress Cate Blanchett and Archbishop Desmond Tutu have promised support.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon backed the initiative in a video posted this month on the event's YouTube channel.

"Earth Hour is a way for the citizens of the world to send a clear message," he said. "They want action on climate change."

People are invited to provide blogs and short video clips on how they spend their time.


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Fifty-six lakes around Jakarta vanished in past five years

The Jakarta Post 28 Mar 09;

The Indonesian Environmental Forum (Walhi) said a total of 56 lakes in Jakarta and its satellite towns of Bogor, Depok, Tangerang and Bekasi (Jabodetabek) had disappeared in the past five years.

"The number of dams in the Jabodetak area has declined from 240 in 2004 to 184 in 2009 while the government always claimed that there are over 200 lakes at present," Walhi campaigner for water and food availability Erwin Rustam said in Jakarta as reported by Antara on Saturday.

Of the 184 dams, 19 are still in good condition while the remaining ones are now experiencing serious shallowing and damage. In term of width, the 240 reservoirs in the Jabodetabek areas have also decreased from 2,337.10 hectares to 1,462 hectares (184 dams).

The average depth of the reservoirs also has dropped from the previous 5 to seven meters to less than 2.5 - 3 meters, including the Gintung dam of Jakarta outskirts in Cirendeu village, Ciputat sub-district, Tangerang, which broke down on Friday morning killing at least 50 residents.

He said that the Walhi data were taken from the directorate general of water resources of the Ministry of Public Works.

Rustam said there were three main causes for the disappearance of the lakes, namely the change in the function of land, the lakes being used as refuse dump sites and shallowing.

The change in the function of land has caused the dam to be converted into resettlement, restaurant and business centers. "There are lakes in Jakarta and Depok which have become garbage dumping sites," he said.

In the meantime, serious sedimentation also caused disappearance of lakes worsened by partial restoration which is not in line with the River Basin Areas (DAS) restoration program of the Forestry Ministry, he said.

Rustam said that in order to restore lakes in the Jabodetabek area, the government had to revitalized more 200 reservoirs in the area including their catchment and DAS areas.


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The great white hunted: plight of albino animals

The Independent 28 Mar 09;

Rare albino animals in the wild are being preyed on by bounty hunters eager to scoop up 10 times the amount paid for more common creatures. Paul Bignell reports

It is the ultimate hunter's prize. From the timid deer to the rampant tiger: the whiter the animal, the bigger the bounty on its head. As deer stalkers take to the British countryside this week for the British roebuck shooting season, one young deer will be a more vulnerable position than its peers. An extraordinarily rare, white deer has had a four-figure bounty put on its head as hunters clamour to be the first to kill the animal.

The white roe, nicknamed Pearl by animal rights protesters, was initially spotted in December in Dumfries, in the Scottish lowlands. It is one of about a dozen found since the Second World War, according to experts. The animal is usually brown coated and one of the most common species in the UK, with an estimated 800,000 living up and down the British Isles.

Initially it was thought the deer was suffering from albinism, but experts now believe a rare genetic mutation resulting in a condition called leucism has changed the deer's pigmentation.

Now hunters are keen to stalk the animal and be the first to kill it. One German stalker has reputedly offered more than £5,400 for the deer.

"Selling the opportunity to shoot this deer is a very good money earner," said Charlie Jacoby, editor of Sporting Rifle magazine, which is to publish a diary chronicling the animal's life, and death. "American and German hunters like deer and once this deer has its antlers, it will be even more attractive to them for stalking."

But Kevin Stuart, who owns the stalking rights to the 3,000 acres of land, this weekend vowed to protect the animal. Mr Stuart last saw the creature about 10 days ago, but is reluctant to get close to it as it may alert people to its whereabouts. "As long as the deer stays within the confines of the estate it will be fine. But it is a wild animal and will go wherever it wants to go. At the moment it is a yearling and doesn't even have antlers. It is a beautiful animal and we are worried about poachers and people coming to shoot it."

The Scottish MSP Elaine Murray has put forward a motion in Parliament to have the animal protected. "We are also looking to whether protection could apply to an animal which is genetically rare from a species itself that isn't particularly rare," she said.

The white deer is just one example of many white or albino animals that have attracted the attention of hunters, illegal animal traders and the plain curious. An albino corn snake can fetch about $500 (£350). Albino alligators are also prized possessions. Last year, seven rare albino alligators were stolen from a zoo in Brazil. They were said to be worth $10,000 each. White tigers have been hunted to such a degree that they are effectively extinct in the wild. Inbreeding in captivity has led to an abundance in zoos. Assuming they could get at them, hunters are reportedly willing to pay as much as $60,000 for a chance to shoot one of the animals, 10 times the bounty for a normal tiger.

Alistair Currie, senior researcher at the animal charity Peta, said: "It is an incredibly Victorian attitude that if something is unusual your response is to kill it. You would hope that if people take the view that if something is unusual, they would want to preserve it and that it should be valued."

Most wanted

1) A white roebuck in Kirkconnell, Scotland; 2) an albino baby alligator in its home in Sao Paulo's aquarium; 3) a white lobster occurs in one in 100 million, while a blue one is found in one in five million; 4) a white tiger with the genetic condition leucism; 5) an albino Burmese python; 6) Snowflake, the albino gorilla who died in Barcelona zoo in 2003


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Sharks pose Sydney food-chain puzzle

Lawrence Bartlett Yahoo News 29 Mar 09;

SYDNEY (AFP) – Three shark attacks in Sydney in three weeks drove newspapers and talk show hosts into a feeding frenzy and sent a collective shudder through the other species at the top of the food chain -- humans.

There was fierce debate about why there had been so many attacks -- a total of seven around the country in just three months -- and calls for shark conservation measures to be lifted.

Although all three Sydney victims survived, two of them lost limbs and one of the attacks in particular drew close attention.

As the first light of dawn filters over hills lined with multimillion-dollar mansions and classy seafood restaurants, the surface of the bay shatters into dancing shards of silver.

Flyfishing guide Justin Duggan cuts the motor and lets the small boat drift as a client snakes a line out in search of predators feeding on the tiny skipping fish massed in a suburb of Australia's biggest city.

They are Australian anchovies, near the bottom of a food-chain boom bringing Sydney Harbour roaring back to life, delighting environmentalists and fishermen and making resident fairy penguins fat.

But at the top of the chain are the toothy killers that have been the talk of the town this southern hemisphere summer -- sharks.

On February 11, a navy diver was mauled by a bull shark in Sydney Harbour, not far from the famous Opera House, suffering serious injuries that later forced doctors to amputate an arm and a leg.

While shark attacks are not uncommon off Australia's vast coastline, experts said no one had been bitten by a shark in Sydney Harbour for more than a decade and the last fatal attack was in 1963.

"The harbour is so full of baitfish -- that's why there are so many predators around," says Duggan, a fishing guide for seven years. "It's a protein soup."

Duggan attributes the baitfish boom and the increase in predators -- which themselves attract sharks -- to a ban on commercial fishing in the harbour in 2005 and anti-pollution measures producing cleaner waters.

"Fish like (Australian) salmon and kingfish like cleaner water," he says, pointing out to his client, retired surgeon David Hunt, another pelagic species -- frigate mackerel -- slicing the surface.

"I've seen schooling kingfish under the harbour bridge, and I've certainly seen more sharks this year. We are also just getting reports left, right and centre of people seeing sharks," he said.

Duggan is cautious about the shark scare, however, complaining that hysteria over attacks ignores the fact that people have more chance of being killed in a car while travelling to the beach than they do while swimming.

"It's arrogant to say that sharks should be culled just because of a few attacks on humans -- people have to take their chance when they go into the water," he said.

That attitude was shared by at least one recent shark victim, avid diver and fisherman Brian Guest, 51, who disappeared in a frenzy of fins and blood off a Western Australia beach in December.

Nothing was found of him except shreds from a wetsuit, but a fishing website still carried his words: "I have always had an understanding with my wife that if a shark or ocean accident caused my death then so be it."

Guest also made clear his opposition to the idea that sharks should be killed to reduce the risk to swimmers.

Duggan starts the motor and heads out of the bay, sliding past upmarket suburban homes and under a bridge carrying dense commuter traffic to work.

The surface of the water erupts again just after the bridge, as cormorants, gulls and pelicans herd baitfish into the shallows for a wild feast.

"Look," said Duggan, pointing to four small creatures swimming a little further on. "Those are the fattest fairy penguins I've ever seen."

Sydney's harbour is a vast and beautiful stretch of open water, bays, beaches and islands, lined by some of the most expensive real estate in the world.

It is a great setting for restaurants where residents dine on fresh seafood -- and an unlikely setting for modern humans to face being eaten by prehistoric creatures.

The attack on the diver took place near Garden Island in Wolloomooloo Bay, which hosts a popular strip of expensive eateries and celebrity apartments.

But diners concerned about seafood exacting revenge can take comfort from shark expert John West of Sydney's Taronga Zoo.

"Humans are not part of the shark's diet, otherwise there would be nobody safe in the water," he told AFP.

And even the most feared of predators, the great white shark, doesn't like the taste of humans, an official said in an apparent attempt to reassure swimmers after an attack at Sydney's Bondi Beach in February.

"Note that in almost all cases, great whites tend to release the person after biting -- probably as they don't recognise the taste," said New South Wales Primary Industries Minister Ian Macdonald.

A total of 194 deaths through shark attacks have been recorded in Australia over the past two centuries, leading researchers to point out endlessly that more people die from bee stings and lightning strikes.

But there is something about being eaten that resonates with humans -- and gave pause to diners at Wooloomooloo, at least for a few weeks this summer.


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Most European countries back seal products embargo

Yahoo News 28 Mar 09;

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Most European countries favour a total ban on importing seal-related products, diplomatic sources said ahead of a key European Parliament vote on the issue next month.

At a meeting of ambassadors of the 27 European Union states Friday, most of the countries present came out in favour of such a ban, mainly because of Canada's controversial slaughtering methods, an official said.

"One has the impression that the European states are ready now to choose this option," the source added.

The meeting had only an advisory status, with a final decision on EU policy set to be taken at a later date by the member states and the multinational body.

But if the EU was to pass such a ban, it could set the stage for a showdown with Canada at the World Trade Organization.

Support for such a ban was not unanimous at Friday's meeting, said one diplomatic source: seven, mostly Scandinavian or Baltic countries made it clear they would not back such an embargo, said the source.

Those countries were Denmark, Finland, Sweden, the Baltic states of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, and Bulgaria. Denmark traditionally supports Greenland over its seal culls, while Finland and Sweden also hunt seals.

Talks to try to find common ground on the issue are due to begin Monday in Brussels ahead of an April 22 European Parliament vote on the issue.

But in early March, a European Parliament committee came out in favour of a total ban.

The proposed ban would only allow for rare exemptions, such as in the case of Inuit or other indigenous communities who practiced small-scale, easily monitored hunts in Alaska, Canada, Greenland and Siberia.

An alternative proposal that would have allowed imports where they could be certified as having come from seals killed in a more humane fashion than takes place in Canada, appeared to have been rejected.

One European diplomat said that it was too difficult to regulate the hunting methods on the ground when it came to the large-scale hunts carried out in Canada.

"We're very happy," said Adrian Hiel, of the International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW). "It looks good for us so far as the chances of an import ban in the EU are concerned."

Groups such as IFAW have fiercely criticised the Canadian seal hunt as unnecessarily cruel.

The Canadian government counters that the 350-year-old hunt is crucial for some 6,000 North Atlantic fishermen who rely on the seal hunt for up to 35 percent of their total annual income.

And Canada's Fisheries Minister Gail Shea has made it clear that if the EU did try to enforce such a ban they would take the issue to the WTO.

Sealers taking part in Canada's controversial yearly hunt slaughtered 19,411 seals so far this year, reaching their full kill quota, Canadian fisheries officials said Thursday.

Canada hopes that requiring training for sealers on how to humanely slaughter seals, legislating standards for seal products and taking measures to safeguard the species will silence critics of the hunt.


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New approach for US in global climate change talks

Dina Cappiello, Associated Press Yahoo News 28 Mar 09;

WASHINGTON – At its first negotiations on climate change, the Obama administration is trying to convince other countries that the U.S. does care about global warming and wants to shape an international accord.

After eight years on the sidelines, the U.S. says it is ready for a central role in developing a new agreement to slash greenhouse gases. But whether the U.S, which is the second largest source of heat-trapping pollution, is ready to sign onto a deal by year's end could depend on Congress.

In a rare move, State Department climate envoy Todd Stern joined the rest of the U.S. delegation in Bonn, Germany, for the first of a series of largely technical meetings that begin Sunday. The talks are hoped to lay the groundwork for an agreement to be signed in December in Denmark.

Stern, in a telephone interview Thursday with The Associated Press from London, said it was important for him to attend and "make the first statement on behalf of the United States and say we're back, we're serious, we're here, we're committed and we're going to try to get this thing done."

He added, "We want to convey that we mean it."

Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, which is hosting the Bonn talks, said participants "will be very excited" to hear Stern outline the basic principles that will guide the U.S.

Other countries are expecting a new tone after eight years during which the Bush administration made clear its disdain for any climate discussions aimed at securing a commitment to mandatory greenhouse gas reductions.

This time the U.S. delegation represents the views of a White House committed to mandatory action on climate change. And unlike 1997, when the Kyoto Protocol was drafted, there is now a Democratic-controlled Congress moving to embrace mandatory limits on greenhouse gases.

Back then, the United States lacked support for mandatory actions to achieve the reductions the U.S. had signed on to. Congress never ratified that accord and the Bush administration later rejected it outright, citing the lack of participation from developing countries.

That lack of involvement and the cost of emission cuts, in form of higher energy bills, have dominated the U.S. debate over Kyoto for years. Those issues have not have not disappeared.

But President Barack Obama has acted to reduce U.S. greenhouse gases and wants Congress to pass a cap-and-trade program that would cut global warming pollution 80 percent by mid-century.

"The president has embarked on a strong domestic program already and there is much more coming," Stern said at a briefing Friday in Berlin.

On Saturday, the White House announced it was convening a Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate in Washington in late April to help achieve a successful outcome in Copenhagen and develop joint ventures to increase the global supply of clean energy. With only six weeks of U.N. talks scheduled before the Denmark meeting, the forum will give leaders of the 16 major economies and the U.S. more time to negotiate a deal.

The final meeting of the forum will be held in La Maddalena, Italy, in July 2009.

Stern said the U.S. position on an international agreement will be framed by what happens in Congress. The reductions expected to be required by Congress will be the basis for what the U.S. can commit to reducing, he said.

But Congress already is trying to address the recession, health care and other priorities. "This will be a big, big fight to get the domestic piece done," Stern conceded.

Many European countries want the U.S. to adopt stronger short-term targets, equal to a 25 percent to 40 percent reduction from 1990 levels by 2020. Obama has called for reaching 1990 levels by then, a roughly 15 percent cut.

Stern has warned European leaders that their demands will lead to stalemate.

In Germany, the U.S. team is expected to spend most of its time listening and forming relationships rather than discussing concrete proposals.

That "is unfortunate given the intense timetable between now and Copenhagen, but understandable," said Jennifer Havercamp, who leads Environmental Defense Fund's international climate negotiations team. "It will not achieve a lot of substantive progress in the negotiations because the Obama team is so new."

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Associated Press writer Vanessa Gera contributed reporting from Berlin.

Obama starts climate change forum for big economies
Jeff Mason, Reuters 28 Mar 09;

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Saturday invited 16 "major economies" including the European Union and the United Nations to take part in a forum on climate change to facilitate a U.N. pact on global warming.

Obama, a Democrat who has taken a more aggressive stance on climate change than his predecessor, Republican George W. Bush, invited the group to a preparatory session on April 27 and 28 in Washington.

The White House made clear that Obama's new initiative would aim to augment U.N. talks that are meant to culminate in an agreement in Copenhagen in December.

"Our goal is to use this forum very much as a key part in how we reach an overall agreement," a senior administration official told Reuters, adding the review was "an important piece of the puzzle of how we get from here to Copenhagen."

The "Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate" has echoes of a similar set of meetings organized by the previous administration.

Bush's "major economies" initiative drew skepticism from participants, who were wary the process was his administration's way of circumventing broader U.N. talks to forge an international deal.

The U.S. official said countries around the world had expressed interest in restarting the major economies process because of Obama's differences from Bush on climate change.

The president, who took office in January, has said he wants the United States to take the lead in global warming talks.

The April meeting, to be hosted at the State Department, would likely touch on a range of issues including technology, financing, and emissions trading, the official said.

POLITICAL WILL

In a statement, the White House said the forum would "help generate the political leadership necessary" to achieve an international pact to cut greenhouse gas emissions later this year.

It said the meeting would spur dialogue among developed and developing countries about the issue, "and advance the exploration of concrete initiatives and joint ventures that increase the supply of clean energy while cutting greenhouse gas emissions."

The major economies include: Australia, Brazil, Britain, Canada, China, the European Union, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Russia, South Africa and the United States.

Denmark, which is hosting the U.N. meeting in December to forge a pact that would take over from the Kyoto Protocol, was also invited.

The group's preparatory sessions are to culminate with a major meeting on the subject in La Maddalena, Italy, in July, hosted by Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

The Group of Eight rich nations also meets at the same location in Italy in July, and the senior official said the climate summit would take place on the margins of the G8.

The U.S. official said he expected other meetings would take place before July, probably outside of the United States.

Obama's announcement comes shortly before a fresh round of U.N. climate talks on Sunday. Up to 190 nations are to meet in Bonn, Germany, to work on plugging huge gaps in the international pact, which is slated to be agreed to in Denmark in December.

Obama wants to cut U.S. emissions by roughly 15 percent back to 1990 levels by 2020 -- tougher than Bush, who saw U.S. emissions peaking as late as 2025.


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