Best of our wild blogs: 18 Oct 09


Malayan Nature Society and friends triumph at Tioman - Tioman Airport Extension Off
from MNS Marine Group, Selangor Branch

Next trip to Chek Jawa Boardwalk - 31 Oct 2009 (Saturday)
from Adventures with the Naked Hermit Crabs

A Great Day Out
from Life's Indulgences

Struttin’ along the beach
from Otterman speaks

Godzilla!
from Manta Blog

Whitehead’s Broadbill nest
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Dusky Broadbill and dragon’s-scale fern
from Bird Ecology Study Group

What is the value of our marine ecosystems?
from wild shores of singapore


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Two frozen tigers seized in Vietnam: newspapers

Yahoo News 17 Oct 09;

HANOI (AFP) – Environmental authorities have seized two frozen tigers in Vietnam, where only a few dozen of the animals remain in the wild, state-linked media said Saturday.

The tigers, weighing 40 and 90 kilograms (88 and 198 pounds) were discovered Friday in a suburban district of Hanoi, said the Thanh Nien newspaper.

At least four people, including the driver of a taxi transporting the animals, have been arrested pending investigations, the paper said.

Police and forest rangers in Hanoi were not available for comment Saturday.

The Tuoi Tre newspaper said one of the accused told police they bought the tigers south of Hanoi in Thanh Hoa province and were bringing them to the capital for sale at the price of two million dong (111 dollars) per kilogram.

There have been at least three similar seizures in Hanoi this year.

Tigers are listed as a protected and endangered species under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora that Vietnam is a party to.

Asia's rapid urbanisation has threatened the natural habitat of tigers, which are also hunted for fur and body parts used in traditional Chinese medicine.


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Gorilla warfare: The battle to save one of Africa's rarest animals

Half of the world's remaining mountain gorillas live in Eastern Congo's Virunga National Park. Now a battle is being fought between the park rangers who protect these extraordinary animals and the criminal gangs who are burning down their habitat around them

Daniel Howden, The Independent 17 Oct 09;

The sound of the first crack stops the patrol dead. Halfway up the 3,407 metres of the Nyiragongo volcano, the rangers fan out in the direction of the chopping noise, leaving the path of shattered lava for the dense forest, assault rifles at the ready.

For a few minutes, the silence is broken only by the sharp reports of blade on wood. Then a confusion of voices, followed quickly by the sound of bodies crashing through the undergrowth towards us. The one ranger remaining on the path has no rifle so instead draws a machete. There is no way to know who or what is coming.

The footfalls veer away from us and down, then the first of the rangers emerges with a prisoner on the path above. Lying on his back on the sharp black rock is a barefoot young man; his two friends have escaped but his arms are being bound with his own belt. He is one of what are known as "carbonisateurs", the footsoldiers of a huge and lucrative illegal trade in charcoal that is threatening the survival of Africa's oldest national park.

It's a criminal network that thrives on the extraordinary misery stretched out among the valleys of Eastern Congo below, where "choppers" like this youngster are joined by "cooks", who feed the old-growth trees of Virunga National Park into earthen ovens, and the human "mules" who transport the 80lb sacks of charcoal on their own backs. The trade generates an estimated £20 million a year, money that goes to the corrupt officials who turn a blind eye to it and the renegade government soldiers and rebel armies who sell their protection.

These cutters cannot have been working alone and the rangers want to know where the kiln is. The forlorn man, who refuses to give his name, is clad in a filthy sweat-stained shirt with "Rooney" on the back. He gestures up the slope to where the clouds meet the volcano's rim. The march begins again, a steep climb up a channel burnt through the forest by the rivers of lava that poured from Nyiragongo when it last erupted in 2002.

Once again there is a signal for silence and lead ranger Bosco Hakizimnana veers off the rock and into the trees, running in a crouch. He emerges into a "clear-cut", an acre in size, with panicked people running in all directions.

At the centre of the clearing is the smouldering black dome of the kiln, standing above head height. Beneath the mound of packed, burnt earth, the trunks and branches of the protected forest are being slowly carbonised.

Of the dozen or so people rounded up by the rangers, there is only one man – the "cook" who was feeding the oven. The rest are women and children, dressed in rags – the human mules who will carry back-breaking loads two hours' trek down the mountain to the road below. Wandering in circles in the smoke is a child who can be no more than eight years old with a baby bound to his back. Many of the women are soldiers' wives, sent by their husbands, who know that the park authorities cannot arrest them.

The rangers smash the sides of the kiln and the dirt gives way to reveal the skeleton of tree limbs below. As oxygen reaches into the oven, flames consume the wood giving it the appearance of a funeral pyre. There is no time to mourn lost money or habitat. Hakizimnana is concerned that those who have escaped have gone to fetch their protectors. "We may be ambushed on the way back down," he warns.

The mules in plastic sandals are loaded with the "evidence" – lumps of charcoal that lie scattered in all directions, turning the forest floor into an open hearth.

The descending path is punctuated by dozens more clearings, like angry black scars on the face of Nyiragongo. Here and there are signs of better times, wooden steps dug into the hillside, and in one of the openings the crumpled wreckage of a few chairs. They are all that remains of what used to be a resting station when the volcano would attract tourists who paid more than £100 a time to climb to the rim and camp in view of the lava lake inside. The route has been closed since 2007, when the carbonisateurs overseen by the FDLR – a rogue army of Rwandan Hutus made up of veterans from the genocidal Interhamwe militia who fled across the border – moved into the area.

When the rag-tag caravan finally emerges at the rangers' station at Kibati the women are made to sit in a circle. Hakizimnana delivers a stern lecture telling them that the park "belongs to all of Congo" and that they must find other ways to feed their families. He finishes by asking them what they will do "when the forest is gone?"

this is a question that haunts Emmanuel de Merode. The boyish-looking 38-year-old is the director of Virunga National Park, probably the hardest job in conservation anywhere in the world. "We are losing as much as 15 per cent of the forest every year so we don't have a lot of time," he says.

And yet at first glance he seems to work in a veritable Garden of Eden. The park headquarters at the hill station of Rumangabo look out over patchwork slopes of banana thickets that seem to shine with fertility. The distant horizon is punctuated by the emerald cones of more than half a dozen volcanoes. Blue monkeys call to each other from the treetops and larger black and white colobus apes loll in the branches around de Merode's office, while patrols of chimpanzees occasionally pass through the grounds.

The park has an almost surreal cast of rare and endangered animals – from the okapi and forest buffaloes to the hippos of Lake Albert and the savvana elephant herds of Rwindi. It has more endemic species than any other park in Africa and more bird, mammal and reptile species too. And in the foothills of Virunga's volcanoes, where the mist meets the tree line, the park's most spectacular residents can be found. Half of the more than 700 mountain gorillas left in the wild live in the Virunga range.

"There is no other park in the world like this," de Merode says with conviction. And certainly none that faces the same existential threats.

The 30,000 square miles of what was established as the Albert Park in 1925 also mark out a corridor of unrivalled human misery. The reserve is both hideout and theatre of operations for a host of rebel armies, including the notorious FDLR and the bizarre and brutal child soldiers of the Mai Mai. The Hutu militia are being hunted down by the largely unpaid and undisciplined Congolese army who have been blamed for an appalling litany of human-rights abuses.

The park is hemmed in, too, by an estimated 600,000 internal refugees, camped on its fringes, the human fallout from years of relentless instability and civil war. And to the south of Virunga is the slum city of Goma, whose population has swollen to three-quarters of a million people.

De Merode, an anthropologist by training, who has been working in the Democratic Republic of Congo for 16 years, was a passionate critic of the way Virunga Park was run, until last year when the government turned to the Belgian and in his words said: "If you're going to criticise, show us you can do better."

"As a conservationist, to be given overall responsibility for Virunga ..." his voice trails off then comes back rapidly: "It's the greatest national park on the continent and it's in serious trouble. If you are serious about conservation then you have no choice."

His predecessor at the Institut Congolais pour la Conservacion de la Nature (ICCN), Honore Mashagiro, is now in jail after being convicted of orchestrating the killing of seven gorillas under his protection in 2007. Pictures of the murdered silverback (or troop leader) Senkwekwe being carried on a litter by mourning villagers made headlines around the world. The subsequent investigation led back to charcoal money and it emerged that the park director had ordered the executions as a warning to rangers threatening to disrupt the trade by protecting the forest.

The chaos and poverty of North Kivu has left 98 per cent of the people there dependant on charcoal. It's their only source of fuel, what they use to cook and to boil water. Even if there was a way to do so, de Merode explains, you cannot simply close down the charcoal trade, it would cause an immediate humanitarian crisis. "We cannot deprive the population of Goma of energy even if it costs us the park," he says. "Without boiled water there would be a cholera epidemic that would dwarf what we saw last year. You would have an immediate, massive crisis."

The rangers raids into the charcoal-harvesting areas, where they have destroyed hundreds of kilns and made scores of arrests, are designed instead to "squeeze supply" and make a show of strength to the traffickers.

What's needed in the meantime is an alternative fuel – and in the workshops at Rumangabo, the Belgian and his team may have found it. While this time last year the rest of the world was waiting for the forces of renegade General Laurent Nkunda to overrun Goma, de Merode was testing technology designed in South Africa to produce "biomass briquettes". Made from a compost of plant waste (like rice husks) they look like rings pressed from animal dung. Now that Nkunda is under house arrest across the border in Rwanda and an uneasy truce prevails in much of North Kivu, the briquette plan is being rolled out at extraordinary speed.

On a whirlwind tour of the factory set up to manufacture the presses at Rumangabo, the park director is a man in a hurry: "You have to take advantage of periods of relative peace," he says. "In Congo things come back to life quickly and if you work with that things happen fast."

In the afternoon sun, dozens of the wooden presses are being varnished and branded with the ICCN stamp. Together with the rest of the kit to start making briquettes, they cost £190 a piece and are being given to the communities around the park.

Local Congolese get everything they need to build a small briquette factory – two days' training, the kit and six months' follow-up support. In return they commit to producing at least four sacks per week, otherwise the press is given to someone else. In return the park guarantees it will buy the briquettes produced at a fixed price, and then sell them on to the market.

The speed with which things can change here is nowhere clearer than in Kiwanja, 15 miles north of Rumangabo. During last year's fighting the small town was the scene of an appalling massacre. In the space of two days in November, 150 people, most of them young men, were summarily executed by fighters from General Nkunda's CNDP.

Shabani Kabemba, now aged 45, remembers the soldiers going from house to house. "It was death," he recalls. "I thought I would die at any time." In the end, he survived but seven of friends were not so lucky and his family was forced to flee to Goma.

Now they have come back and underneath a mango tree in Kabemba's backyard they are pressing briquettes. "Before, my wife went to the forest to get firewood every day," he continues. "But in the bush there are soldiers who can take her."

This new family business is churning out three sacks a day which ICCN buys from them for about £4.50 each. Spread out among the baked-earth gardens and tin shacks of Kiwanja there are now 250 presses at work, and a waiting list of people wanting more.

Three thousand kits have been given out so far and the bulk of production is being sold on to international organisations running the camps for displaced people. There are plans afoot to set up a drying warehouse in Goma – and remarkably, by this time next year, the dung-coloured discs will be the largest employer in North Kivu if the expansion continues. In its report earlier this year, the influential UN panel of experts cited the briquettes as one of four key initiatives to stabilise the entire region.

"The briquettes aren't a success story yet," says de Merode, in the measured tones of someone not wanting to tempt fate. "But something interesting is happening."

the rutted road from Goma to Rutshuru, trodden by the feet of more than a million refugees, draws a line between the two sides of Virunga Park.

The southern sector is dominated by the gently rising contours of Nyamulagira volcano. The green canopy that rolls down from its summit looks unbroken from a distance. Only the grey columns of smoke that climb from the unseen kilns below the tree line warn of what Innocent Mburanumwe calls the "charcoal war" being fought to save the park and the wildlife it contains.

The head of the Nyamulagira sector, he has been shot at by government soldiers and besieged at his own headquarters for arresting carbonisateurs and he has seen dozens of his rangers killed, the last of them shot dead by poachers in August."We are losing the forest," he says and when it is gone the charcoal harvesters will cross the road into the Mikeno sector. Already the tendrils of smoke are beginning to climb the tallest of the volcanoes, creeping towards the gorillas.

A waist-high wall built from volcanic rocks is all that marks the perimiter of Mikeno. Beyond it, the old paths are overgrown and a steep ascent of jagged rock and thick red mud leads into a jungle which closes in overhead and has to be hacked open with a machete.

A network of bamboo thickets that dot the slopes offer breathing space in the claustrophobic vegetation, like yellowing summer pavilions with umbrella-shaped roofs of canes. And scattered across the carpet of dried leaves are the empty yellow husks of bamboo shoots, the gorillas' favourite food.

Nearby branches as thick as human arms have been broken with scarcely credible force and fashioned delicately into "night nests" padded with soft leaves.

Then a clumsy crashing noise announces the presence of Virunga's most charismatic animals. A juvenile male has tested his weight against the strength of a sapling and won with a snap. He lands in an effortless roll, like a black ball, unfurls himself and stretches. A mother scampers hurriedly past trailing an infant behind her, who gawks at the newcomers with huge eyes bulging in a tiny face.

A hollow rattle of a beaten chest sounds from beyond a wall of vegetation. A flurry of unseen movement shakes the jungle floor. Then a face appears. His flared nostrils catch the light beneath an endless forehead and the dense black fur of his immense shoulders gives way to a silvery grey that runs the length of his saddle-shaped back.

Kabirizi is the leader one of the two largest gorilla groups in the world, the dominant male in a family of 34 great apes. He rolls forward with terrifying speed to inspect his visitors at close quarters. Reassured of his authority, the 450-pound silverback returns to the shade of his bamboo pavilion.

His nervousness is understandable. War has already touched this family and the previous silverback was killed by Rwandan soldiers fleeing across the mountain in the wake of the 1994 genocide. And the sad truth is that – despite his immense strength and the life-or-death efforts of the park rangers he has come to accept cautiously into his family – Kabirizi is still not safe.


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The fight against Malta's illegal bird hunt

BBC News 17 Oct 09;

Malta is an important way-point for birds migrating between Europe and Africa. But the spring and autumn migrations attract illegal hunters, who pick off the birds as they fly overhead. There has been a huge rise in illegal hunting in recent years, prompting conservationist group BirdLife Malta to set up camps to deter illegal hunters. Volunteer Steve Butler reports on his experiences at this year's camp.

It's 0545 and I am sitting on the edge of a cliff overlooking a valley at Mtahleb with my team of fellow volunteers, waiting for the sun to rise.

I strain my eyes to distinguish the figures moving around in the darkness of the surrounding countryside.

As we listen to the dogs barking and the sound of gunshots echoing around the hills, we wonder how the hunters can see the birds at this hour, never mind shoot them.

In the first light we start to discern the hunters' dogs running in and out of the bushes to flush out quail and turtle dove. One is successful: a turtle dove leaves the tree, we hear shouting and see a hunter raise his gun towards the bird which has flown directly in front of us.

In Malta, hunting licences allow the shooting of turtle dove, quail, woodcock and duck. There is a loud gunshot and we instinctively drop to the floor. As the bird plummets and lead rains down beside us, we wonder if it was skill or fluke that prevented the hunter from shooting one of us by mistake in his frenzy to kill the bird.

The sound of lead periodically sprinkling down around us throughout the early morning is quite unnerving and we are pleased when the sun has finally risen.

Black storks downed

I pack away my binoculars and prepare to head back to camp for breakfast. It has been an uneventful morning for my team - no illegal hunting activity and no protected species to record.

On other days, we are fortunate enough to see the migration of many birds of prey - including kestrels, honey buzzards and marsh harriers - as well as large flocks of herons and even the occasional black stork.

The birds follow three main paths to migrate between the continents:

* East over the Bosporus and Turkey
* West over Gibraltar
* South over Italy and the central Mediterranean islands, including the Maltese archipelago

Sadly during my volunteering, I have witnessed many protected birds being shot down by Maltese hunters.

The previous morning we had uncovered the bodies of 201 protected birds in the Mizieb woodland. We then failed to protect two black storks.

We made our presence known, but the hunters clearly felt the storks were a prize worth the risk.

With every hillside lined with hunters, the large, majestic birds did not stand a chance as they slowly circled overhead, looking for a spot to roost for the night.

Three extinct species

Despite these setbacks, I feel as volunteers, we do make a difference to the problem of illegal hunting in Malta.

There are many situations in which I think if we were not here in our bright red BirdLife shirts, these special birds would almost certainly have been killed.

"While BirdLife's position is not anti-hunting, there is a very serious problem with illegal hunting in Malta, which dates back many years," says Geoff Saliba of BirdLife Malta.

"Three species have gone extinct in the Maltese islands as a result of illegal hunting - the peregrine falcon, the barn owl and the jackdaw."

One legal hunter (who asked not to be named) has spoken out against illegal hunting in Malta.

"Illegal hunters are destroying the sport I have enjoyed since a child with my grandfather and father," he says.

He adds that the illegal shooting of birds he witnesses on a daily basis is "heartbreaking".

"The youngsters that are doing this do not understand hunting, it is not in their blood, they just want to shoot at anything that flies," he adds.

"Sometimes you see them chasing protected birds in their cars or on motorbikes."

Bird cemetery

The unnamed hunter feels the government needs to make more effort to eradicate illegal hunters by taking measures such as confiscating gun licences.

A recent ruling by the European Court has criticised the Maltese government for allowing the hunting of dove and quail during the spring seasons of 2004 - 2007.

The ruling, which has been welcomed by BirdLife, stated that the Maltese government was at fault for not complying with EU birds' directive.

Throughout this autumn's bird migration, even in light of the discovery of the
in Mizieb, the shooting of the black storks and numerous other protected species, the Maltese government has so far failed to comment.

With under-resourced law enforcement and a culture of fear amongst those against illegal hunting, it seems that, for the time-being, BirdLife Malta and its international volunteers could be the birds' best hope.


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Pebble toad's rock and roll life

Matt Walker, BBC News 15 Oct 09;

When confronted by a predator, some animals fight, others run while a few hide, hoping not to be noticed.

The pebble toad of Venezuela does something altogether different: it curls up like a ball and throws itself down the side of a mountain.
By doing so, the tiny creature bounces down the rocks just like a rubber ball.

This extraordinary tumbling behaviour has been filmed in slow motion by a BBC crew for the natural history programme Life.

The pebble toad ( Oreophrynella niger ) is tiny, measuring just a few centimetres long.



It lives on the top of a type of mountain known as a tepui, which occur across the Guiana Highlands in South America.

These table-topped mountains rise out of the rainforest, isolating the animals and plants that live upon them.

As a result, many of the creatures have evolved differently.

For example, the pebble toad is unable to jump very far, an inch being the furthest it can hop.

While there are no snakes living on the tepui, this lack of athletic prowess makes the toads vulnerable to marauding tarantulas, an ambush predator.

The ball position

So the toads have evolved a unique escape mechanism.

A threatened toad folds its arms and legs under its body, tucks in its head and tenses its muscles, assuming a "ball position".

Because the amphibian is mostly likely resting on an incline, it then rolls downhill like a dislodged pebble.

The toads travel far enough to escape the attentions of the tarantulas and often tumble into a crack or crevice where they are out of sight or difficult to reach.

The toad's black and grey colour also helps it blend in with its sandstone habitat.

The toad is so small and light that the forces of impact are too tiny to cause it any harm.

However, as well as being less than impressive jumpers, the toads do not swim well.

So while most that land in puddles survive, there are reports of toads drowning after tumbling into deeper pools of water.

The team located the toads with the help of biologist Dr Bruce Means, an Adjunct Professor at Florida State University, US and head of a non-profit conservation organisation called the Coastal Plains Institute and Land Conservancy, based in Florida.

Dr Means ventured up the tepui, located in southeast Venezuela, to find the toads.

assistant producer Mr Scott and cameraman Mr Rod Clarke then followed a few days later to film the action, using slow motion cameras capable of recording up to 2000 frames per second.

"The first time I saw one of the toads on a rock one morning, we saw each other, and I made some sudden movement, and it flicked itself back and flopped down into a channel at the bottom of the rock," says Mr Scott.

"We'd been told they do this thing and then it did it to me. It was an unusual thing to see at the top of a mountain. They just curl up and flop."

The tumbling pebble toad can be seen on the BBC series Life, which is broadcast at 2100BST on BBC One on Monday 19 October.


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Bangladesh fights for survival against climate change

William Wheeler, Anna-Katarina Gravgaard and Ashish Kumar Sen
The Washington Times 18 Oct 09;

NOAKHALI, Bangladesh | After his home slipped into the powerful currents of the Meghna River four years ago, Monoranjab Dus came looking for new land along this waterlogged stretch of coastline slowly emerging from the sea.

"I lost my home to river erosion," said Mr. Dus, 50, standing barefoot on a squishy riverbank where he was fishing crabs from gray-brown mud, with the consistency of wet plaster. Behind him stretched a field of bright green rice shoots. "I was bound to come here."

Good land is hard to come by in Bangladesh, a low-lying developing nation that is one of the most densely populated — and vulnerable to climate change — countries in the world. River erosion alone displaces more than 50,000 families each year.

But the swift currents that course down from the Himalayas also bring opportunity: a rich bath of fertile silt that, when it reaches the Bay of Bengal, settles along the coast, gradually forming new land called "chars." The district of Noakhali has actually gained more than 28 square miles of land in the past 50 years.

The Bangladeshi government is finishing up the largest phase of a decades-long effort to develop nearby chars as well as building a new dam to speed up the process of creating new land for settlers like Mr. Dus.

"The Bangladeshi rivers carry silt unlike any others and an intervention is all that is needed to create new land," said S.R. Khan, a government water engineer. "Bangladesh is the only country in the world that can physically grow."

That process begins when the silt from the swirling, tea-colored waters begins to gather in mud flats that gradually rise above the sea. Without intervention, the process takes more than 20 years, after which the forest department plants mangroves to hold the fragile land.

But often people can't wait that long. For decades settlers have been moving in early on their own. Mr. Dus had heard the government was distributing land in 1.5 acre allotments. So, like many settlers, he staked an appropriately sized parcel, cut down the 3-foot mangroves growing on the land and dug a small pond for bathing.

His life is a daily struggle with the elements. The coast is soaked by tidal surge and battered by seasonal cyclones like the one that killed more than 3,000 Bangladeshis in 2007 and one last spring that destroyed Mr. Dus' home.

"This is lowland," he explained. "People here are suffering a lot."

Bangladesh is extremely vulnerable to sea-level rise, as well as increased storm intensity, floods, droughts and other consequences of climate change. This environmental scenario illuminates the paradox confronting much of the developing world, in which nations that contribute few emissions are disproportionately burdened by climate change, without the money or technology that industrialized nations have to mitigate its impacts.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), an organization created by the United Nations two decades ago to study the human impact on climate trends, predicts South Asia will be particularly hard hit.

For example, the IPCC says the region can expect an increase in monsoon rainfall, resulting in higher water levels in the rivers. The situation will be compounded by melting Himalayan glaciers. Eventually, sea levels will also rise.

Keya Chatterjee, U.S. acting director of the World Wildlife Fund's Climate Change Program, said low-lying countries such as Bangladesh are already experiencing devastating effects from climate change.

"They are terrified about what will happen when we begin to experience the additional warming that the planet is already locked into, based on previous and existing pollution," she said, adding, "They are even more terrified of what will happen if the world does not aggressively pursue a global clean-energy economy."

Bangladesh is among a group of nations that have been closely watching the U.S. Senate debate on climate change since 2005. These countries are counting on that debate to come out in favor of their survival before the Copenhagen climate summit in December.

About 190 nations will meet in the Danish capital for a final round of negotiations on a new climate treaty to replace the Kyoto Protocol, which expires in 2012.

In the meantime, the government of Bangladesh is implementing a sophisticated climate adaptation program that helps local communities become more resilient to the effects of climate change and prioritizes interventions in the most vulnerable communities.

Bangladeshis are developing climate-resistant seed varieties for their crops, introducing state-of-the-art early-warning systems for extreme events and identifying the most vulnerable communities, but they lack the resources to fully implement these programs.

A government report, "Bangladesh Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan 2008," notes that the government has, over the past 35 years, invested more than $10 billion to make the country less vulnerable to natural disasters. These investments include flood-management schemes, coastal polders — low-lying reclaimed land protected by dikes — cyclone and flood shelters, and the raising of roads and highways above flood level.

In the worst-case scenario, the report said, unless existing coastal polders are strengthened and new ones built, sea-level rise could result in the displacement of millions of people from coastal regions, and have huge adverse impacts on the livelihoods and long-term health of a large proportion of the population.

Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Dipu Moni told editors and reporters of The Washington Times last month that rising oceans from climate change could swallow up to a third of her country and make 20 million people homeless without urgent action to reduce carbon emissions.

"We are working with very limited resources, and we need support from the international community. We do have expectations for Copenhagen," she said.

Silt accretion could provide some relief.

"Our understanding is that the process of siltation, particularly when you are supporting it through creating dams, that the process is much faster than the increase in sea levels," said Alphons Hennekens, the Netherlands' ambassador to Bangladesh. The Dutch, experienced in river management, support many of the river projects in Bangladesh.

With Dutch funding, the Bangladeshi government began to help develop older chars in the late 1970s, and the effort has since become a multiagency operation building roads, culverts, embankments, cyclone shelters, toilets and ponds, as well as distributing land to settlers. By fall 2010, the program will have allotted some 27,000 acres to 21,000 families.

Several months ago, 32-year-old Zhakia Begums was granted a deed to land on a higher char nearby, where she has been living for 12 years, since she lost her home to river erosion.

"Before we were always a little fearful," she said, "now we know this is our land."

Her property abuts a mud embankment on one side and a small pond on the other. Coconut trees grow in the sun-dappled yard where her husband raises chickens.

Together, they run a small restaurant for local fishermen. Behind their house sits a school on concrete stilts, which doubles as a cyclone shelter.

For his part, Mr. Dus and others want what Mrs. Begums has: shelter, wells, deeds, roads — so that he can get his crabs more easily to market — and an embankment to protect his crops.

But the char that Mr. Dus calls home is still young, not yet safely above the reach of the tides. On its own, it will take another six to seven years before it is eligible for the governments development program, said Zainal Abedin from the government's Char Development and Settlement Project.

Next year, work will begin on a dam expected to create 46 square miles of new land to the west. The most recent plans have also proposed a dam here in Noakhali that could create as much as 350 square miles in Mr. Dus' backyard. The proposed dam, said Mr. Abedin, could also speed up the maturation of Mr. Dus' land by three to four years.

The idea that silt accretion can provide at least a partial solution to the crisis has yet to convince all the critics.

"This deposition process is a very slow process," said Atiq Rahman, director of the Bangladeshi Center for Advanced Studies. "It's not that simple, it doesn't just happen automatically."

Mr. Rahman said more attention from the international community should go to the countrys immediate natural disaster needs and mitigating the increased cyclones, floods and erosions expected as the planet continues to warm.

Analysts say there are limits to the solutions Bangladeshis can engineer on their own, particularly on top of the food security and poverty crises they already face.

"We have a moral obligation to provide support to help them prepare for the effects of climate change that they are experiencing, as well as to stop the pollution that is making these impacts worse," said Ms. Chatterjee. "For countries like Bangladesh and the Marshall Islands this is not a climate change debate, but a debate about their survival."

Along Bangladeshs uncertain coastline, survival seems a day-to-day affair. With more development, however, Mr. Dus said he thinks he can do more than just survive. With some help, he said, he can build a life on the land hes found.

"If the government builds an embankment," Mr. Dus said, "this land will sustain us."

• Ashish Kumar Sen contributed to this report from Washington.

• This story was reported in part with a grant from the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.


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Maldives government dives for climate change

Olivia Lang, Associated Press Yahoo News 18 Oct 09;

GIRIFUSHI, Maldives – Members of the Maldives' Cabinet donned scuba gear and used hand signals Saturday at an underwater meeting staged to highlight the threat of global warming to the lowest-lying nation on earth.
President Mohammed Nasheed and 13 other government officials submerged and took their seats at a table on the sea floor — 20 feet (6 meters) below the surface of a lagoon off Girifushi, an island usually used for military training.

With a backdrop of coral, the meeting was a bid to draw attention to fears that rising sea levels caused by the melting of polar ice caps could swamp this Indian Ocean archipelago within a century. Its islands average 7 feet (2.1 meters) above sea level.

"What we are trying to make people realize is that the Maldives is a frontline state. This is not merely an issue for the Maldives but for the world," Nasheed said.

As bubbles floated up from their face masks, the president, vice president, Cabinet secretary and 11 ministers signed a document calling on all countries to cut their carbon dioxide emissions.

The issue has taken on urgency ahead of a major U.N. climate change conference scheduled for December in Copenhagen. At that meeting countries will negotiate a successor to the Kyoto Protocol with aims to cut the emission of greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide that scientists blame for causing global warming by trapping heat in the atmosphere.

Wealthy nations want broad emissions cuts from all countries, while poorer ones say industrialized countries should carry most of the burden.

Dozens of Maldives soldiers guarded the event Saturday, but the only intruders were groupers and other fish.

Nasheed had already announced plans for a fund to buy a new homeland for his people if the 1,192 low-lying coral islands are submerged. He has promised to make the Maldives, with a population of 350,000, the world's first carbon-neutral nation within a decade.

"We have to get the message across by being more imaginative, more creative and so this is what we are doing," he said in an interview on a boat en route to the dive site.

Nasheed, who has emerged as a key, and colorful, voice on climate change, is a certified diver, but the others had to take diving lessons in recent weeks.

Three ministers missed the underwater meeting because two were not given medical permission and another was abroad.

Maldives cabinet flags climate crisis at undersea meet
Mohamed Shahyb Yahoo News 17 Oct 09;

MALE (AFP) – The Maldives' government held an underwater cabinet meeting on Saturday in a bid to focus global attention on rising sea levels that threaten to submerge the low-lying atoll nation.

President Mohamed Nasheed plunged first into the Indian Ocean followed by his ministers, all clad in scuba gear, for the nationally televised meeting in this archipelago known as an idyllic holiday getaway for the rich.

Nasheed and his deputy, Mohamed Waheed, and a dozen ministers sat behind tables arranged in a horseshoe at a depth of six metres (20 feet) and approved a resolution urging global action to cut carbon emissions.

Tropical reef fish swam among the ministers and the nation's red and green flag with white crescent moon was planted in the seabed behind Nasheed.

After surfacing, he called for the UN's climate summit in Copenhagen in December to forge a deal to reduce carbon emissions blamed for rising sea levels that experts say could swamp the Maldives by the century's end.

"We should come out of Copenhagen with a deal that will ensure that everyone will survive," said the 42-year-old president as he bobbed in the shimmering turquoise waters.

He said there was "less talk" during the half-hour underwater meeting, but he had managed to get more work done.

"The Maldives is a frontline state and what happens to us today will happen to others tomorrow," Nasheed said.

Asked how he felt about taking the cabinet for a splash, he replied they had all enjoyed the plunge into the clear, warm waters.

"The president, vice president, and the cabinet signed a declaration calling for concerted global action on climate change, ahead of the UN climate conference," the president's office said in a statement.

The ministers signed the resolution, printed on a white board, using water-proof markers.

They had taken diving lessons for the last two months and were accompanied by their trainers at the unprecedented underwater meeting off the islet of Girifushi.

The dive was the latest publicity stunt by the media-savvy Nasheed to focus world attention on climate change and its effects on the Maldives ahead of the Copenhagen meeting.

In 2007, the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warned that an increase in sea levels of just 18 to 59 centimetres (seven to 24 inches) would make the country virtually uninhabitable by 2100.

Nasheed, the archipelago's first democratically elected president, stunned the world last year when he announced he wanted to buy a homeland to relocate the threatened Maldives.

More than 80 percent of the the tiny nation, famed as a tourist paradise due to its coral reefs and white-sand beaches, is less than a metre (3.3 feet) above sea level.

Only Nasheed and his defence minister Ameen Faisel had any diving experience before the president came up with the plan for the underwater meeting, officials said.

Government spokeswoman Aminath Shauna said the ministers had signed their wetsuits and these would be auctioned on a protectmaldives.com website due to be launched at the weekend to raise money for coral reef protection.

"All the arrangements went ahead well," she said, adding the ministers would ride bicycles around the capital island, Male, next week as a further sign of their commitment to cutting emissions.

Maldives sends climate SOS with undersea cabinet
Maryam Omidi, Reuters 17 Oct 09;

MALE (Reuters) - The Maldivian president and ministers held the world's first underwater cabinet meeting on Saturday, in a symbolic cry for help over rising sea levels that threaten the tropical archipelago's existence.

Aiming for another attention-grabbing event to bring the risks of climate change into relief before a landmark U.N. climate change meeting in December, President Mohamed Nasheed's cabinet headed to the bottom of a turquoise lagoon.

Clad in black diving suits and masks, Nasheed, 11 ministers the vice president and cabinet secretary dove 3.8 meters (12 feet, 8 inches) to gather at tables under the crystalline waters that draw thousands of tourists to $1,000-a-night luxury resorts.

As black-and-white striped Humbug Damselfish darted around a backdrop of white coral, Nasheed gestured with his hands to start the 30-minute meeting, state TV showed.

"We are trying to send our message to let the world know what is happening and what will happen to the Maldives if climate change isn't checked," a dripping Nasheed told reporters as soon as he re-emerged from the water.

The archipelago nation off the tip of India, best-known for

luxury tropical hideaways and unspoiled beaches, is among the most threatened by rising seas. If U.N. predictions are correct, most of the low-lying Maldives will be submerged by 2100.

"SOS" MESSAGE

Nasheed and the ministers used a white plastic slate and waterproof pencils to sign an "SOS" message from the Maldives during the 30-minute meeting.

"We must unite in a world war effort to halt further temperature rises," the message said. "Climate change is happening and it threatens the rights and security of everyone on Earth."

World leaders will meet in Copenhagen to hammer out a successor agreement to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, and industrialized nations want all countries to impose sharp emissions cuts.

"We have to have a better deal. We should be able to come out with an amicable understanding that everyone survives. If Maldives can't be saved today, we do not feel that there is much of a chance for the rest of the world," he said.

The developing world wants rich countries to shoulder most of the burden, on the grounds they contributed most to the problem.

Nasheed and the cabinet trained for two weeks and were assisted by professional divers to pull off his latest eye-catching move related to climate change.

Nasheed, barely a month after entering office last year, declared he would establish a sovereign fund to relocate his country's 350,000 people if sea levels rise, but later admitted it was not feasible given the state of the Maldivian economy.

Earlier this year, he vowed to make the Maldives carbon neutral within a decade by switching to renewable energy and offsetting carbon emissions caused by tourists flying to the Maldives.

(Writing by Shihar Aneez; Editing by Bryson Hull and Alex Richardson)


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Pesticide endosulfan considered for global ban

Reuters 16 Oct 09;

GENEVA (Reuters) - Scientists took a step closer on Friday to banning the pesticide endosulfan, widely used on crops like cocoa and cotton, despite objections from India which is a major producer and consumer of the toxic chemical.

Endosulfan is under consideration for inclusion on the list of persistent organic pollutants (POPs) under the 166-member Stockholm Convention -- a treaty to protect human health and the environment from chemicals.

The Persistent Organic Pollutants Review Committee decided to draw up a risk management evaluation for endosulfan, the penultimate step to putting it on the banned list, the convention secretariat said in a statement.

Once the committee has produced the evaluation it can propose to the next meeting of the convention in May 2011 that endosulfan should be banned.

"Endosulfan is a pesticide that is still widely used on many crops such as soy, cotton, rice, and tea. It is highly toxic to humans and many other animals and has been found in the environment, including the Arctic," the statement said.

India voted against the proposal to draw up the evaluation at the meeting of the 31-member committee.

Substances are listed as POPs if they are shown to persist for long periods in the atmosphere, soil and water, increase in concentration up the food chain, travel over long distances around the globe, and are toxic.

The convention currently lists 21 chemicals as POPs, including the pesticide DDT, which can damage reproduction, mental capacity and growth, and cause cancer.

The committee also decided to prepare a risk profile of hexabromocyclododecane (HBCDD), a flame retardant, for possible listing under the convention.

But it postponed a decision on short-chained chlorinated paraffins (SCCP), used in metalworking and paint, to gather more information on how toxic it actually is.

(Reporting by Jonathan Lynn; Editing by Dominic Evans)


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Agribusiness readies technology to fight hunger

Christine Stebbins Reuters 17 Oct 09;

DES MOINES, Iowa (Reuters) - Agribusiness leaders are stepping up investment and technology to tackle world hunger and climate problems tied to agriculture, but they see no quick solution to hunger, which kills 25,000 people a day around the world.

"I'm not much of magic bullet guy and I really do believe in a multiplicity of approaches," Mark Cackler, who overseas rural poverty and agriculture programs for The World Bank, said in an interview at the World Food Prize forum on Friday.

"Each of us in our own way have the capacity, the potential and the duty to be leaders," he said.

Jeffrey Sachs, head of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, confronted Cackler and others at the annual gathering of world food industry leaders here with a challenge "in which the food sector of the world, which is the single largest sector of the world economy, is really at the heart of multiple intersecting crises."

"While there is discussion on each of these issues, I don't think we're on a trajectory of solution right now," Sachs said.

Sachs later told Reuters: "Pepsi or Monsanto or the big grain trading companies -- I want them to come to the forefront and to the lead of solving some of these problems."

"We cannot go on the way we're going and we need the food industry to say it first and foremost because we can't do this without the food industry's leadership to solve the problems."

Cackler said many participants at the forum had been discussing Sachs's critique and challenge.

"Jeff is absolutely right when he talks about the severity and the magnitude of the problem and how it's insufficiently recognized. God bless him for reminding us fervently about how serious these problems are," Cackler said.

"The fact that 25,000 people die every day of hunger and malnutrition, the fact over a billion go to bed hungry tonight is shameful," Cackler said.

But he added: "There are no magic bullets."

A FEW MORE GREEN SHOOTS?

Cackler and executives at the three-day conference pointed out areas of progress such as increases in public and private investment in areas of Africa, which along with South Asia dominates world hunger concerns.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced $120 million in grants to boost self-help efforts in agriculture in Africa and South Asia. Microsoft founder Gates told forum participants they must work together better.

"This global effort to help small farmers is endangered by an ideological wedge that threatens to split the movement in two," Gates said, citing a fight over gene-altered crops.

J.B. Penn, chief economist at equipment giant John Deere, called for more research and development funding from both the public and private sectors as well as "more investment in infrastructure around the world in rural areas like ports, storage, farm-to-market roads."

Penn also urged policy changes such as "better incentives for farmers to produce and for people to transport and process the food."

Cackler said the private sector should do more on crops and cropping systems for poor farmers in poor countries and that governments need to improve trading systems.

"Often it's not a question of direction. The direction is largely good, which is why I'm optimistic. It's the pace, and that's where I get very impatient," he said.

Indra Nooyi, chief executive of PepsiCo Inc, the world's second-largest soft drinks maker, told the conference: "It is within our power and not beyond our expertise to consign this suffering to history. We must do what we can."

Climate change complicates efforts to fight hunger.

Carl Hausmann, chief executive of global agribusiness giant Bunge's North American operations, said agriculture will need to double food production in 40 years even as it reduces its big environmental impacts on a changing climate.

"We have doubled production before but in ways that use more water, more land, more fertilizer," Hausmann said, adding that it "hasn't always been as soft on the environment as we will need to be in the future. Doubling again while using less water, less land, less crop inputs, might be an issue."

(Additional reporting by Roberta Rampton; Editing by David Gregorio)


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