Best of our wild blogs: 31 Aug 10


Chek Jawa and volunteers in the Prime Minister's National Day Rally speech from wild shores of singapore

Between tree and tide
from The annotated budak and Up her sleeve and Afoul on Mount Faber

Fivebar Swordtail @ Upper Seletar Reservoir
from Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature

Blog Log August 29, 2010
from Pulau Hantu

Sunda Pygmy Woodpeckers foraging along tree trunk
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Singapore dragonflies & their African relatives
from Creatures Big & Small

Underwater blasting next to Labrador shore
from wild shores of singapore and Reclamation at Jurong Island near natural sites

Coral reef survival depends on the super small an interview with Forest Rohwer from Mongabay.com news


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Border treaty marks new milestone in Singapore-Indonesia ties

S Ramesh Channel NewsAsia 30 Aug 10;

SINGAPORE : Singapore and Indonesia have achieved a significant milestone in bilateral ties.

They exchanged the Instruments of Ratification for the Treaty which defines the sea boundaries of the two countries in the western part of the Strait of Singapore on Monday.

The treaty was signed in March last year in Jakarta.

Negotiations started in 2005 and there were six meetings in all.

Officials said the territorial sea boundary line agreed in the treaty is a continuation of the sea boundary line signed in May 1973.

The foreign ministers of both nations said there is still one aspect which needs to be looked into.

"We have also agreed to begin the process of demarcating that stretch of our border between Changi and Batam. There is one more stretch between Pedra Branca and Bintan, but that will be done later after we have demarcated that part of the seas with Malaysia," said Singapore's Foreign Minister George Yeo.

There has been much activity in the area of Singapore-Indonesia bilateral ties this year, firstly with the Retreat meeting between Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono in May.

Both countries' foreign ministers said they plan to meet informally once every six months to update each other on the state of bilateral ties and also prepare for the next leaders' meeting of the two countries.

During the recent Leaders Retreat, both countries announced that several working groups have been set up to enhance bilateral cooperation. The foreign ministers said their work is progressing well.

"I note that our collaboration is important not only for bilateral purposes, but also within the process of ASEAN. And I cannot emphasise the value that we attach to the various exchanges Singapore and Indonesia has had over the years on matters to do with ASEAN," said Dr Marty Natalegawa, Indonesia's Foreign Minister.

On the work of the workgroup on counter-terrorism, Mr Yeo said: "There is considerable trust and mutual understanding between the two sides, and it is because of this foundation of trust that they are able to act together and mount security operations, very often with great success."

The Indonesian foreign minister also held talks with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at the Istana earlier on Monday. - CNA /ls

Regular talks for Singapore, Jakarta
Foreign ministers will meet every 6 months to review links and working groups' progress
Jeremy Au Yong Straits Times 31 Aug 10;

THE foreign ministers of Singapore and Indonesia have agreed to meet informally every six months, to regularly review the links between the two nations.

The meetings will be part of a broader effort that includes seven joint working groups covering areas such as counter-terrorism, cruise tourism and civil aviation.

Explaining the need for regular dialogue, Foreign Minister George Yeo said it would allow both sides to review progress of the working groups and 'make sure the process is chugging along nicely in time for the next meeting of the leaders'.

He was speaking at a joint press conference with his Indonesian counterpart Marty Natalegawa, who was in Singapore on a one-day introductory visit yesterday.

Dr Natalegawa became the Indonesian Foreign Minister last October.

Yesterday, he called on Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at the Istana in the morning before meeting Mr Yeo.

Mr Lee expressed satisfaction at the present state of warm relations between the two countries and Dr Natalegawa, in turn, reaffirmed Indonesia's commitment to further strengthen bilateral cooperation.

The Indonesian minister returned to Indonesia last night after attending a buka puasa (break fast) meal hosted by Mr Yeo.

The highlight of his brief visit was the afternoon ceremony at which the two foreign ministers exchanged instruments of ratification for the recent treaty on the delineation of the sea boundary between the two countries.

The treaty - which lays down the western segment of the maritime border line between the two countries - was signed in Jakarta in March last year.

Since then, both governments have ratified the agreement. Yesterday's ceremony marked the completion of a five-year process that began with negotiations in 2005.

Both ministers hailed its completion as a milestone in their relations.

Said Mr Yeo: 'This is a happy occasion, a celebration of the coming to force of an important border agreement between Indonesia and Singapore.'

They also agreed to begin talks to settle the eastern segments of the maritime border. An agreement on the middle section was signed in 1973.

Two sections of the eastern border remain unresolved: The first runs between Changi and Pulau Batam, and the second, between Pedra Branca and Pulau Bintan.

Discussions will focus on the first section as the second border line would depend on the outcome of Singapore-Malaysia talks on Pedra Branca's boundaries.

The two sides were optimistic that future negotiations will be fruitful.

'I'm sure the spirit which guided the negotiation on the western border will similarly guide us on the demarcation of that stretch,' said Mr Yeo.

During their meetings, they also discussed how to strengthen collaboration in the Asean community. Indonesia will chair the grouping next year. However, they did not touch on the defence pact or extradition treaty - the two outstanding bilateral issues between Singapore and Jakarta.

Asked if Indonesia's ongoing spat with Malaysia over a disputed maritime border had any impact on ties with Singapore, Dr Natalegawa said: 'Nothing, none whatsoever.'

He added: 'Both sides are keen to ensure that whatever issues we have are dealt with through the usual diplomatic channels.'

The mood of yesterday's proceedings generally reflected the warm and friendly state of ties at the moment, but there was a sombre moment as well.

Both ministers made it a point to pay tribute to the late Mr S. Tiwari, Singapore's chief negotiator on the boundary pact. Mr Tiwari died last month, at the age of 64.

'We remember him, we thank him for all that he had done. I'm sure he's here in spirit to celebrate with us,' said Mr Yeo.

In turn, Dr Natalegawa offered condolences on behalf of the Indonesian government. 'We appreciate the fact that his leadership and foresight and tremendous contribution have made possible the treaties we signed just now,' he said.

Indonesia, Singapore exchange border agreement
Antara 31 Aug 10;

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - The Indonesian and Singapore governments have exchanged a Ratification Agreement Charter on Fixing the Sea Boundary of the Two Countries South of Singapore.

The charter agreement, according to the Foreign Ministry in Jakarta on Monday was ratified by Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty M.Natalegawa and his Singapore counterpart George Yong-Boon Yeo at the Singapore foreign ministry.

The agreement was the product of eight rounds of negotiations between the two countries since 2005.

Under Article 5 of the Agreement, the exchange of the charter caused the agreement to become effective as of August 30, 2010.

On the occasion, the two foreign ministers also signed a Joint Submission Letter for depositing the agreement to the United Nations Secretary General.

The sea boundary agreed on under the agreement is the continuation of the sea boundary already agreed upon in the agreement between Indonesia and Singapore on the Sea Boundary signed on May 25, 1973.

The sea boundary between Indonesia and Singapore was fixed on the basis of international law, namely the 1982 Sea Law Convention, in which the two countries are part of the Convention.

In deciding on the sea boundary, Indonesia used its basic point reference in Nipa Island, and the basic lines of the Indonesian archipelago drawn from Nipa Island to Karimun Besar Island.

The basic lines are the basic lines of the archipelago whose coordinates are set in Law no 4/Prp/1960 on the Indonesian Waters which had been renewed by Government Regulation No 38/2002 and Government Regulation No 37/2008.

The coordinates are set by using the World Geodetic System of 1984 Datum (WGS 1984) and the lines connecting each of the coordinates: 1 (1:10/46.0/NL (North Latitude), 103:40/14.6/ EL (East Longitude); 1A (1:11/17.4/NL, 103:39/38.5/EL); 1B (1:11/55.5/NL, 103:34/20.4/EL); and 1C (1:11/43.8/NL, 103:34?00.0/EL).

The sea boundary in the western segment will make it easier for security personnel and shipping safety in operating in the Singapore Strait, because there is legal security on the sea boundaries of the two countries.

The negotiating technical team for the Indonesian maritime limit consists of representatives of ministries and sectoral representatives of the ministries and the relevent sectoral trans agencies namely the foreign ministry, defense ministry, Military Headquarters, Navy Headquarters, and the Navy`s Hidro-Oseanographic Agency.

The team also gets inputs from a team of experts comprising experts and academicians.

Now that the agreement had been ratified, the next step would be increasing bilateral cooperation in managing the border regions, including those related to navigational security issues, the environment, and the use of natural resources.

With the completion of the sea boundary in the western segment (Tuas/Nipa Island), there is still the eastern segment 1 and eastern segment 2 which need to be negotiated by the two countries.

The eastern segment 1 is the Batam/Changi and eastern segment 2 is the area around Bintan-South Ledge/Middle Rock/Pedra Branca which is still awaiting the result of further negotiations between Indonesia and Singapore.

The two foreign ministers agreed to immediately start the negotiations on the sea boundary in the eastern segment (Batam-Changi). (*)

Indonesia, Singapore to start more border talks
Lilian Budianto, The Jakarta Post 1 Sep 10;

Indonesia and Singapore will proceed with another round of border negotiations, after successful resolution of an earlier spat in the eastern Singapore Strait, said the countries’ foreign ministers.

The success comes after four years of negotiations between Indonesia and Singapore— and at a time when Indonesia has been under pressure to push Malaysia to start long-awaited border negotiations.

Relations between Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur have frayed after the recent arrest of Indonesian officials by Malaysian police in disputed waters off Indonesia’s Riau Islands province.

At a joint press conference in Singapore, Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa said Jakarta and Singapore would begin the process of demarcating the border between Changi and Batam immediately.

That border is one of two sections of the two nations’ sea border that have not been settled.

“There is one more stretch, between Pedra Branca and Bintan, but that will have to be done later, after we have demarcated that part of the sea border with Malaysia,” Singaporean Foreign Minister George
Yeo said.

“So for the next stage, we will concentrate on the sea between Changi and Batam,” he added.

Marty visited Singapore Monday to meet with Yeo at a ceremony to exchange ratification documents on the border negotiations that had been concluded last year.

The border negotiations have hogged the spotlight in bilateral diplomatic relations, over worries that the city-state might use reclaimed shoreline as a basis for determining the border. Singapore has conducted booming coastal expansion since 1999, reclaiming land using sand imported from Indonesia, before Jakarta banned exports in 2003.

Singapore reportedly turned to Cambodia for sand for its reclamation projects.

During the meeting, both ministers agreed to regular informal meetings every six month to assess bilateral relations.

Marty said that both ministers should be able to keep in close contact to address problems that might rise more frequently due to the countries’ geographical proximity.

“I think this is something that both of us agreed to in our previous conversation: That we should make it more practical and more pragmatic to meet whenever a situation requires us to meet, so that we can always have an opportunity to engage and maintain good communications,” said Marty.

Indonesian and Malaysian relations have recently turned sour after demonstrations threatening attacks on Malaysian interests have continued across the archipelago. Angry crowds have said they were outraged by Malaysia’s arrest of Indonesian officials in the disputed waters, which some say has trampled on the dignity of Indonesia.

Indonesia and Malaysia have been involved in several standoffs, such as disputes on cultural heritage, the treatment of migrant workers and border claims.

Marty said the current row between Malaysia and Indonesia would not impact relations with Singapore or ASEAN relations, as Jakarta is set to chair the Southeast Asian regional group next year.

“Obviously we have our ways and means of dealing with whatever problems and challenges through normal diplomatic channels and it has not had any impact whatsoever with the bilateral ties we have, certainly, with Singapore,” said Marty.


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Indonesian wildlife survey seriously hindered by illegal hunters

Illegal hunters seriously hinder wildlife surveys
Antara 30 Aug 10;

Bengkulu (ANTARA News) - The presence of illegal hunters have become a serious hindrance to conservationists in Bengkulu Province who conduct surveys of endangered species, including Sumatran tigers (Phantera Tigris Sumatrae).

Chairman of Bengkulu Province`s Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA) Andi Basrah said here Monday that two suspected hunters had recently been arrested while selling preserved tigers.

The suspects admitted that they got the preserved tigers through hunting activities by using such tools as trap nets and baits, he said.

It was not difficult to hunt Sumatran tigers now because they could be found near villages as a result of their damaged natural habitat, he said.

Basrah said the total population of Sumatran tigers was expected to reach 400 but it was not easy to conduct a survey to find out the current population of these big cats partly due to limited budgets.

Besides huge fund, the survey should also be supported by competent human resources, he said adding that illegal hunters were threatening the habitats of such endangered animals as the Sumatran tiger, elephant, and bear.

Spokesman of Bengkulu Province`s BKSDA, Supatono, recently said the precise number of Sumatran tigers in the province was not known partly because of lack of supporting facilities and competent human resources.

The Sumatran tigers` tracks could only be detected after locals reported about those wild animals, he said.

Residents of three villages in Maje sub-district, Kaur district, had recently been shocked by the coming of several Sumatran tigers.

After conservationists had studied the causing factors, it was found that three villages` areas were part of the Sumatran tigers` habitat, Supatono said.

The hungry tigers were also reported to have attacked some villagers` goats and dogs, he said.

About the government`s efforts to increase the population of Sumatran tigers from 400 to 800 by 2012, he said this ambition remained challenged by some unfavorable factors.

The factors were, among others, poor habitat, insufficient food, and poor surveillance of illegal hunting activities, he said.

In handling those illegal hunters, a comprehensive task force involving forest rangers, police and military apparatuses, environmentalists, and conservationists, was needed, he said.(*)


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Taiwan eyes marine park despite fishermen objection

Yahoo News 30 Aug 10;

TAIPEI (AFP) – Taiwan plans to set up a marine national park in the middle of one of its largest fishing grounds despite opposition from fishermen who depend on the area for their livelihood, an official said Monday.

The planned national park will cover three island chains and surrounding waters to the north of Taiwan, measuring some 750 square kilometres (300 square miles).

"An evaluation of the new marine national park has been under way," Hsu Shao-liang of the Marine National Park Headquarters told AFP.

The outlook for the project, which will become Taiwan's second marine national park, is bright as the initial response from the public has been positive, he said.

"There's been some noise, of course. Some fishermen who wish to catch fish in the area have opposed the project, fearing that their livelihood would be negatively impacted," he said.

"But others favoured the project from a fisheries resources protection perspective," he said, referring to the depletion of fisheries resources by the frequent invasion of Chinese poachers.

Taiwan's coastguards drove away 1,048 Chinese fishing boats illegally operating there last year, up from 797 the previous year, government figures showed.

Chinese fishermen have been accused of using dynamite and poison to catch fish.

If the new national park project is realised, fishing will be banned in a three-mile zone around the three island chains -- Pengchia, Mienhua and Huaping.

Taiwan's existing marine national park, in the South China Sea, straddles a strategically important sea route linking the Pacific and Indian oceans.


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Does Japan's affair with tuna mean loving it to extinction?

Masami Ito Japan Times 31 Aug 10;

Japan is known as the biggest consumer of tuna. Be it raw for sushi or sashimi or fried, broiled or canned, tuna is an important element of the food culture.

But concerns are growing because tuna is disappearing, and this is putting Japan in a difficult diplomatic position.

How much tuna does Japan consume annually, and how does the rest of the world feel? Following are basic questions and answers:

How many types of tuna are there?

There are many different types, but the six main species are Atlantic bluefin, Pacific bluefin, southern bluefin, bigeye, yellowfin and albacore.

Conservationists warn in particular that the bluefin, known as "hon-maguro" or "kuro-maguro," faces extinction because of overfishing.

Bluefin can be found in the Northern Hemisphere in the Pacific and the Atlantic. Served mainly as sashimi, bluefin fetches the highest prices on the market. In 2001, a 202-kg bluefin fetched a record ¥20.2 million at the Tsukiji fish market in Chuo Ward, Tokyo.

Then how much tuna does Japan consume annually?

In 2008, the nation consumed 411,000 tons, or 24 percent of the world's total catch, according to data compiled by the Fisheries Agency.

Japan also accounted for some 70 to 80 percent of all bluefin tuna traded internationally.

Of Japan's annual consumption, bigeye accounted for the most, at 159,000 tons, followed by 140,000 tons of yellowfin and 58,000 tons of albacore.

As for bluefin, Japan consumed 43,000 tons of the Atlantic and Pacific varieties and 10,000 tons of southern bluefin.

While the majority of Pacific bluefin is caught by the domestic fishing fleet, most of the Atlantic bluefin is imported. In 2008, Japan imported about 18,700 tons of the 21,400 tons it consumed.

How serious is the bluefin extinction threat and what caused it?

According to an estimate by Monaco, which advocates a ban on the international bluefin trade, Atlantic bluefin stocks plunged by about 75 percent from 1957 to 2007.

Experts blamed the disappearance on rampant fishing.

"Due to the excessive fishing of brood stock, the number of fish that can spawn has plummeted, making it difficult to reproduce resources," said Aiko Yamauchi, a fisheries official at the World Wide Fund for Nature Japan.

"There is a large possibility that in general, Atlantic bluefin tuna may become (impossible to fish)."

Are only Atlantic bluefin tuna in trouble?

No. A recent study by Japanese researchers showed that the number of Pacific bluefin with reproductive capacity is also dropping at an alarming rate and environmentalists expressed grave concern that they may reach a "critical state" like Atlantic bluefin.

Eating tuna is part of the Japanese culture, isn't it? When did Japanese start eating the fish?

The evidence suggests Japanese were eating tuna as early as in the mid-Jomon Period (10,000 B.C. to around 300 B.C.), according to a book this year by Hideki Nakano and Masakazu Oka titled "Maguro no Fushigi ga Wakaru Hon" ("Learning About the Wonders of Tuna").

But tuna consumption saw a huge increase after the mid-Edo Period (1603-1867) with the spread of fixed fishing nets, which made it easier to catch large amounts of tuna at little cost.

Currently at the Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo, 250 out of about 750 wholesalers specialize in tuna.

Are there any global efforts to conserve tuna?

Some countries proposed a ban on Atlantic bluefin trade at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) last spring in Doha, Qatar.

Monaco proposed that Atlantic bluefin be included in the CITES Appendix I with other marine species like minke whales, the dugong and sea turtles, to impose a ban on its international trade.

Supporters of the proposal included the United States, Norway and Kenya.

The EU, meanwhile, suggested that the Monaco proposal be amended so the ban would be delayed until next May.

In the end, a secret vote on the Monaco proposal was overwhelmingly rejected, with only 20 countries in favor, 68 against and 30 abstaining.

The EU amendment was also rejected, with 43 in favor, 72 opposed and 14 abstaining.

What was Japan's position on the Monaco proposal?

Japan argued that a complete ban on international trade of Atlantic bluefin is unfair because it would benefit countries whose own fleets can meet their domestic demand. EU member states and the United States would be among them.

Masanori Miyahara, a councilor of the Fisheries Agency who was in Doha in March, said during a WWF Japan-hosted symposium on tuna consumption in Tokyo in early August that developing countries depend on the revenue they make from exporting bluefin, including to Japan.

"The Washington Convention only controls trade, so it has no effect on countries that can catch their own tuna supply," Miyahara said.

"The proposal completely lacked fairness."

Are there any international organizations to manage overall tuna stocks, and not just imports and exports of the fish?

Yes. There are five Tuna Regional Fisheries Management Organizations (RFMOs). They are tasked with managing fish stocks in the oceans and conserving them.

Of the five, the group managing Atlantic bluefin is called the International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT).

But environmentalists say ICCAT is falling far short of proper management of tuna stocks.

"While the Atlantic bluefin are placed under the management of an international organization, there was no scientific-based management measures taken. Many fishing boats do not follow the rules, especially the one prohibiting use of (seine nets). It is difficult to grasp the actual situation of bluefin trade," Yamauchi said.

Is Japan taking any action to preserve bluefin resources?

Yes — at least verbally. After the rejection of the proposal in Monaco, then farm minister Hirotaka Akamatsu issued a statement pledging Japan will play a leading role at ICCAT to prevent overfishing of Atlantic bluefin.

"Japan will continue to play a leading role at ICCAT and other RFMOs in preventing overfishing by adopting effective conservation and management measures, based on scientific stock assessments, and by establishing reliable monitoring systems to ensure compliance by RFMO member countries with the adopted measures," he said.

What can consumers do?

WWF Japan advises that people learn more about the current situation, actively seek out companies or restaurants that provide sustainable tuna products, and ask restaurants and fishmongers where their tuna came from.

Yamauchi of WWF Japan stressed that tuna stocks could rebound if the fish have several years to reproduce naturally, even at during this "current excessive production and consumption state."

But Yamaguchi added recovery will become extremely difficult if the reproductive rate falls too low.

"If managed properly, fish, by nature, can be a resource that increases naturally and can be used sustainably," Yamauchi said. "We are now standing at the crossroads. . . . I believe it is necessary to refrain from consuming (Atlantic bluefin) for a few years."


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Davao City hosts Asia’s first regional bird fair Sept. 24-26

Manuel T. Cayon Business Mirror 30 Aug 10;

DAVAO CITY—Asia’s premier avian-conservation and eco-tourism groups will hold their first regional fair of migratory birds and endangered avian species in their bid to widen conservation efforts and to encourage attraction of tourists to the beauty of ecology in their undisturbed habitat.

This city will claim the honor of hosting this pioneering event in Asia from September 24 to 26 this year, to coincide with the holding of the Sixth Philippine Bird Festival, also the country’s major bird-conservation and eco-tourism event.

The Wild Bird Club of the Philippines said in a statement the Asian Bird Fair would be held in time for the migration of birds in autumn from Japan, China and parts of Siberia. Some of these birds flock to warmer countries like the Philippines.

Organizers here said participants, visitors and local residents will get a glimpse of some of these birds in a guided tour at the tidal flats at the Davao Gulf during low tide.

The place is just off the beachfront of the Waterfront Insular Hotel Davao, the venue of the bird fair.

 Spectators would have a close look at marine species, like fiddler crabs and mudskippers, as well as spectacular views of herons, egrets and shorebirds.

The bird fair will highlight the respective bird festivals of participating countries, handled by such organizations as the Bird Conservation of Thailand, the Chinese Wild Bird Federation, the Wild Bird Society of Taipei, the Malaysian Nature Society, and the Nature Society of Singapore.

The fair includes a bird-conservation forum and turnover of hosting rights next year to the Chinese Wild Bird Federation in Tainan City. International and Philippine delegates will also be toured to the Philippine Eagle Center and Eden Garden Resorts here.

“The Asian Bird Fair seeks to enrich eco-tourism through bird-watching, and promote the natural and cultural heritage of host cities,” said Michael Lu, president of the Wild Bird Club of the Philippines.

Lu said he expects the event to draw bird watchers, conservationists, eco-tourism promoters, sustainable-development providers and nature lovers from around the country, Asia and Europe.

Alice Villa-Real, chairman of the organizing committee, said “this latest initiative would be a significant move to draw attention to pressing conservation issues.” “We can make a significant difference to protect the rich bird life and habitats of our islands while promoting responsible enjoyment of nature and encouraging related sustainable businesses in local communities,” she said.

Aside from the main conservation groups, others attending are the Shanghai Wild Bird Society, Fujian Bird Watching Society, Kaoshiung Wild Bird Society, Wild Bird Society of Tainan, Hong Kong Bird Watching Society, Eco-education and Resources Center, Asian Raptor Research and Conservation Network, Borneo Bird Club, Hornbill Research Foundation, the Biodiversity and Nature Conservation Association, Bird Conservation Nepal and the Oriental Bird Club.

Local groups include Conservation International, Fauna and Flora International, Katala Foundation, WWF-Philippines, Birding, Adventure-Philippines, Kaakbay, Malagos Garden Resort, Monfort Bat Cave and Conservation Foundation, Philippine Association of Wildlife Veterinarians, Philippine Wild Bird Photographers, My Zoo Foundation, the City of Alaminos and the City of Balanga.

The Philippine Eagle Foundation and the city government of Davao are the cosponsors of the fair.


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Activists ready to sabotage French bird-hunters

John Lichfield The Independent 31 Aug 10;

French ornithologists are waging an increasingly sophisticated war against the hunting of the ortolan, a songbird which is regarded by gastronomes – when eaten beak, bones and all – as the ultimate in sinful pleasure.

Over the next two weeks, bird lovers in south-west France will be systematically springing "live" traps set to capture the tiny ortolan buntings as they migrate from northern Europe to Africa. Although the capture of the ortolan has been illegal in France for more than a decade, hunting as an "age-old tradition" is tolerated semi-officially in the Landes, south of Bordeaux.

Up to 50,000 birds are captured each September and sold to chefs and gourmets as far away as New York, despite a ban on their sale. An ortolan, which weighs roughly 25g (less than one ounce) can fetch more than €100 (£80) on the international black market. The Ligue de Protection des Oiseaux (LPO) – led by Allain Bougrain-Dubourg, a television presenter and former boyfriend of the animal-loving actress Brigitte Bardot – accuses the French government of bowing to the local hunting lobby. It has decided to take enforcement of the law into its own hands.

In recent years, the LPO has hired helicopters and light aircraft to survey the maize fields, thick scrub and pine forests of the Landes to locate the main hunting sites. The traps consist of rings of cages, some of which contain live ortolans. The bird's distinctive call – and the prospect of food – brings other migrating ortolans into the cages. Over the last few days, and up to mid-September, volunteers will be raiding the trapping sites and opening the cages.

"This practice is unacceptable," said Mr Bougrain-Dubourg. "The population of these birds is in decline all over Europe. Hunting has been outlawed in France since 1999. Although the government has promised zero tolerance this year, the captures are going on in many areas. Afterwards, the birds are fattened in darkness for one month and then killed by drowning in armagnac."

Ortolans are, by Gascon tradition, served whole and aflame. Only the feet are removed, although some chefs are now said to take off most of the feathers. By tradition an ortolan must be eaten with a large white napkin draped over the diner's head. Some experts say this is intended to heighten the intensity of the experience. Others concede that it hides the messy act of chomping into a charred, red-hot ortolan. The ritual was described in 1997 in a book about the last months of the late president François Mitterrand.

The author, Georges-Marc Benamou, revealed that at a New Year's Eve supper in the Landes in 1995, the dying Mr Mitterrand consumed 30 oysters and two ortolans. Twelve of the little birds had been bought by a local politician, who was giving the feast (even though their capture was already doubtfully legal in France). After most of the guests had eaten one bird each, Mr Mitterrand reached for a second.

"Those who had already been through the ordeal once, looked at each other in astonishment," wrote Mr Benamou. The table listened in embarrassment as the former president chewed the tiny bird to a paste behind his napkin before swallowing it. Then Mr Mitterrand lay back in his chair, his face beaming in "ecstasy". Eight days later he died.

François Simon, the feared restaurant critic for Le Figaro newspaper, admits to having tried ortolans on several occasions. "It's absolutely delicious: rather crunchy, with the texture and flavour of hazelnuts," he once said.

Henri Emmanuelli, former treasurer of the Socialist party and president of the département of the Landes, yesterday criticised the "publicity-seeking" actions of the LPO. He said the hunting of ortolans was a "tradition for older people" in his department, which should be tolerated. He insisted that their numbers were not necessarily as low as ornithologists claimed.

The celebrated party in which Mr Mitterrand swallowed two ortolans was organised by Mr Emmanuelli.


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Is Genetically Altered Fish OK? U.S. To Decide

Susan Heavey PlanetArk 31 Aug 10;

U.S. health officials are set to rule on whether a faster-growing, genetically engineered fish is safe to eat in a decision that could deliver the first altered animal food to consumers' dinner plates.

The fish, made by Aqua Bounty Technologies Inc, is manipulated to grow twice as fast as traditional Atlantic salmon, something the company says could boost the nation's fish sector and reduce pressure on the environment.

But consumer advocates and food safety experts are worried that splicing and dicing fish genes may have the opposite effect, leading to more industrial farming and potential escapes into the wild. Side effects from eating such fish are also unknown, with little data to show it is safe, they say.

"They're basically putting the fish on permanent growth hormone so it grows faster ... so they can sell bigger fish faster," said Jaydee Hanson, a policy analyst for the nonprofit Center for Food Safety.

It also raises questions about the industrialization of the nation's food supply at a time when consumers -- exasperated by massive egg and other food recalls -- are growing increasingly concerned and seeking more locally produced meals.

The small Massachusetts-based biotechnology company is seeking Food and Drug Administration approval to sell its salmon, called AquAdvantage, to fish farmers nationwide.

If given the green light, the salmon could be followed by the company's engineered trout and tilapia. Other scientists are also developing altered pigs and cows for food. The United States already allows genetically modified plants.

On September 19, the FDA kicks off a three-day meeting to discuss whether to approve the salmon. Outside advisers will weigh available data and offer advice, although the FDA will later make the final call.

"This is an Atlantic salmon in every measurable way," said Aqua Bounty Chief Executive Ronald Stotish. "When you look at the fish, it's impossible to see the difference."

Whether consumers accept such genetic tinkering could make or break the biotech, which has staked its future on the technology since filing for U.S. approval in 1995. In 2009, it saw a $4.8 million net loss after restructuring in 2008 to preserve cash and focus on completing FDA's approval process.

The company has seen its shares rise 75 percent this year in the run-up to the FDA's decision to a year high of 10.50 British pounds ($16).

TASTES 'GREAT'

Stotish said the company has analyzed its salmon and found no differences that warrant any kind of special labeling.

Using technology developed by Canadian researchers, AquAdvantage grows to full size in less than 250 days compared with about 400 days for a traditional Atlantic salmon, according to the biotech.

But some groups say little is known about hazards -- such as allergies or potential digestive problems. And they have criticized the FDA for not releasing any data. The agency has said it hopes to make data public by Friday but that by law it does not have to release it until two days before the meeting.

Aqua Bounty has submitted all the FDA-required data, Stotish said, but has done no animal or human clinical trials. It has, however, conducted several taste tests, and Stotish says people like it just fine.

An FDA biotech official, who asked not to be named because Aqua Bounty's bid is pending, said testing whole foods' impact on animals would be impossible because of the massive amounts they would have to be fed.

"I've eaten the fish, and it tastes great," said Stotish, whom the company promoted to the top slot in 2008 to try to push approval worldwide, except in Europe where it would face a certain cultural backlash.

Stotish, who trained in biochemistry, has a long history serving in research and development roles at companies focusing on genetics and livestock health products.

PRESSURE ON THE ENVIRONMENT

Until the early 1800s, U.S. Atlantic salmon was abundant in the rivers of the country's Northeast.

But pollution and overfishing took their toll, and despite restoration efforts, much of the Atlantic salmon consumed in the United States is imported. In 2009, the nation spent nearly $1.4 billion buying from Chile, Canada, Norway and elsewhere.

Aqua Bounty says its fish can help reduce the pressure on wild salmon populations and curb costly imports. "We're not saying if they approve our salmon we're going to feed the world," Stotish told Reuters, but "there's a general consensus that overfishing is a fact of life."

Farming fish is already a controversial endeavor, with critics concerned about the methods used and commercial feed.

Food & Water Watch's fish program director, Marianne Cufone, said food supply issues are a concern, "but there are better ways to produce fish in the United States." Her group and others also worry the salmon may escape and harm other fish.

Even if the salmon wins FDA approval, it is not clear how soon U.S. consumers would see it on store shelves.

Few fish farmers in the United States cultivate salmon, according to Stotish, who hopes farmers will convert their facilities to try the altered salmon.

September's salmon meeting marks just the second time the FDA has publicly considered a genetically engineered animal.

Last year, the agency approved GTC Biotherapeutics Inc's modified goats used to produce its anticlotting drug Atryn for patients with a rare inherited disorder.

Other engineered food animals could be on the way.

Canadian researchers are seeking FDA approval for their Enviropig with more environmentally friendly manure. Hematech Inc, part of Kirin Holdings Co Ltd's Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co, is also developing "mad cow" disease-resistant cattle.

Center for Food Safety's Hanson said such animals are the exact opposite of what U.S. consumers want. "All of these are not to make our food healthier ... All of these are to make it profitable for companies to grow animals in less-healthy conditions, more industrial conditions," he said.

(Editing by Matthew Lewis)


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Biofuel Demand Driving "Land Grab" In Africa: Report

Tim Cocks PlanetArk 31 Aug 10;

Biofuel demand is driving a new "land grab" in Africa, with at least 5 million hectares (19,300 sq miles) acquired by foreign firms to grow crops in 11 countries, a study by an environmental group said on Monday.

The contracts by European and Asian companies for land to grow sugar cane, jatropha and palm oil to be turned into fuel will involve clearing forests and vegetation, taking land that could be used for food and creating conflicts with local communities, Friends of the Earth said in the study.

Proponents of biofuels argue they are renewable and can help fight climate change because the growing plants ingest as much carbon dioxide from the air as the fuels made from them emit when burned.

Critics say there is a risk of the crops infringing on land that could be used for growing food and that destruction of rainforests to make way for palm oil and sugar outweighs any carbon benefits gained from the use of such fuels.

"The expansion of biofuels ... is transforming forests and natural vegetation into fuel crops, taking away food-growing farmland from communities, and creating conflicts with local people over land ownership," Mariann Bassey, a Friends of the Earth Nigeria activist, said in a statement.

The report said Kenya and Angola each had received proposals for the use of 500,000 hectares for biofuels and there was a similar plan to use 400,000 hectares in Benin for palm oil.

Rice farmers had been forced off their land for a sugar cane project in Tanzania, it added.

"The competition for land and the competition for staple food crops such as cassava and sweet sorghum for agrofuels is likely to push up food and land prices," the study said.

Other studies have suggested biofuel expansion would not be harmful and could even be beneficial for African agriculture.

Last month, researchers from Britain's Imperial College, carbon trader CAMCO, and the Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA) said biofuels would boost investment in land and infrastructure.

They said this could have a positive effect on food production, and if properly managed would not mean destroying natural forests.

(Editing by Michael Roddy)


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Asia: Making the most of disaster experience

IRIN Reuters AlertNet 30 Aug 10;

Reuters and AlertNet are not responsible for the content of this article or for any external internet sites. The views expressed are the author's alone.
BANGKOK, 30 August 2010 (IRIN) - Greater regional cooperation and decentralization are key to meeting the challenges of disasters in Asia, specialists say.

"The Philippines has expertise in earthquakes and Vietnam in flooding," Adelina Kamal, head of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) [http://www.aseansec.org/], disaster management and humanitarian assistance division, told IRIN in Bangkok. "If each country focuses on their specialties and shares that with the rest of the region, we'll be better off," she said.

Her comments coincide with the Post-Nargis Lessons Learning Conference held by ASEAN and the UN Economic Social Commission Asia Pacific (UNESCAP) [http://www.unescap.org/] on 30 August in the Thai capital.

With Asia as the continent most at risk [http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=89305] - accounting for the highest number of disaster-related deaths since 1980 - the conference shared the lessons learned from Myanmar's Cyclone Nargis and examined ways to institutionalize them at a regional level.

"How we work together regionally is critical to how we can manage future disasters," Noeleen Heyzer, UN Under-Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ESCAP, said.

Cyclone Nargis struck southern Myanmar in May 2008, killing 140,000 people and severely affecting the lives of more than 2.4 million across the country's Ayeyarwady delta.

SEAN facilitated international assistance efforts by working with the government and UN within the Tripartite Core Group (TCG), a collective response that was unprecedented in its regional coordination.

"Cyclone Nargis provided an opportunity for ASEAN to challenge its collective response to a major disaster in a member state," Surin Pitsuwan, ASEAN's Secretary-General, said.

But with a variety of threats facing the region, [http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=90280] concern remains that disaster preparedness efforts will always be focused on the most recent disasters.

"We always plan the future according to the latest disaster," Margareta Wahlström, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction, told IRIN in June. "We have to make sure we don't get dragged away by that."

Accordingly, the ASEAN Agreement on Disaster Management and Emergency Response was ratified in December 2009.

Kamal says the spirit of the agreement is to share information and expertise to improve preparedness for any kind of humanitarian emergency.

The agreement comprises provisions for disaster risk identification, monitoring and early warning, prevention and mitigation, preparedness and response, rehabilitation, technical cooperation and research, mechanisms for coordination, and simplified customs and immigration procedures.

It also provides for the establishment of an ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Humanitarian Assistance on disaster management (AHA Centre) to undertake operational coordination of activities under the pact.


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Five Years After Katrina, An Important Lesson Goes Unlearned

Sandra L. Postel, National Geographic Freshwater Fellow
NatGeo NewsWatch 30 Aug 10;

This post is part of National Geographic's Freshwater Initiative.

It's getting harder and harder to blame Mother Nature for the disasters that befall humanity. While hurricanes, floods, droughts and storm surges are natural events, to be sure, the degree of disaster that unfolds when such events strike is often now heavily influenced by human activities.

When Hurricane Katrina smacked the Gulf Coast in August 2005, the protection from powerful storm surges provided by coastal wetlands and barrier islands had gradually been whittled away. Since the 1930s, Louisiana had lost 1.2 million acres of coastal wetlands. More than two dozen dams and thousands of miles of levees on the Mississippi River had trapped sediment that otherwise would have replenished them. At the same time, wetlands were drained and filled to enable oil and commercial development in the Gulf region. Even as the Army Corps of Engineers failed to adequately maintain levees to keep the floodwaters at bay, this loss of natural protection worsened the catastrophe.

Similarly, there is a human hand in the devastating floods now ravaging villages and farmlands in Pakistan's Indus River valley. Torrential monsoon rains are of course the proximate cause of this disaster, but river engineering plays into its severity and extent. The Indus emerges from the Himalayas carrying millions of tons of sediment from the young, eroding mountain chain. Under natural conditions, the river would carry most of that nutrient-rich load across a gently sloping sandy plain to its delta adjoining the Arabian Sea, helping sustain mangrove forests and fisheries there.

But today the vast majority of the river's water is diverted into irrigation canals, leaving too little flow in the main channel to transport the sediment. As the silt settles out, the capacity of the channel to contain flood flows decreases. With little active floodplain left to absorb flows overtopping the banks, the result is catastrophic flooding - in this case covering one-fifth of the country and forcing 20 million people from their homes.

And on December 26, 2004, the tsunami that struck coastal Asian nations and claimed some 273,000 lives cast a spotlight on another valuable service performed by intact ecosystems--the storm and wave protection provided by mangroves and coral reefs. The tangled roots and dense vegetation of mangroves, which thrive where salt water meets fresh water, act like a shock absorber against storm and wave energy. Vast areas of these natural protective barriers had been cleared for hotels, shrimp farms, and other commercial developments, including half the coastal mangroves in Thailand.

These are extreme, but hardly isolated cases. Floods, droughts, storms and other weather-related natural disasters displaced 20 million people worldwide in 2008. According to Munich Re, the large German re-insurance company, some 850 weather-related disasters occurred in 2009, compared with an annual average of 770 over the previous decade. Economic losses from natural catastrophes in the ten years prior to Katrina exceeded the combined losses from 1950 through 1989.

With climate scientists warning of more extreme floods and droughts in the decades to come, the human and economic losses are bound to increase.

Certainly more people now live in harm's way-along coastlines, on floodplains, and in deltas. But the hidden factor in many "natural" disasters is the loss or degradation of "ecological infrastructure." Healthy rivers, floodplains, wetlands and forested watersheds provide services of enormous value to society just as roads, bridges and treatment plants do. They help mitigate floods and droughts, buffer storms, transport sediment, filter pollutants, purify drinking water, and deliver nutrients to coastal zones. In 2005 scientists participating in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment estimated that wetlands alone provide services worth $200-940 billion per year.

Around the world, however, these services are rapidly disappearing. Some 25-55 percent of the world's wetlands have been drained, 35 percent of global river flows are now intercepted by large dams and reservoirs, and more than 100 billion tons of nutrient-rich sediment that would otherwise have replenished floodplains, deltas, and coastal zones instead accumulates in reservoirs. Post-Katrina, the Gulf coast continues to lose a football field's worth of wetlands every 38 minutes.

Just as we buy home insurance and life insurance to protect ourselves and our families from catastrophic losses, so society now needs to "buy" disaster insurance to reduce the damage caused by floods and other weather-related events. By strategically investing in the protection and restoration of ecological infrastructure, we can begin to re-gain the benefits of nature's services.

Some nascent efforts in this direction have at least been floated. Within a month of the Asian tsunami, officials in Indonesia--where more than 126,000 of the tsunami deaths had occurred and where some 1.6 million acres of coastal mangroves had been lost in the preceding few decades--announced a large-scale effort to restore the nation's mangrove defenses. In the aftermath of Katrina, U.S. scientists have been studying the idea of diverting Mississippi River water back toward Louisiana's disappearing coastal swamps, to supply the nutrients and sediments needed to rebuild them.

Overall, however, the story is one of inertia, neglect and missed opportunity. After the Great Midwest Flood of 1993, U.S. researchers estimated that restoration of 13 million acres of wetlands in the upper portion of the Mississippi-Missouri watershed, at a cost of $2-3 billion, would have absorbed enough floodwater to have substantially reduced the $16 billion in flood damages from that event. But instead of calling floodplains and wetlands back into active duty, officials in the region permitted even more floodplain development. Nicholas Pinter of Southern Illinois University estimates that 28,000 new homes and 6,630 acres of commercial and industrial development have since sprung up on land that was under water in 1993.

Climatic change and its anticipated effects on the hydrological cycle will make the protective resilience of ecological infrastructure all that more critical and valuable. With the pace of "natural" disasters picking up, an international effort to shore up the planet's natural defenses cannot begin too soon.

Sandra Postel directs the independent Global Water Policy Project and lectures, writes, and consults on international water issues. She is also Freshwater Fellow of the National Geographic Society, and serves as lead water expert for the Society's freshwater initiative.

Sandra is the author of several acclaimed books, including Last Oasis, which appears in eight languages and was the basis for a 1997 PBS documentary, and is co-author, with Brian Richter, of Rivers for Life. Her essay "Troubled Waters" was selected for Best American Science and Nature Writing. She is a 1995 Pew Scholar in Conservation and the Environment.


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New Type of El Niño Emerges as Climate Changes

LiveScience.com Yahoo News 30 Aug 10;

A relatively new type of El Niño, featuring warmer waters in a different part of the Pacific Ocean, is becoming more common and stronger, according to a new study that suggests the development may help scientists tease out the relationship between El Niños and climate change.

The warm surface waters of this El Niño type are in the central equatorial Pacific rather than in the eastern equatorial Pacific. The intensity of El Niño in the central Pacific has nearly doubled since 1982, with the most intense event occurring in 2009-10, according to the study.

The stronger El Niño is alternately known as the "Central Pacific El Niño," "warm-pool El Niño," "dateline El Niño" or "El El Niño Modoki" - Japanese for "similar but different." Scientists say it helps explain a steady rise in central Pacific sea surface temperatures observed over the past few decades - a trend often attributed to global warming.

"These results suggest climate change may already be affecting El Niño by shifting the center of action from the eastern to the central Pacific," said study team member Michael McPhaden of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle. "El Niño's impact on global weather patterns is different if ocean warming occurs primarily in the central Pacific, instead of the eastern Pacific.

"If the trend we observe continues," McPhaden added, "it could throw a monkey wrench into long-range weather forecasting, which is largely based on our understanding of El Niños from the latter half of the 20th century."

Despite a rise in sea surface temperatures during El Niño years, no significant temperature increases were seen in years when ocean conditions were neutral or when El Niño's cool-water counterpart, La Niña, was present.

"Our study concludes the long-term warming trend seen in the central Pacific is primarily due to more-intense El Niños rather than a general rise of background temperatures," said study team member Tong Lee of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

Scientists measured changes in El Niño intensity since 1982. They analyzed NOAA satellite observations of sea surface temperature, checked against and blended with directly measured ocean temperature data. The strength of each El Niño was gauged by how much its sea surface temperatures deviated from the average.

Further research is needed to evaluate the impacts of these increasingly intense El Niños and determine why these changes are occurring, Lee said.

"It is important to know if the increasing intensity and frequency of these Central Pacific El Niños are due to natural variations in climate or to climate change caused by human-produced greenhouse gas emissions," Lee said.

El Niño, Spanish for "the little boy," is the oceanic component of a climate pattern (called the El Niño-Southern Oscillation) that appears in the tropical Pacific Ocean on average every three to five years.

El Niños can influence global weather patterns and the occurrence and frequency of hurricanes, droughts and floods. El Niños can even raise or lower global temperatures by as much as 0.4 degrees Fahrenheit (0.2 degrees Celsius).

The study was detailed in the July 24 edition of the journal Geophysical Research Letters.


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U.N. Climate Panel Urged To Reform, Stick To Science

Louis Charbonneau PlanetArk 31 Aug 10;

The U.N. climate panel should make predictions only when it has solid evidence and should avoid policy advocacy, scientists said in a report on Monday that called for thorough reform of the body.

The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was widely criticized after admitting its 2007 global warming report wrongly said Himalayan glaciers would vanish by 2035 and that it overstated how much of the Netherlands is below sea level.

Such firm forecasts should be made "only when there is sufficient evidence," said a review group supported by the academies of science from the United States, Netherlands, Britain and around 100 other countries.

Critics of the idea of mandatory limits on so-called greenhouse gas emissions have said the IPCC errors show the science behind global warming is questionable.

The United Nations has been concerned that focusing only on errors by the panel, which shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former U.S. Vice President Al Gore for work on global warming, could undermine the broader U.N. message that climate change is a real phenomenon requiring urgent action.

The report said the IPCC's mandate calls for it to be "policy relevant" without advocating specific policies. But some senior IPCC officials have been criticized for remarks that appeared to support specific policy approaches.

"Straying into advocacy can only hurt IPCC's credibility," the report said.

SHOULD HE STAY OR SHOULD HE GO?

The review said the limit of two six-year terms for the chair of the IPCC, currently Rajendra Pachauri of India, was too long and should be shortened to one term, as should the terms of other senior officials on the U.N. climate panel.

The report did not call for replacing Pachauri, the IPCC chairman since 2002. Asked if he would resign if requested to by the IPCC's 194 member states in October when they discuss the scientists' recommendations, Pachauri told reporters he would abide by any decision the U.N. climate panel made.

The report also called for an overhaul of the panel's management, including the creation of an executive committee that would include people from outside the IPCC.

The review touched on concerns about Pachauri's work as an adviser and board member for energy firms, as well as IPCC scientists reviewing their own work. The report noted the IPCC lacks a conflict of interest policy and recommended it adopt a "rigorous" one to avoid biases.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has acknowledged there were mistakes in what is known as the Fourth Assessment Report published in 2007, a document of more than 3,000 pages that cited more than 10,000 scientific papers. But he has insisted its fundamental conclusions were correct.

Ban's office issued a statement welcoming the review of the IPCC and reiterating he "firmly maintains that the fundamental science on climate change remains sound."

Harold Shapiro, a Princeton University professor and chair of the committee that reviewed the IPCC's work, told reporters one IPCC report "contains many statements that were assigned high confidence but for which there is little evidence."

Shapiro said the IPCC's response to errors when they were subsequently revealed was "slow and inadequate." The errors, he said, "did dent the credibility of the process."

Asked about the Himalayan glaciers error, Shapiro said: "In our judgment, it came from just not paying close enough attention to what (peer) reviewers said about that example."

Pachauri said the IPCC "will be strengthened by the (scientists') review and others of its kind this year."

But Shapiro made clear the review did not assess the validity of the science behind the IPCC reports, leaving open the possibility the panel could face a new wave of attacks from its critics.

The next IPCC report on climate change will be published in 2013 and 2014.

(Editing by Jerry Norton and John O'Callaghan)

FACTBOX-Errors, findings by UN panel of climate scientists
Reuters AlertNet 30 Aug 10;

Aug 30 (Reuters) - Experts will recommend reforms to the U.N. panel of climate scientists on Monday to avoid errors such as an exaggeration of the rate of melt of the Himalayas in a 2007 report.

The InterAcademy Council, comprising experts from national science academies, will hand a review to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon in New York outlining ways to bolster the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

The United Nations hopes the recommendations (1400 GMT) will restore confidence in climate science. Achim Steiner, head of the U.N. Environment Programme, said he would be surprised if the council urges a major overhaul of how the IPCC works. [ID:nLDE67S076]

Following is an overview of errors and overall findings in a 2007 IPCC report:

MISTAKES

In July, the Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency said it "found no errors that would undermine the main conclusions in the 2007 report" after a review. It urged more transparency about how conclusions were reached [ID:nLDE66415U].

It said the IPCC exaggerated the rate of melt of Himalayan glaciers by saying they could all vanish by 2035. The IPCC wrongly said that 55 percent of the Netherlands is below sea level -- the real figure is 26 percent. The IPCC projected that between 75 million and 250 million people in Africa are at risk of experiencing stress on water supplies by 2020 due to climate change -- the real range is between 90 and 220 million.

OVERALL FINDINGS IN 2007 IPCC REPORT

* OBSERVED CHANGES - "Warming of the climate system is unequivocal".

* CAUSES OF CHANGE - "Most of the observed increase in globally averaged temperatures since the mid-20th century is very likely due to the observed increase in ... greenhouse gas concentrations" from human activities. ("Very likely" means at least 90 percent)

Annual greenhouse gas emissions from human activities have risen by 70 percent since 1970. Concentrations of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, far exceed the natural range over the last 650,000 years, it said.

* PROJECTED CLIMATE CHANGES - Temperatures are likely to rise by between 1.1 and 6.4 degrees Celsius (2.0 and 11.5 Fahrenheit) and sea levels by between 18 cm and 59 cm (7 inches and 23 inches) this century, without accounting for risks of an accelerated thaw of Greenland and Antarctica.

Africa, the Arctic, small islands and Asian mega-deltas are likely to be especially affected by climate change. Sea level rise "would continue for centuries" because of the momentum of warming even if greenhouse gas levels are stabilised.

"Warming could lead to some impacts that are abrupt or irreversible". About 20-30 percent of species will be at increasing risk of extinction if future temperature rises exceed 1.5 to 2.5 degrees Celsius.

* SOLUTIONS/COSTS - Governments have a wide range of tools -- higher taxes on emissions, regulations, tradeable permits and research. An effective carbon price could help cuts.

Emissions of greenhouse gases would have to peak by 2015 to limit global temperature rises to 2.0 to 2.4 degrees Celsius (3.6-4.3F) over pre-industrial times, the strictest goal assessed.

The costs of fighting warming will range from less than 0.12 percent of global gross domestic product (GDP) per year for the most stringent scenarios until 2030 to less than 0.06 percent for a less tough goal. In the most costly case, that means a cumulative loss of GDP by 2030 of less than 3 percent.

(Editing by Charles Dick)

UN climate panel ordered to make fundamental reforms
Yahoo News 30 Aug 10;

UNITED NATIONS (AFP) – An international review panel on Monday called on the UN global climate change body to carry out fundamental reforms after embarrassing errors in a landmark report dented its credibility.

The Nobel Peace Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was caught in an international storm after it admitted its landmark 2007 report exaggerated the speed at which Himalayas glaciers were melting.

The review panel said the IPCC has been "successful overall" but called for leadership changes, stricter guidelines on source material and a check on conflicts of interest.

The five-month probe ordered by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said the IPCC should have a stronger scientific basis for making its predictions and recommended an overhaul of the position of IPCC chairman Rajendra Pachauri.

The InterAcademy Council, which groups 15 leading science academies, was brought in after an uproar over the IPCC's 2007 study, which highlighted evidence that climate change was already hurting the planet.

In the run-up to a climate summit in Copenhagen in 2009, the IPCC was rocked by a scandal involving leaked emails which critics say showed that they skewed data.

The mistake over the Himalayan glaciers -- a claim which was found to be sourced to a magazine article -- and an earlier error over how much of the Netherlands is below sea level also tainted the IPCC's image.

"I think the errors made did dent the credibility of the process -- there's no question about it," said Harold Shapiro, a former president of Princeton University who led the review.

"Trust is something you have to earn every year," he told reporters. "We think what we recommended will help."

The IPCC has admitted its mistakes but insisted its core conclusions about climate change are sound.

The review said the glacier reference showed the IPCC did not pay close enough attention to dissenting viewpoints.

"There were a number of reviewers who pointed out that this didn't seem quite right to them and that just was not followed through," Shapiro said.

The UN review said guidelines on source material for the IPCC were "too vague" and called for specific language, and enforcement, on what types of literature are unacceptable.

The review called for a new chief executive to run the IPCC and for the chairmanship to become a part-time post with a new holder for each landmark study carried out.

Pachauri, an Indian scientist primarily employed by the TERI think-tank, has come under criticism, with some arguing he had a vested interest due to his business dealings with carbon trading companies. He has strongly denied any conflict of interest however.

Pachauri told a press conference after the report that he would let member-states decide his future. The 194 nation IPCC is to hold a general meeting in Busan, South Korea in October.

The IPCC chairman criticized what he called "ideologically driven posturing" in the attacks on the climate group, which shared the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize with former US vice president Al Gore.

Ban said the review had in no way weakened the strength of basic climate science but he said nations had to act on the recommendations.

"Given the gravity of the climate challenge, the secretary general believes it is vital that the world receives the best possible climate assessments through an IPCC that operates at the highest levels of professionalism, objectivity, responsiveness and transparency," his spokesman said in a statement.

In Brussels, European Climate Action Commissioner Connie Hedegaard also said that "after all the fights" the main findings of the 2007 report are "still unchallenged."

"The bottom line, and this report says it, is that overall the IPCC has done a very good job, but there were some minor errors and they were corrected," she told AFP.

Environmental group Greenpeace pointed to severe weather this year -- including Pakistan's flood disaster and Russia's worst-ever heat wave -- as new evidence of global warming.

"Despite the muckraking and crude attempts to undermine the findings of the IPCC, the scientific consensus is clear, climate change represents a serious threat to the future of the environment and humanity," Greenpeace said.

Report: Climate science panel needs change at top
Seth Borenstein, Associated Press Yahoo News 30 Aug 10;

WASHINGTON – Scientists reviewing the acclaimed but beleaguered international climate change panel called Monday for a major overhaul in the way it's run, but stopped short of calling for the ouster of the current leader.

The independent review of the U.N. climate panel puts new pressure on chairman Rajendra Pachauri, who has been criticized for possible conflicts of interest, but shows no sign of stepping down.

"It's hard to see how the United Nations can both follow the advice of this committee and keep Rajendra Pachauri on board as head," said Roger Pielke Jr., a frequent critic of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The University of Colorado professor praised the review findings as a way of saving the climate panel with "tough love."

The InterAcademy Council, a collection of the world's science academies, outlined a series of "significant reforms" in management structure needed by the IPCC, a body that won a Nobel Prize with former Vice President Al Gore in 2007.

Last year, a batch of errors embarrassed the authors of the climate report. Among the most prominent were misleading statements about glaciers in the Himalayas. The IPCC incorrectly said they were melting faster than others and that they would disappear by 2035 — hundreds of years earlier than other information suggests.

"Those errors did dent the credibility of the process, no question about it," said former Princeton University president Harold Shapiro, who led the review of the IPCC.

Climate change science took a parade of public hits last winter, starting with the release of hacked e-mails from a British climate center. Then there was the failure of a summit in Copenhagen to come up with mandatory greenhouse gas pollution limits, followed by the mistakes discovered in the IPCC report. On top of that, the winter seemed unusually cold in many places, undercutting belief in global warming.

The mood seems different now. Several outside reports — including those by the British, Dutch and American governments — have upheld the chief scientific finding of the climate panel: that global warming is man-made and incontrovertible. This year, so far, is on target to be the hottest on record worldwide with a number of extreme weather events.

IPCC chief Pachauri, an academic from India who also is a professor at Yale, said many of the recommendations outlined are steps he already has started. Critics, including those in the U.S. Senate, have called on him to resign, but on Monday he gave no indication he would.

"This has nothing to do with personalities," Pachauri told The Associated Press. "I think we're jumping the gun if we're talking about taking any action before the IPCC takes a look at the report."

Shapiro said if fundamental changes are made, the IPCC — created in 1989 by the United Nations and World Meteorological Organization — can regain its credibility. The IPCC involves scientists mostly volunteering work with only 10 staffers, and even Pachauri is a part-time volunteer.

The 113-page review was requested by the IPCC and the U.N. after the errors were found. It didn't study the quality of the science itself, although Shapiro said the key recommendations in the climate report "are well supported by the scientific evidence."

Still, he said the way the report expressed confidence in scientific findings was incomplete and at times even misleading. In the panel's first report, which addresses the physical causes of global warming, scientists may have underestimated how confident they were in their conclusions, Shapiro said. In the second report, about the effects on daily life, in at least one instance they may have overestimated the scientific backing for their conclusions, he suggested.

The InterAcademy Council said the climate change group overall has done a good job. But the council said it needs a full-time executive director, more openness and regular changes in leadership. It also called for stronger enforcement of its reviews of research and adoption of a conflict of interest policy, which the IPCC does not have, even though its parent agencies do. The conflict of interest issue was raised because of Pachauri's work as adviser and board member of green energy companies.

Pachauri said he has been cleared of any conflict claims, especially since he gave away all the money he was paid to sit on companies' boards.

Scientists who have been among the IPCC authors praised the study. Andrew Weaver of the University of Victoria in Canada said the recommended changes include some that scientists have urged, but he doesn't see these changes as being major.

Weaver said the focus on IPCC structure misses the point when it comes to global warming: "The Titanic is sinking and we're arguing about the nature of the deck chairs."

Achim Steiner, the executive director of the U.N. Environment Program, said the review would help the IPCC recover some of the credibility it lost when it came under a "concerted effort" to attack its integrity.

Steiner said in a telephone interview said the new report restores "in the public mind a level of confidence which is critical for the IPCC's work to be used as a basis for international negotiations and policy making."

Associated Press writers Edith Lederer in New York and Frank Jordans in Geneva contributed to this report

Online:

The InterAcademy Council's review: http://reviewipcc.interacademycouncil.net/

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change: http://www.ipcc.ch/

Stricter controls urged for the UN's climate body
Paul Rincon BBC News 30 Aug 10;

The UN's climate science body needs stricter checks to prevent damage to the organisation's credibility, an independent review has concluded.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has faced mounting pressure over errors in its last major assessment of climate science in 2007.

The review said guidelines were needed to ensure IPCC leaders were not seen as advocating specific climate policies.

It also urges transparency and suggests changes to the management of the body.

The IPCC has admitted it made a mistake in its 2007 assessment in asserting that Himalayan glaciers could disappear by 2035. But it says this error did not change the broad picture of man-made climate change.

The review committee stressed that previous IPCC science assessments had been successful overall, but it said the body's response to revelations of errors in its 2007 report had been "slow and inadequate".

Critics have previously called on the IPCC's chair, Dr Rajendra Pachauri, to resign. Responding to the report, Dr Pachauri said he wanted to stay to implement changes at the organisation.

He stressed that none of the reviews set up in the wake of recent climate controversies found flaws with the fundamental science of climate change.

In the past year, climate science and political negotiations aimed at dealing with global warming, such as the Copenhagen summit, have come under unprecedented scrutiny.

In February, the UN panel suggested setting up an independent review, feeling that its 20-year-old rules might need an overhaul. It was overseen by the Inter-Academy Council (IAC), an international umbrella body for science academies.

There was also a sense the UN body might have been ill-equipped to handle the attention in the wake of "Glaciergate" and the release of e-mails hacked from the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) and the the University of East Anglia, UK.

The e-mails issue came to light in November last year, when hundreds of messages between CRU scientists and their peers around the world were posted on the internet, along with other documents.

Critics said the e-mail exchanges revealed an attempt by the researchers to manipulate data and three independent reviews were initiated into the affair.

This review of the IPCC's workings was released at a news conference in New York on Monday. Among the committee's recommendations was that the UN body should appoint an executive director to handle day-to-day operations and speak on behalf of the panel.

It also said the current limit of two six-year terms for the chair of the organisation was too long.

The report favoured the post of IPCC chair and that of the executive director being limited to the term of one climate science assessment.

Dr Pachauri became head of the organisation in 2002 and was re-elected for his second term in 2008.

A conflict of interest charge has also been levelled at Dr Pachauri over his business interests. The IPCC chair has vigorously defended himself over these charges, but the report said the UN organisation needed a robust conflict of interest policy.

Speaking in New York, Harold Shapiro, who led the IAC review, said that although the IPCC's assessment process had "served society well", fundamental changes would help the IPCC continue to perform successfully under a "public microscope".

Dr Shapiro conceded that controversy over errors in climate science assessments had dented the credibility of the process.
'Slow' response

The IAC report concentrates on review processes at the UN body, including the use of non-peer reviewed sources, and quality control on data.

It said the IPCC should establish an executive committee that could include individuals from outside the climate science community in order to enhance credibility and independence.

The IAC committee said processes used by the UN panel to review material in its assessment reports were thorough.

But it said procedures needed tightening to minimise errors. And the IAC urged editors to ensure genuine controversies were reflected and alternative views were accounted for.

Speaking to the BBC, Dr Benny Peiser, director of the Global Warming Policy Foundation, a "sceptical" climate think-tank, welcomed the recommendations, but added: "We really want the IPCC to accept these recommendations and implement them not in 2015, but now. Otherwise, their next report will not be credible."

Mike Hulme, professor of climate science at the University of East Anglia, called the reforms radical and far-reaching.

"If the recommendations are fully implemented, the way the IPCC reports and communicates its findings will be very different in future," he told the BBC.

The IAC says part of the IPCC 2007 report contained statements that were based on little evidence, and urges IPCC authors to make future projections only when there is sufficient support for them.

The use by the IPCC of so-called "grey literature" - that which has not been peer-reviewed or published in scientific journals - has sparked controversy, partly because this type of material was behind the glacier error.

The committee said such literature was often appropriate for inclusion in the IPCC's assessment reports. But it said authors needed to follow the IPCC's guidelines more closely and that the guidelines themselves were too vague.

The report's recommendations are likely to be considered at the IPCC's next plenary meeting in South Korea in October.


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Best of our wild blogs: 30 Aug 10


ReefFriends Reef Survey Dive @ Pulau Semakau Instead
from colourful clouds

Falling trees
from The Green Volunteers by Grant W.Pereira

Learning outdoors survival skills @ ICCS Briefing?
from News from the International Coastal Cleanup Singapore

How best to balance economic growth and protection of the environment?
from Mongabay.com news


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Captive hawsbill turtles released in Malaysia

'City' turtles find sea legs
Satiman Jamin New Straits Times 29 Aug 10;

PULAU REDANG: Sea Turtle Research Unit (Seatru) at Cagar Hutang Turtle Sanctuary here scored another first yesterday when it released a pair of juvenile hawksbill turtles into the sea attached with satellite transmitters.

The turtles, named "Duke Aziz" and "Myrtle Adie" were flown from Subang airport in Selangor to the island two days ago.

The pair were hatched at the sanctuary four years ago but had been living at Aquaria KLCC since they were hatchlings as part of Seatru's long-term experiment to see whether it was viable to raise turtles in captivity.

Seatru chief Dr Juanita Joseph said raising turtles in captivity was called "head-starting", referring to the head start the turtles were given in the safe environment in captivity.

She said although juvenile turtles were stronger than hatchlings, the head-starting programme was not without its risks as the turtles raised in captivity might have lost their ability to survive in the open ocean, their natural habitat.

"The satellite transmitter package costs about RM50,000 each including the data retrieval, satellite usage and data recording functions. The one on Duke was sponsored by Aquaria KLCC while Myrtle's was sponsored by The Body Shop."

She said the transmitters would enable researchers to know the location of the turtles as well as how deep they dive and how long they stayed underwater.

"The data would be more comprehensive compared with other transmitters attached to turtles. Previously we only got to know the approximate position of the turtles," she said.

Seatru is a unit of Universiti Malaysia Terengganu and Duke Aziz was named after UMT vice chancellor Prof Dr Aziz Deraman.

The other turtle was named Myrtle by Aquaria KLCC, and the the name Adie was after Adie Mahadi Mustaffa, the longest serving employee at the sanctuary.

Seatru adviser Associate Professor Dr Liew Hock Chark said the data obtained from the voyage of the turtles would help determine the next step in their turtle conservation programme.

"If they cope well after spending their early years in captivity, we may do more head-starting programmes in future," he said.

Although Duke looked a little lost at first as he wandered around the beach, it eventually made it to the water. Liew, Joseph and Seatru staff filming Duke's maiden voyage were pleased when the city-bred turtle proved that it still had not forgotten its roots.

Duke whizzed past the researchers and was gone as soon as his flippers touched the crystal-clear water.

Myrtle Adie, whose gender has yet to be determined, displayed the same behaviour once released from the transport box in which it had travelled from Kuala Lumpur.

It seems the turtles totally agreed with the programme's motto of "Tracking For Freedom".


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Green turtle satellite tagged for the first time in India

Shyam Balasubramanian Express Buzz 30 Aug 10;

CHENNAI: For the first time in India, a Green Turtle, a large species of sea turtle, was satellite tagged on Sunday. The turtle, Greenie, is expected to give great insight into the feeding and migration patterns of the species.

Sunday’s tagging also marks the third such instance of a sea turtle being tagged on the Chennai coast. Greenie was released into the sea near Marakkanam on Sunday evening by Tamil Nadu’s Chief Wildlife Warden R Sundararaju.

“This is fresh lease of life for Greenie. It was found entangled in a fisherman’s net near Marakkanam. It was very tired from struggling against the net and persistently refused to return to the sea. So we went and brought the turtle to our facility in Neelankarai, where we rehabilitated the turtle,” said Dr Supraja Dharini, founder of the TREE Foundation, a voluntary organisation that works for marine biodiversity conservation along the Chennai coast.

Volunteers held Greenie down, as the satellite tag was attached to its back using waterproof adhesive. “We cannot tell yet if Greenie is male or female because it is not mature yet. But it will grow up to at least four feet in length,” says Saba Natesan, volunteer with TREE Foundation.

The two previous sea turtles which were satellite tagged in Chennai were both Olive Ridleys, of which one stopped transmitting signals. The other Ridley, Arnavi has travelled 6,185 km in the sea since she was released on March 13 this year. Her movements have shed light on the central role that ocean currents play in the movement of sea turtles as well as their feeding patterns.

Greenie’s movement, as is also the case with the previous two Ridleys, will be tracked by six satellites to which the transmitters will send signals every time the turtle surfaces to breathe. To track the movements of Greenie and Arnavi, visit www.seaturtle.org.


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Thousands flee as long-sleepy Sumatra volcano erupts

Reuters AlertNet 29 Aug 10;

JAKARTA, Aug 29 (Reuters) - Thousands of Indonesians were evacuated from the slopes of a volcano on Sunday after it erupted for the first time in more than 400 years, spewing out lava and sending smoke and dust 1,500 metres (5,000 feet) into the air.

Mount Sinabung, in the north of the island of Sumatra, began erupting around midnight after rumbling for several days, prompting some villagers to panic before the mass evacuation got under way.

Indonesia is on the so-called Pacific Rim of Fire, an arc of volcanoes and geological fault lines triggering frequent earthquakes around the Pacific Basin. The eruption triggered the highest red volcano alert.

Two people died, one from breathing problems and the other from a heart attack, and two suffered injuries in road accidents as trucks, ambulances and buses were mobilised in the rescue operation.

"This is the first time since 1600 that Sinabung has erupted and we have little knowledge in terms on its eruptive patterns," said Surono, head of Indonesia's vulcanology centre.

Authorities took at least 12,000 people from high risk areas on the slopes of the 2,460-metre volcano to temporary shelters. Local TV showed showed women and children wearing face masks in cramped tents.

The area around the volcano is largely agricultural.

"Since this is the first eruption we've had in Sinabung, we're anticipating residents to remain at the shelters for at least a week while waiting for further status alert," said Priyadi Kardono, a spokesman at the national disaster management agency.

Residents panicked when the volcano started erupting overnight and some of them who live in safer areas chose to take refugee at shelters, Kardono added.

The eruption has not damage roads or bridges. The nearest big city is Medan where there were no disruptions to flights.

(Reporting by Karima Anjani; Editing by Nick Macfie)

Volcano quiet for 400 years erupts in Indonesia
Associated Press Yahoo News 29 Aug 10;

JAKARTA, Indonesia – A volcano in western Indonesia spewed hot lava and sand high into the sky early Sunday in its first eruption in 400 years. Government volcanologist Surono, who uses only one name, said Mount Sinabung in North Sumatra province started rumbling a few days ago and the minor morning eruption had mostly stopped.

It sent sand and ash up to a mile (1.5 kilometers) high but lava only moved near its crater. It caused no major damage and "only dust covered plants and trees," he said.

He said Mount Sinabung last erupted in 1600, so observers don't know the volcano's eruption pattern and are monitoring it closely for more activity.

Evacuations on the volcano's slopes started Friday at the first signs of activity. Up to 10,000 people who fled are staying in government buildings, houses of worship and other evacuation centers in two nearby towns.

The government has distributed 7,000 masks to refugees and set up public kitchens so people can cook food, said Priyadi Kardono, spokesman for the National Disaster Management Agency.

Indonesia, the world's largest archipelago, is on the so-called "Ring of Fire," an arc of volcanos and fault lines encircling the Pacific Basin.

Ash won't reach Singapore
Straits Times 31 Aug 10;

THE volcanic ash thrown up by an Indonesian volcano is not expected to cloud the skies over Singapore.

Mount Sinabung erupted on Sunday and again yesterday morning, sending ash 2km into the air. The volcano is about 648km from Singapore in the north of Sumatra. Records dating back 400 years do not show any eruptions over that time.

The prevailing winds are not expected to blow the volcanic ash towards Singapore, however. Said a spokesman for the National Environment Agency (NEA): 'The low-level winds over Singapore are light and from the south-east, while the upper-level winds are from the north-east to east.

'Around northern Sumatra, near Mount Sinabung, low-level winds are light and variable with upper-level winds blowing from the north-east to east.'

He added that wind conditions are expected to remain unchanged for the next few days.

The Meteorological Services Division of the NEA is monitoring the situation closely.

Dormant volcano eruptions do happen, with about one incident every decade.

VICTORIA VAUGHAN


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Best of our wild blogs: 29 Aug 10


Semakau guiding with NUS High
from wonderful creation

Life History of the Studded Sergeant
from Butterflies of Singapore

An Oriental Magpie Robin and a green parakeet
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Barge carrying liquid petroleum products hits Bedok Jetty
from wild shores of singapore

Chek Jawa with the Naked Hermit Crabs
from wild shores of singapore


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Malaysia mulls landmark trial of GM anti-dengue mosquitoes

Beh Lih Yi (AFP) Google News 29 Aug 10;

KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysia is considering releasing genetically modified mosquitoes designed to combat dengue fever, in a landmark field trial that has come in for criticism from environmentalists.

In the first experiment of its kind in Asia, 2,000-3,000 male Aedes aegypti mosquitoes would be released in two Malaysian states in October or November.

The insects in the study have been engineered so that their offspring quickly die, curbing the growth of the population in a technique researchers hope could eventually eradicate the dengue mosquito altogether.

Females of the Aedes species are responsible for spreading dengue fever, a sometimes deadly illness that has killed 100 people so far this year in Malaysia alone.

The World Health Organization estimates worldwide infections at 50 million annually. Numbers have grown dramatically in recent decades, due to rapid urbanisation and enhanced mobility that has carried the virus further afield.

The proposal field trial follows a series of lab tests conducted in Malaysia since 2006, and the government is seeking public feedback before moving to the next step.

But environmentalists are not convinced, and are concerned the genetically modified (GM) mosquito could fail to prevent dengue and could also have unintended consequences.

"Once you release these GM mosquitoes into the environment, you have no control and it can create more problems than solving them," said Gurmit Singh, head of the Centre for Environment, Technology and Development.

"There are a lot of risks involved," he told AFP.

Singh said the larvae will only die if their environment is free of tetracycline, an antibiotic commonly used for medical and veterinary purposes.

"If the larvae come into contact with the tetracycline, the chances of the larvae surviving is higher than it dying off," he said.

"We don't know how the genetic flow will be affected. The non-targeted species might be adversely affected and increase the risk of ecological harm."

"We shouldn't take the risk, it is better to play safe," Singh said, adding that current measures to contain dengue outbreaks such as spraying insecticides are still effective if enforcement is beefed up.

The field trial for the GM anti-dengue mosquitoes -- which was developed by a British-based insect bio-tech company, Oxitec -- will be undertaken by the Malaysia's Institute for Medical Research, an agency under the health ministry.

The two groups, through their media firm, declined comment on the trial or respond to the environmental concerns, saying it was inappropriate as their "application is now going through the final stages of regulatory scrutiny".

The Natural Resources and Environment Ministry said on its website that the field trial, if approved, would be conducted on two consecutive days and "in strict adherence to requirements" by the National Biosafety Board.

It said the GM mosquitoes proposed for release contain "a fluorescent molecular marker and a self-limiting construct".

A ministry official confirmed the plan to AFP and said that anti-dengue GM mosquitoes had previously been released in a trial in Cayman Islands in the Caribbean.

Dengue infection leads to a sudden onset of fever with severe headaches, muscle and joint pains, and rashes.

The virus has historically been found in tropical regions, particularly in urban and semi-urban areas, but has spread in recent years to colder and higher places and is now endemic in more than 100 countries.


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