Best of our wild blogs: 3 Jan 10


Nature in the Heartlands: Toa Payoh Town Park
from Midnight Monkey Monitor

Life Saving 123: Marine Animal Defenses at Pulau Semakau
from a NEW blog Darwinian Left. Of all things evolved

Back to Tuas
from Urban Forest

Land of the Clam Graveyard
from Psychedelic Nature and singapore nature and wild shores of singapore

Rare snail at Sentosa
from wonderful creation

Starry Starry Semakau
from Where Discovery Begins

My Last Outing in 2009
from Beauty of Fauna and Flora in Nature

Red tide affecting Pulau Ubin
from Pulau Ubin Stories

I May Be Wrong About the Kingfishers
from Life's Indulgences

Common Kingfisher swallows fish tail-first
from Bird Ecology Study Group

34 Ubin House
from Pulau Ubin Stories

20,000 Wishing Spheres Recycled After Marina Bay Singapore Countdown from Zero Waste Singapore


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Fish farms in west spared from plankton woes

Irene Tham, Straits Times 3 Jan 10;

Fish farmers along the west coast of Singapore said they are off the hook in terms of huge losses faced by their counterparts in the east.

A plankton bloom that first hit fish farms off Pasir Ris Beach 12 days ago - depriving the fish of oxygen - has also plagued farms around Pulau Ubin.

The sinking news to date: About 20 floating farms reporting a combined loss of 300,000 fish worth about $2.7 million, the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) told The Sunday Times.

However, fish farmers in the west said they are spared from these woes as the types of fish they rear are sturdier.

Mr Malcolm Ong, 46, whose floating farm is about 1km off Lim Chu Kang Jetty, said none of his stock has died so far.

'We rear milk fish and mullet, which are tougher. They also feed on plankton,' he added.

Another milk fish and mullet farmer, Mr Ching Ching Heng, 34, gave the same report: 'We are not affected.'

His farm is about 300m off the same jetty.

The AVA has confirmed that no dead fish have been reported so far by the 48 floating farms in the West Johor Strait, off Lim Chu Kang.

Rearing mostly milk fish, mullet, grouper, seabass, snapper and marine tilapia, they account for about three-quarters of the total aquaculture production here.

The two fish farms off Pulau Semakau, south of Singapore, are also unaffected by the plankton bloom.

The bloom has caused the 20 fish farmers off Pasir Ris Beach and around Pulau Ubin to suffer their biggest loss in the 10 years they have been in business.

Chief among their lost stocks: tiger garoupas, cultivated over the last two years and primed for harvest for next month's Chinese New Year.

Last week, The Straits Times reported that about 1,000 dead fish, mainly tiger garoupas, had washed ashore.

The AVA had explained that the current plankton bloom was triggered by a combination of factors: sudden shift in weather between bouts of sunshine and heavy rain; nutrients from the land washed into the sea by the rain; and little water exchange from rising and ebbing tides.

The spike in the number of these organisms drains the seawater of oxygen, subsequently suffocating fish and other sea creatures.

This is the first time fish farmers here have been hit in this way.

There are a total of 106 licensed coastal floating netcage fish farms. Of these, 56 are in the east off Pasir Ris Beach and around Pulau Ubin.

In total, the farms produced some 3,235 tonnes of fish valued at $11.4 million in 2008, accounting for 4 per cent to 5 per cent of the fish consumed here yearly.


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NEA's stand on styrofoam utensils, idling engines

Sunday Times 3 Jan 10;

I refer to last Sunday's letter, 'What about styrofoam containers?', by Mr Chan Wai Chong.

As part of its overall efforts to reduce the amount of waste and packaging material generated, the National Environment Agency (NEA) encourages the use of non-disposable utensils, and only what is necessary, if plastic containers and other forms of disposable utensils have to be used.

However, consumers can play their part by using their own reusable containers and reusing their plastic bags.

As to idling engines in stationary vehicles, it is an offence under the Environmental Protection and Management (Vehicular Emissions) Regulations to leave an engine idling unnecessarily.

The NEA has been advising drivers to switch off their vehicle engines when having their meal breaks or waiting for passengers.

The NEA also holds regular dialogue sessions with large fleet owners such as taxi companies, bus companies and the National Association of Travel Agents Singapore to remind their drivers not to leave their engines running when stationary.

Members of the public can give details of stationary vehicles with idling engines to the NEA on 1800-CALL NEA (1800-2255-632).

We thank the writer for the feedback.

Vincent Teo
Chief Engineer
Resource Conservation Department
National Environment Agency


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Malaysian catfish fighting with African breed for survival

Loh Foon Fong, The Star 3 Jan 10;

KUALA LUMPUR: The local freshwater walking catfish or keli kayu, a favourite among Malaysians, may soon be a thing of the past if nothing is done to conserve the fish.

Malaysian Zoological Society ecologist Herman Bernard Ganapathy said the catfish (Clarias batrachus), used to be commonly found but now could only be located in remote villages.

“If we don’t do anything about it now, it may head towards being endangered in the next 10 to 15 years,” said Herman yesterday.

The local catfish is usually found in swampy areas, lowland rivers, padi fields and mining pools, but since the introduction of the African catfish, its population has dwindled.

“This is a concern when foreign species are introduced into our local ecosystem and they compete for food and space, and cross breed and reduced the diversity level,” Herman said.

He had to go to a remote village in Negri Sembilan to look for the species for Zoo Negara’s aquarium, which was launched on Friday.

He said the Fisheries Department gave farmers the African catfish and tilapia fish to breed, both highly ferocious eaters, instead of local fish.

He said the African catfish was favoured by farmers because it was hardier and bigger than the local breed and was more viable commercially.

“The local catfish could grow up to 30cm but the African catfish could grow to more than double the size,” he added.

It was also a concern that fish traders and hobbyists sometimes dumped foreign fish species that they did not want into the river and this could affect the local species, he said.

Herman said the Natural Resources and Environment Ministry and the Fisheries Department should seriously look into this.

An avid angler, L.C. Ti, said the keli kayu was small and grew slower than the African breed but tasted sweeter and its texture was smoother.

“We rarely see the keli kayu these days,” he added.


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How JFK airport keeps birds out of plane's way

Working to Separate Big and Small Fliers
Michael Wilson, The New York Times 31 Dec 09;

SHE was driving on the grounds of Kennedy International Airport and talking about the importance of keeping the grass 6 to 10 inches long when she spotted something out of the corner of her eye: a sea gull, standing on the tip of a runway. She hit the gas and cranked the steering wheel and charged straight for it.

The bird flew away. The driver, Laura C. Francoeur, paused in a “now where was I?” way, then resumed her tutorial on how to keep birds away from airplanes.

Ms. Francoeur, 41, is the chief wildlife biologist for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which oversees New York City’s airports. Nearly a year since the double-bird strike that led to Capt. Chesley B. Sullenberger III’s smooth ditching of a US Airways jetliner in the Hudson River, Ms. Francoeur described the many tools — some high-tech, some deadly, some just glorified noisemakers and broomsticks — that she uses to prevent such crises from happening.

She and other wildlife supervisors patrol Kennedy’s runways in S.U.V.’s and carry shotguns. There is a time to shoo a bird away, she explained, and a time to shoot it out of the sky.

All airports must deal with the threat of bird strikes, but at Kennedy, which was built in wetlands, the relationship with wildlife is particularly lively and complicated. Take the aforementioned gull. Gulls love Kennedy. They scoop clams from adjacent Jamaica Bay and drop them on the tarmac, where the shells pop open to reveal the tasty treat. There are clamshells all over the runways.

Unlike those that disrupted Captain Sullenberger’s flight last Jan. 15, most bird strikes are not witnessed by pilots, but discovered by the wildlife team upon recovering the carcass. There have been fewer than 100 per year over Kennedy for most of the last decade, down from 315 in 1988 and 314 in 1989, thanks largely to the airport’s depredation — lethal shooting — program, started in 1991.

That is just one of many tools in Ms. Francoeur’s toolbox.

PYROTECHNICS They look like the fat revolvers from a Dick Tracy strip, but the pistols the wildlife supervisors carry on J.F.K.’s runways do not fire bullets. They are noisemakers that shoot two different rounds, depending on the species of bird the person wants to scare away — the “whistler,” which emits a harsh Fourth-of-July-type screech, and the “banger,” which, as the name suggests, bangs.

TRAPS The airport traps “mostly what they call ‘nuisance birds’ — pigeons, starlings and house sparrows,” Ms. Francoeur said. One trap is shaped like a funnel. “They walk in and get disoriented,” she said. “They just walk around the edges. They kind of walk around the exit point, they just keep missing it.”

BIRDS OF PREY From May to November, falcons are deployed to scare off smaller birds. The falcons are teased with a lure that looks like a bird they preys upon, setting the falcon into a series of dives as if it were hunting. “Birds see this from a distance away, they see this falcon is in hunting mode, and theoretically, they don’t want anything to do with that part of the airport,” Ms. Francoeur said. Falcons are not supposed to actually kill birds, but they do from time to time. “It’ll go for retraining,” Ms. Francoeur said.

CLIPPERS Six to 10 inches is a “happy medium” for the grass near the runways. If the grass is allowed to get too tall, it might attract small mammals, and that in turn will attract raptors, a type of bird the airport wants to keep at a minimum, Ms. Francoeur said. “If you keep it too short, certain birds like really short grass so they can watch for predators. Gulls like to sit in short grass so they can see everything around them.”

LASER The airport bought a hand-held laser device from a French company, Lord Imaging, that shines a thin, green beam. “Birds perceive the bright green beam as a long and big stick coming their way and the only alternative they have to avoid the blow is to fly away,” the company states on its Web site. “This is a survival reflex, the same reflex as a bird flying away as a car approaches.”

HELIKITE Part balloon, part kite, this little device, from a family-owned English company, floats in the air and simulates a predatory bird. Smaller birds flee.

NOISE The airport has special vehicles equipped with loudspeakers on the roof that send out a recording of a gull in distress that researchers found in a Cornell University library. “We have two species: the laughing gull and the herring gull,” Ms. Francoeur said. “They will fly in and investigate to see what’s going on, and then you fire the pyrotechnic into the flock.”

It’s important to remember to turn off the recording right away. “If you just keep playing the distress call over and over, it’s like crying wolf,” she said. “Gulls seem very adept at figuring things like that out.”

CABBIE CONTROL Kennedy has a robust, to put it mildly, waiting area for cab drivers seeking fares, out of sight of travelers. There the cabbies pray, nap, play soccer, throw dice — and eat takeout from a little cafe. Gulls swoop like dive bombers for scraps. Ms. Francoeur and her staff regularly visit the drivers and ask them not to feed the birds, and have posted signs imploring the same in English, Spanish and French Creole.

SHOTGUNS The most effective means of preventing bird strikes remains the good old 12-gauge shotgun. Ms. Francoeur’s team killed 1,093 birds this year, a record (up from 265 in 1991, when shooting began). Shooters are trained and retrained on what birds they can shoot and which are protected.

YANKEE INGENUITY Fish scales on the airport grounds = bad sign. It turned out that osprey were nesting on a complex radio antenna that the wildlife supervisors were forbidden to interfere with. “I needed something nonmetallic,” Ms. Francoeur recalled. She and others rigged up a system of PVC pipes and nylon lines around the antenna last year that made it impossible for osprey to get comfortable enough to eat their freshly caught fish, much less nest.


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Battle will be stepped up this year to save the tiger

Tigers top WWF list of 10 important endangered species as biodiversity campaign is launched
Robin McKie, The Observer 3 Jan 10;

Scientists and conservationists are to intensify their efforts this year to save one of Earth's most powerful, and threatened, creatures: the tiger.

Biologists have placed Panthera tigris at the top of a list of 10 key animals facing extinction, which should become the focus for major conservation efforts in 2010, they say.

"This year has been designated the International Year of Biodiversity by the United Nations and so we have created a list of 10 critically important endangered animals that we believe will need special monitoring over the next 12 months," said Diane Walkington, head of species programme for the WWF in the UK. Animals on the WWF list include the polar bear and the giant panda.

"This year will also be the Chinese Year of the Tiger, and so we have put it at the top of our list," added Walkington. "It will have special iconic importance."

Over the past century, the world's population of tigers has been reduced by 95% as a result of hunting and poaching for their body parts, which are used in traditional Asian medicine. There are only around 3,200 tigers left on the planet.

Of its nine main sub-species, three – the Bali, Caspian and Java tigers – are now extinct, while there has been no reliable siting of a fourth, the South China tiger, for 25 years. This leaves the Bengal, Amur, Indochinese, Sumatran and Malayan tigers, the numbers of which, with the exception of the Bengal and Indochinese, have been reduced to a few hundred per species.

In recent years conservationists have achieved some noticeable success in halting the decline in tiger numbers. For example, they helped to halt hunting of the Amur tiger, which lives in eastern Russia. Its numbers had dropped to a few dozen. Today there are around 500 Amur tigers, thanks to conservation measures introduced by the Russian government.

"It showed we could help the tiger," said Walkington.

However, over the past two or three years, levels of poaching have risen again while habitat problems have added to the stress on tiger numbers.

For example, sea level rises – caused by climate change – are now threatening the mangrove homes of tigers in the Sunderbans regions of Bangladesh and India. Hence the international decision to redouble efforts to save the tiger this year. "Of course, there are thousands of other species on the endangered list," added Walkington. "However, there is particular importance in selecting a creature such as the tiger for special attention.

"To save the tiger, we have to save its habitat – which is also home to many other threatened species.

"So if we get things right and save the tiger, we will also save many other species at the same time."


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Hunters kill 20 wolves in first Swedish hunt in 45 years

Yahoo News 2 Jan 10;

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – Hunters shot dead 20 wolves in Sweden on Saturday on the first day of the country's first authorised wolf hunt in 45 years, according to a toll issued by Swiss media.

The Swedish environment authority had issued permits for 27 of the animals to be killed between January 2 and February 15 in five central and southwestern regions: 10 percent of the Sweden's entire wolf population.

Parliament decided in October to limit the wolf population to a maximum of 210 and 20 packs for the next five years.

The wolf population has grown steadily from near zero in the 1970s and poses a problem for farmers, who lose livestock in attacks. They are also increasingly seen in urban areas including suburbs of Stockholm.

Sheep farmer Kenneth Holmstrom told the Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter that he had lost 32 sheep in 2005 in just two wolf attacks.

"The wolf has the right to exist in the forests and in the fields but it must be better controlled," he said.

"It does not have a natural enemy and it multiplies quickly."

Swedish conservation groups have objected the hunt violates European Union legislation on species and habitats.

There were about 150 wolves in Sweden in 2005. The number rose to between 182 and 217 last winter and more cubs produced since then, according to the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency.

Sweden culls its resurgent wolves
BBC News 2 Jan 10;

Swedish hunters have begun culling wolves for the first time in 45 years after parliament ruled that numbers needed to be reduced again.

More than half the quota of 27 may have died on the first day alone with nine shot dead in Dalarna and up to nine killed in Varmland, Swedish radio says.

Hunters have until 15 February to complete the cull, which will leave Sweden with an estimated 210 wolves.

Some 10,000 hunters were reported to be planning to take part in the hunt.

Hunting in the county of Dalarna was halted as the county's individual quota was nine wolves.

Varmland's quota of nine "may also have been filled", the radio reported later on Saturday.

'Five injured'

In Dalarna, hunters reportedly injured another five wolves.

Every time a hunter shoots and hits a wolf he has to report it to the county authorities, so they can keep track of the local cull.

Earlier, hunters insisted there were measures in place to prevent them shooting too many.

"There's a lot of regulation, hunters have to check the quota every hour," Gunnar Gloersson, of the Swedish Hunters Association, told Swedish radio.

Nevertheless, the Swedish Society for Nature Conservation was critical of the decision to proceed with the cull, saying it was against EU legislation as the Swedish wolf population had not reached a healthy level.

A formal complaint was to be issued to the EU Commission, Swedish radio said.

The hunt is timed to end before the mating season, which begins in mid-February.

Snow vital

Wolves were hunted to near extinction in southern Scandinavia until a hunting ban was imposed in the 1970s.

Sweden and Norway have worked together to reintroduce the species to the forests along their border. When Norway culled some wolves in 2001, saying the population had spread too far, Sweden lodged a protest.

But the Swedish parliament recently decided there should be at most 210 wolves in Sweden.

Michael Schneider of the Swedish Environmental Protection Agency says that was the level last year, and since then more than 20 pairs of wolves have had pups.

"We have to remove this increase to keep the population at this level," he said.

Mr Gloersson, of the hunting association, said: "We have a lot of problems with wolves - in reindeer areas, with livestock, and for hunters they kill our valuable dogs."

"Since they came back we have to live with them, but we have to keep their numbers down."

He said the success of the cull would depend on the weather.

"The only easy way to hunt wolves is if we have snow, so the hunters can track them on the snow. If we don't have snow I don't think we'll even be able to reach the quota of 27 wolves," he said.

Sweden's cull of wolves nears its quota
Yahoo News 3 Jan 10;

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – Hunters have only a few more wolves to kill to complete their quota in the first cull of the animal in Sweden for 45 years, according to a tally compiled by the press Sunday.

Another three wolves were shot Sunday after some 20 killed on Saturday, all but meeting the target of 27 kills set for the hunt, which was meant to run between January 2 and February 15.

The controversial cull, condemned by the country's ecology movements, was authorised after parliament voted in October to limit the wolf population to 210 in 20 packs over the next five years.

Farmers had complained of attacks on their livestock and wolves had been reported in the outskirts of some cities, including Stockholm.

"This is a sad day for all those who care about nature," said Mikael Karlsson, president of Swedish Society for Nature Conservation.

Wolves, which had virtually disappeared from Sweden in the 1970s, thrived after being reintroduced there.

Criticism soars as Sweden's wolf hunt ends
Marc Preel Yahoo News 5 Jan 10;

STOCKHOLM (AFP) – Sweden's first wolf hunt in 45 years came to an end Tuesday after hunters met their quota of 27 kills in just four days, as ecologists blasted the hunt as rushed and cruel and slammed the government's decision to allow the cull.

The final two wolves of the quota were killed in central Sweden on Tuesday, bringing to an end the first wolf hunt since 1964 as a number of hunters reported receiving anonymous death threats.

Parliament decided in October to limit the country's wolf population to 210 animals for the next five years.

The cull was meant to run between January 2 and February 15, but hunters killed 20 wolves on the first day, sparking the ire of animal rights activists and local officials.

"I think the hunt was carried out very quickly, there were too many kills all at once," said Stig-Aake Svenson, head of the local branch of the environmental agency in the central Dalarna region where hunters killed 10 wolves instead of the nine allotted to the region.

"And across the entire country, seven wolves were first wounded before they were killed, and that's a very high number. These are problems that need to be investigated ahead of a possible wolf hunt next year," he told AFP.

Some 12,000 hunters had been granted permits to take part in the hunt, a number environmentalists said was out of proportion to the total of 27 authorised kills in five central regions.

They also criticised the lack of coordination between the regions.

"The hunt was totally out of control, the quota was even exceeded in Dalarna, and thousands of hunters were allowed to take part in the kill," lamented Mikael Karlsson, the head of the Swedish Society for Nature Conservation (SSNC) who has filed a complaint against Sweden with the European Commission.

The SNCC claimed the hunt violated European Union legislation on species and habitats.

"This hunt was aimed at pleasing the loudmouthed hunters" who have been calling for a wolf hunt for years, Karlsson said.

But Torbjoern Loevbom of the Swedish Association for Hunting and Wildlife Management said the criticism was "exaggerated".

"The hunt went well for the most part, apart from the one wolf too many that was killed in Dalarna. The cull was completed quickly because the snow made it easier for us," he said.

A fresh snowfall makes it easier for hunters to follow the animal's tracks.

Several hunters have filed police complaints after receiving anonymous death threats, the Association for Hunting and Wildlife Management said.

The Swedish government has also been the target of heavy criticism, in particular Environment Minister Andreas Carlgren whose image as a nature lover has taken a blow.

"The hunt turns to Carlgren," headlined an editorial in tabloid Aftonbladet, the country's most widely read newspaper.

The minister "says the hunt will put an end to the inbreeding in the Swedish wolf population ... That's of course nonsense," it said.

Wolves had virtually disappeared from Sweden in the 1970s. They have thrived since being reintroduced but suffer from the effects of inbreeding because they all descend from the same handful of animals that were introduced.

The government plans to release some 20 new wolves into the wild by 2014 to broaden their gene pool and improve their health.

"If the environment minister's real aim was to combat the wolves' heart, back and kidney problems then the hunt would have been organised differently," the paper wrote.

Parliament's decision to allow the wolf hunt was aimed at increasing public acceptance of the predators.

The animal's presence is controversial in the Nordic country as domestic and farm animals are increasingly attacked by wolves, which have been sighted recently near residential areas, including near the capital Stockholm.

There were between 182 and 217 wolves in Sweden last winter, the Environmental Protection Agency said, noting that new litters had been born since then.


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Row over plan to build dolphin pool in Dubai's The World islands

7 Days 3 Jan 10;

A plan to build a dolphin pool on The World islands should be scrapped immediately, a marine protection activist has said.

Dubai-based Damien Byrne, of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, said the dolphin pool on the Austrian island makes a mockery of a claim that the island will be “environmentally friendly”.

The European development company, Kleindienst, has distributed brochures in which the future inhabitants of the Austria island will “play and swim with the animals” and will please “sports fans and animal lovers”.

The brochure promises that several of the “designer villas” on the Austrian island will have a basement level with “fascinating views into the aquarium and its swimming inhabitants”.

Kleindienst is promising that the dolphins will come from reliable sources and is keen to avoid the negative publicity that followed the Atlantis Hotel’s purchase of wild dolphins from the Solomon Islands.

“The animals concerned are not straight out of the wild, but are domesticated dolphins from established aquariums,” the company said. It says the islands will be “the first environmentally friendly luxury holiday paradise in the world”.

Chief executive Josef Kleindienst told 7DAYS the Austria island would not be complete until 2015 and that is was premature to talk about the performance times for the dolphins or any specific details.

“However, we can confirm that the dolphinarium will operate under the highest recognised marine life protection guidelines in the areas of our business,” he said.

The company says the dolphin pool will be an integral part of its island collection, known as ‘The Heart of Europe’, which includes Switzerland, Austria, Sweden, Germany, Holland and Belgium.

Three more islands represent Monte Carlo, Geneva and Luxembourg.

But Byrne said that he was shocked by the decision to use dolphins as entertainment.

Byrne, who has travelled on Sea Shepherd missions to confront Japanese whaling ships, said that Kleindienst should avoid the bad publicity that Atlantis experienced and scrap the plan.

“Dolphins are very intelligent animals and we should be rebuilding their habitat, not parading them for amusement,” he said.

SI, a potential dolphin source
Solomon Star 5 Jan 10;

THE Solomon Islands is likely to be one reliable source of commercial dolphin export to a newly planned dolphin pool on The World Islands in Austria.

The dolphine pool to be built by European Development Comapany Kleindienst is promised to be a facinating spot.

Kleindienst although refuse to point out where the dolphins will come from promised that the dolphins will come from reliable sources and is keen to avoid the negative publicity that followed the Atlantis Hotel’s purchase of wild dolphins from the Solomon Islands.

The plan has now attracted criticisms from marine conservation groups.

Dubai-based Damien Byrne, of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society said the planned dolphin pool on The World islands should be scrapped immediately.

The marine protection activist said the dolphin pool on the Austrian island makes a mockery of a claim that the island will be “environmentally friendly”.

The European Company, Kleindienst, has distributed brochures in which the future inhabitants of the Austria Island will “play and swim with the animals” and will please “sports fans and animal lovers”.

The brochure promises that several of the “designer villas” on the Austrian island will have a basement level with “fascinating views into the aquarium and its swimming inhabitants”.

“The animals concerned are not straight out of the wild, but are domesticated dolphins from established aquariums,” the company said.

It said the islands will be “the first environmentally friendly luxury holiday paradise in the world”.

Chief executive Josef Kleindienst told 7DAYS the Austria Island would not be complete until 2015 and that is was premature to talk about the performance times for the dolphins or any specific details.

“However, we can confirm that the dolphinarium will operate under the highest recognised marine life protection guidelines in the areas of our business,” he said.

The company said the dolphin pool will be an integral part of its island collection, known as ‘The Heart of Europe’, which includes Switzerland, Austria, Sweden, Germany, Holland and Belgium.
Three more islands represent Monte Carlo, Geneva and Luxembourg.

But the marine activist Mr Byrne said that he was shocked by the decision to use dolphins as entertainment.

Byrne, who has travelled on Sea Shepherd missions to confront Japanese whaling ships, said that Kleindienst should avoid the bad publicity that Atlantis experienced and scrap the plan.

“Dolphins are very intelligent animals and we should be rebuilding their habitat, not parading them for amusement,” he said.

Solomon Islands government has approved an export of up to 100 dolphins a year.


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Sustainability Comes of Age

Henry Fountain, The New York Times 29 Dec 09;

WHEN Andrew Pattison was looking to pursue a graduate degree in sustainability, he drew on his post-college experience working as a conservation biologist in upstate New York. Butterflies were his thing, and he produced numerous recommendations about what should be done to protect them. “I found that quote-unquote important people who were decision makers would read the reports I filed and then not follow them,” Mr. Pattison says.

Those frustrations led him in a different direction. “I knew I wanted to study the way decisions were made on environmental policy,” he says. He also knew where many of the important decisions were made: in cities. With energy and climate policy, he says, “the problem is global, but all politics are local.”

Mr. Pattison, 32, is now a doctoral student in the sustainable urban infrastructure program at the University of Colorado, Denver. It’s one of a growing number of graduate programs in sustainability where the issues affecting cities are front and center.

“We’ve seen a growth in programs that are more focused, either on a particular geographic area or on a discipline,” says Paul Rowland, executive director of the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education. The organization’s Web site, aashe.org, lists nine universities offering doctoral or master’s degrees in urban sustainability studies, and many more programs include the urban environment as a central part of their studies.

In some ways, the shift reflects a coming-of-age of sustainability as a field, away from the back-to-nature ethos of earlier efforts and toward a realization that there are grittier problems — and solutions. “The environmental movement has expanded to understand that people are at the center of these issues,” Mr. Pattison says. “It’s not just save the trees for the trees’ sake.”

But beyond that, sustainability programs are also beginning to better reflect the demographics of their students.

“Too much of environmental planning and policy focuses on wilderness and rural areas,” says Julian Agyeman, professor and chairman of the department of urban and environmental policy and planning at Tufts University in Medford, Mass. “Yet most students’ lives are lived in the urban environment.”

Mr. Agyeman’s department is one of the pioneers of urban environmental studies — it was founded in 1973 by Herman Field, who had been planning director for the university’s school of medicine from 1961 to 1972. Writing some years later about why he created the program, he said, “I was appalled by the mindless despoiling of the physical environment essential to any quality of life, urban or otherwise.”

The University of Colorado’s program began in 2003 with money from the Department of Education, but expanded in 2007 with a five-year National Science Foundation grant to finance 26 doctoral students, according to the program’s director, Anu Ramaswami, a professor of environmental engineering. The program has about the same number of master’s students.

In New York, City College announced in October that it would begin a master’s program in sustainability in the urban environment. The plan is to enroll 18 to 20 students the first year, says Latif Jiji, the program’s director, and students will be able to focus either on architecture — sustainability issues relating to buildings and parks — or engineering, where recycling and clean power will be major subjects.

But as with most such programs, the emphasis will be interdisciplinary. “The philosophy is that the problems these people are going to face are really complex,” Mr. Jiji says. “They don’t fit into nice little categories. We want people with different backgrounds to work together.”

Like other students in Colorado’s multidisciplinary program, Meghan Bernard is working with a city — in her case, Broomfield, northwest of Denver — as she pursues her master’s in engineering. Much of the work has involved crunching numbers to come up with a baseline greenhouse-gas inventory for Broomfield — the climate-related costs of transportation, shelter, food and other aspects of urban life. But now she will be working with residents to develop an action plan for improving the city’s carbon footprint.

“I don’t see myself as an engineer or a policy person,” Ms. Bernard says. “I enjoy the hard numbers, but the engagement part is important for me as well.”

Mr. Pattison’s area of concentration is public policy — he’s been working with the university on analyzing its carbon footprint and developing a climate action plan, and with his class work done he will soon be starting a job as the university’s sustainability officer for its downtown campus. But as he put it, the program has not involved “just sitting in a room full of policy geeks.”

“Here you are taking classes with engineers and planners, and hearing about different things — it’s like, ‘Wow, that wasn’t even on my radar screen.’ ”


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