Best of our wild blogs: 23 Mar 10


Fri 16 Apr 2010: 5pm-7pm @ NUS - "Zoological Explorations in Singapore" from Habitatnews

Job opportunity: RA @ Marine Biology Lab
from The Biodiversity crew @ NUS

Angry about litter on our shores? Do something!
from wild shores of singapore

Unknown Aeolid Nudibranch @ Chek Jawa
from colourful clouds

An E.T. moment
from Compressed air junkie

Faunaweb - a sneak peek at NPark's new site!
from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Brahminy Kite with worn out feathers
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Half a Billion Bottles of Water A Week
from Story of Stuff

Scientists discover world's first amphibious insects: Hawaiian caterpillars from Mongabay.com news


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Overcrowded Singapore seeks to grow with its enormous appetite for sand

Richard Lloyd Parry, Times Online 23 Mar 10;

Since its foundation as an independent state in 1965 Singapore has had bad-tempered relations with its neighbours — and none is larger or more contrasting than Indonesia.

The latter is a sprawling archipelago of 17,500 islands and 240 million people where oases of wealth exist alongside deserts of poverty and deprivation.

The former is an affluent, educated and disciplined modern but overcrowded city state of 4.9 million.

While Indonesia has oil, gas, minerals and forests, Singapore sits on a swampy, malarial island without even enough water to supply its own needs.

The island also has long-term plans to ease its overcrowding by reclaiming land from the sea, and its appetite for sand and aggregates has been immense.

At independence Singapore was 581sq km (224sq miles). Now it is 710sq km and expanding. It gets through 1.5 billion cubic metres of dredged silica a year. The Government has been forced to draw on its strategic sand reserve, which Singapore hoards as other nations keep stocks of oil.

Indonesia’s reluctance to export its own earth is about more than environmental conscientiousness. If Indonesia loses its islands it also risks losing the rights to the ocean surrounding them.

Nipah Island, which is suffering erosion, is only 20km (12 miles) from Singapore. Every foot that it recedes reduces the maritime territory that is measured from its shore.

As Indonesia’s former intelligence chief, General Abdullah Mahmud Hendropriyono, said: “This could theoretically lead to a cartographic zero-sum game in which Singapore’s gain could be at Indonesia’s territorial loss.”

The black marketeers stealing Indonesia’s islands by the boat-load
Richard Lloyd Parry, Times Online 23 Mar 10;

For the people of Sebesi Island, who spend their lives next to the world’s biggest natural time bomb, it seemed to be an offer that they could not refuse.

A businessman from the Indonesian mainland landed one day with a remarkable proposal: to make safe their deadly neighbour, the notorious volcano island of Krakatoa, hulking in the sea a few miles across the water.

When Krakatoa exploded in 1883 36,000 people died and the dust thrown up by the eruption lowered temperatures and darkened skies across the globe.

So the fishermen welcomed the offer of trenches to channel the lava and reduce the danger of the next explosion. However, when the boats arrived and the work began, they realised with anger that the kindly businessman was not renovating Krakatoa. He was stealing it.

“There was a huge barge, the kind you use to carry coal, and it was pumping up the sand through pipes,” said Waiso, an environmental activist who investigated the activity. “This is a national park and a Unesco World Heritage Site and you’re not allowed to touch it. The local people rely on the fishing and the income from tourism, and here they were taking Krakatoa away.” And Krakatoa is just one case among thousands.

With more than 17,000 islands — from the jungly immensities of Borneo and Sumatra to unnamed rocks jutting out of the sea — you might think that Indonesia would not mind if a few of them went missing. But the South-East Asian nation is fighting a losing battle against black marketeers who are, literally, making off with its territory by the boat-load.

Sea reclamation projects in China, Thailand, Hong Kong and Singapore are driving a black market in Indonesia’s abundant supplies of soil, sand and gravel. In 2007 Indonesia banned the export of its sand and soil and threatened a shoot on sight policy against foreign sand pirates and gravel bandits. But, thanks to corrupt local officials who sign off on permits and turn a blind eye to where the material ends up, the smugglers are winning.

Since 2005 at least 24 small islands have disappeared as a result of erosion caused by sand mining. Even where they remain above the waves, the mining process clouds and muddies the sea, devastating fish populations and destroying livelihoods.

“The small islands don’t have large populations but their function in the ecosystem is very important,” said Riza Damanik, of the People’s Coalition for Justice in Fisheries. “In the Riau Islands the fishermen have lost 80 per cent of their income as a result of sand mining.”

Because the trade is illegal, an accurate accounting of how much material is being removed is difficult. Before the ban, however, sand miners might have removed 300,000 tonnes a month from a single island. “I’m sure that the amount of material removed altogether is bigger than the volume destroyed by the Krakatoa explosion,” Mr Riza said.

The eruption of Krakatoa ripped the island to pieces, leaving only fragments of the original landmass but, 127 years later, it is once again a highly active and unpredictable volcano. In the late 1920s a new peak, Anak Krakatau, or Child of Krakatoa, rose out of the sea and has climbed to more than 300m (1,000ft) at a rate of about a centimetre a day.

Since 2007 it has had periods of intense activity when lava and ash have spewed from its crater. But for local people it is a crucial source of income from the tuna, snapper and lobster that live there and the few thousand intrepid tourists who visit every year, as well as being a site of religious reverence.

A legendary prince named Syech Dapur is said to watch over the volcano and protect the people of neighbouring Sebesi, who were very gratified when the sand mining operation began to go wrong.

The pump kept breaking down; a worker was injured when his arm was sucked into a pipe; and after the fishermen’s observations of the illegal activity were reported in the media the smugglers slipped quietly away.

“The spirit of the island was angry with them,” said Iman Faisil, a local tour guide with a smile. “And we are angry too. If they come back we will make a human shield. We will burn their boats. This island does not belong to them; it belongs to all the world.”


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$15m boost for green building practices in Singapore

Firms can tap new fund to introduce and upgrade recycled building products
Tan Hui Yee, Straits Times 23 Mar 10;

THE building industry got a leg up in its recycling efforts yesterday with the launch of a $15 million fund to help companies adopt more sustainable processes.

Demolition contractors, recyclers and ready-mixed concrete suppliers can now tap the Sustainable Construction Capability Development Fund to introduce and upgrade their recycled building products, said Senior Minister of State for National Development Grace Fu.

If need be, the Government may look into topping up the fund in the future, she said, speaking at the opening of a recycling technology project by local company Samwoh Corporation.

The Building and Construction Authority plans to increase demand for recycled materials by requiring building owners aiming for the top grades of its environmentally friendly building programme to adopt sustainable construction methods.

Currently, those aiming for the 'Goldplus' and 'Platinum' standards under its Green Mark scheme can opt out of these measures by beefing up other areas such as greenery and accessibility to public transport. But the changes make mandatory a prescribed minimum level of effort in this regard.

To give users more confidence in the reliability of recycled concrete, the Government will also, from October, require all ready-mixed concrete makers for the Singapore market to be certified according to new standards.

Ms Fu said the industry has 'a long way to go' in adopting more sustainable processes. 'We need both the regulators as well as industry players, both the suppliers as well as developers and constructers, to come together,' she added.

Singapore imports almost all of its construction materials like granite aggregate and sand, which are major components of concrete. Recent supply disruptions, rising material costs and shrinking landfill space have made the task of recycling demolition and construction waste urgent.

The National Environment Agency said 98 per cent of construction and demolition waste was recycled last year. The problem is that materials like recycled aggregate tend to line the bottom of roads or be cast into road kerbs rather than used back in buildings.

The president of the Ready Mixed Concrete Association and chief executive of Holcim Singapore, Dr Sujit Ghosh, said the $15 million fund could come in handy to pay for the extra monitoring of building projects that use the 'green' concrete his company produces.

This will help reassure building owners and consultants that they are not taking unnecessary risks with such new building materials. Most, he said, still stick to fresh materials as they will not have to calculate various specifications from scratch.

'People are looking at the short-term monetary benefits. Recycled concrete is not necessarily significantly cheaper,' he added.

Samwoh's Eco-Green Park, which was officially opened yesterday, comprises an asphalt recycling plant, a ready-mixed concrete plant with recycling facilities, as well as the first building in South-east Asia to use fully recycled aggregates - made of granite - for one entire level.

The Ministry of Education is considering using recycled concrete in the structures of its upcoming schools.

Separately, the Land Transport Authority yesterday gave the green light for the use of recycled asphalt in roads.

The move could save up to 140,000 tonnes of raw material for road building each year.

New S$15m fund to aid sustainable construction
Chris Howells Channel NewsAsia 22 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE : The Building and Construction Authority is setting up a S$15 million fund to promote sustainable construction.

The fund will focus on developing capabilities in recycling waste from the demolition of buildings and in using recycled materials for construction.

The construction industry has welcomed the latest initiative, but is hoping for more government support for their usage.

The opening of the Samwoh eco-green park demonstrates a growing focus in Singapore's construction industry on sustainable development methods.

This is the first building in the country to be built using recycled concrete aggregate.

And Samwoh wants to raise its production of recycled materials for the construction industry.

However, it notes that this will be a long-term investment due to the low margins and the current slow take-up rate.

The government hopes that more companies can use recycled concrete and building materials to reduce Singapore's reliance on imported raw materials.

Elvin Koh, managing director, Samwoh Corporation, said: "...we have invested about S$10 million (in this eco-park). If you are talking about returns, it might be a bit slow because it is new in the market.

"But we view this as a long term-business. It all depends on the government agencies and how fast they can accept this new concept ."

The eco-concept is also making other inroads.

The Land Transport Authority has rolled out changes to its road construction specifications to allow recycled materials to be used in building roads.

While supportive of these moves, industry players said it is too early to tell whether costs will be impacted.

However, they stressed that more government funding is needed for sustainable construction to take off in a big way.

Andrew Khng, president, Singapore Contractors Association, said: "I am hoping that the government will take the lead forward to push the industries by implementing in their contracts (that) a certain percentage of their contracts component should look at the green products; for the contractors, we need some kind of incentive to push us to go green on our own."

Companies said a public-sector led push to adopt more eco-friendly practices could have a positive impact on their earnings.

Samwoh, for instance, gets 3 to 4 per cent of its revenues from the sale of recycled materials. - CNA/sc/ms

Changes to road building specs
Business Times 23 Mar 10;

THE Land Transport Authority (LTA) announced changes to existing road construction specifications to allow the use of recycled waste materials as alternatives to natural raw materials for use in road construction.

Previously, road construction made use of a mixture of bitumen and natural granite aggregates. With the changes, contractors can construct new road pavements with green materials such as Reclaimed Asphalt Pavement (RAP), a processed construction waste material recycled from the milling of defective roads.

Lim Bok Ngam, deputy chief executive (Infrastructure and Development), LTA, said: 'By allowing the use of these recycled waste products, we can reduce our reliance on natural imported construction materials.'

The announcement comes after the success of the Green Pavement trial, started in March last year. A stretch of Tampines road was constructed with a mix of recycled materials, RAP and Incineration Bottom Ash (IBA), to determine if it would be suitable for daily use.

While some roads may have been constructed with a single layer of recycled material, every layer of the Tampines stretch was constructed out of RAP and IBA.

Trial results showed that roads constructed with this mixture of recycled waste materials performed equally well compared to one constructed with natural aggregates.


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Vegetable prices up 10% due to extreme China weather

Seet Sok Hwee/Lynda Hong Channel NewsAsia 22 Mar 10;

SINGAPORE: Extreme weather in China has caused a sharp drop in fruit and vegetable harvests and their supplies to Singapore.

This has in turn resulted in wholesale prices of some vegetables such as cabbage, going up by at least 10 per cent here.

But wholesalers said Singapore will not be too adversely affected as it has a wide variety of food sources to keep supplies stable.

In fact, Singapore imports its vegetables from some 30 countries, including Malaysia. - CNA/vm


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Eating less meat won't reduce global warming: study

Yahoo News 22 Mar 10;

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Eating less meat will not reduce global warming, and claims that it will distract from efforts to find real solutions to climate change, a leading air quality expert said Monday.

"We certainly can reduce our greenhouse gas production, but not by consuming less meat and milk," Frank Mitloehner, an air quality expert at the University of California-Davis, said as he presented a report on meat-eating and climate change at a conference of the American Chemical Society in California.

Blaming cows and pigs for climate change is scientifically inaccurate, said Mitloehner, dismissing several reports, including one issued in 2006 by the United Nations, which he said overstate the role that livestock play in global warming.

The UN report "Livestock's Long Shadow," which said livestock cause more greenhouse gases than all global transportation combined, distracts from the real issues involved in looking for a solution to global warming, said Mitloehner.

The notion that eating less meat will help to combat climate change has spawned campaigns for "meatless Mondays" and a European campaign launched late last year called "Less Meat = Less Heat," backed by former Beatle Paul McCartney, one of the world's best-known vegetarians.

"McCartney and others seem to be well-intentioned but not well-schooled in the complex relationships among human activities, animal digestion, food production and atmospheric chemistry," said Mitloehner.

"Smarter animal farming, not less farming, will equal less heat," Mitloehner said. "Producing less meat and milk will only mean more hunger in poor countries," he said.

Rather than focusing on producing and eating less meat, Mitloehner said developed countries "should focus on cutting our use of oil and coal for electricity, heating and vehicle fuels."

In the United States, transportation creates an estimated 26 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions, whereas raising cattle and pigs for food accounts for about three percent, he said.

The UN report, issued in 2006, said global livestock rearing was responsible for 18 percent of greenhouse gas emissions measured in carbon dioxide equivalents. The UN report said that was more than the greenhouse gases produced worldwide by transport.

Mitloehner said the UN report did not compare like with like when it analyzed the role of livestock versus fossil fuel emissions in spurring global warming.

UN to look at climate meat link
Richard Black, BBC News 23 Mar 10;

UN specialists are to look again at the contribution of meat production to climate change, after claims that an earlier report exaggerated the link.

A 2006 report concluded meat production was responsible for 18% of greenhouse gas emissions - more than transport.

The report has been cited by people campaigning for a more vegetable-based diet, including Sir Paul McCartney.

But a new analysis, presented at a major US science meeting, says the transport comparison was flawed.

Sir Paul was one of the figures launching a campaign late last year centred on the slogan "Less meat = less heat".

But curbing meat production and consumption would be less beneficial for the climate than has been claimed, said Frank Mitloehner from the University of California at Davis (UCD).

"Smarter animal farming, not less farming, will equal less heat," he told delegates to the American Chemical Society (ACS) meeting in San Francisco.

"Producing less meat and milk will only mean more hunger in poor countries."

Leading figures in the climate change establishment, such as Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) chairman Rajendra Pachauri and Lord (Nicholas) Stern, have also quoted the 18% figure as a reason why people should consider eating less meat.

Apples and pears

The 2006 report - Livestock's Long Shadow, published by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) - reached the figure by totting up all greenhouse-gas emissions associated with meat production from farm to table, including fertiliser production, land clearance, methane emissions from the animals' digestion, and vehicle use on farms.

But Dr Mitloehner pointed out that the authors had not calculated transport emissions in the same way, instead just using the IPCC's figure, which only included fossil fuel burning.

"This lopsided 'analysis' is a classical apples-and-oranges analogy that truly confused the issue," he said.

One of the authors of Livestock's Long Shadow, FAO livestock policy officer Pierre Gerber, told BBC News he accepted Dr Mitlohner's criticism.

"I must say honestly that he has a point - we factored in everything for meat emissions, and we didn't do the same thing with transport," he said.

"But on the rest of the report, I don't think it was really challenged."

FAO is now working on a much more comprehensive analysis of emissions from food production, he said.

It should be complete by the end of the year, and should allow comparisons between diets, including meat and those that are exclusively vegetarian.

Different pies

Organisations use different methods for apportioning emissions between sectors of the economy.

In an attempt to capture everything associated with meat production, the FAO team included contributions, for example, from transport and deforestation.

By comparison, the IPCC's methodology collects all emissions from deforestation into a separate pool, whether the trees are removed for farming or for some other reason; and does the same thing for transport.

This is one of the reasons why the 18% figure appears remarkably high to some observers.

The majority of the meat-related emissions come from land clearance and from methane emissions associated with the animals' digestion.

Other academics have also argued that meat is a necessary source of protein in some societies with small food resources, and that in the drylands of East Africa or around the Arctic where crop plants cannot survive, a meat-based diet is the only option.

Dr Mitloehner contends that in developed societies such as the US - where transport emissions account for about 26% of the national total, compared with 3% for pig- and cattle-rearing - meat is the wrong target in efforts to reduce carbon emissions.


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Tracking down the elusive Knysna elephants

BBC News 20 Mar 10;

There has not been a confirmed sighting of an elephant in the Knysna forests of South Africa for decades, after they were hunted to the brink of extinction in the early 1900s. But signs of their survival can still be found, as Hamilton Wende discovers.

The sound of birds calling, twittering and chattering to one another fills the cool forest air.

The trees towering above - kalander, yellowwood, stinkwood - create a vast, soaring canopy of mingled shade and light that surrounds you as you walk the paths.

The Knysna forests are one of the great wonders of our country, and one of the most rewarding experiences you can have is to explore them with children.

Recently, I was there with my wife and stepchildren. The beauty and the fascination of the forest were enhanced by the excitement they brought to their first encounter with it.

A century ago there were up to 600 elephants here. They were hunted ruthlessly for their ivory, but for a long time the impenetrable nature of the forest and the elephants' skill at threading their way through the trees meant that their numbers remained relatively stable.

Then gold was discovered in the area and, although the seam petered out, it led to many more humans arriving, establishing a mine and a small town.

The hunting of the elephants increased exponentially until, according to some estimates, there were only 30 to 50 elephants left in 1902.

By 1920, there were perhaps fewer than 10.

This was the point at which the Knysna elephants and their fate shifted into the netherworld between history and myth.

For decades now, the animals have been seldom seen - years have gone by without any confirmed sightings.

Particularly ferocious

In 1980 the Department of Forestry claimed there were only two or three elephants remaining in the entire dense woodland.

Since then, their existence has become even more shrouded in doubt with many studies claiming that the rare photographs of an elephant in the forest all showed the same single individual.

It was with this shifting, uncertain notion of the giants in the forest that we began our walk.

The children were excited by the possibility that these beasts still lived in the deep, sun-speckled shadows around us - but of course, none of us really wanted to encounter one of them.

Elephants are dangerous enough anywhere in the wild, but those in the Knysna forest are said to be particularly ferocious.

It comes, they say, from the memory of generations having been slaughtered by humans.

"You don't want to see one of these elephants," the guide at the nearby mine museum told us.

"Some of my guys saw one a few months ago and it came charging at them. They raced off on their quad bikes and luckily managed to get away, but it was close."

Elephant memories may be a cliche, but there's no doubting the cruelty suffered by those in the Knysna forest.

"Often they used to hack their tusks out when the animals were still alive," the guide told us.

PJ Pretorius - a famous hunter in the 1920s - describes in his autobiography, Jungle Man, shooting four elephants in a matter of minutes for the benefit of a film camera and an audience of ladies from the local hotel.

He shot another in the head in front of the camera.

The wounded elephant struggled in agony to its feet with a bullet in its brain, until another shot brought it down.

Revered beings

That was another era. We humans have now learned, perhaps, not to take either forests or elephants for granted any longer.

Forests have become sacred places and elephants, revered beings.

Scientist and writer, Lyall Watson, claims that in 2000 he witnessed a female Knysna elephant standing at the edge of the forest right on the coastline.

There, in the sea only a stone's throw away, was a blue whale.

Watson heard deep rumbling from the female elephant as it stared out to sea, and he is convinced she was communicating with the whale.

And so, with such history in mind, we walked quietly together on the forest pathway.

At one point along the shaded trail, my stepdaughter stopped and pointed to the edge of the beaten track.

There, trampled down into the forest earth, was a heap of animal dung.

"Do you think it could be from an elephant?" she asked excitedly.

"It might be," I replied, with a caution that belied my own excitement.

Later, the guide at the museum confirmed our hopes. "It had to be," he told us. "There are no other animals in the forest that big."

Sadly we never did get to see a Knysna elephant, but our day in the forest, walking in their footsteps, made us take a closer look into our own souls.

It made us consider what truths about our planet we may have been blinded to.

And the ongoing uncertainty about the elephants and their continued survival is a haunting reminder of the need for the presence of wonder and mystery in our own lives.


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Are Aquariums Getting Too Lifelike?

Henry Fountain, The New York Times 23 Mar 10;

On the reefs in the Florida Keys, plenty of snorkelers and scuba divers take in the sights, and others fish with spear guns for sport. But a small third group collects blue-legged hermit crabs, peppermint shrimp and other invertebrates, not for food or fun, but for the aquarium trade.

There are an estimated 700,000 saltwater home aquariums in the United States, and tropical fish with a bit of rock and a plastic Diver Dan are no longer enough to satisfy the keepers of many of these miniature oceans. The fish are still there, but as technology and technique have improved, the aquariums are now often small-scale reef ecosystems, with living coral and “live” rock brimming with anemones, shrimp, sea urchins, crabs and snails.

The result has been a growing market for these and other reef invertebrates, many of which are supplied by about 165 licensed collectors in Florida.

Those involved in the Florida fishery, which is concentrated in the Keys, say that it is sustainable and more closely managed than many others, with no new licenses permitted and daily limits on many species.

But scientists argue that the collecting poses a threat to the very ecosystems aquarium hobbyists aim to replicate. Aside from the long-recognized ecological impact of the trade in live coral itself, these researchers say the demand for invertebrates — creatures that often serve the same cleaning and pest-control roles in a tank that they do in nature — is such that the fishery may be unsustainable.

“We may be increasing the catch up to a point where you push something over the edge,” said Andrew Rhyne, a marine biologist with Roger Williams University and the New England Aquarium who has studied the Florida invertebrate fishery. “The question is, where is that edge?”

If a species is overharvested to the point where its numbers decline dramatically, Dr. Rhyne and others say, there can be a cascading effect in the ecosystem. Without invertebrate grazers and herbivores, for example, a reef may be overrun with algae.

Jessica McCawley, a biologist with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, disagrees that the fishery is threatened. She helped update the regulations last year, and said: “These collectors are a special type of fisherman. They’re very concerned about the environment and the sustainability of the fishery. And they came to us and said, ‘Can you put some regulations on us?’ ”

Collectors also say that scientists don’t have the experience they do in seeing these invertebrates go through regular cycles of bust and boom.

Pete Kehoe, who has been collecting marine life near Key West for 35 years, recalled that after Hurricane Ike in 2008, he found one reef that had been scoured clean of blue-legged hermit crabs, which are valued in reef tanks because they eat detritus, helping to keep the coral clean. “You couldn’t find a shell on that reef,” he said.

But two years later, he said, the crabs have recovered, and then some. “The other day we were on that reef and someone said, ‘Have you ever seen so many blue-legged hermit crabs in your life?’ ” Mr. Kehoe said.

While acknowledging that some collectors are aware of the dangers of overfishing, Dr. Rhyne said there had been little scientific study of the blue-legged crabs and the hundreds of other species that are collected, including the 15 that make up about 90 percent of the catch. For example, with certain snails it is not known how long it takes for them to start to reproduce. If it is more than a year, then harvesting many of them from the same location year after year could be disastrous. There are many species that are probably not a concern, Dr. Rhyne said, but he added, “I don’t think anyone can use the word ‘sustainable’ when they don’t know enough about the animals.”

What is not in dispute is that the fishery has changed in the past two decades, coinciding with the rise in popularity of reef tanks. These aquariums include home or office tanks of a few gallons to several hundred gallons or more, and attractions like the 20,000-gallon coral reef tank at Atlantis Marine World in Riverhead, N.Y., considered one of the finest anywhere.

Jeff Turner, owner of Reef Aquaria Design of Coconut Creek, Fla., which builds and maintains large reef aquariums in homes, offices, hospitals and other institutions, says these are not mere decorations, but “an educational window into the sea.” The hobbyists and professional aquarists who undertake these projects, he said, “are concerned about the marine environment.”

The popularity of the tanks is reflected in a study of Florida fishery data by Dr. Rhyne, Michael Tlusty, director of the New England Aquarium, and others. As the researchers detailed in a paper earlier this year in the open-access journal PLoS ONE, the number of organisms collected from 1994 to 2007 increased by about 13 percent a year, on average, to about 8.8 million in 2007.

Over the same period, the types of invertebrates changed. In 1994, only 6 species among the top 15 were collected and sold for their ecological roles as cleaners, grazers, water filters and the like. The others were harvested for their ornamental value — because they look pretty in an aquarium — or as curios to be sold in shell shops and other stores. The most popular “working” invertebrates were turbonella snails, with about 175,000 collected.

Thirteen years later, 9 species among the top 15 collected were sold to fill ecological niches in aquariums, including nearly 700,000 turbonella snails and 2.4 million blue-legged crabs.

“Now, there are whole suites of taxa that people don’t really care what they look like,” Dr. Rhyne said. “They only care that they perform these services that are exactly the same as they are performing in the wild.”

For example, Dr. Rhyne said, peppermint shrimp, of the genus Lysmata, are not as showy as some other shrimp species, but since they control a pest anemone in tanks, their harvested numbers have increased twentyfold in Florida since 1994. “There’s just a huge demand,” he said.

The attraction to the hobbyist or professional is that using these creatures both replicates the natural ecosystem and reduces the need for less-natural forms of tank maintenance. At Atlantis Marine World, Joseph Yaiullo, curator and co-founder, scuba-dives in the reef tank regularly to scrape algae off the glass or trim the many multicolored corals, some of which he has been growing for two decades. Yet he also has sea urchins — scavengers that do some of the cleaning.

“If I can put some critters in there that make my life easier, I’ll do it,” said Mr. Yaiullo, whose tank has inspired many a home hobbyist. “I’d rather have urchins scraping away than me doing it.”

Mr. Yaiullo does not use crabs or snails in his big tank, and the urchins he uses come from the Indian and Pacific Oceans, another source of invertebrates. His coral thrives so well that he is constantly removing pieces, or “frags,” which he provides to hobbyists on Long Island and elsewhere for home tanks. But home hobbyists are not always as skillful at maintaining their tanks, which are susceptible to even small changes in water chemistry or temperature. Invertebrates die, for natural or other reasons, and must be replaced.

“The thing that’s always bothered me is the disposable nature of these animals,” said Eric Borneman, a longtime aquarist who has written two books on coral husbandry and is studying for his doctorate in reef ecology at the University of Houston. With invertebrates, he said, “there’s a huge amount of mortality in shipping,” and in tanks kept by people just starting out in the hobby. “How do you stop this mortality and this constant influx of animals from the wild to supply this trade?”

Collectors and others argue that even with high mortality creating an even greater demand, the numbers of creatures harvested every year in Florida are still not a cause for major concern. They say their fishery is not like other commercial fisheries that harvest huge numbers of fish or shellfish for eating. And the invertebrate catch is closely monitored by the state, said Ms. McCawley, the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission biologist. “If we see an explosion in a particular species, then we can come back and revisit this at any time,” she said. “We feel these things are pretty well protected.”

Collectors point out that an unusual cold snap in January probably killed far greater numbers of invertebrates than are harvested each year. “Our biggest threat to this fishery is the changing conditions down here,” said Ken Nedimeyer, a longtime collector. “Our little collecting effort can’t even compare to a natural event.”

But Dr. Tlusty, of the New England Aquarium, said that in Florida “they are trying to manage this as a single fishery,” when there are hundreds of diverse species being collected, and about which not enough is known. While the state has done a much better job of managing its fishery than governments overseas, he said, “it’s probably time to go to a more adaptive management strategy.”

“Let’s make sure in our own backyard we’re doing things right.”

Dr. Rhyne added: “We’re not saying it’s going to collapse tomorrow or next year. But we need to do due diligence, so all of a sudden we don’t say, ‘Oops, we just caught the last one.’ ”


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Dubai Atlantis whale shark's whereabouts will be mystery for three months

Experts await transmission from tracking device on whale shark that had been placed in a Dubai hotel aquarium before being released into the wild
Emmanuelle Landais, Gulf News 20 Mar 10;

Dubai: Sammy's health and whereabouts will not be known for another three months, when its tracking device will pop up and transmit its location.

The female whale shark was tagged and quietly released on Thursday after it had been placed in a Dubai hotel aquarium for 18 months. The shark was said to have been rescued by the hotel's fish husbandry team in 2008.

No photos or invitations were sent to the media or the Dubai marine community to witness the much-anticipated release of the ocean's biggest fish. Sammy had caught the attention of thousands of people when Atlantis, The Palm, placed her in their aquarium, the Ambassador Lagoon.

In a statement by Atlantis, Steve Kaiser, vice-president, marine and science engineering, said the whale shark will be tracked through a tagging programme co-developed with the Mote Marine Laboratory in Florida.

"The whale shark is an animal about which little is known and Atlantis is proud that the research and data gathered can be shared amongst the marine community."

The device will not track the shark in real time, but instead will collect data on the animal's movements, depth, and water temperature for the next three months, and store the data inside the device.

Dubai-based underwater filmmaker, Jonathan Ali Khan told Gulf News he did not understood why the release of the whale shark had been carried out so secretly. Even the Arabia Whale Shark Research Programme was kept in the dark.

In December 2009, the Emirates Foundation announced it would give a grant of Dh850,000 for the production of a documentary film and research on whale sharks in the Gulf waters to Khan and his team. The documentary and research is expected to produce new theories on the species.

Sammy was apparently found in distress in shallow waters by fishermen and brought to the hotel for treatment in August 2008. She measured around four metres at the time. No information on Sammy during her captivity was released by the resort hotel. A spokesperson for the Ministry of Environment and Water said the Ministry did not order the whale shark's release but supports the action.

‘It's a waiting game at this point'

Dr Robert Hueter, director of the Centre for Shark Research Mote Marine Laboratory, which developed the tagging programme said although he was not present during the release, he had visited Atlantis in April 2007.

"It was under construction, and it was at that time the tagging programme was discussed with Atlantis staff and the satellite tags were set up for their use… I cannot comment on the health of the shark, other than to relay the Atlantis staff told me the animal was healthy, heavy, and had grown 0.6 metres in length in the one and a half years it was in the Atlantis aquarium. This growth rate is very similar to their rate of growth in the wild, indicating this shark was in good condition upon release."

The tracking device is called a "pop-up archival transmitting tag", or just satellite tag, manufactured by Wildlife Computers in the USA.

"If all goes as programmed, the tag will detach from the shark and "pop up" to the surface, where its stored data will be transmitted via satellite back to us in the lab in Florida. We will then be able to reconstruct the shark's movement track and the depths and water temperatures in which it swam," said Dr Hueter.

So far the centre has tagged about 30 whale sharks and other species in the Atlantic using the same technology, starting about six years ago. The success rate in recent years has run to about 90 per cent.

Nothing will be known about Sammy for the next three months, unless the tag comes off prematurely and starts transmitting. "In three months, if we hear nothing from the tag, it will not mean the shark is not moving or has died, because not all these tags successfully transmit their data," said Dr Hueter.

"Sometimes the tags are damaged and will not transmit, other times the tags get fouled with marine growth or are attacked by other fish, and so on. Sometimes the tags are late in transmitting but eventually we do get some data. So you see, it's a waiting game at this point."


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Whaling: the great betrayal

Outrage as secret deal set to sweep away international moratorium
Michael McCarthy, The Independent 23 Mar 10;

The moratorium on commercial whaling, one of the environmental movement's greatest achievements, looks likely to be swept away this summer by a new international deal being negotiated behind closed doors. The new arrangement would legitimise the whaling activities of the three countries which have continued to hunt whales in defiance of the ban – Japan, Norway and Iceland – and would allow commercial whaling in the Southern Ocean Sanctuary set up by the International Whaling Commission (IWC) in 1994.

Conservationists regard it as catastrophic, but fear there is a very real chance of its being accepted at the next IWC meeting in Morocco in June, not least because it is being strongly supported by the US – previously one of whaling's most determined opponents.

Should the deal go ahead, it would represent one of the most significant setbacks ever for conservation, and as big a failure for wildlife protection as December's Copenhagen conference was for action on climate change.

Agreed in 1982, and introduced in 1986, the whaling moratorium was brought in after a prolonged and intense campaign by green pressure groups highlighting the fact that many populations of the great whales had been drastically reduced by over-hunting – blue whales, the largest of all, had been driven to the brink of extinction – and that whaling itself, based on the firing of explosive harpoons into large and intelligent animals, was cruel.

However, three countries carried on commercial hunting regardless: Japan, by labelling its killing "scientific research" – a fiction believed by no one – and Norway and Iceland simply by lodging formal objections to the agreement.

Between them, although there is little market for whale meat, they have since killed more than 30,000 great whales, mainly minke whales, but also Bryde's, fin, sei and sperm whales – to the anger of many conservation-minded countries, in particular a group led by the US, Britain, Australia and New Zealand.

The result has been that IWC meetings have been characterised by unending confrontation between pro- and anti-whaling factions and the proposed new deal has arisen out of a three-year attempt to bring the altercations and arguments to an end.

After a series of meetings – behind closed doors – two IWC working groups have crafted a compromise proposal which is intended to end the confrontation by "giving something to both sides".

For conservationists, it suggests there might be reduced catches by the whaling countries, observers on some whaling boats, and a DNA database to trace the origin of whalemeat. But in return, there will be official IWC "quotas" set for whales they may hunt, in all the places where they currently hunt them in defiance of the moratorium, including the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary, for the first time in 25 years. The quotas are being negotiated for a final version of the proposal, which is currently in draft, due in a month's time. It will be voted on at the IWC conference in Agadir, Morocco, in June.

Despite the fact that the proposal says "the moratorium shall remain in place", meaning that it will not be specifically abolished, the new arrangements overturn it and mean commercial whaling will be legitimised.

"This deal spells disaster for whales," said Vassili Papastavrou, whale scientist for the International Fund for Animal Welfare. "I can't imagine how the very countries that fought so hard for the adoption of the whaling moratorium and the establishment of the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary should now even be considering legitimising commercial whaling. If this goes ahead, the IWC will abandon science and return to the dark days of the 1950s."

The fact that the proposal says the moratorium will remain was "being extremely economical with the truth", said Mark Simmonds, head of science for the Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society. "These are weasel words," he said. "Even though the moratorium would remain in place, the reality is that it will be nullified. The proposal on the table is quite frankly disastrous. It legitimises commercial whaling once again." The British Government is unhappy with the proposed new deal. "At present we have a number of significant concerns which mean we could not support it, not least that there's no guarantee of a significant reduction in the number of whales killed in the short term," Huw Irranca-Davies, the Fisheries minister, said last night. "Nor does it provide for a phasing-out of either scientific or commercial whaling."

The proposal has some powerful backers, even among countries which were formerly solidly opposed to commercial whaling's return – a fact which substantially increases its chances of adoption at Agadir. Principal among them is the US, whose officials in the negotiations have been strongly backing the proposal. This is thought to be in part because of a specific problem – the subsistence whaling quotas for indigenous Inuit peoples in Alaska, which the US is obliged to seek from the IWC every few years.

In 2002, in return for American hostility to its "scientific" whaling, Japan blocked the quota, causing the US considerable embarrassment before the Japanese backed down. The next quota request is due in 2012 and some observers think the US wants to make sure it is on terms with Japan so the quota will not be blocked again.

Another surprise supporter of the proposal is New Zealand, although Australia is strongly opposed to the plan.

Conservation victory: bid to trade ivory fails

Bids by Tanzania and Zambia to lower protection for their elephant populations were rejected yesterday by countries meeting to discuss the global trade in threatened wildlife.

The conference of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Cites) in Qatar turned down their request to make ivory tradable on international markets. It also refused a request from Tanzania to hold a one-off sale of legal ivory stocks.

The vote was welcomed as a "victory for common sense" by the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and by conservationists, who feared the one-off sale and lower protection for elephants could prompt an increase in poaching and ivory smuggling.


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More incidents of wild tigerskilling people in Sumatra

Tiger kills fisherman
Antara 22 Mar 10;

Jambi (ANTARA News) - A Sumatran tiger (panthera tigris Sumatrae) in Jambi attacked and killed Darmilus (25), of Sponjen village, Kumpeh Ilir subdistrict, Muarojambi regency, Jambi province, in the small hours of Monday.

The victim was fishing in the outskirts of the forest, when the tiger attacked him. This was the second tiger attack this month, Sponjen village head Juhrianto said Monday.

The other villagers who saw the tiger attacking Darmilus ran away while screaming, which had scared the tiger which then disappeared into the forest leaving his dead prey.

After the tiger had gone, an hour later the villagers came back and brought the victim`s dead body to his home, and buried him at a local cemetery.(*)

Tiger Gives Man Deadly Wake-Up Call in Jambi
Fidelis E Satriastanti & AFP Jakarta Globe 23 Mar 10;

A man was killed when a Sumatran tiger dragged him from a forest hut, breaking his neck and crushing his skull before his friends could save him, a conservation official said on Monday.

The 25-year-old victim died from injuries sustained in the Sunday night attack at Berbak National Park in Jambi, the provincial conservation agency head Didi Wuryanto told Agence France-Presse.

“A Sumatran tiger went into the makeshift hut while they were asleep and dragged one of the men out,” he said. “His friends heard screaming, but when they got to him, it was too late.”

Authorities are investigating why the men camped overnight in a forest where tigers were known to roam, he added.

Human-animal conflicts are becoming a rising problem as people encroach on wildlife habitats, particularly in the rainforests of Sumatra and Kalimantan.

In a separate development, officials on Monday said that the adult female tiger and three cubs found during a recent raid of an estate in Pondok Cabe Ilir, Tangerang, were indeed critically endangered Sumatran tigers.

The Feb. 20 raid, which involved officers from the National Police and Jakarta’s Natural Resources Conservation Agency (BKSDA), also found 20 other exotic animals, including four birds of paradise, two Timor deer, three eclectus parrots and other rare birds in a two-hectare property belonging to Henry Yukio Sujatim.

“We have already done DNA tests on the tigers and they are Sumatran tigers,” said Darori, the Ministry of Forestry’s director general for forest protection and nature conservation, adding that the animals were now being quarantined at the Gadog Animal Rescue Center in Bogor and Tegal Alur Animal Rescue Center in West Jakarta.

He said Henry faced up to five years in prison and a Rp 100 million ($11,000) fine.

But Muslim Arief Toengkagie, head of the Jakarta BKSDA, said the owner had not been taken into custody because he was cooperating with authorities.

Irma Hermawati, coordinator of the Wildlife Advocacy Institution, said the owner needed to be thoroughly investigated to help bring down the illegal animal trade.

Wild tiger kills Indonesian man
Yahoo News 23 Mar 10;

JAKARTA (AFP) - – An Indonesian man was killed when a rare Sumatran tiger dragged him from a forest hut, broke his neck and shattered his skull before his friends could save him, a conservation official said Monday.

The victim, 25, died from his injuries after the attack on Sunday night at Berbak National Park in Jambi province, Sumatra island, provincial conservation agency head Didi Wuryanto told AFP.

"A Sumatran tiger went into the makeshift hut while they were asleep and dragged one of the men out. There was a struggle but the tiger managed to break the victim's neck and bit the back of his head, leaving a hole," he said.

"His friends heard screaming but when they got to him it was too late. The tiger was gone and their friend was dead."

Authorities are investigating why the men camped overnight in a forest where tigers are known to roam, he added.

Human-animal conflicts are a rising problem as people encroach on wildlife habitats in Indonesia, an archipelago with some of the world's largest remaining tropical forests.

There are fewer than 400 Sumatran tigers left in the wild, according to conservationists, but Wuryanto said there were up to 30 human deaths attributed to tiger attacks last year.


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CITES Gives Enforcement of Tiger Trade Ban Top Priority

Environment News Service 22 Mar 10;

DOHA, Qatar, March 22, 2010 (ENS) - Countries could begin treating illegal trade in tiger parts as seriously as they treat arms and drug trafficking under a deal reached today at the triennial meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, CITES.

The UK-brokered agreement, the result of negotiations between the European Union and the tiger range countries India and China, provides for increased intelligence sharing against criminal networks that smuggle big cat parts, and builds on recent training provided by the international police force INTERPOL.

Parties to the CITES treaty agreed to develop a database to help monitor the illegal trade in tiger, leopard and snow leopard parts.

Although all commercial tiger trade has been banned by CITES since 1987, wild tiger populations have dropped by about half since the ban took effect.

With just 3,200 tigers left in the wild, tiger conservation advocates warn that the words of the new agreement must be turned into actions.

"There have been many promises this week, but getting countries to actually use these new enforcement tactics will be the real test of the commitment to ending tiger trade, and saving the species," said Debbie Banks, senior campaigner at the UK-based Environmental Investigation Agency, and chair of the Species Survival Network�s Big Cat Working Group.

"Time is running out for tigers and other big cats. Tiger range countries and consumer nations need to work together to reduce demand for their parts and stamp out the illegal tiger trade," said Avinash Basker, legal consultant to the Wildlife Protection Society of India.

"This proposal was a test for the effectiveness of CITES as an international conservation agreement and despite the compromise, progress was made," said Carlos Drews, director, Species Programme, WWF International. "But words alone will not save wild tigers as a global poaching epidemic empties Asia�s forests and CITES governments will need to live up to the commitments made today."

The agreement comes as fresh evidence of trade in tiger parts was presented to CITES delegates by an animal conservation organization based in Singapore.

A three-month undercover investigation by Animal Concerns Research and Education Society, ACRES, revealed that 59 out of 134 jewelry and antique shops visited in Singapore offered alleged tiger parts for sale. Evidence of the 59 shops selling alleged tiger parts was recorded on video.

The ACRES report released Friday in Doha shows that 159 alleged tiger claws, 303 alleged tiger teeth and 38 pieces of alleged tiger skin were found on sale during the investigation, which was conducted from December 2009 until February 2010.

The alleged tiger parts were claimed to originate from Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, China, Myanmar, Indonesia, Laos and Cambodia.

Tiger parts are used for traditional medicine, jewelry, lucky charms and novelties. Pieces of tiger skin are made into amulets as religious lucky charms believed to bring authority, power and protection.

One shopkeeper told ACRES investigators the demand for tiger parts and the amount of tiger parts being stocked by the shops appeared to be higher over the Chinese New Year period in this Year of the Tiger.

ACRES investigators reported that 28 shopkeepers said an order for more tiger parts could be placed with them, with delivery times from one week to three months or more.

But only seven shopkeepers recognized that tigers are protected animals, that it is illegal to sell tiger parts, and that tiger parts are customs-controlled items.

Singapore has a law against the domestic sale, or offer for sale, of endangered species specimens that provides for a $10,000 fine or a year in prison per species offered for sale.

"It is important to note that anyone who advertises for sale any tiger parts contravenes the act, even if the products turn out to be not authentic. By making a claim that the product is from tigers, the dealer is potentially driving up the demand for tiger parts, which directly contravenes the spirit of CITES and the local legislation meant to enforce CITES," said Anbarasi Boopal, director of the ACRES Wildlife Crime Unit.

ACRES Executive Director Louis Ng said, "The investigation findings showed the presence of an illegal trade in alleged tiger parts in Singapore and that there is an immediate need for continued serious efforts to curb this illegal trade. The investigation findings and footage have been submitted to the AVA [The Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore] and we look forward to working closely with the AVA."

Singapore has previously been recognized as playing a role in the trade of tiger products from neighboring countries such as Indonesia, for both domestic trade and international re-exports.

Dr. Lim Wee Kiak, Member of Parliament for Sembawang GRC, said, "As long as there is demand, there will be supply. Legislation alone is insufficient to bring a complete halt to the illegal trading of endangered species and their parts. We must do more public education and awareness so demands for them can be curbed and supply will then terminate."

In Doha, government delegates supported an existing decision to ensure that tiger farms do not supply the illegal market for big cat products.

CITES Parties called for an urgent meeting of senior police and customs officers before a Head of State tiger summit to be held in Vladivostok, Russia later this year.

The Russian government, the global conservation organization WWF and the World Bank initiated the tiger summit, in which the heads of 13 states are expected to participate.

WWF estimates Russia's Khabarovsk and Primorye regions currently have 500 Amur tigers.

Russian Customs officers at the Vladivostok International Airport have gotten serious about detecting the smuggling of wildlife specimens. Since 2004, the Far Eastern Operative Customs has trained and placed into service 77 sniffing dogs.

On March 3, in advance of the CITES meeting in Doha, the sniffer dog divisions of Far Eastern Operative Customs and Vladivostok Customs together with WWF and the TRAFFIC wildlife monitoring network held a briefing for the media and demonstrated their work at the Vladivostok International Airport.

Customs officers told reporters that the dogs help to combat a new trend that has appeared in illegal wildlife trade - smugging wildlife parts in small pieces hidden on the body or in clothing. In these cases, they said, only a specially trained dog can detect items hidden from customs control.

Tiger range countries roar with one voice on trade controls
TRAFFIC 21 Mar 10;

Doha, Qatar, 21 March 2010—Tiger range countries, including China, reached a strong consensus at the CITES Conference in Qatar on the way forward to address pressing concerns of illegal trade threatening wild populations of Tiger and other Asian big cat species. The 13 range countries, with support from the CITES Parties, also agreed to continue with measures to address farming of captive populations, and stop breeding of tigers for trade in parts and derivatives.

A significant market for tiger products persists in China, but commitments from the Chinese government and traditional Chinese medicine associations point the way forward to making effective interventions to reduce consumer demand and stop illegal trade.

In January this year, China’s State Forestry Administration issued a Directive which reaffirmed its policy regarding Tiger conservation and regulation of trade in tiger products, including control of existing farming activities. The Directive restates China's commitment to stopping illegal Tiger trade, which includes the maintenance of a domestic ban in place since 1993 to prohibit trade in Tiger bone.

Immediately prior to the CITES Parties meeting in Qatar, the World Federation of Chinese Medicine Societies (WFCMS) announced in Beijing their commitment to tiger conservation. The WFCMS, which has 195 member organizations in 57 countries, urged its members not to use tigers and other endangered wildlife species in traditional medicine.

Following substantive consultations in Doha between Tiger range countries and the EU, the Tiger range countries agreed on a strengthened platform to control illegal trade in Tiger and other Asian Big Cats.

Amendments to an EU document calling for strengthening of an existing CITES Resolution on trade in Asian Big Cats include improved reporting by the range countries on the conservation of, and trade in, Asian big cats; the establishment of regional enforcement networks; and the setting up of a database for Asian big cat trade.

The revised Resolution also urges CITES Parties to contribute financial and technical assistance to enable the range countries to implement the Resolution.

At CoP15, CITES Parties were also urged to support and participate in international conservation programmes such as the Global Tiger Initiative, the driving force behind the Global Tiger Summit which will take place in September 2010 in Vladivostok. The Summit will bring together Heads of State of range countries and interested donor countries to push for firm commitments on the protection of tigers against poaching, habitat loss, human encroachment and illegal trade.

“The strengthening of the CITES framework, combined with the commitments made by the Chinese government and other range countries provide the foundation necessary to make the Global Tiger Initiative deliver on its potential,” said TRAFFIC’s Pauline Verheij.

“If the global community is to save the tiger from extinction, we need to work together with China and the other range countries to reduce the demand for illegal tiger parts and products, protect the last remaining tiger habitats from poaching and human encroachment, and to ensure that traders benefiting from illegal trade in tiger and other Asian big cats are brought to justice.”


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CITES backs better rhino trade protections amid global poaching crisis

WWF 22 Mar 10;

Doha, Qatar – WWF welcomes a decree for better trade protections for rhinos made today during the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) meeting, which comes amid a global poaching crisis.

Countries with rhinos agreed to focus on increasing law enforcement, training of guards, strengthening border controls, improving rhino population monitoring, creating awareness raising campaigns in consumer countries such as Vietnam, and rooting out organized crime syndicates that are behind the increase in poaching and illegal trade.

"We congratulate the countries gathered at CITES for their united commitment to eradicate rhino poaching,” said Dr Joseph Okori, coordinator of WWF’s African Rhino Conservation Programme. “The political will shown at this meeting can help save rhinos in both Africa and Asia if it is backed by conservation programs on the ground and good law enforcement.”

Rhino poaching worldwide hit a 15-year high in 2009. The illegal trade is being driven by an Asian demand for horns, made worse by increasingly sophisticated poachers that are now using veterinary drugs, poison, cross bows and high caliber weapons to kill rhinos.

The decisions adopted were based on TRAFFIC/International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) report, which was released before the CITES CoP and reported a decline in law enforcement effectiveness and an increase in poaching intensity in Africa. Vietnam was highlighted as a country of particular concern – Vietnamese nationals operating in South Africa have recently been identified in rhino crime investigations. It also raised concerns about the low and declining numbers as well as the uncertain status of some of the Sumatran and Javan rhino populations in Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam.

“CITES governments must now commit to a complete crackdown on the illegal international and domestic trade so that we can turn the tide on rhino poaching,” said Dr. Okori. “WWF remains committed to supporting range state governments as they take on this challenging task.”


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UN wildlife body rejects bids to reopen ivory trade

Marlowe Hood Yahoo News 22 Mar 10;

DOHA (AFP) – A UN body rejected Monday proposals by Zambia and Tanzania to reopen trade in ivory that experts say would have worsened a surge in illegal trafficking driven by Asian-based organised crime.

After a tense debate, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), meeting in Doha, voted down Tanzania's request to sell 80.5 tonnes of stockpiled ivory to Japan and China.

Zambia later withdrew its own bid for a one-off sale of 21.7 tonnes worth several million dollars.

Efforts by both countries to downlist wild populations of the intelligent mammals to a lower level of protection were also slapped down in separate votes.

"We are sitting on a treasure that we are not allowed to use to help our population, to help the poor build schools and roads," said Stanslaus Komba, from Tanzania's ministry of natural resources.

The move to reopen ivory trade -- banned since 1989 with the exception of a few one-time sales -- comes on the heels of a dramatic surge in illegal trafficking since 2005.

"Large-scale ivory seizures are becoming not only more frequent but larger in size," said Tom Milliken, head of the Elephant Trade Information System.

Organised crime syndicates in Asia have also gotten into the act to satisfy growing demand in the region, he said.

In Africa, the countries most directly involved in the traffic have been Nigeria and the Democratic Republic of Congo, while in Asia activity was particularly high in Thailand, he added.

Some 25 tonnes of the precious material -- culled from an estimated 2,600 elephants -- were confiscated last year, mainly in Asia, according to wildlife trade monitoring group TRAFFIC.

All told, tens of thousands of elephants are likely butchered every year for their tusks, experts say.

Poachers have taken to using heavy arms to carry out military-style operations, leaving local law enforcement outmatched.

"They fire on herds with rocket launchers," said Cosma Wilungula Balongelwa, a delegate from the Democratic Republic of Congo, citing cases from earlier this year.

Except for populations in four southern African nations, African elephants in two dozen other range states are listed on CITES Appendix I, which bans cross-border trade.

Tanzania and Zambia sought a downlisting to the less restrictive Appendix II, which allows commerce if it is monitored and deemed sustainable.

The one-off sales would have netted about 13 million dollars (9.5 million euros), said TRAFFIC.

The last such sale in 2008 by Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe set the clock running on a nine-year moratorium on international ivory sales, agreed upon at the last CITES meeting in 2007.

The recent surge in seizures has caused officials to question whether one-off sales stimulate illegal trade rather than stem it, as was once thought.

"In the last three years, the population of the Selous game reserve in Tanzania has declined by 30,000 elephants," Sam Wasser, director of the University of Washington's Center for Conservation Biology, said in an interview.

"Tanzania argues that they have just moved, but where did they go?" added Wasserman, whose laboratory has pieced together a genetic map of African elephants based on DNA take from dung samples that will allow police to trace seized ivory to its origin.

Conservation and wildlife groups applauded the decisions.

"Governments made the right move by rejecting the proposals," said the WWF's head of species programme, Carlos Drews.

"It is not the right time to be approving ivory sales due to increased elephant poaching in central and western Africa."

Both Tanzanian bids fell far short of the two-thirds majority needed to pass.

But Zambia -- whose bid was backed by China and Japan -- missed the downlisting by only a handful of votes, and said it may resubmit the measure in the finally plenary session on Thursday, permitted under CITES rules.

A separate proposal backed by 23 other elephant range nations that would have extended the trade moratorium on ivory trade to 20 years was withdrawn at the last minute.

UN meeting rejects proposed one-off ivory sales
Michael Casey, Associated Press Yahoo News 22 Mar 10;

DOHA, Qatar – Conservationists scored a rare victory at a U.N. wildlife meeting Monday when governments voted to reject contentious proposals by Tanzania and Zambia to weaken the 21-year-old ban on ivory sales over concerns it would further contribute to poaching.

The heated debate over the proposed sale of the two countries' ivory stocks divided Africa, as it has in years past, at the 175-nation Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species.

Nearly two dozen central and east African countries came out against the proposals on the grounds that they would hurt already declining African elephant populations. Southern African countries, in contrast, argued the two nations should be rewarded for the conservation efforts undertaken and should have to right to manage their herds as they see fit.

"People born in 100 years, they should be able to see an elephant," said Kenya's Ministry of Forestry and Wildlife Noah Wekesa, whose country opposed the sales and had called at one point for a 20-year moratorium on such auctions.

"We should not lose this heritage that we have," he said. "We have a duty to make sure we increase the numbers of elephants."

The ivory stocks the two nations wanted to sell come from natural deaths or controlled culling of problem animals.

Key to the defeat of the two proposals were concerns among many delegates and environmentalist that the sales would further exacerbate a poaching problem that some say is at its highest levels since the 1989 ivory ban.

Environmentalists welcomed the decision, which came on the same day that countries agreed on a conservation plan for African and Asian rhinos. Delegates agreed to step up enforcement against rhino poaching, which is at a 15-year high, and work to slow the demand in Asia mostly from traditional medicine markets.

Until the rhino and elephant votes, environmentalists had achieved little at CITES. A proposal to ban the export of Atlantic bluefin tuna was defeated along with a plan to regulate the coral trade and conserve sharks.

"After the way the week went for marine species, today's decisions were much more positive, particularly the decision on rhinos, which was really a boost for conservation and morale," said Carlos Drew, head of the WWF delegation.

On the elephant proposals, Tanzania was asking to sell almost 200,000 pounds (90,000 kilograms) of ivory that would have generated as much as $20 million. It noted in its proposal that its elephant population has risen from about 55,000 in 1989 to almost 137,000, according to a 2007 study.

Zambia wanted to sell 48,000 pounds (21,700 kilograms) of ivory worth between $4 million and $8 million. It withdrew a request for the ivory sale and offered a compromise to allow a regulated trade in elephant parts excluding ivory — a first step toward future tusk sales.

The two countries argued that their elephant populations had reached the point where they were trampling crops and killing too many people. They also said preventing them from selling the stocks would increase anger toward the beasts, which are seen increasingly as pests by affected communities.

"Tanzania is committed to conservation of its wildlife, including elephants," said Shamsa Selengia Mwangunga, the country's minister of natural resources and tourism. "But should this meeting fail to consider this proposal, we run the risk of enhancing hostility against elephants by our local community especially where human-elephant conflicts are prevalent. More elephants would be killed."

Zambia's Minister of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources Catherine Namugala accused activists and other delegates of misrepresenting the poaching situation in her country and spreading rumors that it would spend the money raised from sales on election campaigns.

She also complained that her country was struggling to protect elephants even as it fails to provide its citizens with basic needs and should be able to sell its ivory just as its neighbors "were selling their gold and oil."

"We can't justify failure to take a child to school because we are using resources to conserve elephants," Namugala said. "I appeal to allow Zambia to utilize the natural resources given to us by God."

Opponents of the proposals said there was evidence to back claims that such sales worsen poaching.

For example, the poaching of elephants has risen sevenfold in Kenya since a one-time ivory sale was approved in 2007 by CITES for four African countries, Kenyan wildlife officials have said. Last year 271 Kenyan elephants were killed by poachers, compared with 37 in 2007.

TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring group, tracks ivory seizures and found that poaching and smuggling to markets mostly in Asia has risen steadily since 2004. They blame weak law enforcement in Africa and growing demand for ivory products like chopsticks and ivory jewelry mostly in China, Thailand and other Asian countries.

The price of ivory on the black market has risen from about $200 per kilogram in 2004 to as much as $1,500 now.

African elephants have seen their numbers drop in the past 40 years by more than half to 600,000 mostly due to poaching. The global ban briefly halted their slide. But conservationists said that poaching, especially in central Africa, now leads to the loss of as many as 60,000 elephants each year. Without intervention, the elephants could be nearly extinct by 2020.

Samuel K. Wasser, director of the Center for Conservation Biology at the University of Washington, said there was a clear link between one-off sales and the rise in poaching. He said the sales revive dormant markets by sending consumers the message that it is OK in general to once again buy ivory and make it difficult to differentiate between legal and illegal products.

Ivory bids fall on poaching fears
Richard Black, BBC News 22 Mar 10;

The UN's wildlife trade organisation has turned down Tanzania's and Zambia's requests to sell ivory, amid concern about elephant poaching.

The countries asked the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) meeting to permit one-off sales from government stockpiles.

The ivory trade was banned in 1989, but two sales have since been granted to nations showing effective conservation.

Kenya withdrew a bid to ban sales for 20 years, after finding little support.

Most conservation groups were delighted that the Tanzanian and Zambian bids were turned down.

"This is a real victory for elephants," said Jason Bell-Leask, director of Southern African operations with the International Fund for Animal Welfare (Ifaw).

Others argued that the real issue facing African elephants was poaching, not the occasional legal sale.

"While the issue of whether sales should be allowed to proceed or not has dominated much of the discussions here... the key driving force behind the ongoing elephant poaching is the continued existence of illegal domestic ivory markets across parts of Africa and Asia," said Steven Broad, executive director of Traffic, the body charged with monitoring the illegal wildlife trade.

Traffic's latest report shows that poaching and smuggling are rife in West Africa in particular, with several Asian nations complicit in smuggling.

Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Thailand are picked out as the worst offenders.

Organised crime syndicates are increasingly involved in the lucrative trade.

"Poaching and illegal ivory markets in central and western Africa must be effectively suppressed before any further ivory sales take place," said Elisabeth McLellan, species programme manager with WWF International.

Rejection slips

An expert report released on the eve of the CITES conference raised concerns about the extent to which organised crime rings are involved in Tanzania's poaching and smuggling operations.

Although commending the national wildlife services for their "professional" approach, it noted signs of a declining commitment to law enforcement and a lack of co-ordination between wildlife and customs services.

Traffic also noted that almost half of the ivory in the government's stockpiles - which would have been the source for the ivory sales - was of unknown origin.

As a result of this, it recommended rejecting Tanzania's bid. Similar misgivings also led to a recommendation to reject the Zambian proposal.

Both countries also failed in bids to switch their elephants from CITES Appendix One to Appendix Two, which would have permitted trades under certain restrictions.

The vote on the Zambian proposal was extremely close, and Zambia may seek to re-open the issue on Thursday, the conference's final day.

A number of conservation and animal welfare groups say the one-off ivory sales ensure there is an ongoing market into which crime rings can sell poached ivory, although the data is hard to interpret.

However, Eugene Lapointe, president of the IWMC World Conservation Trust and a former CITES secretary-general, said the one-off sales generated revenue that under CITES rules had to be ploughed back into elephant conservation.

"The situation is simple: prohibition plus poverty causes poaching," he said.

"Where people are given incentives to conserve, elephant stocks increase and poachers are put out of business."

The last legal sale - in Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe - took place in 2008.

Over the weekend, the CITES meeting in Doha, Qatar also turned down a bid to ban trade in red and pink corals from the Mediterranean Sea.

Conservation groups say the corals - which are used in jewellery - are threatened with local extinction if extraction continues.

Elephant Trade Ban Reaffirmed For Tanzania, Zambia
Regan Doherty, Yahoo News 23 Mar 10;

A U.N. wildlife conference rejected on Monday proposals by Tanzania and Zambia to relax a trade ban on elephants to allow a one-off sale of their ivory stockpiles.

The 175-nation meeting voted down calls by the two nations, which say elephant numbers are rising and are a danger to people in rural areas, to ease trade restrictions to permit a sale of 112 metric tons of ivory.

"We do not think our sovereignty has been respected," Zambia's Tourism Minister Catherine Namugala said of the decision by governments at the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) in Doha, Qatar.

"Many people have been killed by elephants. Even as we speak, children are not going to school because they are afraid of encountering elephants along the way," she said.

Conservation groups broadly welcomed the vote.

"Poaching of elephants and ivory seizures are escalating, not decreasing, this decision is a victory for common sense," said Jason Bell-Leask, Southern Africa director of the International Fund for Animal Welfare.

The last CITES meeting in 2007 agreed to a nine-year moratorium on any further trade in ivory, after a sale of 105 metric tons of elephant ivory from Botswana, Namibia, South Africa and Zimbabwe to China and Japan.

Elephants, the world's largest land mammals, are under pressure in many parts of Africa from poaching, loss of habitats to farms and towns, pollution and climate change. Numbers have fallen to 470,000-685,000 against millions decades ago.

JUMBO RISING

But in some countries numbers are recovering.

"The wild population is large (about 27,000 animals) and steadily increasing," Zambia's proposal says. Tanzania says its wild population "has considerably increased (from about 55,000 in 1989 to 136,753 in 2006) ... and continues to increase."

But Esmond Bradley Martin, an authority on the rhino horn and ivory trade, estimated that Tanzania's elephant population had fallen by 30,000 over the last three years due to drought, migration and increased poaching.

"The main problem is unregulated markets that exist throughout tropical Africa and Asia," he told Reuters. "In any city in west or central Africa, you can buy ivory. We need to close these illegal markets down. It's so simple, because they're out in the open, they're not hidden."

Ivory prices peaked in 1988 before a CITES ban in ivory trade, but plummeted by about 75 percent during the early 1990s. Prices have increased recently as a result of new demand from China and Asia, Martin said.

Ivory can range from $25 to $150 a kilo throughout Africa. Prices in Asia are higher, ranging from $250 to $500 a kilo. Proceeds from one-off ivory sales are meant to be put into conservation and community development.

"My people definitely think that CITES has no human heart," said Christine Eva Mambo, tribal head of Zambia's Lusaka province, where she said more than 18 people have been killed by elephants in the last three years.

The CITES talks will consider trade protection for about 40 species during the talks from March 13-25. Governments have rejected trade bans for bluefin tuna and polar bears.

(Editing by Alister Doyle and Janet Lawrence)

For elephants' sake – let’s get our act together
IUCN 22 Mar 10;

The elephant issue remains central to CITES though, unfortunately, the emotiveness of the ivory debate has not dissipated and the divisions are as deep now as at any time in the past. IUCN is concerned, that much of this may be diverting efforts from the real issues and what must really be done to reduce the impact of illegal killing on Africa’s elephants.

It would be a more positive step forward to use the considerable energies of the Parties in a constructive manner in dealing with the issues at hand and not in a divisive manner. To this end, IUCN encourages the Parties to step back from the outcomes of decisions taken on the proposals before this Conference of the Parties and take a holistic look at the situation and the future prospects for this species.

“Although we currently do not have unequivocal answers to all the questions, it’s true to say that we do now, through trade monitoring processes, have a greatly improved understanding of the current situation on the ground, the ivory trade dynamics facing the species across its range and the market drivers behind this trade,” says Dr. Holly Dublin, Chair of IUCN’s SSC African Elephant Specialist Group.

Africa’s elephants are being exposed to different circumstances in different parts of their range. Because of these very real differences, trying to manage to the lowest common denominator ends up being unsatisfactory all round; thereby feeding the division because different countries are faced with radically different management challenges. In most countries, former elephant range has been drastically reduced by land conversion in the face of rapid human population growth and conflict between people and elephants presents an ever-growing problem to management authorities.

It comes as no surprise that while elephant populations continue to show significant growth in some countries, others, particularly those in the Congo Basin of Central Africa, give cause for grave concern. Elephants are being killed illegally and illegal ivory, in significant amounts, is moving off the continent.

“Time and again reports of the Secretariat with regard to the implementation of the Action plan for the control of trade in elephant ivory demonstrate worryingly little progress on what we know to be two of the most important factors in this dynamic – that unregulated domestic markets provide a ready flow of ivory to the illicit market and that large-scale syndicated operations are on the increase,” adds Dublin.

Just as it is incumbent on those African countries cited in Decision 13.26 of the Action Plan mentioned above to do what they can to close these loopholes, we feel it is incumbent on the consuming and entrepot countries, to contribute as well. Without unprecedented actions from both sides acting independently and in concert, the future for elephants subjected to such pressures does, indeed, look bleak.

“IUCN must admit its frustration with the current situation and we would urge the Parties to rise above these divisive and distracting stalemates in favour of more decisive action on the known problems facing African elephants in many parts of their range,” says Sue Mainka, Head of IUCN’s delegation to CITES. “We stand ready to assist, as we always have, in processes and engagements that will move us towards positive outcomes for the species.”

Tanzania, Zambia ivory sales requests fail at CITES
WWF 22 Mar 10;

Doha, Qatar – Requests from Zambia and Tanzania to hold one-off sales of their ivory stockpiles failed during a United Nations species trade meeting today that comes during a worldwide poaching crisis.

Governments participating in the United Nation’s Convention on the International Trade of Endangered Species of Fauna and Flora (CITES) rejected proposals by Tanzania and Zambia to relax trade restrictions on their elephant populations by moving them from Appendix I – the highest level of protection under the Convention banning all international commercial trade – to Appendix II.

The two countries had also initially, asked in addition to their downlisting requests, that they be able to hold a one-off sale of their ivory stockpiles.

No commercial ivory sale is permitted if their elephants remain in Appendix I, but are possible with the Appendix II listing, which allows some regulated international commercial trade.

But neither country was given permission to sell their ivory at this stage or relax trade controls on their elephant populations. The decisions come amid a poaching crisis destroying elephant populations in Asia and Africa.

Governments rejected Tanzania’s downlisting and ivory sales request. They also voted against Zambia’s request to move their elephant populations off Appendix I – a decision which came despite an amendment by Zambia to remove the request for a one-off sale of their ivory stockpiles from their original proposal.

“While the issue of whether sales should be allowed to proceed or not has dominated much of the discussions here in Qatar, WWF and TRAFFIC believe the key driving force behind the ongoing elephant poaching is the continued existence of illegal domestic ivory markets across parts of Africa and Asia,” said Steven Broad, Executive Director of TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network of WWF and International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS) also was formally presented to delegates at the meeting.

The report found that the illicit trade in ivory, which has been increasing in volume since 2004, moved sharply upward in 2009 and there continues to be a highly significant correlation between large-scale domestic ivory markets in Asia and Africa and poor law enforcement, suggesting that illicit ivory trade flows typically follow a path to destinations where law enforcement is weak and markets function with little regulatory impediment.

“Poaching and illegal ivory markets in central and western Africa must be effectively suppressed before any further ivory sales take place,” said Elisabeth McLellan, Species Programme Manager, WWF International.

ETIS, one of the two monitoring systems for elephants under CITES (the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) but managed by TRAFFIC, comprises the world’s largest collection of elephant product seizure records. The latest analysis was based upon 14,364 elephant product seizure records from 85 countries or territories since 1989.

In the middle of a poaching crisis

According to new data released today from park rangers and WWF field staff on the ground in Cameroon, for example, there has recently been an increase in poaching and use of high-calibre weapons.

In February, two unarmed game guards and 14 elephants were gunned down in Bouba Ndjidda National Park in northern Cameroon. During the past few months at least 40 elephants in and around protected areas were killed for their ivory and it is estimated that about 400 elephants have been killed within the last four years in three national parks in Cameroon alone.

The grim situation in Central Africa will not be addressed until domestic markets in that region are brought under control, WWF said. The sight of ivory openly on sale in many cities of Central and Western Africa sends a potent signal to poachers, smugglers and consumers that it is legal to buy and sell unregulated ivory.

Monday’s decisions follow the release last week of a new analysis of elephant trade data showing that coordinated enforcement in Central and West Africa and South-east Asia is crucial to addressing the illicit ivory trade.

Detailed regional summaries of the data held in the Elephant Trade Information System (ETIS), the world’s largest database on ivory seizures, highlighted the failure of law enforcement in key elephant range states facing an increasing threat from organised crime and the presence of unregulated markets.

ETIS is compiled by TRAFFIC on behalf of CITES, and comprises more than 15,400 ivory seizure cases compiled over the last 21 years.

The re-analysis of the data was made by region rather than by country, and was carried out to align the data with another CITES-tool used to monitor poaching, which also shows that the Central African region is losing the most elephants.


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Cloud seeding works in Johor, Malaysia

Shahrum Sayuthi, New Straits Times 21 Mar 10;

JOHOR BARU: The cloud seeding carried out in central Johor a few days ago appears to be showing positive results.

It has been raining for the past two days in areas worst hit by the current dry spell, including Kluang.

Despite water levels at dams and rivers mostly still being critical, a further decline has been stopped.

State water management company SAJ Holdings Sdn Bhd appeared upbeat over the prospect of the drought coming to an end within the next two or three weeks.

Its corporate communications head, Jamaluddin Jamil, said the cloud seeding initiated by the state government would continue to induce more rain until the current dry spell improved.

"The cloud seeding carried out on Saturday, for instance, was successful in inducing rain in several of the affected catchment areas," he said.

"Water level at the Bekok dam on that day actually increased by about 0.02 metre, which may not seem much, but, nonetheless, is still a good development."

The Bekok dam, which supplies water mostly to the Batu Pahat district, registered 9.92m on Friday -- below its 10m critical mark.

Water levels at other affected catchment areas remained the same. However, Jamaluddin said, they were expected to increase if more rain could be induced through cloud seeding over the next few days.

As of yesterday, the Chengok dam which supplies water to Mersing registered 4.14m, 0.56m below the critical level; and the Sembrong Barat dam in Kluang was at 8.11m where 7.4m is the critical level. The other water source for Kluang, Sungai Sembrong Timur, was still at 0.1m -- below the river's critical level of 0.5m.

Jamaluddin urged people living in the affected areas, especially Kluang, which has been undergoing water rationing for the past one month, to use water sparingly until the dry spell ends.

The cloud seeding, which cost the state government RM500,000, started on March 13 and will go on for a month.

The exercise is jointly carried out by the Johor Water Supervisory Division (Bakaj), which coordinates the water resources in the state, the Meteorological Department and Department of Irrigation and Drainage.


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Pulp Firm Blamed for Destroying North Sumatra Tribal Forests

Fidelis E. Satriastanti Jakarta Globe 22 Mar 10;

After being shocked to see bulldozers destroying tribal forest areas that they call home, indigenous peoples of North Sumatra on Monday called on forestry officials to shut down pulp companies operating in their area.

Eight villagers from Pandumaan and Sipitu Huta, Humbang Hasundutan district, North Sumatra, came to Jakarta to meet with officials of the National Forestry Council of Indonesia to complain about the operations of PT Toba Pulp Lestari, formerly PT Inti Indorayon Utama, a known pulp and paper company that they claim had razed their forests without their consent.

“Forests are supposed to be the world’s lungs, to help us breathe. Destroying our forests means that they have destroyed our lungs, too,” said Dime Boru Lumbangaol, a 50-year-old woman from Sipitu Huta.

“The forests sit on our ancestors’ land and we’ve lived there for hundreds of years. We love that land, so no people from Jakarta could make us move out.”

The villagers have claimed ownership of the 4,100-hectare forest, locally known as Tombak Haminjon, for about 250 years, or 11 generations.

Toba Pulp Lestari arrived in 2009 claiming to have obtained concessionaire rights from the Ministry of Forestry.

Mangasal Lumbangaol, a 60-year-old man from Sipitu Huta, said the trees helped the villagers to define their territory, and without trees their tribes would not know how big their land was.

The villagers have referred their complaints to local officials, Mangasal added, but none of them have responded to their pleas.

“They all said that the matter was under the central government’s responsibility,” Mangasal said. “That’s why we are here. We want the government to shut down the company’s operations because they are destroying our forests. They not only cut down our trees, they also dry up our rivers. We just want our land back.”

Agus Setyarso, executive chairman of the National Forestry Council, said time was needed to solve the issue.

“There are a lots of parties involved in this case starting from local officials, the central government, the company and then you have the people. It is impossible to expect an immediate solution to all of this,” Agus said.

Agus also advised the villagers to sit down with Toba Pulp Lestari officials to find a solution to the issue.

“These kinds of conflicts come and go. To come up with a solution, you need to be patient and you need to be objective.

“Being too emotional, holding rallies, that could negatively affect the cause that they are fighting for,” Agus said.


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