Best of our wild blogs: 8 May 09


“Greening a nation”
on talfryn.net

Vesak Day and "Animal Liberation" on our shores
on the wild shores of singapore blog

8-13 May: Wayang performances at Pulau Ubin!
on the wild shores of singapore blog

Emerging threats and research challenges in the tropics
on the Raffles Museum News blog

Chek Jawa in May 2009
on the Chek Jawa Mortality and Recruitment Project blog

Selatium brockii @ Lim Chu Kang mangrove
on otterman speaks

Walk at Sungei Serangoon mangroves
on the Urban Forest blog

Chestnut Munia eating grass seeds
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Nesting of the Coppersmith Barbet
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Seagrasses of Chek Jawa
on the wonderful creation blog

Show a little leg
on the annotated budak blog and tree dance and the weevil within and rare damsel at Pulau Semakau

St John's Jambu air
on the wonderful creation blog


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Java most vulnerable to climate change: Study

Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post 8 May 09;

A study released by the Singapore-based Economy and Environment Program for Southeast Asia (EEPSEA) has revealed Indonesia's most populated island of Java is the most vulnerable to the negative impacts of climate change.

The report showed that Jakarta's five municipalities were the most vulnerable in Southeast Asia, with a higher than expected susceptibility to natural disasters including floods, landslides, drought, sea-level rises and tropical storms.

State Minister for Environment Rachmat Witoelar said the report should serve as a warning to cities in Indonesia to take action to minimize the ramifications of climate change.

"The way to beat this is to improve spatial planning in each city, otherwise the serious impacts of climate change, as reported by EEPSEA, will become reality," Rachmat told reporters Thursday.

Many local administrations had not made spatial planning a priority when developing new cities, aggravating environmental problems.

"The risks posed by climate change should be approached not only in the mid-term strategic plan, but also in policies and institutional structures. The cost of climate change outweighs the cost of mitigating the disaster," he said.

In regards to Jakarta, Rachmat called on the city administration to control population growth in the capital.

"I don't know what should be done to overcome population problems, but like or dislike, there has to be a limitation on the number of newcomers entering the city."

He said Jakarta was capable of accommodating around one million people, but the figure had now reached somewhere around 9 million.

"Jakarta is really overcrowded. The environment is always the first victim of such a large population," he said.

The EEPSEA report was the second study published by an international body confirming the serious impact climate change will have in Indonesia.

The Asian Development Bank, in its report last week, warned that thousands of small islands in Indonesia could disappear if sea levels rise as a result of global warming.

The EEPSEA study called on spatial distribution data looking at various hazards in 530 sub-national areas across Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Malaysia and the Philippines.

Based on the mapping assessment, the study said all regions of the Philippines, the Mekong River Delta system in Vietnam, almost all regions of Cambodia, North and East Laos, the Bangkok region of Thailand and West Sumatera, South Sumatra, West Java and East Java were also among regions in Southeast Asia at risk of devastation from climate change.

"But in our overall assessment, the districts of Jakarta emerge as the most vulnerable region in Southeast Asia," an expert from EEPSEA, Arief Anshory Yusuf, said. The EEPSEA assessed Jakarta's history of natural disasters in the period from 1980 to 2000, along with those of 530 other areas in Southeast Asia.

The results were drawn up by considering each area's exposure to natural forces and its ability to adapt to such threats, and comparing those findings with the vulnerability assessment framework of the United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

The EEPSEA was established in 1993 to support research and training in environmental and economics studies. It is supported by the International Development Research Center, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency and the Canadian International Development Agency.

Jakarta Most vulnerable city to climate change in SE Asia
Antara 7 May 09;

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Among all the cities in Southeast Asia, Jakarta is the most vulnerable to climate change, according to a study conducted by the International Development Research Center`s Economic and Environmental Program for Southeast Asia (IDRC- EEPSEA).

EEPSEA Director Herminia Fransisco speaking in a Seminar on "The Southeast Asia Climate Change Vulnerability Map: Indonesian Perspective", here on Thursday said the study covered 530 sub-national areas in seven SE Asian countries.

Jakarta was vulnerable to climate-related disasters among other things because of its high population density, Fansisco, who spearheaded the study with Dr Arief Yusuf, EEPSEA's Senior Economist, said.

The disasters included floods, drought, sea-level rise, and landslides, she said.
Meanwhile, Indonesian Environmental Affairs Minister Rahmat Witoelar said in the seminar that the people must care about the high population density which has induced the vulnerability to the climate change.

He hoped that the public could use Jakarta as a transit area, and they should not live in the city permanently.

The Singapore-based Economy and Environment Program for Southeast Asia (EEPSEA) ranked Central, North and West Jakarta at the top of a list of administrative regions prone to climate change, followed by Mondol Kiri province in Cambodia and East Jakarta.

Other vulnerable areas in Indonesia include West Sumatra and South Sumatra, the study says.

The study also reveals that all regions in the Philippines, Vietnam's Mekong River Delta, Cambodia, North and East Laos and Bangkok are vulnerable.

Thailand and Malaysia are the most capable of adapting to the impacts of climate change, according to the report.

The EEPSEA was established in 1993 to support research and training in environmental and economics studies.

According to Dr Francisco, the map and analysis would also help bridge the information gap between scientists working on climate change and the media.(*)


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Public urged not to release animals into the wild on Vesak Day

Zaki Amrullah, Channel NewsAsia 7 May 09;

SINGAPORE : The National Parks Board and national water agency PUB have appealed to the public not to release animals into nature reserves and reservoirs, as such acts may have adverse effects on the ecological balance of Singapore's nature reserves and parks.

They will also affect the water quality of Singapore's reservoirs. The joint statement comes as Vesak Day approaches.

It is a common practice in Singapore to release animals during Vesak Day, which falls on May 9.

The President of the Buddhist Fellowship, Angie Monksfield, said there is a difference between Buddhism and kindness towards animals.

"Being kind to animals is one of the core practices in Buddhism," she said. "However, freeing animals into the wild, especially those that have been bred in captivity, is not necessarily a kind act as these animals would be easy prey for predators."

The fellowship has taken efforts to remind the public against releasing the animals.

Its members, students and volunteers from all walks of life will be distributing brochures and putting up posters at various locations including MacRitchie Reservoir Park, and Lower and Upper Peirce reservoirs from May 9-10 and May 16-17. - CNA /ls

Don't free animals
Straits Times 8 May 09;

DO NOT free animals into nature reserves or reservoirs on Vesak Day, advises the National Parks Board and the PUB.

Customarily, Buddhists release birds, insects and other animals on this day. It is a symbolic act, representing the giving of freedom to those in captivity. But while being kind to animals is a core practice of Buddhism, freeing those bred in captivity is not necessarily a kind act as they would be easy prey for predators, said the president of Buddhist Fellowship, Ms Angie Monksfield. Instead, she urged Buddhists to refrain from eating meat and to adopt and care for animals from shelters, help injured animals and preserve their natural habitats.

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300 dogs dumped on Malaysia islands eat each other

Sean Yoong, Associated Press 7 May 09;

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (AP) — More than 300 stray dogs that were dumped on isolated islands turned to cannibalism after weeks of starvation, animal welfare activists said Thursday.

The plight of the dogs cast away by villagers on two small, uninhabited islands off Malaysia's western Selangor state ignited outrage after activists this week released photographs showing dogs eating the carcasses of ones that had died.

Residents of a fishing village on Pulau Ketam, another island off Selangor, caught the dogs last month and took them to the islands covered in mangroves. The villagers said they never intended to be cruel — they believed the dogs could feed on the deserted islands' wildlife — but wanted to rid their island of dogs that defecate on the streets and sometimes bite children.

A team from the Selangor Society of Prevention of Cruelty to Animals visited one of the islands — Pulau Selat Kering — on Monday and saw several emaciated dogs "crowded and hunched around something — they were hungrily feasting on the remains of another dog," the SPCA said in a statement.

"Nearby, a weak dog was screaming because several dogs were trying to bite her," it said.

Volunteers have so far rescued two dogs and left food for the others, said SPCA official Jacinta Johnson. They estimate 200 might have survived. Activists would also try to rescue any dogs left on the other island, Pulau Tengah.

Pulau Ketam's residents have said some dogs tried to swim back to their island, about a half-hour boat ride away, but it was not clear how many succeeded.

Efforts to save the dogs have been slow because many were fearful of people and scampered into mangrove swamps when rescuers approached, Johnson said.

Activists have persuaded Pulau Ketam's villagers not to dump any more dogs and are considering measures such as sterilization and relocation to ease problems posed by an estimated 2,000 stray dogs, the SPCA said.


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Marina Barrage wins US green award

Straits Times 8 May 09;

The Barrage was chosen because it provided 'a sustainable urban water solution for all'

THE Marina Barrage has received the top prize at a competition organised by the American Academy of Environmental Engineers.

The site, opened in November last year, beat 33 other entries for the Superior Achievement Award which was conferred on Wednesday in Washington DC.

The award honours the best in environmental engineering practices, innovation and economic efficiency.

The Barrage, which has already won two other international awards, was chosen because it provided 'a sustainable urban water solution for all', said the academy's president Debra Reinhart.

It is only the second project outside the United States to win the award in the last decade.

The Barrage, built to dam the Marina Channel, resulted in the creation of the Marina Reservoir - Singapore's 15th reservoir and the first in the downtown district.

It also controls flooding in nearby low-lying areas such as Chinatown and Little India.

Since last month, seawater has not been allowed into the reservoir, so that the water can be gradually desalted by dilution from rainwater. Once the desalting process is completed in about a year, the water will be ready to be processed into drinking water.

More than 250,000 people have visited the site so far, said the PUB, Singapore's national water agency, which manages the Barrage.


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Biodiversity is the spark of life

Barry Gardiner, BBC News 7 May 09;

Biodiversity is not getting the attention it deserves on the international agenda, says Barry Gardiner. In this week's Green Room, he warns that we need to understand the true value of ecological services before it is too late.

For the past 16 months I have put off upgrading my mobile phone because two years ago a little girl was stung by a jellyfish on a beach in south-west England.

Let me elaborate: it is demand for the latest mobile phones that has made the metal coltan so valuable, leading to conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

That conflict has caused deforestation, which has seen a decline in the number of forest mammals.

As a result, more people demand more fish as an alternative protein, leading to overfishing of species higher up the food chain.

Fishermen, in turn, have shifted their focus to species further down the food chain, reducing their population. This has allowed jellyfish become the lower reaches of the food chain.

Hence, a possible reason why large blooms of jellyfish were invading the south coast of England.

Web of life

Every form of life on this planet stands not on its own but is supported by, and supports, other living things.

Lose one species and you lose a vital part of some ecosystem.

That means you lose not just a plant or an insect but a service: you lose the medicine that comes from that plant; you lose the pollination of crops which that insect provides.

Climate change matters, not because the world mustn't get any hotter, but because the rate of change is too fast for species to keep pace.

As species die, so biodiversity is depleted and with it the ecosystem services that such biodiversity provides.

How ridiculous then that over the last three months, climate change has had 1,382 mentions in British national newspapers.

Yet, during the same period, biodiversity was mentioned just 115 times.

'Side show'

We have ignored the circus and focused on the side show.

Perhaps the reason why biodiversity has been ignored while climate change has been taken progressively more seriously is that the case for biodiversity has often been couched in emotional terms.

Well-intentioned campaigning organisations have fed us with sentimental descriptions of the polar bear, giant panda and blue whale.

However, these arguments for biodiversity have proven to be much less compelling for business leaders than Nicholas Stern's report that climate change could cost us between 5% and 20% of global GDP by the end of the century.

Yet, the head of Deutsche Bank's Global Markets predicts that our current rate of biodiversity loss could see 6% of global GDP wiped out as early as 2050.

Climate change does not just lead to biodiversity loss; causality works the other way around too.

It is the loss of forest that is causing climate change. It would be comforting to think that we can control this process, which is linear and predictable.

It is not. In nature, disruptions to the equilibrium led to turbo-charged changes.

Yet nobody puts a value on pollination; national accounts do not reflect the value of ecosystem services that stop soil erosion or provide watershed protection.

Economists call these externalities: things which we can take for granted and need not be ascribed a value. The economists are wrong. Unless we begin to value this natural capital in exactly the same way we value human or social capital, we will not begin to tackle the problem.

Isn't it ironic that the UK has a treasury department that spends most of its time talking about over-leveraging in the financial system and credit bubbles, but cannot see the connection with a world that every year consumes resources that it takes the planet one year and four months to renew or replace?

The problems is that biodiversity is still left as the responsibility of environment ministers, who are usually relatively junior.

They do not have the clout to make changes across government policy.

Biodiversity should be, as climate change is beginning to be, a heads of governments' issue.

Just as climate change has moved out of its environment cul-de-sac into mainstream government thinking to influence decisions on everything from transport to development and energy policies, so biodiversity and the ecosystem services they provide need to be considered in every government decision.

The issue lacks a body like the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to provide scientific assessments and advice to governments and the public.

Most important of all, we need a global agreement with teeth to protect biodiversity that captures the imagination like Kyoto.

Otherwise, the hordes of jellyfish will be the least of our problems.

Barry Gardiner is the Labour MP for Brent North, and co-chairman of the Global Legislators Organisation (Globe) Land Use Change & Ecosystems Dialogue

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


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ASEAN workshop to boost Southeast Asia’s taxonomic capacity

ASEAN workshop in Los Baños, Philippines, 18-22 May
ACB, France and Japan partner to boost Southeast Asia’s taxonomic capacity
ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity Press Release 7 May 09;

Taxonomy, the science of describing, naming and classifying organisms, is a building block for information sharing on flora and fauna. The last few decades, however, saw the discipline of taxonomy falling off the global political, funding, and academic agendas.

To boost Southeast Asia’s taxonomic capacities, the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity (ACB) is partnering with the French and Japanese governments to conduct a workshop on taxonomic needs assessment.

The French Regional Delegation and the French Embassy in Manila, together with Japan’s Ministry of the Environment’s Biodiversity Center, will provide funding support for the “ASEAN Regional Workshop on Global Taxonomy Initiative (GTI): Needs Assessment and Networking” on 18-22 May 2009 in SEARCA, Los Baños, Laguna, Philippines.

The workshop, organized by the European Union-funded ACB, is supported by experts from the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), specialists from other branches of the Japanese government, experts from the Museum of Natural History of France (MNHN), the French Agricultural Research Centre for International Development (CIRAD), the French Research Institute for Development (IRD), European Distributed Institute of Taxonomy (EDIT), the Global Network for Taxonomy (Bionet), and other taxonomic specialists in the region.

“There is a dire need to revive interest in taxonomy. The diminishing status of taxonomy is crippling ASEAN Member States’ chances of effectively cataloguing their biological resources. Without knowing and understanding the species we have, it would be difficult to implement biodiversity conservation efforts,” ACB Executive Director Rodrigo U. Fuentes said.

“We are delighted to partner with the French and Japanese governments on this activity as France and Japan are known for their extensive experience in the field of taxonomic initiative and their network of museums, herbariums and similar repositories of biological information,” Director Fuentes added.

Ms. Clarissa Arida, ACB Director for Program Development and Implementation, said the workshop will provide a venue for sharing experiences in the implementation of the Program of Work for the Global Taxonomy Initiative (GTI) of the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and identifying future programs for capacity development in the ASEAN region.

The Conference of Parties (COP) to the CBD realized that taxonomic information, taxonomic and curatorial expertise, and infrastructure are insufficient in many parts of the world, especially in developing countries. Such a gap was anticipated to be one of the key obstacles in the implementation of the Convention. To overcome this taxonomic impediment, the GTI was established.

“Adequate taxonomy is one of the fundamental tools required for the global community to implement the Millennium Development Goals and the development targets from the World Summit for Sustainable Development. Without sufficient long-term investment in the human, infrastructural, and information resources necessary to underpin the science of taxonomy, the now well-recognized taxonomic impediment will continue to prevent implementation of sound, scientifically based sustainable, environmental management and development policies,” Director Fuentes explained.

He added that taxonomy is a critical tool for combating the threat from invasive alien species and other concerns such as in human health. Without access to support, misidentifications are made, costing precious money and time when rapid decisions need to be made.

The workshop will culminate with the celebration of the International Day for Biodiversity on 22 May with the launch of the First ASEAN-wide Photo Contest “Zooming in on Biodiversity” sponsored by ACB and the European Commission; the redesigned ACB website, and the ASEAN Biodiversity Information Sharing Service/Regional Clearinghouse Mechanism.

“The workshop is very timely as the international community will be observing the International Day for Biodiversity in 22 May with invasive alien species as this year’s theme.

“Through this partnership with the French and Japanese governments, we will mobilize and share expertise in the field of taxonomy and ensure that taxonomic capacities will be made accessible to ASEAN Member States,” Director Fuentes said.

For more information on the ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity and its advocacy, log on to www.aseanbiodiversity.org or e-mail contact.us@aseanbiodiversity.org.


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Could we end up trampling biodiversity in the name of biofuels?

Will the growing demand for cheap, ample supplies of cellulose create powerful incentives to convert diverse, native grasslands into sterile "energy lawns" and to chop down vast swaths of wild forests, asks David Malakoff. From Conservation Magazine, part of the Guardian Environment Network
guardian.co.uk 7 May 09;

These days, Jason Clay walks around with an eerie sense of déjà vu. Over the past few years, the World Wildlife Fund (WWF) anthropologist has become deeply entangled in the tortuous struggle to ensure that supposedly "green" biofuels — such as ethanol brewed from corn and biodiesel wrung from palm nuts—don't decimate biodiversity in an attempt to save the planet.

It's been a dizzying and sometimes disorienting experience. For instance, Clay watched as biofuels, once hailed as the savior of the climate, became an environmental sinner almost overnight—blamed for everything from food riots to trashed tropical forests. "The backlash has been pretty ferocious—ethanol and biodiesel have lost a lot of their green image," he says.

Now Clay is bracing for what could be an even more jarring roller-coaster ride. Some scientists, executives and political leaders—including President Barak Obama's energy team—are touting a new breed of "cellulosic" biofuels. They argue that these second-generation fuels—created by breaking down cellulose, the molecule that gives trees and grasses their toughness—could deliver more help with less harm. Some even paint the picture of a future powered by waste sawdust, grass clippings and corn husks. And they are dreaming big: by 2022, the United States alone could brew more than 75 billion liters of cellulosic ethanol a year. Experts say that will require spending tens of billions of dollars on research and corporate subsidies and dedicating tens of millions of hectares of land to producing biomass, from hay bales to whole logs.

The dream of cellulosic ethanol, however, is causing nightmares for many ecologists. They fear that growing demand for cheap, ample supplies of cellulose will create powerful incentives to convert diverse, native grasslands into sterile "energy lawns" and to simply chop down vast swaths of wild forests. Even if these environmental costs are mitigated, it's getting harder to identify the upside of cellulosic fuels—a recent MIT study suggests that, despite the hype, the new fuels may not reduce overall greenhouse-gas emissions. Which raises an unsettling question: can the pursuit of clean, "green" fuels lead to a true ecological solution, or is it just a detour from traditional conservation strategies that, although less futuristic, might be far more effective?

New research is crystallizing fears that cellulosic fuels might wreak havoc on the world's landscapes. Forecasting what will happen if the fuels take off is a tricky enterprise because biofuels can have indirect effects that ripple around the globe. If a farmer in Europe, for instance, replaces the soybean crop she sells to China with an energy crop such as switchgrass, it could create an incentive for a farmer in South America to clear a new chunk of forest or grassland to replace the European soybeans. Similarly, a move to log a forest in Siberia for energy cellulose could put added pressure on Asian or African forests to produce plywood or lumber for the housing market.

In January, a team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) released one of the most ambitious efforts yet to make sense of it all. Led by climate specialist Jerry Mellilo of MIT and the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, the team used a complex computer model to produce a vision of the global landscape in 2050.

After assuming that cellulosic fuels provide at least 10 percent of the world's energy supply, the study concludes that "large tracts of natural forests, woodlands, and grasslands will be converted to either food or cellulosic biofuels production." By 2050, the land devoted to cellulosic crops mushrooms to about 11 percent of the earth's total (between 13.9 and 14.8 million square kilometers). Many areas would lose from 20 to 70 percent of their natural habitats, with tropical and semitropical ecosystems able to produce high levels of biomass the hardest hit. On the lengthy danger list: biodiversity "hotspots" in Mesoamerica, the cerrado of Brazil, Guinea/West Africa, Madagascar, Indo-Burma, and the cluster of Philippines, Malaysia, and Indonesia.

In part, that list reflects the expectation that "forests in the tropics could get hit particularly hard by cellulosic ethanol," says James Bowyer, a forestry industry expert with Dovetail Partners, a nonprofit environmental consulting group in Minneapolis, Minnesota. That's because natural forests would provide a relatively cheap, easy-to-exploit supply of cellulose. And unlike grasses that must be harvested and carefully stored, "trees are easy biomass to store when they aren't needed," says Bowyer. "You just leave them standing in the forest when the market dips, and wait for ethanol prices to rebound."

Ironically, the MIT team concludes it's not clear that the profound transformation in land use spurred by cellulosic ethanol would actually reduce greenhouse-gas emissions. In part, that's because clearing new land can release carbon stored in soil and plants, negating the benefits of using the biofuels to replace fossil fuels. In fact, the land-use changes wreaked by use of cellulosic biofuels would add carbon to the atmosphere in the first half of the twenty-first century. Even under the most optimistic scenario, it would take some 50 years for the use of cellulosic biofuels to offset that added carbon.

Cellulosic fuels advocates say such problems can at least be reduced by planting biofuel crops on so-called marginal lands that have already been plowed, grazed, or logged. But here, too, scale is an issue. A February 2009 study by the Department of Energy's Sandia National Laboratory and General Motors' R&D Center, for instance, suggests it could take at least 20 million hectares of currently "idle" or "marginal" U.S. farmlands and forests to grow the biomass needed to produce 170 billion liters of cellulosic fuel a year by 2030. That means putting an area the size of Kansas into cultivation, a feat that could exact a stiff toll on biodiversity.

"You hear a lot about using 'marginal lands' and 'waste wood,' but that land and debris is still somebody's habitat," says Doug Landis, an ecological entomologist at Michigan State University. And in grasslands, "even a degraded prairie or hayfield can be better for biodiversity than planting a switchgrass monoculture," notes grassland ecologist Mike Palmer of Oklahoma State University.

Still, to gain standing in the biofuels policy debate, ecologists are ramping up an array of studies that, in the words of one, "once again will prove the obvious": that prairies and other multispecies ecosystems requiring few inputs such as irrigation and fertilizer are often better for biodiversity and overall environmental functioning than high-input, low-diversity systems such as corn fields.

For instance, Mary Gardiner, a post-doc with Landis, has started intensively studying 30 sites across southern Michigan that might produce biofuel crops. They range from low-diversity corn fields to switchgrass plots to remnant prairies. Not surprisingly, Landis says, preliminary results suggest that the corn mono-cultures support less insect diversity than the lower-input switchgrass and prairie plots. Other researchers are documenting similar trends in birdlife, with the prairies providing more nesting and feeding habitat. Overall, it appears "prairie gives you the most diversity—and it may be able to produce just as much usable biomass too," he says. Indeed, some scientists say "energy prairies" could be one way to both fight climate change and promote biodiversity.

Other researchers, such as plant ecologist Linda Wallace of the University of Oklahoma in Norman, are pondering the implications of replacing even degraded grasslands with switchgrass and other fast-growing plants. One problem, Wallace says, is that studies show switchgrass or other perennial grasses can become highly invasive in some places, "so the ecological footprint is much larger than the field."

The problems with cellulosic fuels seem depressingly familiar to WWF's Jason Clay and other veterans of the first biofuel war. "It seems like the same arguments are coming up, just in a new context," Clay says. And until it is clear exactly how cellulosic technologies will play out—and whether any will become economically viable—he predicts the discussions will be frustrating and sometimes baffling. To help unmuddy the waters, WWF and other groups have been contributing to efforts to measure the impacts of cellulosic fuels and develop guidelines for "sustainable" production.

But the closer you look at the debate, the harder it becomes to ignore a conclusion reached by many analysts of the bioenergy conundrum: to make biofuels—or any fuels—truly environmentally friendly, we may simply have to use them in smaller quantities. Which means it might be time to further embrace age-old solutions such as developing fuel-efficient vehicles, switching to a diet that substitutes vegetables for meat, building a highly efficient distribution infrastructure. The list goes on—and, like the latest biofuels controversy, it's all too familiar.


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Effort to Protect Rare Turtles in Indonesia Shows Need to Address Human Problems as Well

Solenn Honorine, Voice of America 7 May 09;

In the coming days, scientists and politicians will gather in the Indonesian city of Manado for the World Ocean Conference. They will be talking about the role of oceans in mitigating climate change, and how to protect the endangered species living in the world's seas. VOA reports from Abun district, in the Indonesian province of Papua, about efforts to save one such species, the leatherback turtle.

It is a moonless night on Jamursba Medi beach. But the stars shine brightly enough to cast a dim light on the round shape that thrashes sand around. It is a sea turtle. She has just finished laying her eggs and is heaving herself back to the ocean.

Three men huddle above her nest, digging it up. They remove its freshly laid eggs one by one, with infinite care.

Made Jaya Artha hurries up the beach, holding with both hands the bucket that contains the 88 eggs. He is no thief, but a scientist working with the environmental group WWF.

"The nest is too shallow; if it's too shallow, then for the predators it's easy to smell it, the temperature is too hot so the hatching success is not good," said Made Jaya Artha. "So we have to relocate and make it safe from the tide."

Despite Made's precautions, only one out of 1,000 laid eggs will, one day, become a full-grown turtle that will eventually come back here, to her birthplace, to lay her own eggs.

In the Pacific Ocean, three-quarters of all leatherback turtles come from Jamursba Medi or one of three neighboring beaches in northern Papua province. They are nicknamed "giant turtle", for they can grow up to two and half meters long and weigh as much as a small car.

The leatherbacks are endangered, and scientists estimate only about 3,000 nesting females still swim the Pacific.

Starting Monday (May 11), hundreds of scientists, environmentalists and government officials from around the world will gather in the Indonesian city of Manado for the World Ocean Conference. The delegates hope to build new cooperation in studying how the oceans affect climate change, and can be harnessed to reduce its effects. And they want to improve international efforts to protect the seas and the creatures that live in them.

For the leatherback, the beaches are crucial for survival, but it is territory turtles must share with their worst enemy: humans.

Wau is a village of 55 families, a two-day ferry ride from the nearest town, with no phones, no running water, no electricity. The bell is a call to church, but there is no place of worship here. Four months ago, an earthquake destroyed the church, the school and several houses. Two people died in the rubble. Nothing has been rebuilt yet, because the villagers lack the money, and no one else has sent help.

In the local language, Wau means "turtle". The neighboring beach, where hundreds of leatherbacks nest every year, is called "Warmon", or "Sacred Water".

Mama Tabita, a short and tough woman, is a traditional leader in the village.

She explains that people here have been eating turtle meat and eggs for generations. It was no problem until the first foreigners came to Wau village, in the 1980's, wanting to buy turtle eggs and meat. She says it was the first time villagers saw money. It was the first time ever they could buy rice, sugar, clothes or cigarettes. The trade was brisk - so much so that the turtle's population became threatened.

That is why today the WWF pays the villagers to protect the turtles. Mama Tabita guarantees that no one eats turtle eggs or meat; and a dozen villagers have been hired to patrol the beach. They make up to $150 a month for this - a hefty sum here.

But the money has also brought discord.

During a meeting with officials from the government and the WWF, a villager stands up, arms defiantly crossed on his chest, lip quivering with rage. He throws his fist toward Mama Tabita, and lashes out at the officials. "When we were hit by the earthquake, where was your speed boat to come help us?", he says. "I'm a man, why shouldn't I get more help than those animals receive?"

Jealousies about who in the community gets the new jobs have led to a deep rift in the village. This sort of tension occurs throughout Papua, where land disputes are rife as traditional authority is eroded by modern ways of life. Creusa Hitipeuw, from the WWF, says that to protect nature, humans should come first.

"Actually, working for conservation is working for humans," said Creusa Hitipeuw. "Conservation practitioner[s] should look for ways where both species come together. I'm sure there is a way to do that."

Papua has long been ignored by the government in Jakarta. Although the province is rich in natural resources, its inhabitants remain among the poorest of Indonesians. But now Papua is opening to the rest of the world, both for the exploitation and the protection of its natural resources. The province's residents are starting to make sure their voices are heard, so that this new openness, and the efforts to protect to wildlife do not destroy the social harmony in their villages.


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Indian Rhino population in Nepal given helping hand by Extinction Sucks

WWF 8 May 09;

The Indian Rhino, also known as the Greater One-horned Rhino, is slowly recovering from near demise in the 1970’s, when only 600 of the creatures remained. And while figures of 2,400 living in the wild still leaves them as vulnerable, the tremendous work by conservationists and anti-poaching teams has helped to give the rhino’s a fighting chance.

These Rhino’s are killed for their horns, which are believed to work as anti-inflammatory’s – although no scientific evidence exists to support this.

And while the value of these horns is only quite modest by Western standards, the sale of a single horn can account for a months salary in somewhere like Nepal.

And it is here that they are most threatened, and where Extinction Sucks conservationists Ashleigh Young and Aleisha Caruso, look to help by raising funds for the anti-poaching teams.

The girls throw a “Missing Horn” funk night in their local pub in order to raise vital funds for the anti-poaching teams, and then travel to Nepal to see some of the country’s remaining 408 rhinos in the shadows of the Himalayas.

Extinction Sucks is a unique co-production between WWF and Babelgum to bring high-quality conservation programming to web audiences. It's thought to be the first time that an online video channel has commissioned original, full-length wildlife shows specifically for the internet. The series is being broadcast over a six week run on www.panda.org and www.babelgum.com. Other programmes see Ash and Aleisha raise funds for WWF programmes protecting elephants in India and sea turtles in Australia, and Asiatic black bears in Vietnam.


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Giant Shark Mystery Solved: Unexpected Hideout Found

Helen Scales, National Geographic News 7 May 09;

How do you lose track of the world's second largest fish?

For decades, that's what scientists have been doing each winter, when basking sharks mysteriously disappear from the cool waters of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.

Now the baffled experts have at least part of the answer: Giant basking sharks from New England take tropical vacations.

Photograph by Nick Caloyianis/NGS

Previously thought to inhabit only temperate waters, a new study shows that the sharks, which grow up to 32 feet (10 meters) long, make vast migrations to deep, warm-water hideouts.

Before the annual winter disappearance, scientists tagged 25 basking sharks off New England with floating, timed-release satellite transmitters.

Swimming at depths of between 600 and at least 3,000 feet (200 and 1,000 meters), some of the fish moved to Florida. But others kept on going south—thousands of miles, in some cases.

"When a tag popped up in the Caribbean Sea, I was really blown away," said study co-author Gregory Skomal, a marine biologist from the Massachusetts Division of Marine Fisheries.

Even more surprising: One shark crossed the Equator to the mouth of the Amazon River off Brazil, where the fish stayed for a month, according to the study, published online today by the journal Current Biology.

(Related: "World's Largest Shark Species at Risk, Expert Says.")

Why So Far?

Exactly what is driving these giant sharks to migrate remains a mystery.

The cold-blooded sharks probably leave the Gulf of Maine seeking warmer waters and more abundant plankton, their main food, Skomal explained.

"But why do they move all the way to Brazil?" he asked. "There is plenty of food for them in northern Florida."

One theory is that they're heading to undiscovered nursery grounds.

Scientists have never seen a young basking shark. "We still have no idea where they give birth," Skomal said.

Mauvis Gore, a biologist from Marine Conservation International, was involved in a 2007 study that tracked a basking shark crossing the Atlantic, east to west.

"Tracing basking sharks on these journeys begins to tell us much more about the population structure," Gore said.

For example, study co-author Skomal said, based on tracking data, "What were thought to be regional stocks may in fact belong to a single, oceanwide population."

Key to Saving Sharks?

The International Union for Conservation of Nature lists basking sharks as being vulnerable to extinction. And "any kind of impacts on basking sharks in one region may affect the entire population," Skomal said.

The new discovery could help address threats facing the sharks, Skomal said—perhaps sooner rather than later.

In August the Save Our Seas Foundation is holding a workshop to bring together basking shark researchers from around the world.

"We hope to develop a program of how best to move forward in working out just what is happening with populations of basking sharks worldwide," Marine Conservation International's Gore said.


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Vast reserve to protect remote Prince Edward Islands

WWF 7 May 09;

South Africa’s declaration to establish one of the world’s largest Marine Protected Area’s (MPA) around its Prince Edward Islands, is a marine conservation achievement of global importance which will help protecting a suite of spectacular wildlife, including albatrosses, penguins and killer whales.

The announcement of Environment Minister Marthinus Christoffel Johannes van Schalkwyk, came after many years of close cooperation between the government and WWF.

The Islands, which consist of Prince Edward and Marion Islands, are located almost 2000 km south of South Africa in the Southern Ocean, and form an important global biodiversity hotspot, which was subject to rampant poaching during the late 1990’s.

“This is a historic day in marine conservation in South Africa. All of South Africa’s current MPAs are located very close inshore. The commitment of the first large offshore MPA moves South Africa into a new era of marine conservation,” Dr Deon Nel, head of the WWF Sanlam Living Waters Partnership, said.

The Prince Edward Islands is among the world’s most important and diverse regions. But the islands, home to albatrosses, penguins and killer whales, have been threatened by illegal and irresponsible fishing practices in the past. The illegal fishing vessels around the PEIs were targeting Patagonian Toothfish. And the Albatross species were killed as bycatch in these operations.

Given the scarcity of land masses in the Southern Ocean, sub-Antarctic islands contain vast populations of seals and seabirds, which use these islands to breed and moult and are therefore critical to the conservation of such species

The islands support some 13% of King Penguins worldwide, and five Species of Albatross breed there together with 14 species of petrels and five other species.

“South Africa has made a globally significant commitment to our oceans through its intention to declare this large MPA.,” Jim Leape, Director General of WWF International said.

“In particular, South Africa plays a key role with several other countries including Australia, France and New Zealand, in protecting the amazing biodiversity and commercially important fisheries of the sub-Antarctic and, through this, helps to establish a fully representative, viable and effective MPA network for the Southern Ocean.”


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North Atlantic shrimp fishery may be vulnerable to climate change

Shrimp Said At Risk From North Atlantic Warming
Alister Doyle, PlanetArk 8 May 09;

OSLO - A $500 million North Atlantic shrimp fishery may be vulnerable to climate change that could disrupt the crustaceans' life cycle and mislead them into hatching when food is scarce, scientists said.

Any damage to stocks of the northern shrimp -- a small, sweet-tasting variety popular in salads -- could have knock-on effects in the ocean food chain ranging from algae to cod, according to a Canadian-led team of experts.
Northern shrimp are hauled aboard a shrimp boat. (Credit: Aldric D'Eon)

"The shrimp is the marine equivalent of the canary in the mine shaft. It's an indicator of climate change," Peter Koeller, the lead author of the study at the Bedford Institute of Oceanography in Canada, told Reuters.

Writing in Friday's edition of the journal Science, the scientists said that the shrimp timed mating so that their eggs hatch when algae that shrimp larvae feed on are most abundant.

"They have evolved to mate the previous year at just the right time to take advantage of spring blooms," said Koeller. Eggs carried by the females take between 6 and 10 months to incubate over the winter.

"But climate change could decouple the match" between seabed temperatures and food, he said of findings with colleagues in the United States, Britain, Denmark, Iceland and Norway.

The scientists found that the crustaceans, which live from the Gulf of Maine to Arctic waters north of Norway, time their mating according to water temperatures on the seabed where the adults live. Warmer waters could disrupt that timing.

Previously, one theory had been that the larvae hatched in direct response to a chemical trigger from the blooms, for instance cued by dead algae drifting down from the surface.

The shrimp make up about 70 percent of the 500,000 tons of cold-water shrimp harvested annually from the world's oceans. Koeller said the fishery was worth about $500 million.

Koeller said shrimp were an important link in the food chain -- they feed on algae and are in turn eaten by fish. Overfishing of cod has helped a sharp rise in shrimp populations.

The U.N. Climate Panel says that a build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, caused mainly by mankind's use of fossil fuels, could push up world temperatures and cause more heatwaves, more powerful storms and rising ocean levels.

(Editing by Angus MacSwan)

Shrimp tuned to ocean temperature
Victoria Gill, BBC News 7 May 09;

Stocks of northern shrimp, the essential ingredient in the ubiquitous prawn cocktail, could be badly affected if ocean temperatures rise.

Researchers report, in the journal Science, that shrimp eggs hatch within days of each spring phytoplankton bloom - the main food source for the larvae.

They conclude that shrimp are adapted to local temperature, which determines how long eggs take to develop.

If seas warm, as predicted, shrimp stocks could decline, the team says.

The international team of scientists found that, throughout the north Atlantic - from Cape Cod in the US to to Svalbard in Norway - northern shrimp ( Pandalus borealis ) eggs hatched, on average, in time with the bloom.

This is the period when food is abundant, so the larvae have a far better chance of survival.

But to get the timing right, the shrimp must mate during exactly the right period during the previous year.

"They don't do this on a year by year basis - deciding to mate a week later because the algal bloom will be a week later," said Peter Koeller, a researcher from the Bedford Institute of Oceanography, who led the study.

"This is on evolutionary time scales - they have adapted to local conditions."

This means it would be impossible for the shrimp to adapt to a rapid change in temperature at the seafloor, where they live.

Shrimp boats

Dr Koeller's team collected samples of shrimp daily and counted the proportion of females that were still carrying their eggs. With satellite imaging, they were able to compare the timing of the algal blooms to the release of the larvae.

As Dr Koeller pointed out, an explosion in the northern shrimp population in the 1980s and 1990s was linked to a drop in sea temperatures at that time.

He said it was feasible that the opposite could happen "as the climate changes".

"As surface waters warm, this would eventually result in warmer water at the bottom, which would lead to faster development of eggs and earlier hatching," he explained.

"The larvae would be further removed from period of food abundance, which would mean poor survival rates and fewer shrimp."

For Northern Shrimp Populations In North Atlantic, Timing Is Everything
ScienceDaily 7 May 09;

Even for Northern shrimp (Pandalus borealis), which support commercial fisheries worldwide, timing is everything in life. The tiny creatures, eaten in shrimp rolls and shrimp salad, occupy a pivotal role in the oceanic food chain and may serve as early indicators of changing climate due to their sensitivity to temperature. Northern shrimp also seem to have an uncanny sense of reproductive timing, releasing their larvae to match the arrival of food and thus maximizing larval survival.

In a study to be published May 8 in the journal Science, Anne Richards of NOAA’s Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC) laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass. and international colleagues evaluated the timing of the annual shrimp hatch between 1998 and 2007 in populations or stocks at different latitudes across the North Atlantic Ocean from Maine to Norway. The researchers also estimated the timing of spring phytoplankton blooms - the major source of food for the shrimp larvae - in each location using satellite images that show biological productivity in surface waters, commonly called ocean color.

“In the Gulf of Maine we have seen years when there is a good match in timing between when shrimp larvae are released and when the annual spring bloom begins. In these years larvae tend to have high survival rates, resulting in large year classes and a very successful fishery,” said Richards, who has been studying Northern shrimp for almost two decades. “In other years that timing is off, leading to lower survival rates and a poorer fishery. The match or mismatch between the larvae and their food appears to be a key factor in shrimp production.”

The Science study looked at stocks of Northern shrimp, also called pink shrimp, in the Gulf of Maine, on the Scotian Shelf and in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, off Newfoundland and Labrador, on the Flemish Cap, off western Greenland and Northern Iceland, in the Barents Sea and off Svalbard, a group of islands between Norway and the North Pole.

The spring phytoplankton bloom occurs at different times in different latitudes because sunlight and sea surface temperatures, the primary triggers for onset of blooms, vary among regions. The researchers found a surprising tendency in each location for the shrimp eggs to hatch and the larvae to appear just as the bloom arrived.

“The interesting thing is that the timing of the hatch is strongly dependent on temperature on the ocean bottom, but the timing of the bloom is a function of several factors, including temperature throughout the water column and available sunlight,” Richards said. “Yet, on average, in most of these locations, there is a close match between the hatch and the bloom. It makes perfect sense from an evolutionary perspective, but it is still surprising. Before the advent of satellite imagery, it would have been very difficult to be able to demonstrate this phenomenon across a wide geographic area.”

The time it takes for shrimp eggs to develop into young shrimp, or larvae, varies significantly depending on local bottom water temperatures. In the southern Gulf of Maine off Cape Cod, the waters are relatively warm and shrimp eggs take six months to hatch, while in the cold waters off Northern Iceland the eggs take 9-10 months to hatch. This suggests that the time of mating must have evolved so the larvae are ready to hatch near the time of the bloom under average temperature conditions for each area.

Northern shrimp may serve as an early indicator of the impact of climate change since their life cycle is very temperature dependent. The species breeds once a year, usually in the summer/fall, with the female carrying eggs on her abdomen much like lobsters do until they hatch the following winter/spring. Although the shrimp live most of their life in colder bottom waters, once the eggs hatch the young shrimp live near the surface for several months feeding on phytoplankton and larger zooplankton.

The authors say changing climate may increase bottom water temperatures, resulting in shorter development times for the eggs. If so, the eggs may hatch too early and be too far ahead of the spring bloom for optimum survival. However, they also say this “mismatch” in timing might not occur if warmer sea surface temperatures result in earlier spring blooms.

Richards is testing the “match-mismatch” hypothesis suggested in this study in more detail in her own research on the Gulf of Maine shrimp stock. So far, she has found a strong relationship between water temperatures, the timing and amount of plankton in surface waters, and shrimp survival rates.

“The warming trends evident in the waters in the Northeast U.S. are likely to have an impact on shrimp recruitment and survival," Richards said. "Shrimp production may be much more variable in the future as the Gulf of Maine warms. The population there may ultimately decline if temperatures continue to increase unless the shrimp can adapt.”

Lead author of the study was Peter Koeller of the Bedford Institute of Oceanography in Canada. In addition to Richards, other authors were from the United Kingdom, Canada, Iceland, Denmark, and Norway. Richards work was supported in part by the Fisheries and the Environment (FATE) program at the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service.


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Wild fruit trees face extinction

Victoria Gill, BBC News 7 May 09;

The wild ancestors of common domestic fruit trees are in danger of becoming extinct, scientists have warned.

Researchers have published a "red list" of threatened species that grow in the forests of Central Asia.

These disease-resistant and climate-tolerant fruit trees could play a role in our future food security.

But in the last 50 years, about 90% of the forests have been destroyed, according to conservation charity, Fauna & Flora International.

The Red List of Central Asia identifies 44 tree species in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan as under threat from extinction.

It cites over-exploitation and human development as among the main threats to the region's forests, which are home to more than 300 wild fruit and nut species including apple, plum, cherry, apricot and walnut.

Antonia Eastwood, the lead author of the research, described the region as a "unique global hotspot of diversity".

"A lot of these species are only found in this area," she told BBC News. "It's very mountainous and dry, so many of these species have a great deal of tolerance to cold and drought.

"A lot of our domestic fruit supply comes from a very narrow genetic base," she continued. "Given the threats posed to food supplies by disease and the changing climate, we may need to go back to these species and include them in breeding programmes."

Farming fruit

Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan are thought to be the ancestral homes of familiar favourites such as Red Delicious and Golden Delicious.

The US Department of Agriculture has already sponsored expeditions to Kazakhstan, during which scientists have collected samples with the aim of expanding the genetic diversity of farm-grown apples.

This type of genetic foraging, Dr Eastwood explained, allows domestic lines to be crossed with wild strains, producing varieties more resistant to diseases such as apple scab, a fungus that can devastate crops.

"But these countries lack the resources to conserve their valuable trees," added Dr Eastwood.

This year, as part of the the UK Darwin Initiative, Fauna & Flora International is working with scientists in Kyrgyzstan to carry out research on threatened trees and develop methods to harvest the fruit sustainably.

The organisation is training local scientists and involving communities in the planning and managing of their own forests.

Death in the Orchard of Eden
The ancient forests of Central Asia gave the world apples, apricots and walnuts. Now they are under threat
Michael McCarthy, The Independent 8 May 09;

In Biblical legend, it grew in the Garden of Eden. In reality, it grew wild in Kazakhstan. And now the world's original apple tree, the progenitor of all our modern apple varieties, is threatened with extinction.

It is one of nearly 50 trees, including the original apricot and the original walnut, which have become endangered in a belt of forests in Central Asia – a region home to more than 300 wild fruit and nut species, including, plum, cherry, and many other important food trees from which domesticated varieties are thought to descend.

In the past 50 years an estimated 90 per cent of these forests have been destroyed, and a new survey has pinpointed the threat to the very existence of many of the wild tree species they contain. The Red List of Trees of Central Asia identifies 44 tree species in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan as threatened with extinction.

Notable among them is Kazakhstan's wild apple, Malus sieversii, which scientists from the University of Oxford have recently judged to be the genetic progenitor of all domestic apples in cultivation today. (The name of Kazakhstan's former capital city is Almaty, which means "Father of Apples".)

It is thought that as the wild apples were domesticated and bred, they gradually spread westwards down the Silk Road, the great trading highway for camel caravans which linked Asia to the Middle East and ultimately Europe, and that this process was repeated with other fruits and nuts. It happened with the wild apricot, Armeniaca vulgaris, from which all the current varieties of apricot stem – 6,000-year-old apricot seeds have been discovered during archaeological excavations in the region – and the wild walnut, Juglans regia. Both of these species are now to be found on the Red List.

According to the British conservation charity Fauna & Flora International (FFI), which has drawn up the list in collaboration with Botanic Gardens Conservation International, "these fruit and nut forests have been described as a biological Eden, and have long held an important role in human culture".

The Red List identifies over-exploitation, human development, pests and diseases, overgrazing, desertification and fires as the main threats to the trees and forests in the region, while a lack of financial resources and infrastructure since the break-up of the Soviet Union has also had a negative impact.

"Central Asia's forests are a vital storehouse for wild fruit and nut trees," said Antonia Eastwood, the Red List lead author. "If we lose the genetic diversity these forests contain, the future security of these foods could be jeopardised, especially in the face of unknown changes in global climate."

Owing to the often fragmented, mountainous geography of the landscape, the genetic diversity these plants display is exceptionally high, and could prove vital in the development of new disease-resistant or climate-tolerant fruit varieties. FFI is already working in Kyrgyzstan to save and restore one of the most highly threatened apple species identified in the report, the Niedzwetzky apple (Malus niedzwetzkyana), as part of its Global Trees Campaign. Only 111 individuals of this tree are known to survive in Kyrgyzstan and the species features on the Red List as "endangered" – the second highest category of threat.

FFI is also working with local communities and government forest services in Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan to encourage sustainable use and more effective protection for forest resources, including providing training for community groups and grants for eco-friendly small businesses to assist local livelihoods.

To build on this work, a new collaborative project is being launched in Kyrgyzstan this year, led by Professor Adrian Newton of Bournemouth University, which will conduct research on threatened trees, provide training to Kyrgyz scientists and involve local communities in forest use planning.


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Domesticated bee numbers soar amid buzzing demand

Jean-louis Santini Yahoo News 7 May 09;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – The number of domesticated bees is on the rise worldwide despite declining numbers of wild honey bees in the United States and Europe, a study said Thursday.

"The honey bee decline observed in the USA and in other European countries including Great Britain, which has been attributed in part to parasitic mites and more recently to colony collapse disorder, could be misguiding us to think that this is a global phenomenon," said Marcelo Aizen of Universidad Nacional del Comahue in Argentina.

"We found here that is not the case."

He is one of the co-authors of a study, published Thursday in the June edition of the US magazine Current Biology, which analyzed data from the Food and Agriculture Organization on the number of domesticated bee hives to examine whether we are heading for a world pollination crisis.

Researchers found that commercial domesticated bee hives have increased 45 percent in the past 50 years, to match growing demand for honey among a growing human population, but not necessarily for pollination purposes.

Most large farming operations for corn and rice do not depend on pollination by bees, the study noted.

But demand for other popular crops such as fruit and nuts, which do depend on pollination by bees and other insects, has tripled in the past half century, raising doubts that there are enough insects to do the task.

These include such fruits as mangoes, cherries, plums and raspberries which are now found on almost all supermarket shelves.

"We were particularly astonished when we found that the fraction of agricultural production that depends on pollinators, which includes all of these luxury agriculture items, started growing at a faster pace since the fall of communism in the former USSR and Eastern Europe," said Aizen.

"Although the primary cause of the accelerating increase of pollinator-dependent crops seems to be economic and political, not biological, their rapid expansion has the potential to trigger future pollination problems for both these crops and native species in neighboring areas."

The concern is that there may be a fall in crop production with not enough bees and insect populations to tackle the job.

An increased demand for agricultural land could also speed up the destruction of habitats that support hundreds or thousands of species of wild pollinators, which would in turn cause a drop in crop yield, he warned.


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Brazil drought staunches famed Iguazu falls

Yahoo News 7 May 09;

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil (AFP) – An acute drought in Brazil has hit the famed horseshoe-shaped Igauzu falls which straddle two countries, cutting back the tumbling waters to reveal the rocky sides.

Only a third of the usual volume of water is now flowing over the top of the stunning falls, which were listed as a world heritage site by UNESCO in 1984 and border both Brazil and Argentina, Globo television said.

At the foot of the falls on the Brazilian side, the bottom of the Parana river is now clearly visible, allowing environmentalists a rare chance to clean up mountains of accumulated trash.

The falls, which are actually made up of 275 waterfalls stretching some 2.5 kilometers (1.5 miles), are taller than the Niagara Falls and twice as wide.

They provide a panoramic backdrop to the tropical rainforest region, with an average of 553 cubic feet of water per second from the Iguazu River thundering some 269 feet over the falls and then draining into the Parana.

Divers have been cleaning up the garbage which has collected in the Parana, finding everything from cameras to combs, CDs and batteries as well as plastic bottles, tin cans and umbrellas.

Some of the trash has floated down river from other towns, but most has been dropped by tourists, said environmentalist Tassio Lima.

"Under the algae, we have found lots of coins. It's all rubbish and the tourists shouldn't be throwing them into the river," he added.

Southern Brazil has been hit by its worst drought in 80 years, leading authorities to declare a state of emergency in some areas, while the usually arid northeast of the country is suffering from floods.


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World frog trade spreading killer diseases

Catherine Brahic, New Scientist 7 May 09;

Millions of frogs are shifted around the world each year for sale as pets and food. Now research shows, for the first time, that this global trade is spreading two severe diseases – one of which is blamed for driving amphibians towards extinction.

Last year the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) took a step towards monitoring both diseases by making them "notifiable", but as yet there are no regulations to prevent the trade of infected frogs.

"This is a major issue," says Peter Daszak, president of the Wildlife Trust, and an expert on amphibian diseases. "Over a million bullfrogs a year come into the USA for food. If only five per cent are infected, that's 50,000 infected animals."

Importing disease

Daszak and colleagues surveyed frogs that were imported through three major US ports: Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York. In each city, they visited market stalls and stores selling live imported bullfrogs or frog parts, purchased samples, and took them back to the lab where they were tested for the fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd) and for ranaviruses – viruses specific to amphibians.

Bd causes devastating chytrid disease, first identified about a decade ago. In the past few years, a number of studies have shown that it is an important factor in the recent drop-off in amphibian numbers. Worldwide, chytrid disease has caused extinctions and declines in 200 species of frogs. Ranaviruses also cause large die-offs, but scientists do not yet know whether they can contribute to extinctions.

Just over eight per cent of the frogs the researchers sampled had ranaviral diseases, whereas two thirds carried the chytrid fungus.
'Major factor'

"Considering the devastating impact Bd has had on global amphibian populations and the millions of animals being traded on an annual basis, this number is especially alarming," says Lisa Schloegel of the Wildlife Trust who led the work. "We may never completely know the extent to which trade has contributed to the global spread of amphibian diseases, but it does appear to be a major contributing factor."

Studies of chytrid fungus show its genetic makeup is very similar around the world, suggesting it is a relatively new pathogen, says Trenton Garner, a herpetologist at the Institute of Zoology in London. "The only way we can think of it getting this wide distribution without any evidence of it being an old pathogen is that it must have been moved around an awful lot, and recently."

The two main factors that move frogs around on a global scale are the pet and food trade. To get some idea of these movements, Daszak and colleagues obtained import data from the US Fish and Wildlife Service under the US Freedom of Information Act.

They found that between 1 January 2000 and 31 December 2005, over 7 million kilograms of amphibians and amphibian parts were imported into the US. That comes to more than 28 million animals in five years, or about 5 million animals a year.
'Important step'

Yet, although many nations, including the US, Australia and the European Union, have strong research programmes into the origins and spread of chytrid, none of the researchers New Scientist spoke to had heard of any national regulations to control infections in imported animals.

Animals are examined by vets when they enter the US, but both Bd and ranaviruses are easily missed in physical examinations. Skin swabs need to be taken and analysed in a laboratory to detect both conditions.

Ideally, says Garner, exporting nations would be required to certify that their animals are disease-free and importing nations should check this upon arrival.

The OIE's decision to make Bd and ranaviral diseases notifiable means that all 172 member countries must report on the status of the disease within their borders every six months. "The OIE measures are the first step, and a very significant one," says Daszak.

Journal reference: Biological Conservation (DOI: 10.1016/jbiocon.2009.02.007)


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UN 'stunned' by scale of bail-out

Steven Duke, BBC News 7 May 09;

The UN's head of environment has been left "stunned" by the billions of dollars pumped into ailing companies following the global financial crisis.

Achim Steiner told the BBC One Planet programme that he had fought for years to secure much smaller sums to tackle poverty and climate change.

"We waited perhaps a decade to get $5bn ($3.3bn) to accelerate development of renewable energy," he said.

We now see $20bn (£13.3bn) paid [to] a car company simply to keep it alive." He said he was surprised that such huge amounts had "suddenly been found" to tackle the crisis.

'False story'

Over $11trillion (£7tn) has been spent on bank bailouts in the UK and the US alone.

Billions more has been promised in aid for struggling industries, such as automotive manufacturers.

But Mr Steiner, who is based in the Kenyan capital of Nairobi, warned we are passing the bill to the next generation, and stressed that if extra investment is not found to tackle climate change, the bail-outs would be "a terrible waste of money".



Despite the urgency of governments to ensure financial institutions do not collapse, Mr Steiner urged the public not to be "sold the false story" of banks having to be fixed before worrying about other issues such as environmental protection.

If that did happen, Mr Steiner believes it would represent "the greatest political tragedy of the last five decades".

In the interview, the Brazilian-born UN director also suggested the world's richest countries could make huge inroads to tackling climate change by adding $5 (£3.30) to the cost of a barrel of oil - which he estimates would raise over $100bn (£66.5bn) to invest in new technology.

"Are you really that worried about paying three cents more per litre of oil in order to reverse global warming - what would be the debate if we put it in those terms?"

But when asked which governments he thought would be prepared to put such a surcharge on oil, Mr Steiner admitted, "Not a single one, right now".

The full interview with Achim Steiner can be heard on the 7 May edition of the One Planet programme on the BBC World Service.


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What Is The Best Way to Turn Plants into Energy?

A new study compares biofuels with bioelectricity
David Biello Scientific American 7 May 09;

The environmental case for ethanol from corn continues to weaken. Turning the food crop into ethanol would not be the best use of the energy embedded in the kernels' carbohydrates, according to a new study in Science. That's because fermenting corn into ethanol delivers less liquid fuel energy for internal combustion engines than does burning the kernels to generate power for electric motors.

"We had been studying the area of land that would be available to grow crops for energy and we were curious to discover the most efficient use of these crops," explains environmental engineer Elliott Campbell of the University of California, Merced, who led the study. "We found that with a given amount of biomass you could produce more transportation and greenhouse gas offsets with electricity than with ethanol."

The new study shows that burning biomass to produce electricity rather than converting it to ethanol (made from corn kernels or the other parts of the plant, so-called cellulosic ethanol) delivers 81 percent more miles per acre of transportation in electric vehicles than ethanol burned in internal combustion, even taking into account the lifetime costs of the expensive batteries available today. "The input energy to produce an electric vehicle was 1.5 times the energy to produce an [internal combustion vehicle]," Campbell says. "The batteries currently require large energy inputs in the vehicle production component of our life cycle assessment."

On average, looking at a wide variety of source crops (corn kernels to switchgrass), ways to convert plants to energy, and vehicle sizes (ranging from compact cars to SUVs), bioelectricity delivered 56 percent more energy for transportation per acre, even including the fact that making ethanol produces other useful products, such as cattle feed. To take just one example: a small truck powered by bioelectricity could travel almost 15,000 city and highway miles (24,000 kilometers) compared with just 8,000 comparable miles (13,000 kilometers) for an internal combustion equivalent.

From the atmosphere's point of view, growing biomass to burn in a power plant and using the electricity to move a car avoids 10 tons of carbon dioxide emissions per acre, or 108 percent more emission offsets than ethanol. "One other aspect of the electricity pathway is that most emissions are concentrated in one location, which provides perhaps an opportunity for more control of the emissions," Campbell notes. "It also perhaps locates [other air pollution] emissions in a place where impacts might not be as harmful as where cars are driven today."

Of course, such a bioelectricity future for transportation would also rely on widespread availability of cars and trucks with batteries and electric motors. "A great deal of innovation must happen in vehicle and power transmission technologies to make that a reality," argues Renewable Fuels Association spokesman Matt Hartwig, an ethanol trade association that owns an ethanol-electric hybrid car. "In the meantime, Americans still need liquid transportation fuels. If the goal is to have more of those gallons come from renewable sources rather than imported oil, fuels like ethanol are the only technologies that are having an impact today."

He adds: "In theory, you could have a plug-in hybrid with a renewable fuel powered [internal combustion engine] and eliminate the need for petroleum all together."

The Obama administration seems to agree, granting $786 million in 2009 for biofuels research and setting up the Biofuels Interagency Working Group to study how best to meet the renewable fuel standard mandated by Congress that will require increasing the amount of renewable fuels, such as ethanol, to 36 billion gallons by 2022.

But the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (and the California Air Resources Board) have noted that turning corn into ethanol can actually be a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions and other unintended environmental effects, largely by driving the expansion of agriculture and its attendant pollution—as evidenced by previous studies published in Science.

All use of biomass—whether for ethanol or electricity—runs the risk of displacing food crops, however, as well as the need for large amounts of water. "Both pathways could be totally disastrous if these types of impacts can't be avoided," Campbell admits. "This is going to be a constrained area of land and amount of biomass, so how much transportation and greenhouse gas offsets can we milk out of this constrained land? It looks like the electricity pathway might get us more bang for the buck."

And burning biomass for electricity while capturing the CO2 emissions from such a power plant can actually result in carbon-negative power generation—taking CO2 out of the atmosphere. "By sequestering the flue gas CO2 at the power plant, the bioelectricity pathway could result in a net removal of CO2 from the air," the researchers wrote, and that could help with the problem of ever-rising levels of the greenhouse gases causing climate change.


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Pumping CO2 Underground Best Hope For Climate: Shell

Joshua Schneyer, PlanetArk 8 May 09;

NEW YORK - Projects to capture industrial emissions and store them in the earth's crust could cut CO2 pollution by up to 40 percent, according to officials from oil major Shell.

Carbon capture and storage (CCS) -- gathering CO2 emissions at their source and pumping them underground -- faces steep cost hurdles, but may someday be worth hundreds of billions of dollars a year, a Shell executive said.

"CCS is probably the largest source of potential carbon reduction for the next 30 years, and a way to deal with 30 to 40 percent of (global) emissions," said Kimberly Corley, Shell senior advisor for CO2 and environmental affairs.

The technology is now used from Texas to Algeria to pump CO2 into oil and gas reservoirs, pressurizing them to increase output. But Shell is betting on becoming an industry leader in storing its own and other companies' carbon emissions to tap into financial perks given for lowering emissions.

The company already has seven test-phase CCS projects underway and is looking to fund future projects through lucrative carbon credits.

"We think (CCS) is one of the few technologies that has the potential to become very big," said Shell CEO Jeroen van der Veer, in a conference call with reporters Thursday.

Costs are a drawback due to the difficulty of trapping emissions as they spew from coal or oil-burning plants.

Building CCS projects now would cost Shell around $2 billion for each million tons a year of emissions, Corley said. The U.S. emits around 7 billion tons a year.

"No one knows the cost if you start to do it on a large scale," Van der Veer said.

Aggressive deployment of CCS could mean a billion tons of CO2 are stored by Shell and others annually by 2025, generating $50 billion, said David Hone, Shell's climate advisor.

CCS hinges on financial rewards for emissions reduction, including cap and trade programs, which Shell supports.

The Obama administration is pushing climate legislation, including cap and trade, to generate $650 billion between 2012 and 2019 and cut emissions by 14 percent.

Policy makers will gather in December in Copenhagen to discuss a replacement for the Kyoto Protocol, the global emissions reduction framework that expires in 2012.

The United States isn't a signatory to Kyoto.

Shell's plans include one to pump CO2 from its Pernis oil refinery near Rotterdam into spent gas reservoirs underneath a nearby town, which Corley expects to go ahead soon.

CCS critics say there's no guarantee that emissions will stay underground, and leaks pose dangers.

"We think we can do it safely," CEO Van der Veer said.

Shell's first commercial CCS project, worth more than $2 billion, is under feasibility study at the Athabasca oilsands project in Alberta, Canada. The project, known as Quest, would be led by Shell and include Chevron and Marathon. No deadline is set for an investment decision.

(Editing by Christian Wiessner)


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New U.N. Climate Deal: Not Much Bolder Than Kyoto?

Alister Doyle, PlanetArk 8 May 09;

OSLO - A planned new U.N. climate pact is shaping up to be a mildly tougher version of the existing Kyoto Protocol rather than a bold treaty to save what U.S. President Barack Obama has called a "planet in peril."

"There's not a lot of ambition around," said Jennifer Morgan, of the London-based think-tank E3G, of submissions to the United Nations published this month to meet a deadline for consideration in a deal to be agreed in Copenhagen in December.

Australia is a partial exception, saying on Monday that it would ratchet up planned cuts by 2020, if other nations also did so. But Canberra put back its planned carbon emissions trading scheme by a year to mid-2011, amid a recession.

Taking account of the new Australian offer, plans outlined by developed nations add up to average cuts in greenhouse gas emissions of between 9 and 16 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, according to Reuters calculations.

That is nearer the goal of the Kyoto Protocol -- an average cut by industrialized nations of 5 percent below 1990 levels by 2008-12 -- than the 25 to 40 percent reduction below 1990 by 2020 outlined by the U.N. Climate Panel as the order of cutback required to avert the worst of global warming.

"The economic downturn is putting a brake on the level of commitment and investment to mitigate climate change," said Pep Canadell, head of the global carbon project at Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization.

He said Australia's delay was a sign of economic strains.

BUDGET DEFICITS

"The current stimulus packages are committing the economies of developed countries to run deficits for a number of years which will not make things easier in the near future either," he said.

And the rich nations' plans contrast starkly with demands by developing nations, which are likely to suffer most from projected floods, droughts, extinctions of plants and animals and rising sea levels caused by global warming.

Countries such as China and India want the rich to cut by at least 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020 as a condition for their greater involvement in curbing rising emissions. They also want aid and green technology -- submissions so far have been vague about cash.

Among developed nations, the European Union says cuts must ensure that world temperatures do not rise more than 2 Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) above levels that existed before the Industrial Revolution.

"Submissions so far from all countries are nowhere near 2 Celsius," said Bill Hare, a visiting scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research and a director of Climate Analytics.

"Many countries are slumbering through the climate crisis like Sleeping Beauty," Norwegian Environment Minister Erik Solheim said, asked about the gap between the rich nations' offers and the expectations of developing nations.

Norway has so far promised some of the deepest cuts -- 30 percent below 1990 levels by 2020. But some of the cuts will be made by buying carbon emissions quotas abroad, funded by cash from North Sea oil, rather than by reducing emissions at home.

Fossil fuels are a main source of greenhouse gases.

Obama plans to cut U.S. emissions to 1990 levels by 2020, a cut of about 14 percent from 2007 levels, to help what he described in his election victory speech last November as a "planet in peril." He wants cuts of 80 percent by 2050.

Washington says that it needs to be guided by pragmatism as well as by climate science -- and says the 25 to 40 percent range is far out of reach for 2020. But Obama's more modest goal may be having a knock-on effect.

"Even going back to 1990 levels in the U.S. -- which is far from insignificant -- has just made Japan feel more at ease that it doesn't need to go any further," said Kim Carstensen, head of the Global Climate Initiative of the WWF International environmental group.

"My sense is that we have seen the same relaxation in Europe...Australia may be the point where we begin to see a change," he said.

Australia said it will cut by up to 25 percent below 2000 levels if other nations join in, toughening its earlier plan to cut by 5 to 15 percent. Japan has yet to set a 2020 goal, from widely varying options. The EU has promised a cut of 20 percent by 2020 from 1990, and up to 30 percent if other nations join in.

(Editing by Mark Trevelyan)


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