Best of our wild blogs: 12 Jun 09


Pasir Ris mangroves and beach
on the Singapore Nature blog and wild shores of singapore blog with Bruguiera parviflora

Chek Jawa IV: Im a Tabloid Lover, check out these Chocolate Truffle Rocks
on the You run, we GEOG blog

Semakau Public Walk on 11 June
on the wonderful creation blog and the discovery blog

The Palm King
Butterfly of the Month - June 2009 on the Butterflies of Singapore blog

Seeing Double
on the My Itchy Fingers blog

Buffy Fish-owl and a half eaten rat
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

Oriental Pied Hornbill eats rambutan
on the Bird Ecology Study Group blog

VIDEO: Saving Sarawak's Turtles
on the Lost in the Jungle blog


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Malaria outbreak worsens with two more cases

The type of mosquito responsible unlocated; partial immunity in some people may aid spread
Salma Khalik, Straits Times 12 Jun 09;

THE outbreak of malaria in Singapore took a turn for the worse yesterday, with two more people - including another Singaporean - coming down with the potentially deadly disease.

This brings the total number of people infected to 17 - all men.

Of these, 15 are foreign workers living in dormitories - either in the Sungei Kadut/Mandai area in the north, or Jurong Island in the south.

The two Singaporeans are a full-time national serviceman who the Health Ministry said was likely to have been bitten while in camp, and a 51-year-old worker in Mandai Estate.

Worryingly, the type of Anopheles mosquito responsible for the outbreak of malaria has not been located yet despite sweeps of the two areas where the infections have occurred.

This could mean that the mosquitoes may continue to breed and infect more people.

The outbreak of malaria here is the worst since 2006, when 13 people came down with it.

In that instance, however, a victim infected overseas was bitten by an Anopheles mosquito which succeeded in spreading the parasite to 13 other people on Jurong Island and the nearby Pulau Busing.

The current outbreak, on the other hand, has not only infected more people, but has occurred in two distinct locations, making it more difficult to contain.

Another worry this time around: Many foreign workers here come from countries where malaria is endemic, and might have been infected several times previously.

This gives them a sort of 'semi-immunity', said Dr Lim Poh Lian, a senior infectious disease consultant at the Communicable Disease Centre (CDC). This could make the chain of transmission harder to break.

She explained that those who have had previous infections might become only mildly sick if bitten by an infected mosquito. In such cases, they might not be diagnosed as having malaria.

However, the parasites which cause the disease would be in their blood following the bite. If they are bitten by another Anopheles mosquito, the disease could spread.

Meanwhile, the National Environment Agency (NEA) is pursuing efforts to stamp out the disease.

It said it is investigating how the transmission took place, and is continuing with intensive search-and-destroy operations on the ground.

These include thermal fogging in the night, as the mosquitoes responsible for spreading malaria are active in the evening and early morning.

Singapore was declared malaria-free in 1982, when it eradicated sustained local transmissions of the disease.

It has maintained this status for almost three decades by swiftly ring-fencing any imported cases to prevent the disease from spreading.

Malaria can be cured if diagnosed early and treated. Delays in treatment can result in death. Symptoms include fever, headache, chills and vomiting.


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SEC combing for errant marketers using label

Cashing in on ‘green’
Lin Yan Qin, Today Online 12 Jun 09;

HOPING to catch the attention of eco-conscious shoppers, more products are getting themselves “green” certified, but consumers should make sure that they are indeed getting the genuine things.

Two brands of washing detergent were found to have misled consumers by displaying the Singapore Environment Council’s (SEC) GreenLabel certification on their products although they were not certified, according to a survey by the Consumers Association of Singapore (Case) and the SEC.

One case - involving Power Plus Anti-Bacterial clothing detergent by CMM Marketing - was found to be due to a miscommunication within the company.

But the second - Spank Floor Cleaning solution marketed by Lifestyle Integral - was the type of indiscriminate use of the label that the SEC and Case were concerned about, said council project manager Yatin Premchand. “The GreenLabel has grown to have more cache with consumers ... so some companies see it as a lucrative marketing tool to be part of that (certified) group,” said Mr Premchand.

With “thousands” of products now bearing the GreenLabel - a voluntary accreditation for environmentally-friendly products - it was natural that a small number hoping to cash in would turn up too, he said.

The council and Case surveyed 38 brands from February to March to check for misuse of the label, as well as check if certified products were displaying the label correctly. Both SEC and Case were satisfied that 95 per cent of the brands surveyed were found to be genuine.

“We have been doing (audits) on our own to check for any misuse of our certification, and will continue to do so for other product categories in future,” said Mr Premchand.

SEC also relies on industry partners and consumers to provide feedback.

“They are active in protecting their brand, and they report to us any cases they pick up,” said Mr Premchand.

Meanwhile, consumers should take note that the Spank product has not been certified, as SEC has been unable to track down the company at its listed address to have the company remove the labels.

CMM Marketing will pull all its Power Plus Anti-Bacterial clothing detergent bearing the GreenLabel from the shelves by Monday, and is considering submitting an application for GreenLabel certification, said Mr Premchand.

The company had apparently applied the GreenLabel to its product thinking it had applied for the certification when it had not, due to an internal error.

Neither company could not be reached for comment


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Going green 'makes good business sense'

Key reasons are cost savings and concern over pollution, global survey results show
Chua Hian Hou, Straits Times 12 Jun 09;

BUSINESSES are seeing the merits of going green to cut costs and win clients over.

About 97 per cent of companies worldwide are taking an eco-friendly route to slash power consumption and pollution - with 50 per cent having already implemented these strategies, according to a survey by Symantec.

The survey, conducted in March by the information technology company, polled 356 regional companies, including 25 from Singapore, on whether they were looking at becoming more environmentally aware, and what would make them do so.

The key driver, said Symantec's senior director for systems engineering Alvin Ow, is cost. This was cited by 93 per cent of respondents as a key reason for their efforts.

Cementing the pros of going green was last year's oil scare, when prices hit an unprecedented US$147 a barrel, resulting in higher electricity costs.

And while oil and electricity prices have since fallen, companies remain anxious that oil costs may spike again. Several weeks ago, Saudi Arabia's Minister of Petroleum and Mineral Resources, Mr Ali Al-Naimi, predicted that the oil price could soar beyond 2008's levels by next year.

Bottom-line concerns aside, 89 per cent of large organisations are genuinely concerned about further damage to the environment, making this the second biggest reason respondents want to go green, the report said.

One such company is OCBC Bank, which offers its customers electronic statements instead of paper ones, uses energy-saving bulbs in its branches as well as groups its computer servers together to perform complex tasks instead of buying additional systems.

Another major motivator is the positive spin going green has for a company's reputation in the market, with 85 per cent of companies listing it as an important outcome for any moves to be environmentally conscious.

Although less of a priority for some respondents, this may pay off in the long run as consumers become more discerning about the environmental impact a company has.

While the effects of this are not immediate, a growing number of companies will work only with socially responsible business partners, said Robert Walters spokesman Rena Tan.

The multinational headhunting firm, with 70 employees here, has just completed an audit of its office equipment, like photocopiers and printers, to test how power-efficient they are and whether they need to be upgraded to more efficient models. It is also in the process of installing video-conferencing systems to reduce overseas travel, and to automatically power down its computers at midnight.

Low-power computers and motion sensors to turn off lights in unused areas are also being tested.

And if companies are willing to spend, the benefits can be big.

Energy services company CPG Facilities Management's vice-president for its CPGreen division, MrDerrick Hong, said companies can cut power bills by single digit percentages to 'more than 20 per cent for those making major investments'.

According to the National Environment Agency's Energy Efficiency Programme Office's website, simply swapping a low-efficiency device to one with better energy efficiency can offer savings of about $80 a year. And power-saving bulbs provide savings of $15 a year compared to incandescent ones.

But many smaller businesses are sitting on the fence over this issue, said Symantec's Mr Ow.

This is because they are facing a cash crunch, and many also have no idea where to start, he said.

Mr L.W. Tan, for instance, still uses incandescent bulbs in his Yishun watch repair shop, which he did not want named.

Speaking in Mandarin, Mr Tan, 56, said: 'I know about energy-saving bulbs but it costs more money to renovate the shop (to use them). Anyway, I'm so old already and I'm going to retire soon, so no point wasting money.'


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Malaysian police, pilots on blaze alert

Straits Times 12 Jun 09;

KUALA LUMPUR: - Malaysian police and airline pilots were on the lookout for fires at forests and garbage dumps yesterday after a decline in air quality signalled the possible return of a seasonal smog.

The authorities are concerned that the fires might contribute to haze and pollution during the mid-year dry season. The haze is generally caused by farmers in Indonesia who start illegal brush fires to clear land for planting, causing smoke to drift across to neighbouring countries.

Officials have reported a dip in air quality and visibility in parts of Malaysia over the past week.

More than half of 50 monitoring stations across the country have reported a fall in air quality from 'good' to 'moderate' in recent days.

The Natural Resources and Environment Ministry said that regional satellite images showed more than 1,100 'hot spots' - indicating large fires - recently on Indonesia's Sumatra island and in Kalimantan province, and a further 125 'hot spots' in Malaysia that could aggravate air pollution.

The areas hit by air pollution were mostly on peninsular Malaysia's west coast, which is separated from Sumatra by the Malacca Strait.

The Meteorological Department said visibility near Kuala Lumpur had fallen to between 6km and 8km yesterday morning. Visibility on a clear day exceeds 10km.

The ministry said in a statement that it was working with the police and private plane companies to detect blazes through aerial surveillance. Pilots at Malaysia's main airlines have also been asked to report any fires that they notice.

People who conduct unauthorised open burning in Malaysia can face up to five years in prison.

Malaysia and Singapore have complained since 1997 about haze drifting in from Indonesia. The last time a severe haze affected both countries was in 2006. Indonesia has said that it lacks the money and technical expertise to curb or control the fires.

ASSOCIATED PRESS


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Haze chokes Sumatra once again

Smoke worry resurfaces as 'hot spots' return
Wahyudi Soeriaatmadja, Straits Times 12 Jun 09;

JAKARTA: - The dreaded haze has returned to parts of Sumatra and Kalimantan, despite efforts by Indonesia to curb the use of slash-and-burn methods to clear land for planting.

Smoke from forest fires in Sumatra has reached the coastal province of Riau, but not the Riau Islands province off the coast of Singapore.

The past two weeks have seen a rise in the number of patients at local clinics complaining of haze-related ailments such as respiratory problems and sore eyes.

Visibility in the Riau city of Dumai dropped to a low of 30m yesterday, forcing motorists to turn on their headlights even at midday. However, a downpour yesterday evening offered some respite and more rain is expected.

'We are likely to see occasional, localised rains in the Sumatra area until next week or so,' Mr Kuku Ribudianto, a spokesman for the Indonesian Agency for Meteorology, Climatology and Geophysics (BMKG) in Jakarta, told Elshinta Radio.

Nevertheless, the haze is likely to remain a threat until August at least. The rainy season usually begins in September.

Despite a ban on open burning, some farmers in Sumatra and Kalimantan are still clearing land by cutting down vegetation and burning it.

But Indonesia has insisted that its efforts to stop such practices - and thus the haze - are paying off.

Mr Nur Alim, a spokesman for BMKG in Pekanbaru, Riau, told The Straits Times: 'We are seeing fewer cases as the government has stepped up campaigns against illegal burning. Farmers have been told it's a crime and they can be thrown in jail.'

Those caught and convicted of illegal burning face up to 15 years in jail.

On Wednesday, there were 76 hot spots in Sumatra, according to Singapore's National Environment Agency (NEA), and 15 in Riau. At the same time last year, there were about 100 hot spots in Riau alone.

NEA did not rule out the possibility that the haze would affect Singapore. In a statement, it said the likelihood would depend on factors such as the location and intensity of the hot spots, the amount of rain and the prevailing wind direction.

An NEA spokesman said the agency would monitor the situation closely. It will alert the public if conditions deteriorate and 'there is a likelihood that we will be affected by smoke haze'.

The region has been hit by haze almost every year since 1997. That year, fires set to clear land in Indonesia and East Malaysia burned out of control, fuelled by the El Nino weather phenomenon. The ensuing smoke blanketed much of South-east Asia in a choking haze.

There are concerns that a similar problem could arise this year. The Climate Prediction Centre in the United States said this month that an El Nino pattern, which can produce chaotic conditions that result in droughts and floods, could develop within weeks.

However, Mr Alfi Fahmi, who heads a unit in charge of environmental damage at Indonesia's environment ministry, ruled out a repeat of the 1997-98 situation.

'Plantation companies haven't dared (to illegally burn land or forests) since we stepped up our law enforcement,' he said. 'Those still doing it are local farmers who don't own land or who have very small properties.'


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Indonesia forest fires flare, Malaysia hit by haze

Reuters 12 Jun 09;

PEKANBARU, Indonesia (Reuters) - The number of forest fires raging in Indonesia's Sumatra island has increased, with wind blowing choking smoke over parts of Malaysia and slashing visibility, officials said on Friday.

The fires are a regular occurrence during the dry season in areas such as Sumatra and Borneo, but the situation has deteriorated in the last decade, with timber and plantation firms often blamed for deliberately starting fires to clear land.

The worst haze hit in 1997-98, when drought caused by the El Nino weather phenomenon led to major Indonesian fires. The smoke spread to Singapore, Malaysia and south Thailand and cost more than $9 billion in damage to tourism, transport and farming.

Risks for another bad period appear to have risen with the prospect of a return of El Nino this year.

An Indonesian official said 47 hotspots were recorded in Riau province in Sumatra by Thursday based on satellite surveillance, and temperatures were abnormally high at 35 degrees C (95 F).

"There is a potential for the number of fire spots to rise and haze conditions to worsen if there is no rain," said Blucer Dolok Saribu, head of the meteorology, climatology and geophysics agency in Riau's provincial capital of Pekanbaru.

The haze is likely to remain a threat until August at least. The rainy season usually begins in September.

The city, which frequently suffers from haze, had been shrouded in unpleasant yellowy, smoke earlier this week, although by Friday visibility had improved after some rains.

Rahmad Tauladani, a meteorological analyst in Pekanbaru, said wind had blown the haze over neighbouring Malaysia, but said that no flights had been cancelled so far, with visibility of 6,000 metres, above the minimum to allow flights of 1,000 metres.

In Malaysia, the haze had reduced visibility in some areas surrounding the capital Kuala Lumpur to as low as 5,000 metres, the Department of Environment (DOE) said.

Two out of 51 areas in the country monitored by the department recorded air readings that were unhealthy.

"We are monitoring the situation. We will decide later if any action should be taken," the DOE's Director-General Rosnani Ibrahim told Reuters by telephone.

Spurred on by the 1997-98 fires, Southeast Asian countries signed the ASEAN Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution in 2002, but Indonesia has yet to ratify the pact.

It is illegal to carry out slash-and-burn land clearing in Indonesia, but prosecutions take time and few have stuck.

Weather expert Tauladani said the current high temperatures had increased the risk that fires could spread to peatland areas.

Environmentalists are particularly concerned over an increasing trend towards converting peatland forests.

Once these areas are drained, peat soil is highly flammable, producing more smoke and carbon emissions than other soil types.

Indonesia's neighbours have been frustrated by Jakarta's failure to stop the annual fires.

Indonesia has identified the ASEAN haze pact as one of six "crucial" bills that should be passed before the current session of parliament expires at the end of September.

But with politicians distracted by the July 8 presidential election, it is unclear whether there will be time in the current parliamentary term to pass it. The pact calls for signatories to work together on monitoring and combating haze.

(Additional reporting by Telly Nathalia in Jakarta and Julie Goh in Kuala Lumpur)


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Thousands of Indonesian Islands May Vanish

Tempo Interactive 11 Jun 09;

TEMPO Interactive, Bandung:Global warming has caused the sea level to rise, inundating small islands in Indonesia. According to Deputy State Minister for the Environment in charge of Environmental Communication and People Empowerment, Henry Bastaman, around 3.000-4.000 islands may vanish if this condition continues for the next 100 years.

“This may make Indonesian territory smaller,” Henry said at Padjadjaran University, Bandung, yesterday. He said the 4.000 figure was based on a simulation carried out by researchers at the Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB).

The areas mostly threatened by this situation are small islands, such as those found in eastern Indonesia, covering Ambon, Southern Bali and West Nusa Tenggara. “This is what we worry about if the sea level continues to rises,” said Henry.

Indications which showed that these islands could disappear can be seen from the rise in sea levels when the tide comes in. In Indramayu, Henry said, sea water reaches as far as three meters ashore. In Jakarta, the tide can suddenly appear even though it is not raining.

It is estimated that by 2050, the Cengkareng area will be like Ancol and the beach will be found at the Soekarno – Hatta airport area. “If this condition persists, sea levels could rise up to 1 – 2 meter due to melting ice in the North Pole,” Henry warned.

Henry said there are no solutions to deal with this problem because of the global warming. “It is difficult to prevent because it is a natural phenomena.” People must change their living habits and adapt to nature, he urged.

People living in the coast, Henry added, must be warned that they are living in a dangerous area. Meanwhile, the regional government must improve the coastal landscape. “Mangrove forests must be rehabilitated because they are now in a critical condition,” he said.

ITB’s Environmental Management and Infrastructure Research Center chief, Ibnu Syabri, said that the rise in sea levels has also inundated Pondok Bali tourism area in Subang. “Five or six years ago, we could reach the area by land. But not anymore today,” he said. The local people now live with regular flooding. Water can come in as high as 30 centimeters.


ANWAR SISWADI


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Ice loss could push sea levels above estimates: report

David Fogarty, Reuters 12 Jun 09;

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Increasing loss of ice from Antarctica and Greenland could cause sea levels to exceed U.N. estimates by 2100, an Australian government-backed report says, with the extent of the rise still uncertain.

The U.N. Climate Panel says seas could rise by 18-59 cm (7-24 inches) by 2100. It also raised the possibility of an additional 20 cm rise if polar ice sheets dumped ever greater amounts of ice into the ocean.

That assessment was based on scientific knowledge up to 2005.

"There is now emerging evidence that sea level rise by 2100 might exceed this," says the report released on Friday that reviews the latest science and is meant to guide policy-makers.

"Although it is unlikely that total sea level rise by 2100 will be as high as 2 meters, the probable upper limit of a contribution from ice sheets remains uncertain," said the report by the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Center in Hobart, Tasmania.

A rise of even one meter would force millions along Bangladesh's low-lying coast to move inland and trigger mass migration in Vietnam's Mekong Delta. Major coastal cities around the globe would need taller sea defenses or risk being swamped.

"The ice that's being lost is Antarctica is being lost not by surface melt. The continent is very cold. But it's being lost by increasing discharge from glaciers," Ian Allison, one of the report's authors, said in an online briefing on Friday.

"Some of the large glaciers in West Antarctica have sped up and they are pushing more ice out into the ocean," said Allison, leader of the Australian Antarctic Division's ice, ocean, atmosphere and climate program.

The same was also occurring in Greenland, in addition to increased melting of ice near the coast.

SHRINKING SEA ICE

The report says sea levels were rising at the upper end of U.N. climate panel projections and that evidence suggested the Greenland and Antarctic icesheets were contributing more to present sea-level rise than was previously estimated.

The total ice stored in ice sheets on both landmasses would raise sea levels by nearly 65 meters if it all melted.

East Antarctica, where most of the ice is locked up, remains stable for now, studies show.

But in West Antarctica, much of the ice sits on bedrock up to 2 km below sea level and was at great risk of collapse if warming seas eroded protective ice shelves.

The ice would be susceptible to rapid decay if it thinned and progressively began to float away, the report said, which called for greater research to better estimate how much the loss of ice would raise sea levels.

A study released last month showed that a meltdown of West Antarctica's ice sheet would raise sea levels by 3.3 meters, half what was previously thought, but the impact would still be catastrophic, especially for U.S. coastal cities.

The center, in a separate report released on Friday, also warned of the risks from shrinking sea ice at the poles.

Floating sea ice helps regulate the climate by reflecting large amounts of solar radiation and drives ocean circulation patterns.

It is also crucial to seals, polar bears, penguins and as a refuge for tiny creatures called krill, a key component of the food chain.

"In response to a warming climate, sea ice is forecast to reduce by 24 percent in extent and 34 percent in volume by 2100," said the study.

The Arctic has already suffered rapid loss in the extent of summer sea ice and some scientists estimate it could be ice-free as early as 2013.

(Editing by Sugita Katyal)


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U.S. dogs to sniff out Cambodian tigers

WWF 12 Jun 09;

Mereuch, Cambodia: Researchers will monitor Cambodia’s remaining tigers using almost 200 camera traps and two specially trained dogs – capable of tracking the tigers over 150 square kilometers by following the animal’s droppings.

The camera traps and dogs ultimately will help conservationists to better protect tigers in the Mondulkiri Protected Forest in Eastern Cambodia, one of Southeast Asia’s largest remaining tropical dry forests.

WWF has set up more than 165 camera traps in the area, and in a few months two US-trained dogs, will begin scouring the undergrowth and sniffing for tiger scent.

The two dogs will be re-trained to locate the scat of tiger and other carnivores. Using dogs to sniff out the scats from large carnivores has been widely used in other parts of the world with great success, such as tiger monitoring projects in the Russian Far East.

“We know tigers are there. With more concentrated monitoring we have a better chance of spotting them – and this will enable us to put more protective measures in play,” said Nicholas Cox, WWF’s Dry Forests Ecoregion Leader.

Despite many years of poaching, there now are signs that the dry forest is recovering as a habitat for tigers. Leopards now are relatively common and other wildlife returning to the area include wild banteng, Asian jackal, Eld’s deer and primates such as silvered langur. In addition Vultures, Great Hornbills and Giant Ibis have now been frequently spotted in the forest.

The tiger population is estimated to be between 10 and 25 animals in the Eastern Plains Landscape. Camera traps have been used in some parts of the Protected Forest previously, but they will now be concentrated to a core area frequented by tigers. A tiger was last photographed in the area in 2007, and scats (droppings) have been found more recently in the area.

“It’s now or never, we must act if the trend of increasing tiger prey species is to be made permanent,” said Seng Teak, WWF Cambodia Country Director. “Stronger protection measures and a rigorous management plan are being implemented by the local government in Mondulkiri and WWF. When prey returns to the area the tiger population will have a chance to bounce back in a few years”, says.

WWF has been involved in conservation work in the Eastern Plains since early 2001. That commitment was increased a few years ago to cover an area spanning more than 20,000 square kilometers.

Strict protection measures have been enforced in the Mondulkiri Protected Forest and the Phnom Prich Wildlife Sanctuary. In core protection zones, villagers are not allowed to hunt or cut timber, and more than 70 trained rangers patrol the protected areas.

Lean Kha, a 48-year-old ranger working for WWF, was a poacher in the 70s.

“As a 13-year-old boy I was forced by the Khmer Rouge to go into the forest and kill wild animals,” Kha said. “I quickly learned to shoot and lay snares. During a period of 5-6 years I shot 16 elephants, 14 leopards and two tigers. At the time, I was ignorant and did not think of the consequences when I shot those tigers.”

“Today I’m really proud to work for WWF, and to use my skills to combat wildlife crime so that there will still be tigers and other wildlife in the forest when my children grow up,” he said.


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Secret Found to Flight of 'Helicopter Seeds'

livescience.com 11 Jun 09;

You probably played with them for hours - the seed pods of maple trees, slowly twirling and hovering like helicopters before falling to the ground.

The mechanism that causes "helicopter seeds" to spin has been a mystery, until now - a new study has found that the aerodynamics that keep these seeds aloft also allow certain insects, bats and hummingbirds to hover.

A team of Dutch and American scientists from Wageningen University and Caltech measured the flow of air created by swirling seeds by creating plastic models of the seeds and spinning them through a large tank of mineral oil using a specially designed robot dubbed "Robofly."

The scientists used light from a powerful laser to measure the motion of tiny glass beads in the oil as the model seed spun through the tank.

The images the team obtained showed that a swirling maple seed generates a tornado-like vortex that sits atop the front leading edge as the "helicopter" spins slowly to the ground.

This leading edge vortex lowers the air pressure over the upper surface of the maple seed, effectively sucking the wing upward to oppose gravity.

The mechanism is remarkably similar to the trick employed by insects, bats, and hummingbirds when they swing their wings back and forth to hover.

Thus, the new study, detailed in the June 12 issue of the journal Science, shows that plants and animals have converged on an identical aerodynamic solution for improving their flight performance.

This vortex doubles the lift compared to the performance of non-swirling seeds.

To confirm the vortex finding, the scientists built a wind tunnel at the University of Wageningen in the Netherlands to examine the flow created by real maple seeds as they spin. The team used smoke to visualize the flow of air around spinning seeds, and confirmed that real seeds make a leading edge vortex which is similar in structure to that made by the flapping wings of insects, bats, and hummingbirds when they hover.

The findings could help improve technologies, such as the swirling parachutes and vehicles that have been designed by space agencies to slow down the descent of their planetary probes for exploring the atmosphere of planets such as Mars.

The research was financed by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research and the U.S. National Science Foundation.


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Exploring the 'Google forest'

Jonah Fisher, BBC News 11 Jun 09;

Hunting chameleons is a night-time activity, but there's no need for stealth or even speed.

With the protection of darkness, chameleons give up on camouflage.

Sleeping on the low-lying branches of bushes in Mount Mabu, northern Mozambique, they're easy to spot by torchlight. White lizards with their eyes defiantly shut.

"We're not sure if it is a new species; I rather suspect it may be," Professor Bill Branch, one of Africa's leading reptile specialists, explains to me as we watch one chameleon standing statuesque on a branch.

For the first reptile expert to ever visit Mount Mabu, the hunt for new lizards and snakes is proving rather easy.

Of the seven species that Professor Branch has caught so far, only one is definitely not new to science.

Untouched landscape

Five years ago, few knew there was a forest here. Its discovery by the scientific community is down to a very 21st-Century research tool.

"I used Google Earth to locate all the mountains over 1,500m that were closest to Mount Mulanje in Southern Malawi," Dr Julian Bayliss, head of the cross-border conservation project, told me.

"Mount Mabu was selected through Google Earth as one of these sights."

Dr Bayliss's project, funded through a British scheme called the Darwin Initiative, looked for similarities between different patches of medium altitude rainforest.

When images of Mount Mabu were analysed, it became clear that there was a large patch of dark green of which there was no official record.

A quickly arranged visit to northern Mozambique confirmed what Dr Bayliss had suspected.

"It was at that stage I realised that we were dealing with what looks like the biggest rainforest in Southern Africa," he said.

Travelling with Dr Bayliss and a team of scientists on to Mabu, I saw what had so excited them.

Unlike most of the forests in southern Africa there was no sign of any logging or burning having taken place. The 7,000 hectares of Mount Mabu are in pristine condition.

New species

"This is an island of evergreen forest in a sea of savannah," Professor Branch said.

What that means is that the animals inside Mabu have had very little interaction with other groups of forest dwellers.



Unable to walk across the dry lowlands to mountain forest elsewhere, they have evolved in isolation to suit Mabu's own type of wet forest.

That now translates into many of the species being new to science.

Declaring a new species is a process fraught with the fear of being proved wrong. But Mabu's scientists are quietly confident that, in the last year, they have found more than 10 new species.

"Whatever we see we pick up, and there's a high probability that it's going to be a new species," Dr Bayliss said.

His own specific passion is butterflies. I watched his eclectic team, which included a 75-year-old enthusiast, as they scoured the forest canopy for new discoveries.

They weren't disappointed. Four new butterflies are set to be confirmed, with one of them likely to bear Dr Bayliss's name.

Though butterflies are his first love, Dr Bayliss showed a boyish enthusiasm for finding all things new.

I watched him trap bats and crabs, shrews and snails before carefully preserving them in ethanol to be sent off for further analysis.

"There are definitely new species to be found in all types of animals here on Mabu," he told me as we sat around the campfire.

With only an eighth of the forest having undergone even a cursory scientific investigation, it's hard to disagree.

I even managed to inadvertently get in on the act. Sat on the forest floor, I picked at a piece of rotten wood with a knife.

A small insect, perhaps three millimetres long dropped out on to my hand.

It looked liked a scorpion, but I stopped myself from throwing it away.

"This a pseudo-scorpion," Dr Bayliss told me as I presented it to him in a plastic pot. "It pretends to look like a scorpion to scare off predators.

"Not much is known about these - we'll send it off and I'd reckon there's a 90% chance that it's new."

For Mount Mabu the discovery of new species has a broader significance. On 18 June experts from Mozambique, the World Bank and the UK will meet in Maputo.

The scientists are hoping their discoveries prove that Mount Mabu is a unique habitat, and that it merits official protection.


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Hawaiian Islands named habitat for endangered seal

Jaymes Song, Associated Press Google News 12 Jun 09;

HONOLULU (AP) — The federal government on Friday will significantly expand the critical habitat for endangered Hawaiian monk seals to include beaches and waters of the main Hawaiian Islands, officials said.

Environmentalists say the added habitat is needed to reverse the plight of the monk seals, which are among the most endangered marine mammals in the world with fewer than 1,200 remaining.

Previously, the critical habitat was limited to the remote and largely uninhabited Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, where it was first established in 1986.

The enhanced designation means greater protection of seal habitat under the Endangered Species Act. It does not affect or restrict access to Hawaii's beaches or fishing. But the designation limits federal government activities, which must undergo reviews to ensure they do not harm the seal or the habitat.

The announcement to be published Friday in the Federal Register is the result of a petition filed a year ago by the Center for Biological Diversity, KAHEA: The Hawaiian-Environmental Alliance, and Ocean Conservancy.

"It will give this species a fighting chance," said Vicki Cornish, wildlife policy director at Ocean Conservancy. "When we protect critical habitat for monk seals, we are also protecting the larger ocean ecosystem on which we all depend."

Miyoko Sakashita, an attorney with the Center for Biological Diversity, said the seals are "teetering on the edge of extinction ... and the forces are against them with rising sea levels flooding their beaches, derelict fishing gear entangling them and foraging grounds running dry."

She called the expanded protection "essential" for the recovery of the seals.

Environmental groups point to the Caribbean monk seal as proof of what could happen to their Hawaiian relatives.

A year ago, the National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration's Fisheries Service confirmed Caribbean monk seals were extinct. The seals once had a population of more than 250,000, but they became easy game for hunters because they often rested, gave birth or nursed their pups on beaches. The last confirmed sighting was in 1952.

The Hawaiian monk seal population is declining at a rate of about 4 percent annually, according to NOAA. The agency predicts the population could fall below 1,000 in the next three to four years.

When the numbers of any species fall to such small numbers, the population gets unstable and is more vulnerable to threats like disease.

"We cannot afford the extinction of a creature so sacred in Hawaiian culture and endemic to these islands," said Marti Townsend, KAHEA's program director. "And we cannot expect to save the seals without meaningfully protecting critical habitat."


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Reindeer & Caribou Populations Plunge

Robert Roy Britt, livescience.com 11 Jun 09;

Reindeer and caribou numbers worldwide have plunged nearly 60 percent in the last three decades due to climate change and habitat disturbance caused by humans, a new study finds.

Global warming and industrial development are driving the dramatic decline, said Liv Vors, a Ph.D. student at the University of Alberta who did the study with university biologist Mark Boyce.

"Their future is dubious if climate change and habitat disturbance continue at their current pace," Vors told LiveScience. "We do not know how quickly they can adapt to this changing world."

Reindeer and caribou are two names for the same species. "Generally speaking, caribou are the North American version and reindeer are European," Vors explained. Exact numbers for the creatures are not known, because not enough study has been done. But for those populations that have been studies, the average decline in numbers is 57 percent.

The results come from the first-ever comprehensive census analysis of this species, the researchers said. The findings are detailed in the Global Change Biology Journal. The decline raises serious concerns not only for the animals, but also for people living in northern latitudes who depend on the animals for their livelihood, the scientists say.

What's causing the decline, according to the study:

* Earlier spring green-ups now occur before migrating herds arrive north. This deprives mothers and calves of quality feeding.
* Warmer summers cause more intense insect activity, harassing animals and affecting their feeding.
* The impact of more freezing rain, in place of snow, has negatively impacted lichens that animals feed on during the colder months.

Another scientist warned of the fragility of the caribou and reindeer range last year:

"The caribou is central to the normal function of northern ecosystems," said Justina Ray, executive director of Wildlife Conservation Society-Canada. "With their huge range requirements and need for intact landscapes, these animals are serving as the litmus test for whether we will succeed in taking care of their needs in an area that is under intensifying pressure."

Caribou are vulnerable to a number of threats, including deforestation, natural resource extraction and accompanying road networks, and climate change, Ray and a colleague said last year. In North America, caribou have lost about one-third of their southern range, they said.

Vors said countries where the beasts live need to exercise their authority to protect them.

"This issue is extremely urgent," Vors said. "We have sufficient information about caribou habitat requirements to begin immediately a program of protection and recovery of critical habitat for woodland caribou. Clearly, climate change requires attention as well and the sooner we begin to reduce carbon emissions the more likely we will be able to protect some of the remaining caribou and reindeer herds."

Reindeer herds in global decline
Matt Walker, BBC News 11 Jun 09;

Reindeer and caribou numbers are plummeting around the world.

The first global review of their status has found that populations are declining almost everywhere they live, from Alaska and Canada, to Greenland, Scandinavia and Russia.

The iconic deer is vital to indigenous peoples around the circumpolar north.

Yet it is increasingly difficult for the deer to survive in a world warmed by climate change and altered by industrial development, say scientists.

Reindeer and caribou belong to the same species, Rangifer tarandus .

Caribou live in Canada, Alaska and Greenland; while reindeer live in Russia, Norway, Sweden and Finland.

Worldwide, seven sub-species are recognised. Each are genetically, morphologically and behaviourally a little different, though capable of interbreeding with one another.

These differences between sub-species dictate how each is affected by human impacts.

For example, it has been known for a while that populations of woodland caribou in Canada have declined as human disturbance has increased, caused by logging, oil and gas exploration, and road building, says Liv Vors of the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada.

But then reports started coming in that the numbers of other herds were also falling.

"When we discovered that many herds of reindeer also were declining we decided to compile a comprehensive survey to see if this indeed was a global pattern," says Vors.

Vors and Mark Boyce at the University of Alberta contacted other researchers and scoured the published literature and government databases for all the information they could find about reindeer and caribou numbers. They compiled data on 58 major herds around the Northern Hemisphere.

The scientists were shocked to discover that 34 of the herds were declining, while no data existed for 16 more. Only eight herds were increasing in number. Many herds had been declining for a decade or more.

"We were surprised at the ubiquity of the decline," says Vors.

"We knew that woodland caribou in North America were in bad shape." There is also some evidence that populations of migratory caribou in the Canadian Arctic have fluctuated in recent history.

But the researchers were surprised at how migratory caribou and reindeer numbers seem to be falling in synchrony across the Northern Hemisphere.

"When we delved into the status of European reindeer herds, we were surprised that so many were declining. We expected them to be in better shape than North America herds because reindeer, namely the semi-domestic herds, are closely managed by humans."

The scale of the problem is shown by a map upon which the researchers plotted their data, which is published in Global Change Biology.

"Seeing that sea of red was a sobering moment," Vors says.

"If global climate change and industrial development continue at the current pace, caribou and reindeer populations will continue to decline in abundance," says Vors.

"Currently, climate change is most important for Arctic caribou and reindeer, while anthropogenic landscape change is most important for non-migratory woodland caribou."

For example, climate change is affecting migratory caribou in a number of ways.

Warmer summers mean more insect activity, and caribou and reindeer that are harassed by insects are not able to feed as much to put on weight before winter.

Earlier springs mean plants may be past their prime by the time migrating animals reach their calving grounds, while warmer winters include more freezing rain which can form layers of ice over the ground. The caribou and reindeer cannot dig through the ice to feed, and can then starve en masse.

"In time, however, climate change will become more important for woodland caribou, and landscape change will have a greater effect on arctic caribou and reindeer," Vors continues.

"There likely will be more forest fires in woodland caribou habitat, as well as diseases and parasites transmitted to caribou from white-tailed deer, whose range is expanding northward in Canada. More roads are being built in the Arctic, as well as infrastructures like diamond mines, and these sometimes interfere with migration routes."

Unless something is urgently done, all seven sub-species of Rangifer face a bleak future, says Vors.

"The concern is that their habitat and the climate are changing too quickly for them to adapt."

The annual treks of migratory caribou form one of the last remaining large-scale ungulate migrations in the northern hemisphere.

Different sub-species also provide a cornerstone to many indigenous cultures around the circumpolar north, from subsistence hunting of caribou by Aboriginal peoples in Canada, Greenland and Alaska to reindeer husbandry by numerous cultures across Scandinavia and Siberia.

"From a Canadian perspective, the caribou is part of our national identity," says Vors. "Canada's caribou migrations have frequently been identified as one of this country's natural wonders, and the species even appears on our 25-cent coin."

THE SEVEN SUB-SPECIES
# R. t. tarandus . Semi-domestic and wild reindeer that live across northern Scandinavia and Russia. Wild reindeer undertake long, seasonal migrations between summer and winter ranges.
# R .t. fennicus . Wild forest reindeer that live in the forests of Finland and the Kola Peninsula of Russia.
# R. t. platyrhynchos . Svalbard reindeer that live only on the Spitsbergen Archipelago, which belongs to Norway. Svalbard reindeer have light-coloured fur, and shorter legs than other subspecies.
# R. t. granti . Grant's caribou found in Alaska and the Yukon. They reside in large groups and undertake long, seasonal migrations.
# R. t. groenlandicus . Migratory barren-ground caribou found across the tundra of Canada and Greenland.
# R. t. pearyi . Peary caribou, of which perhaps 700 persist on Canadian high Arctic islands.
# R. t. caribou . Woodland caribou residing in the boreal forest, mountains and tundra lowlands of Canada.


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Scotland's seabird decline 'worrying'

BBC News 11 Jun 09;

Scotland's seabird numbers plunged by 19% between 2000 and 2008, a new report has said.

Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) said the major cause was almost certainly a shortage of food due to a drop in the number of small fish, such as sandeels.

SNH said the fish were probably being affected by rising sea temperatures.

Declines have been greater in areas such as the Northern Isles and down the east coast. RSPB Scotland said the figures were "deeply worrying".

SNH said lower fish numbers led to lower numbers of adult birds surviving from one year to the next, and not enough chicks being produced and surviving to replace them.

SNH director of policy and advice, Prof Colin Galbraith, said: "While it's always disappointing to witness declines in important species, we are not entirely surprised at these findings.

"After several decades of increasing seabird abundance, we are now witnessing a period of decline. Key reasons are likely to be linked to food availability, weather, and predation.

"It is important that we are now able to monitor seabird numbers much more effectively than in the past, to inform policy and action. We need to keep a close eye on seabird trends and try to understand what is driving them."

'No reprieve'

SNH said there were now 55% fewer black-legged kittiwake and 71% fewer Arctic skuas breeding in Scotland than in the mid 1980s. Arctic terns declined by 26% over the same period.

Deryk Shaw, warden of the Fair Isle Bird Observatory in Shetland, said: "Breeding kittiwake numbers have been falling for many years now and there was no reprieve in 2008.

"A whole island count for the Fair Isle found that the number of nests is only half of that counted as recently as 2005 with many birds just standing on bare ledges."

Douglas Gilbert, of RSPB Scotland, said: "If the declines continue at this alarming rate, then many of Scotland's famous seabird cities could be virtually deserted within a decade.

"In the past decade the hopes of a good breeding season have been crushed, as eggs are deserted or young chicks starve in their nests because the adult birds cannot find enough fish."


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Scientists find whales more endangered in Exxon, BP and Rosneft oil areas

WWF 11 Jun 09;

Gland, Switzerland – Oil and gas exploration by energy giants Exxon, BP and Rosneft is seriously threatening one of the world’s most critically endangered whales, according to a panel of top scientists in a new report.

The Western Gray Whale Advisory Panel (WGWAP), composed of 11 scientists and representatives from Shell and Sakahlin Energy, met in April to discuss how oil and gas development affect the whales’ main annual feeding area off the northeastern coast of Sakhalin Island, Russia.

The scientists found that in 2008 there was a large decrease in the number of whales in their annual feeding area near the shore during a period of loud industrial activity, including a seismic survey. This is significant because if the whales are displaced from this primary annual feeding area, they will have less success reproducing.

“Western gray whale cows with their calves feed near the shore, but the industrial noise resulting from oil and gas development activities is pushing them out of the area,” Doug Norlen from Pacific Environment. “Any disturbance of these critically endangered whales’ behavior is particularly concerning as there are only 130 of them left."

However, Exxon, BP and Rosneft have refused to address their threats to the Western Gray Whale and these oil giants plan to carry out further activities in 2009 including seismic testing, construction and other loud activities that could displace whales from their annual feeding area.

“The new information presented at this meeting has heightened rather than diminished the Panel’s concern that whale distribution and behaviour may have been seriously affected by industrial activities – on land and offshore - in 2008,” according to the panel’s report.

Meanwhile, 35,000 people from across the world have signed on to a petition calling on five major oil companies including Exxon, BP and Rosneft to postpone any new development work in the vicinity of the Western Gray Whale feeding area this summer, and to work with experts find adequate measures to protect the critically endangered population.

WWF is sending the petitions to oil companies this week, urging them to act immediately as the gray whales will start to arrive at their summer feeding area near Sakhalin in a couple of weeks.

“Tens of thousands of people are calling on Exxon, BP and Rosneft to immediately halt their potentially destructive activities at Sakhalin Island this summer, and these companies can either choose to act responsibly or stay their course and help push the western gray whale further toward extinction,” said Aleksey Knizhnikov, WWF Russia.

The panel reiterated it call for a moratorium on all development activities in the area this summer. Because of those concerns, Sakhalin Energy - a partnership between Shell, Gasprom and other sharholders – agreed in April to cancel their proposed 2009 seismic activities in the whales’ feeding area.

The Western Gray Whale is one of the world’s most endangered whales, with only 25-30 breeding females remaining.


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'Boom and bust' of deforestation in the Amazon

Richard Black, BBC News 11 Jun 09;

Cutting down Amazon forest for cattle and soy does not bring long-term economic progress, researchers say.

A study of 286 Amazon municipalities found that deforestation brought quick benefits that were soon reversed.

Writing in the journal Science, the researchers say the deforestation cycle helps neither people nor nature.

They suggest that mechanisms to reward people in poorer countries for conserving rainforest could change this "lose-lose-lose" situation.

Jumbled paths



The Brazilian government has long had a twin-track approach to the Amazon, which contains about 40% of the world's remaining rainforest.

While the land development agency Incra settles people in the region as a way of giving them land and livelihoods - a policy that dates from the 1970s - the environment ministry is trying to reduce the rate of deforestation.

Last year the environment ministry named Incra as the country's worst illegal logger.

The Science study suggests that the settlement and expansion policy is not producing real benefits for people.

Ana Rodrigues and colleagues assessed the development status of people in 286 municipalities using the UN's Human Development Index (HDI), which combines measures of standard of living, literacy and life expectancy.

Some of the municipalities were in areas of virgin forest.

Others had already lost all their trees, and some were in the process of being deforested.

Areas in the initial stage of deforestation yielded HDI scores above the average for the region.

But once the period of deforestation had passed, scores returned to the values seen in areas that had not yet been logged.

"It is generally assumed that replacing the forest with crops and pastureland is the best approach for fulfilling the region's legitimate aspirations to development," said Dr Rodrigues

"We found although the deforestation frontier does bring initial improvements in income, life expectancy, and literacy, such gains are not sustained."

The "boom and bust" pattern was the same for each of the three aspects of the HDI, showing that even a straight economic benefit was not maintained.

REDD dawn

As the study emerged, UN climate negotiators are meeting in Bonn to discuss aspects of a follow-on treaty to the Kyoto Protocol, which is suppposed to be finalised by the end of the year.

One of the aspects of the new treaty will be a mechanism that rewards local communities for keeping carbon-absorbing forests intact - a mechanism known as REDD (Reducing Emissions through Deforestation and forest Degradation).

Andrew Balmford, a co-author of the new study, said REDD and other proposals could change the current situation, which he described as disastrous for local people, wildlife and the global climate.

"Reversing this pattern will hinge on capturing the values of intact forests... so that local people's livelihoods are better when the forest is left standing than when it is cleared," said the Cambridge professor of conservation science.

"Discussions being held in the run-up to this December's crucial climate change meeting in Copenhagen... offer some promise that this lose-lose-lose situation could be tackled, to the benefit of everyone - local Brazilians included."

The research was possible only because Brazil has good data on human development and on deforestation, which these days is measured by satellites.

But Ana Rodrigues believes the conclusions probably hold true for other countries stocked with tropical forests in southeast Asia or west Africa.

"I would be very surprised if we didn't see this boom and bust pattern emerging in these areas as well," she told BBC News.

President Lula is currently debating whether to ratify a bill that would grant legal status to illegal settlers and loggers in the Amazon region.

Environmentalists say the bill would increase the rate of land-grabs, with a knock-on rise in illegal logging likely.

Amazon deforestation leads to development 'boom-and-bust'
Study challenges argument that chopping down trees improves economic and social conditions, writes Alok Jha
Alok Jha, guardian.co.uk 11 Jun 09;

Chopping down the Amazon rainforest to make way for crops or cattle has no economic or social benefit for local people in the long term, according to a major new study.

The finding undercuts the argument that deforestation, which causes 20% of the globe's greenhouse gas emissions, leads to long-term development.

Conservationists showed communities develop rapidly but temporarily when forests are cleared. But rates of development quickly fall back below national average levels when the loggers move on and local resources near depletion.

More than 155,000 square kilometres of Amazonian rainforest in Brazil have been cleared for timber or burned to make way for agricultural land since 2000. Every year, around 1.8m hectares are destroyed — a rate of four football fields every minute. The Amazonian rainforest is one of the most biodiverse regions in the world, guarding against climate change by absorbing CO2 and maintaining geochemical cycles.

But some argue that local communities, which are among the poorest in Brazil, should be able to benefit from the local resources by creating farms or logging the trees. To calculate these potential benefits of deforestation for local communities, a team of international scientists analysed the life expectancy, literacy and income of people living in 286 areas around the Brazilian Amazon.

Their results, published today in Science, showed that the quality of life for local communities improved rapidly when a forest first cleared. "The monthly average income started out at 74 Reals per month," said Rob Ewers of the department of life sciences at Imperial College London, a member of the study team. "Then it went up to as much as 196 Reals per month in the middle [of the deforested area] and then to 82 once the resource is gone. Literacy went from 68% at the frontier [of the forest] up to a maximum of 83% then dropped down to 69%."

The researchers said that the cycle occurred because, at first, the newly available natural resources in an area of cleared forest attract investment and infrastructure. New roads can lead to improved access to education, medicine and an increased overall income gives people better living conditions.

But once the timber and other resources dry up, things change. "A lot of the agricultural land is only productive for a few years so once you lose that, you also lose that as a source of income," said Ewers. "On top of that you tend to have much higher populations because a lot of people have been attracted to the area."

This higher population has to survive on ever-dwindling local resources, pushing the standard of living right down again.

Ana Rodrigues of the Centre of Functional and Evolutionary Ecology in France, and lead author of the study, said: "The Amazon is globally recognised for its unparalleled natural value, but it is also a very poor region. It is generally assumed that replacing the forest with crops and pastureland is the best approach for fulfilling the region's legitimate aspirations to development. This study tested that assumption. We found although the deforestation frontier does bring initial improvements in income, life expectancy, and literacy, such gains are not sustained."

Greenpeace forests campaigner Sarah Shoraka said the research undermined any arguments that deforestation tackles poverty. "Slashing and burning rainforest to make way for cattle ranches or soya farms is simply not sustainable, because profits are short lived and the big companies simply move elsewhere. Instead we need sustained international funding to protect this massive natural resource, to make trees worth more alive than dead."

Andrew Balmford of the University of Cambridge said that the "current boom-and-bust trajectory of Amazonian development is therefore undesirable in human terms as well as potentially disastrous for other species, and for the world's climate. Reversing this pattern will hinge on capturing the value of intact forests to people outside the Amazon so that local people's livelihoods are better when the forest is left standing than when it is cleared."

This could be achieved in part, he said, by international schemes where rich countries could pay Brazilians to maintain their forests, which would lock up the carbon contained within them in a bid to tackle climate change but also provide locals with an income.


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Beijing's garbage crisis

Straits Times 12 Jun 09;

City's 13 landfill sites expected to be full in four years' time, say officials
BEIJING: - The Chinese capital faces a 'garbage crisis' as an increasing volume of rubbish threatens to overwhelm the city's existing landfills, officials said.

Waste produced in Beijing is growing at 8 per cent a year and is expected to exceed the capacity of the city's 13 landfill sites within four years, municipal government officials were quoted as saying on Wednesday.

They warned of a 'garbage crisis' if the situation is not checked, noting that two of Beijing's dumps are already full and will soon close.

'If we don't reduce our garbage, or build more waste management facilities, within four years Beijing will run out of space for garbage disposal. The situation is very dire,' said Mr Wei Panming, an official of the municipal government's facilities section.

The 18,000 tonnes of trash thrown out by residents every day already go far beyond the 11,000 tonne capacity of all the garbage disposal plants combined, said Mr Guo Weidong, a publicity division head of the government.

He said the authorities were working on laws and penalties to cut down garbage production and have stepped up construction of new landfill sites.

The nose-wrinkling problem also looms over other large and growing cities such as Shanghai and Chongqing, and the issue is an increasing worry for the nation's planners amid fears over pollution and water supplies.

Shanghai's Changshengqiao sanitary landfill plant, for example, is expected to be full in 15 years, about two years ahead of schedule, officials said.

The amount of garbage the city generated in 2007 was five times the size of the 421m Jinmao Tower, the tallest building in China.

Professor Nie Yongfeng, of Qinghua University's College of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, said developed countries deal with the problem by incineration, but the method is not used in Beijing for fear of the pollution it generates.

He added: 'If waste incineration is not applied immediately, garbage disposal will become a huge problem in the near future.'

Some commentators have warned that Beijing could confront a 'waste disposal state of emergency' like Naples.

Mountains of rotting trash have become a common sight in the streets of the southern Italian city because the region has run out of places to house it.

Not that Beijing residents are unaware of the gravity of such a scenario.

In 1983, some 5,000 piles of trash were left in the open around the capital because there were not enough disposal facilities.

The problem is more pressing this time because Beijing's population has grown steadily since to 17 million, creating in tandem an even bigger stinker.

Yet the people are raising increasingly vocal objections to the construction of garbage-related facilities in their already crowded cities.

In March, the national environment agency called off the construction of a controversial waste-fuel power plant in Beijing because nearby residents were worried it would pollute water aquifers.

A month later, hundreds of Shanghai residents marched to protest against the expansion of a garbage incineration plant.

There is at least one bright spot in the problem though.

Last year, the central government banned the distribution of free plastic bags at supermarkets throughout the nation and this has reduced polythene waste by at least 65 per cent, according to Mr Xie Zhenhua, deputy director of the National Development and Reform Commission.

CHINA DAILY/ASIA NEWS NETWORK, XINHUA


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Food of the Future to Be More Diverse?

Maggie Koerth-Baker, National Geographic News 11 Jun 09;

From the perspective of the plate, the foods we'll eat in the future will likely look and taste a lot like what we eat today. But take a closer peek, and tomorrow's dinner becomes very different indeed.

Agricultural scientists shaping the future of food say that, as global waming alters patterns of temperature, rainfall, and carbon dioxide concentrations in the air, farms must evolve.

Global warming will affect agriculture in a variety of ways: Some regions and farms will get a boost; others will suffer.

To cope with changing growing conditions, farmers will need to reverse decades of crop homogenization and diversify plant strains, agriculture scientists say.

(More on sustainable agriculture.)

Stephen Jones, a plant geneticist and wheat breeder at Washington State University in Pullman, notes that since the mid-20th century, farming has undergone radical homogenization.

"It's not just about monoculture of farms, where one farm grows only one crop, it's also monoculture within those crops and within fields," he said.

Jones notes, for example, that just three varieties of wheat comprise 60 to 70 percent of all wheat grown in the Pacific Northwest, a situation he says is similar with other crops in other regions.

While homogenization has made it easier to grow huge amounts of food on ever larger plots of land, adapting to global warming-induced changes becomes more difficult, particularly if those changes vary from farm to farm and plant to plant.

"There has to be some variation available for the environment to work on. If not, there will be big trouble," he said.

Jones and other researchers say global warming could suppress crop yields, increasing food costs in Western countries and worsening food shortages in many developing areas.

Natural Selection

Agricultural scientists say there are a variety of possible solutions to avoid low crop yields or failures.

Lewis Ziska, a USDA plant physiologist based in Beltsville, Maryland, is in the early stages of creating more resilient varieties of food crops by breeding them with certain weeds.

"Many weeds seem to do better, in general, under a wide range of environments," he said. "Can we take these genes and exploit these abilities by crossing the weeds with cultivated lines? Absolutely."

Ziska notes, for example, that domesticated rice can't produce seed if the temperature creeps above about 90° Fahrenheit (32° Celsius) when the plant is trying to fertilize.

Some weeds related to rice avoid the problem, however, by undergoing fertilization in the early morning or at night, when temperatures are generally cooler. That trait could be passed to the domesticated rice, Ziska says.

Scientists are also looking to breed modern crops with ancestral plant lines.

Global warming forecasts predict higher concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide. Ziska has found that under such conditions an early 20th-century strain of wheat actually performs better than a common modern strain.

Jones, of Washington State University, is working on this, as well. His team made test plots of every strain of wheat grown in the Pacific Northwest since the 1850s, looking for traits that could be useful under global warming conditions.

The plant geneticist said he is especially interested in characteristics that haven't been selected for since modern farmers started relying heavily on herbicides, pesticides, and fertilizers—such as the ability to compete with weeds or grow well in poor soil.

Plants with those traits could help farmers reduce the need for chemical inputs and lower their carbon footprint.

Genetic Modification

In a changing climate, farmers will need to experiment with many plant varieties to find the mix that works best on their farms, Jones says.

"Nature does a better job of selecting the plants that work than we do," Jones said.

Other crop scientists say there are situations where nature could benefit from a helping hand.

L. Curtis Hannah, a plant molecular biology researcher at the University of Florida in Gainesville, is using modern gene-transfer techniques to engineer strains of corn that could help farmers in tropical areas.

Global warming may bring relatively fast temperature increases such areas.

Focusing on the naturally occurring genes in corn that produce an enzyme called AGPases, Hannah has been able to produce lab-modified corn that thrives at high temperatures.

"When the temperature is above 90 [32° Celsius] during the early stages of seed development, we've seen increases in the yield as high as 68 percent," Hannah said.

While environmentalists generally oppose the introduction of genetically engineered organisms as too risky, Hannah and other crop scientists say such techniques aren't inherently dangerous and can be effective tools—used alongside traditional breeding—to adapt crops to global warming.

The USDA's Ziska said, "It's not a simple good vs. evil scenario."


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UN sketches countries with climate risk profile

Yahoo News 11 Jun 09;

BONN, Germany (AFP) – Disasters caused by climate change will inflict the highest losses in poor countries with weak governments that have dashed for growth and failed to shield populations which settle in exposed areas, a UN report said on Thursday.

"Disaster risk is not evenly distributed," said the report, released on the sidelines of the world climate talks in Bonn, as it urged countries to shore up protection for their citizens.

From 1990 to 2007, loss of life and property from weather-related disasters rose significantly, with floods the biggest single cause, it said.

Large developing countries, led by China, India, Bangladesh and Indonesia, suffered the biggest mortality in absolute terms, but in relation to population, the highest tolls were in Dominica, Vanuatu and Myanmar.

Poor small-island states and poor landlocked states, which can suffer years-long economic damage after an extreme weather event, are most in the firing line, according to the report, "Risk and Poverty in a Changing Climate."

Together, these states account for more than two-thirds of countries with "very high" economic vulnerability to such disasters.

"Disaster risk is increasing fastest in low- and low-middle income countries with rapidly growing economies," said the report.

"These countries have rapidly increasing exposure but relatively weak institutions. While they are making improvements in risk-reducing capacities, these have yet to catch up with rising exposure."

Scientists on the Nobel-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) say the impacts of global warming are already perceptible.

For this century, they predict storms that could become more violent and frequent and more floods and droughts, as weather systems are changed by the planet's warmer surface.

Presenting the report, Andrew Maskrey of the UN's International Strategy for Disaster Reduction explained why risk was not evenly spread among all countries.

Risk depends not only on the weather but how people are exposed to such events and whether governments are prepared to deal with the threat and have the means to do so, he told a press conference.

For instance, people who migrate to fast-growing cities in search of a better life can be cruelly exposed to storms and floods if their only housing is shanty huts with no drainage, said Maskrey.

"Climate change is going to magnify risk but it's also going to magnify risk because of increasing hazard and decreasing resilience," he said.

He gave the example of Japan and the Philippines. Japan has 22.5 million people who are exposed to cyclones each year while the Philippines has 16 million. But the annual cyclone death toll in the Philippines is 17 times that of Japan.

Maskrey said 97 percent of losses related to disasters were weather-related, and only three percent were caused by earthquakes, tsunamis or volcanic eruptions.

Massive storms may grab the world headlines, but a worrying trend is the rise in disasters of a lesser magnitude that may hit only at regional level, he added.

"There has been a doubling in climate-related reports at local level since the 1980s, and more importantly, a quintupling in the housing damage associated with these frequent, low intensity loss reports," he said.

"This is the kind of under-the-radar-screen picture you don't pick up just by looking at Hurricane Katrina, Cyclone Nagis, and occasional large-scale events. This is really what is happening on the ground."

Climate change worsens disaster risks for poor: U.N.
Alister Doyle, Reuters 11 Jun 09;

BONN, Germany (Reuters) - Climate change will aggravate natural disasters and people in developing nations such as Dominica, Vanuatu, Myanmar and Guatemala are most at risk, a U.N.-backed study showed Thursday.

It urged governments to invest hundreds of billions of dollars to curb mounting impacts of hazards such as cyclones, floods, droughts, landslides, earthquakes and tsunamis.

"Risk is ... felt most acutely by people living in poor rural areas and slums," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon wrote in the report, issued on the sidelines of June 1-12 U.N. climate talks in Bonn working on a new treaty to combat global warming.

"Climate change will magnify the uneven distribution of risk, skewing disaster impacts even further toward poor communities in developing countries," the Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction said.

Andrew Maskrey, lead author of the report, said that developing countries with big populations -- led by China, India, Bangladesh and Indonesia -- suffered the most fatalities from natural disasters.

"But you also have to look at it in relative terms -- the proportion of the population at risk," he told a news conference. By that yardstick, those at risk were "mainly small countries -- many small islands ... and small countries."

The list was topped by Dominica in the Caribbean, Vanuatu in the Pacific along with Myanmar and Guatemala.

AFRICAN

In those nations, risks of an individual dying from cyclones, floods, earthquakes or landslides were close to one in 10,000 per year. The survey did not account for risks of droughts, which would have boosted hazards for African states.

According to the report, the safest places to avoid natural disasters include Saudi Arabia, Oman, Belgium and Britain.

"Wealthier countries are not immune, as bush fires in Australia reminded us so tragically at the start of this year," Ban wrote.

"Risk is increasing globally even without climate change," the report said, largely because of a rising global population with people living in vulnerable areas such as flood plains.

The number of people living in squatter settlement -- most exposed to risks such as storms or floods -- was 1 billion and rising by 25 million a year.

Illustrating risks in developing nations, Maskrey said 17 times as many people died in the Philippines from cyclones than in Japan, even though the number of people living in vulnerable areas was similar.

And he said governments should take more account of disaster planning.

Converting mangroves into shrimp farms could make coasts more vulnerable to storm surges, he said. Draining wetlands to build houses curbs the ability of soils to regulate floods. Deforestation loosened soil and added to risks of landslides.

Needed investments to disaster-proof economies totaled hundreds of billions of dollars, he told Reuters.

"Often poor countries say 'we can't afford disaster risk reduction'," he said. His advice was "rather than build 100 schools which will fall down in the next cyclone or earthquake, build 80 to disaster risk standards."


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Climate pledges bound to breach key warming target: scientists

Yahoo News 11 Jun 09;

BONN, Germany (AFP) – Pledges currently on the table at the UN climate talks will doom Earth to a warming of more than two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit), a figure that has been widely endorsed as a safe limit, scientists said on Thursday.

Warming "is virtually certain to exceed 2 C" (3.6 F) compared to pre-industrial times, said their assessment of national positions.

The study was published online by the British science journal Nature as a new 12-day round of negotiations was in its penultimate day.

There is no scientific consensus on what constitutes a safe level of warming.

However, the 2 C (3.6 F) goal has been described by the UN's Nobel-winning panel of climate experts as the only practical option for inflicting the least damage to Earth's climate system.

The figure lies at the heart of efforts to craft a new pact in Copenhagen in December for tackling climate change in decades to come.

It has been enshrined as an objective by more than 100 countries, including the 27 nations of the European Union (EU).

The new analysis looks at chances of hitting the 2 C (3.6 F) target, based on the calculation that developed countries would cut their emissions of heat-trapping gases by 25-40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020, and to 50-80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050.

Developing countries, for their part, would have to reduce their emissions by between 15 and 30 percent by 2020 compared with a "business-as-usual" trend.

"Business as usual" means a rise in emissions by 2020 that would occur through expected economic growth, but without any measures to mitigate the gas.

On both counts, though, the news is dire.

Promises or discernible actions sketched so far at the talks show the world is on track for smashing the 2 C (3.6 F) ceiling, the study said.

Rich countries' positions amount to cuts "in the range of eight to 14 percent" by 2020 over 1990, rising to 57-63 percent by 2050 over 1990 "if current positions were faithfully implemented," it said.

Developing countries would be on track for a reduction of four percent by 2020 compared with business as usual.

As a result, global industrial emissions would be roughly double 1990 levels by 2050.

This pathway "has virtually no chance of limiting warming to 2 C" (3.6 F), said the study, authored by a team from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impacts Research in Germany.

In 2007, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicted warming of 1.1-6.4 C (1.98-11.52 F) by 2100 compared to 1980-99 levels.

Heatwaves, rainstorms, tropical cyclones and surges in sea level were among the events expected to become more frequent, more widespread or more intense, depending on the temperature rise.

That report sketched three scenarios for policymakers, although none was a recommendation.

The most ambitious would limit carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations in the atmosphere to 450 parts per million (ppm), equivalent to a roughly 2 C (3.6 F) warming.

Before the Industrial Revolution, CO2 concentrations were 280 ppm; in 2007, they were nearly 385 ppm.

To reach 450 ppm would require emissions cuts of 25-40 percent by industrialised countries by 2020 over 1990 and by 80-95 percent by 2050. There would have to be a "substantial" deviation from business-as-usual by developing countries, the IPCC said, without giving a figure.

Reducing emissions has become a fiercely-contested issue because of the cost of easing use of oil, gas and coal, the cheap and abundant "fossil" fuels that meet most of the world's energy needs.

Pressure is rising for an early fix because temperatures have already risen by around 0.8 C (1.4 F), causing worrying glacier melt, snow loss and retreating permafrost.

On top of that, 0.6 C (1.1 F) has to be factored in from past emissions that have yet to have an effect because of the inertia of the climate system. This leaves very little room for further emissions.


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Two Developments Climate Negotiators Should Heed

Gary Gardner, Worldwatch Institute 10 Jun 09;

Two news items from opposite ends of the carbon cycle are potentially hopeful signs for our planet's climate - and in principle could have a positive bearing on the international climate change negotiations in Copenhagen, Denmark, this December.

The Wall Street Journal on Friday reported on a U.S. Geological Survey report [PDF] suggesting that economically extractable coal reserves in the United States, typically measured at some 240 years' worth, could be substantially less abundant than previously thought - perhaps only half the estimated reserves.

"We really can't say we're the Saudi Arabia of coal anymore," the head of the study told the Journal. The news is consistent with the findings of a 2007 National Research Council study and is similar to other reports of overestimates of economically recoverable coal reserves in other countries.

If King Coal's crown is tarnished, what impact will this have on U.S. climate negotiations? Will negotiators be less likely to view coal as a core long-term energy source, and therefore more inclined to accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels? Or will coal interests pressure the government to fight harder to protect coal, in order to capture the likely increase in the value of a declining resource? Will the more limited view of coal supplies increase or decrease the prospects for carbon sequestration technology? How will it change the U.S. negotiating relationship vis-à-vis China, the world's largest holder of coal?

At the opposite side of the carbon cycle, the United Nations Environment Programme released an interesting report [PDF] on the potential of the world's forests, farmland, and peatland to soak up atmospheric carbon.

Among the findings: "Reducing deforestation rates by 50 percent by 2050 and then maintaining them at this level until 2100 would avoid the direct release of up to 50 Gt of carbon this century, equivalent to 12 percent of the emissions reductions needed to keep atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide below 450 ppm."

The report also found that the agricultural sector could be essentially carbon neutral by 2030 if sustainable management practices were followed, echoing the findings of a Worldwatch Institute report issued last week. But achieving this carbon "sponging" potential requires a conservation approach to agriculture, forests, and peatland. Will conservation issues - less sexy than carbon sequestration and other technological fixes - receive the attention they deserve at Copenhagen?

Less coal and more carbon sponges are potentially good news for climate stabilization. But neither development is automatically an assist to the climate. Negotiators will have to do the heavy lifting to leverage these developments into climate-friendly commitments and policies.

Gary Gardner is a senior researcher at the Worldwatch Institute, an environmental research organization based in Washington, D.C.


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