Best of our wild blogs: 4 May 10


Semakau Intertidal Walk to raise funds for New Natural History Museum from Raffles Museum News

Tired of trash on our shores? Submit a video clip and win prizes! from wild shores of singapore

8 May (Sat) is World Migratory Bird Day
from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Don't release animals during Vesak, you're sending them to their deaths from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

Job opportunity: Education Officer with the Raffles Museum from Raffles Museum News

Hotsoup postcard
from The Green Volunteers

A Peek Into The Life Of A Colugo
from Life's Indulgences

Hot and scorching at Semakau
from wonderful creation and wild shores of singapore

Things I Find in the Woods
from Crystal and Bryan in Singapore

Four nesting of a pair of Olive-backed Sunbirds
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Admiralty Park's Mangrove Trail
from Macro Photography in Singapore

Raffles Museum Treasures: Orange-spotted grouper
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

Terumbu Raya Rocks!
from Nature's Wonders



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'Musang' facing threat from annoyed residents

Ang Yiying Straits Times 4 May 10;


The musang, believed to be the last small wild carnivore in Singapore, has made its home in the east. A study team puts its population in Siglap and Opera estates at between 20 and 30. -- PHOTOS: WILDLIFE RESERVES SINGAPORE

THE musang, or Asian palm civet, is clinging on as a species in the urban environment of Singapore. It is believed to be the last small wild carnivore here.

A study of its presence in the Siglap and Opera estates shows that the animals are breeding, which bodes well for its preservation. But this delicate balance is being threatened by residents snaring them and possible changes to housing developments.

Weighing about 3.2kg, with grey, coarse shaggy hair and a tail about the same length as its body, the musang, also known as the toddy cat, is common to the region.

While their numbers in Singapore are not available, these nocturnal creatures have been sighted in the east. The Wildlife Reserves Singapore (WRS) and National University of Singapore's biological sciences department put the musang population in the Siglap and Opera estates at between 20 and 30.

The estimates are based on sightings in the area and photographs taken by the study team and remote camera traps that are triggered by motion.

About five offspring were caught on camera, a sign that the musangs are breeding and could be a sustainable population. Their food sources include small birds and fruits.

But residents say more of the musangs are being snared by those who consider them a nuisance. The animals are known to patter on rooftops and eat fruits from trees grown in residents' gardens.

The Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) said the number of musangs it received went up from 23 in 2007 to 31 last year. Almost all came from the Siglap and Opera estates. So far this year, seven have been turned over to the agency, all from that area.

Musangs handed to the AVA are released into nature areas. Those that are weaker may be sent to the zoo.

The Night Safari's acting assistant curator of zoology Abdul Razak Jaffar, who is part of the study team, thinks the musangs should be left alone in their urban stronghold. 'Right now, we're not sure how these animals are doing in the nature reserve,' he said.

'So, if we keep pushing them there, there may be a point of time when the resources are not enough to sustain the introduced population or they may not adapt well because they are from a different location.'

WRS is looking into organising night walks in the area to allay people's fears about the harmless wild animal which also eats pests such as rats.

Dr Vilma D'Rozario of environmental group Cicada Tree Eco-Place, which teaches children about local flora and fauna, has another concern.

The musang, which likes to stay under the eaves of old houses, may have nowhere to go as new buildings may have sealed rooftops that they cannot get into. 'I feel that as old homes get torn down, there won't be many musangs left,' said Dr D'Rozario.


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NEA seeks expert help to raise recycling rate

Measures to be studied include waste disposal levies and refund schemes
Grace Chua, Straits Times 4 May 10;

PEOPLE here do not recycle waste as much as they should and the National Environment Agency (NEA) is asking for expert advice on ways to raise the recycling rate.

The NEA said in a tender document made public last week that it wants a consultant to look into whether measures such as levies for waste disposal, refund schemes or mandating certain premises to separate recyclables like food waste and glass, can work to get people to change their habits.

The cost-benefit study would help keep the Semakau landfill, now one-eighth full, from filling up fast, as well as shrink the mountain of rubbish generated here each year.

Consultants studying the issue should, the NEA says, recommend a combination of these and other methods that provide the most bang for the buck, or the 'highest increase of the overall recycling rate per unit cost'.

If any of the proposals are implemented, they will be the first measures forcing a 're-use and reduce' culture here by fiat.

Despite the presence of recycling bins in HDB estates and condominiums, households' efforts to fill them have proved abysmal.

Just 57 per cent of the nation's 6 million tonnes of waste was recycled last year. Now, official targets are set at 60 per cent by 2012, and 70 per cent by 2030.

Going by the tender documents, it appears that NEA is testing measures already implemented elsewhere - with the caveat that the measures 'shall be relevant and applicable to Singapore's context'.

Japan, for example, has strict laws on separating recyclables which go beyond separating glass, plastic and paper: It even pushes for the separation of polyethylene terephthalate (PET, a type of plastic used in bottles) from other plastic containers, and paper products from cardboard boxes.

In Switzerland, residents pay a fee for each bag of rubbish they throw out.

Here, those living in flats pay between $4.31 and $7.35 a month for waste collection, and landed- home owners pay $17.12 to $24.08.

The NEA also wants the consultant to look at how companies can do more to recycle mixed food waste.

Just 13 per cent of the 606 million kg of food waste was recycled last year, even though it could be put to industrial use, such as the manufacture of organic fertiliser.

On the household front, the concern is the disposal of plastic and glass.

Mr Edwin Khew, chief executive of environmental waste management firm IUT Global, pointed out that the cost of making plastic will go up as oil prices rise.

Yet only 9 per cent of plastic is recycled, and plastic containers are usually dumped into rubbish bins to be incinerated.

When they are burnt, toxic chemicals called dioxins are released, which must be scrubbed from flue gas.

'The less you incinerate, the less ash you produce, and the less you spend on these procedures,' Mr Khew said.

To incentivise people to recycle plastic bottles, the NEA wants the consultant to study a deposit-refund scheme.

A small-scale scheme is in place at three FairPrice supermarkets where customers can deposit their bottles and cans in 'reverse vending machines' in exchange for coupons, which can be collected to earn small items like bottled drinks.

Both Mr Khew and National University of Singapore South-east Asian Studies scholar Natasha Hamilton-Hart welcome the idea of mandating the separation of recyclables.

'Several other developed countries and local governments are - without exaggeration - decades ahead,' Dr Hamilton-Hart said.

'Singapore has the administrative and political resources to run a mandatory programme.'

Dr Lim Wee Kiak, MP for Sembawang GRC, is concerned about how some of the proposals, such as higher levies, might affect households used to throwing rubbish down refuse chutes. He suggested increasing recycling facilities for households instead.

The tender will close on May 18, with the study to be completed some time next year.

Lessons in recycling from Germany
Straits Times Forum 7 May 10;

I APPRECIATE the National Environment Agency's effort to conduct a feasibility study on improving recycling efforts in Singapore ('NEA seeks expert help to raise recycling rate'; Monday).

Recycling efforts in Singapore are indeed evident, as seen from the placement of recycling bins around the island, Bring Your Own Bag Day every Wednesday at supermarkets, and more recently, the use of biodegradable food packaging for takeaway orders in foodcourts.

However, more can be done to increase the recycling rate at both individual and national levels.

Spending six months last year in Germany was an eye-opener for me, as I observed the various recycling efforts by the public. Efficient waste-disposal systems and deposit-refund schemes in supermarkets allow residents to integrate recycling efforts into their daily lives.

Deposit-refund machines are located in supermarkets for customers to return used plastic bottles. Customers are given a refund of about 50 Singapore cents per bottle, which can be used to offset subsequent grocery purchases. Alternatively, they can donate the amount to charity. Plastic carriers can be bought for a small fee, with the object of persuading customers to bring their own grocery bags instead.

Rubbish chutes in almost every house and building have multiple compartments for disposal of paper, plastic and glass. Rubbish collected from these compartments is eventually sent for recycling. Such rubbish chutes ensure that residents keep up their recycling efforts even at home and at work.

These practices are not confined to Germany, as I have seen them elsewhere in Europe. The existence of a strong recycling management system there has ultimately enabled residents to be more proactive in their recycling efforts.

Such practices, if extended to Singapore, may allow greater accessibility of recycling efforts to the general population. It is certainly possible for Singaporeans to regard recycling not as an imposition, but a convenient and meaningful facet of their daily lives.

Azlyn Khalid (Miss)


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Singapore to share Urban Governance & Management with Kerala, India

Channel NewsAsia 3 May 10;

SINGAPORE : Singapore will be sharing its experience in Urban Governance and Management with the government of Kerala, India.

A Collaboration Agreement was signed on Monday between Mr Rajesh Kumar Singh, Secretary to Government, Local Self Government Department and Mr Alphonsus Chia, Chief Executive Officer of Singapore Cooperation Enterprise (SCE).

A delegation of 15 senior government officials from Kerala, led by Mr Singh, is in Singapore from May 3 to 7 to kick-start the programme with a policy roundtable on the Strategy and Implementation for Urban Governance and Management.

The programme will be supported by non-profit philanthropic organisation Temasek Foundation, with a grant amount of about S$870,000 and co-funded by Kerala's government with an amount of S$124,450.

SCE will be the implementing agency for the programme. SCE is an agency formed by the Ministry of Trade and Industry and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in May 2006 to respond effectively to the multitude of foreign requests to tap on Singapore's development experience.

The five-day policy roundtable will enable the officials from Kerala to interact and exchange knowledge and information with a team consisting of experts from the Public Utilities Board (PUB), National Environment Agency (NEA) and private sector companies like Surbana International Consultants, Surbana Technologies, CH2M HILL and MWH.

They will cover areas such as urban and waterfront planning, facilities management, water management and solid waste management.

Following the roundtable, eight training workshops will be conducted in the capital of Kerala and the city of Calicut, benefiting a total of 120 officials from Kerala.

Speaking at the signing ceremony, Mr Alphonsus Chia, CEO of SCE said: "We hope that through this collaboration, we can pave the way for other Singaporean parties to better understand the developments in Kerala and also to find new cooperation opportunities."

- CNA/al

Singapore to help Kerala with projects
Straits Times 4 May 10;

SINGAPORE will work with officials from Kerala in a new programme designed to help the Indian state improve its management of major projects.

The partnership programme, which is sponsored by the Temasek Foundation, is intended to help Kerala officials draw up development and infrastructure plans to improve urban and waterfront planning, facilities and water management as well as deal with solid waste.

A Kerala government official here for the signing ceremony yesterday said its agencies have limited capacity to exploit large central government inflows of funds due to a lack of professional staff.

Mr Rajesh Kumar Singh said the sharing of ideas and experiences in the programme's workshops 'will definitely enable the urban managers and administrators to formulate action plans to meet the strategic goals'.

The Singapore Cooperation Council (SCE) will implement the programme with funding of $870,000 from the Temasek Foundation and $124,450 from the government of Kerala.

A delegation of 15 senior government officials from Kerala is in Singapore to kick-start the process with a five-day policy roundtable to discuss strategy and implementation for urban governance.

Experts from a range of Singapore government organisations, including PUB and the National Environment Agency, and private sector firms will then conduct eight training workshops for 120 Kerala government officials.

A collaboration deal was signed yesterday by SCE chief executive Alphonsus Chia and Mr Singh, secretary to government in Kerala's Department of Local Self Government.

'This is the first partnership between SCE, Temasek Foundation and the state government of Kerala,' said Mr Chia, who hopes the collaboration will open doors for Singapore businesses to move into Kerala.

He said the agreement will be the start of a 'long and fruitful exchange', not just between the two governments but between the private sectors of both regions.

HARSHA JETHNANI


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Ivy Singh-Lim hauled to court

Ng Jing Yng, Today Online 4 May 10;

SINGAPORE - Former Netball Singapore president Ivy Singh-Lim appeared in court yesterday to face two charges - failing to have her farm inspected and not engaging a professional engineer to carry out the check.

Mrs Singh-Lim - the owner of Bollywood Veggies, a farm and eatery in Lim Chu Kang - was brought to court by the Building and Construction Authority (BCA) after failing to comply with the inspection orders.

According to court documents, the BCA first informed Bollywood Veggies in April 2008 of the need for its building to be inspected.

However, Bollywood Veggies failed to do so despite five deadline extensions by the BCA.

In the subordinate courts yesterday, Senior Counsel Engelin Teh asked for the case to be heard at a later date as she needed more time to consult with her client, Mrs Singh-Lim.

A pre-trial conference will be held tomorrow.

Under BCA regulations, owners of commercial and industry buildings must conduct structural inspections on their premises once every five years. The inspection must be done by a professional engineer.

If convicted, Mrs Singh-Lim faces a fine of up to $40,000 or a jail term of up to one year or both.


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Tourist quota for Redang, Malaysia

The Star 4 May 10;

KUALA TERENGGANU: The Terengganu Government plans to limit the number of tourists to Pulau Redang to 160,000 annually.

State Tourism, Culture, Arts and Heritage Committee chairman Datuk Za’abar Mohd Adib said the move was aimed at protecting the environment especially the coral reef from being damaged by too many divers.

“More than 200,000 tourists visit the island yearly and the number is growing.

“This is alarming as it could pose a threat to the serene environment,” he told reporters here yesterday.

He said an RM10mil water supply project was being carried out in Teluk Kalong and Pasir Panjang on the island.

Za’abar said the state government was considering applications to build two more hotels on the island.

At present, Pulau Redang, deemed one of the 10 most beautiful islands in the world, has 30 hotels and chalets, including a five-star hotel boasting 1,059 rooms, reports Bernama.

Recently, Terengganu Mentri Besar Datuk Ahmad Said had said that the state government would no longer approve the construction of chalet-type accommodation on the island.

He said only hotels rated five-star and above would be allowed to be built while only wealthy individuals would be able to afford holidays in Pulau Redang as hotel rooms would eventually cost no less than US$500 (RM1,600) a night.

He had also said that with the decision to turn the island into a high-end holiday destination, current chalets catering for backpackers would have to upgrade and raise their rates.

However, the move drew criticism from divers, tourists and tour operators who wanted the island to be open to all.


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Plants in peril at the Klang Gates Quartz Ridge in Malaysia

Tan Cheng Li, The Star 4 May 10;

The changing face of the land around the Klang Gates Quartz Ridge is taking a toll on its plant life.

MANY who have trekked at the Klang Gates Quartz Ridge in Hulu Kelang, Selangor, would have walked pass tufts of Eulalia milsumii and think it a kind of lalang. But it is no weed – this grass is a rare plant that grows only on that ridge, and nowhere else in the world.

Four other plants on the quartz ridge share that accolade: the small woody shrub Aleisanthia rupestris, the small tree Ilex praetermissa, the wiry herb Borreria pilulifera, and the ground herb Henckelia primulina.

The craggy outcrop spreads out over 14km – which makes it the longest quartz ridge in the world – and soars to 380m at its highest point. The ridge is what botanists call an island habitat. Isolated from the surrounding forest, vegetation at the ridgetop differs from those of surrounding areas. Flora surveys dating back to the 1920s reveal at least 265 plant species thriving there and the occurrence of five endemics makes it botanically unique.

But as development envelops the ridge, its vegetation has altered. Some of its rare plants are disappearing. Having studied the flora there since 1998, Universiti Malaya plant taxonomist Dr Wong Khoon Meng finds the native vegetation losing out to weeds.

After searching for three of the five endemic plants – A. rupestris, E. milsumii, and I. praetermissa – he and his students found many populations have disappeared and have not regrown in the more disturbed sites.

“Disturbance in the terrain has encouraged invasive weeds to gain a stronghold on the ridge and replace native plants.”

Large groups of trekkers who trample the ground, and campers who clear vegetation for camp and lit fires, are to blame. In the disturbed spots, fast-smothering species such as ferns and grasses quickly take over. As the plants there are highly adapted and narrowly distributed species, any changes in the habitat can lead to extinction.

“Some of the rare plants are still found in the less disturbed parts of the ridge but they will be endangered if the ridge becomes more accessible and faces more disturbances such as fires and trampling. And if the proposed highway comes near the ridge, the threat is that adjacent areas will be developed,” says Wong.

The surrounding vegetation, he says, is vital to protect the ridge habitat as it helps to retain moisture to support other plants.

The ridge itself has been protected as a Wildlife Sanctuary since 1936, primarily for conservation of the serow, but not the surrounding lands. As such, the landscape has seen drastic transformation. Though the south slopes are still forested, being the catchment for the Klang Gates reservoir, its north face has changed severely. Rubber plantations, orchards and of late, housing, have replaced much of the original lowland forest. For Wong, the quartz ridge is a remarkable natural feature with unique plant communities that are best protected on site. In fact, many of its other rare plants have yet to be adequately studied. To conserve the site, he urges legislation and enforcement, control over visitor activities, restoration of severely transformed sites, and provision of information to encourage public awareness of the special features of the ridge.

More should be done, and soon, to safeguard this botanical and geological treasure for it will face even more perils in the future – the activities that follow a new road are always more destructive than the road itself.


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Whale population in Indonesia decreases

English.news.cn 3 May 10;

JAKARTA, May 3 (Xinhua) -- Whale population in the waters of Indonesia's Lamalera has been decreasing in the last three years, supposedly caused by the mammal's movement, Kompas daily quoted residents as saying on Monday.

Traditional fishermen in Lamalera of East Nusa Tenggara province's Lembata regency, said that the decrease resulted in declining whale capture.

According to Martinus Hulu, a tribeman of Lelaona in Lamalera, whales captured in 2007 were about 30, decreasing to 20s in 2008 and two in 2009.

"So far this year we only had captured two in March," said Martinus on Sunday.

Katarina Beto Key, another resident of Lamalera, said the decreasing capture was a concern as people rely on the whale capture to support their economic needs

People usually capture spermwhale or Physeter macrocephalus.

The Representative of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in Lembata regency, Februanti, said that she was not sure about the cause.

"We need a deeper analysis. However, it might be caused by natural factor or whale movement," she said.


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Mass hatching of Olive Ridley sea turtle eggs begins

The Hindu 3 May 10;

Mass hatching of Olive Ridley turtle eggs has begun at this major nesting site under the shroud of environmental degradation caused by oil spill from a ship recently.

The mass hatching, which started on Saturday night, is expected to continue for next two to three days.

Berhampur Divisional Forest Officer Ajay Kumar Jena, who is monitoring the protection of the hatchlings till Monday morning, said eggs in around 30,000 nests on the coast had hatched.

Around 1,55,000 Olive Ridleys nested along the coastline near the Rushikulya Rookery in March and the eggs have started hatching after 45 days. More than 100 eggs were laid into every nest. On an average, however, around 80 hatchlings came out of each nest, Mr. Jena said.

Nearly 24,00,000 hatchlings had entered the sea and lakhs will follow in the coming days.

High mortality

The mortality of the hatchlings is usually quite high. Experts say only one in a 1,000 survives to become an adult. Environmental activists like Soumya Tripathy of Greenpeace feel the oil spill that occurred on April 13 may increase the mortality of the hatchlings this year.

Mr. Jena said though the surface of the sea near the nesting site was monitored, no residue of the oil spill was found. However, marine scientist and Vice-Chancellor of Berhampur University Bijay Kumar Sahu said the oil spill would have had be a serious impact on the marine flora and fauna near the rookery, especially on plankton and small organisms that were the food of the turtle hatchlings.

Mr. Sahu and Mr. Tripathy said there was immediate need for a detailed multi-discipline faculty study on the long-term impact of the oil spill on the marine environment.

Protective measures

As part of measures to protect the hatchlings, the bright lights of the industrial units and townships near the area have been ordered to be shut down during the hatching period. The hatchlings get attracted to light sources. Nylon nets were in place over a distance of three km at the nesting beach to stop hatchlings from straying towards the land.

Volunteers of the Rushikulya Sea Turtle Protection Committee — an organisation comprising people from villages near the rookery involved in turtle protection — collected stray hatchlings and released them into the sea. Hundreds of children were also seen saving stray hatchlings and releasing them into sea. Forest officials have put up camps in the area to monitor the process.


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Asiatic Lions prosper in last habitat

Yahoo News 3 May 10;

AHMEDABAD, India (AFP) – An endangered lion that survives only in the Gir Forest of western India has increased in number to more than 400 due to decades of conservation work, local officials said.

The Asiatic Lion once roamed across southwest Asia but is now restricted to the 1,410 square kilometre (545 square mile) Gir National Park and Wildlife Sanctuary and surrounding jungle.

In the late 1960s only about 180 were thought to survive due to hunting.

A growth rate increase from up to seven percent in 2005 to almost 13 percent in 2010 was "remarkable," Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi told reporters on Sunday.

"According to the census at present there are 411 lions in the Gir forest," he added.

A count conducted last month found 162 mature females, 97 mature males, and 152 cubs.

Chief Conservator of Forests Pradeep Khanna said that the number of female and young lions was encouraging and the male to female ratio was a "very good indicator".

"The population composition was found to be healthy," Khanna said, adding that protection of wells had been an important part of improving the lions' habitat.

Government conservation schemes, anti-poaching measures and good grass growth were also credited with the lions' partial recovery.

The IUCN international register of endangered species rates the Asiatic Lion as a unique sub-species that was critically endangered in 2000. In 2008 it improved its assessment, describing the lion as endangered.

"Constant monitoring is required to ensure poaching levels do not increase; 34 animals were reported killed in 2007," it said in its latest report, adding some lions were reported to have died of drowning after falling down wells.

The IUCN (International Union for Conservation of Nature) also warned that as the lion survives in only one area it remained vulnerable to extinction from an epidemic or large forest fire.


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Aboriginal hunting and burning increase Australia's desert biodiversity, Stanford researchers find

Stanford University, EurekAlert 3 May 10;

In Australia, Martu hunter-gatherers light fires to expose the hiding places of their prey: monitor lizards called goanna that can grow up to six feet long. These generations-old hunting practices, part of the Martu day-to-day routine, have reshaped Australia's Western Desert habitats, according to Stanford University anthropologists Douglas and Rebecca Bird.

"Martu" refers to a group of about 800 indigenous Australians from eight dialect-groups that inhabit the Western Desert. For 10 years, the Birds have been investigating Martu hunting strategies and their lasting environmental impacts. With support from the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford, the researchers have begun to explore what makes aboriginal hunting grounds molded by fire more biologically diverse than lands untouched by humans.

"The results of our work will be used to assist conservation efforts and joint indigenous land management policy in the Western Desert," said Douglas Bird, an assistant professor (research) of anthropology and principal investigator on the Woods Institute Environmental Venture Projects (EVP) grant.

In many cases, humans aren't the wrench in nature's gears but an important piece of the clockwork, he added. And because so much of Australia's Western Desert, from lizards to shrubs, revolves around Martu practices, conservation efforts will only succeed if they incorporate traditional goanna-hunting practices, he said.

"We're trying to demonstrate what would happen if you did pull people off the landscape," he said. "What happens when you break all of these co-evolutionary links between people who've lived on the landscape for thousands of years and the diversity of the faunal and floral community?"

Martu life

Martu life revolves around hunting and fire, Douglas Bird explained. Martu inherit ritual duties that correspond to certain tracts of desert called "estates." An important part of this inheritance is the knowledge of when and where to light smoldering brush fires. Martu never start blazes without knowing every nook and cranny of a territory and often forgo campfires when traveling through foreign estates, he said.

"You never burn unless you're with someone who has all of that knowledge about that estate," he added. "If your fire were to threaten one of those totemic spots where they keep all their religious paraphernalia associated with these rituals, it's technically punishable by death."

The middle-aged and elderly women who typically hunt for goanna can spot the animal's burrows and tracks better in burn scars than in thick spinifex grass, Rebecca Bird explained. Goanna hunters burn desert in about 55-acre chunks, making their hunting grounds a patchwork quilt of recently burnt earth and recovering vegetation. These scars are much smaller than those left by lightning wildfires, which char an average of 2,000 acres.

Burning back grasses and other fire-prone plants encourages the growth of a diverse range of annual vegetation, she said. The variable turf of Martu hunting grounds allows small mammals to find plenty of places to hide from predators, she added, while areas free of human burning lack this patchwork quality and are home to fewer plants and animals.

"The thing that anthropogenic fire does is rearrange the landscape variation into smaller and smaller bits," said project collaborator James Holland Jones, an assistant professor of anthropology and a Woods Institute center fellow. "It happens to be the scale that animals, plants and people work at."

While Martu families believe strongly in preserving their lands and know all the animals and plants that benefit from burning, their fires are, first and foremost, tools for nabbing goanna meat.

"Martu don't think of it as, 'We apply fire in order to promote the future long-term biodiversity,'" Douglas Bird said. "They can talk about all those effects, but that's not what maintains the system."

To determine the impact of Martu hunting practices over times, the research team is searching the geologic record for evidence of burning thousands of years into the past. The researchers will also recreate the diversity of historic plant communities using molecular clues hidden in animal remains.

Conserving Australia's deserts

Despite growing awareness of the role that fire plays in wild space, many Australians have been slow to accept Martu burning practices, Rebecca Bird said. "They see it as a destructive force. It's in line with the thinking of most ecologists who view humans as a disturbance of the natural equilibrium," she said. "The Martu perspective is much more that humans are part of it all."

Most Australian conservationists have only paid lip service to Martu hunters, Douglas Bird noted. But desert conservation programs won't work unless they include an understanding of Aboriginal fire, he said. And because hunting is so central their culture, Martu men and women will only accept land-management practices that are compatible with their day-to-day subsistence.

"When you're drafting a fire-management program for a national park, if it's not done with respect to the actual practice of folks and the trade-offs people face on a daily basis, then those prescriptions are disregarded," he said.

To bring Aboriginal representatives into a true dialogue on land management, a delegation from the Western Desert will meet with researchers on the Stanford campus in 2011 or 2012. The Birds and Martu leaders also will host an international conference for anthropologists and ecologists in Australia in 2011 on the role of fire in hunter-gatherer communities and ecosystems. A goal of the conference is to communicate that "indigenous knowledge is not different from scientific knowledge," Rebecca Bird said.

"Through generations of hunting for goanna, Martu appreciate fire for what it can be: A tool for shaping human communities, as well as the natural world," she said. "They see the burned areas beautiful. They say, 'It's safe. There are no snakes, no nasty things living here now that we've cleaned it up.'"

###

Other Stanford collaborators on the Woods Institute EVP grant are Page Chamberlain, professor of environmental Earth system science; Tadashi Fukami, assistant professor of biology; and Katherine Maher, assistant professor of geological and environmental sciences.

This article was written by Daniel Strain, a science-writing intern at the Woods Institute for the Environment at Stanford University.


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Indonesian mining companies asked to prioritize conservation

Antara 4 May 10;

Ambon (ANTARA News) - Maluku deputy governor Said Assagaff had asked the mining companies operating in the province to prioritize environmental conservation during explorations and exploitations of minerals.

"Conservation is a precondition for companies building the mining and energy sector prioritizing integration, conservation, and biodiversity," he said when opening a Maluku mining and energy exhibition in Ambon on Monday.

He also said that the mining and energy sector is a leading resource of Maluku province, as its mineral resources were very big and had yet to be adequately exploited and processed for the welfare of the local population.

According to official data, the coal mines in Maluku are located in Seram island, covering Tehoru, Elpaputi, Banggoi and Wahai, and the limestone deposits are found in South Buru and West Seram, natural oil in 10 sediments in East Seram, and the renewable hydro and geothermal energy resources are adequate for building hydropower plants (PLTAs) in Seram island to generate 217.4 megawatts (MW).

He said business prospects for national or regional private companies recommendations are for C-category minerals for industries and for oil, gas and coal are expected to be used under cooperation with foreign investors to serve the welfare of the local population.

In addition, the Maluku provincial administration is also seriously considering the environmental impact analysis (AMDAL) and the social obligations of investors to the people living near the location of explorations, he said.

He also said that the Mining and Energy Expo 2010 will demonstrate the potentials of the natural resources in the thousand islands.

"The expo will also inform the people of the natural resoources of Maluku, and provides a means for the selection of potential foreign and domestic investors. The expo will also invite investors to inspect and consider the mining and energy investment potentials in Maluku," he said.

The Maluku Ming and Energy Expo 2010 also held on the occasion of Sail Banda 2010 with a number of mining companies taking part like PT Batu Tua Kharisma Permai/PT Batu Tua Tembaga Raya, PT Maluku Global Masindo, PT Manusela Prima Mining, PT Belirang Kalisari, PT Gemala Borneo Utama, PT Masindo Putera Energy and PT Satria Fajar Intim. (*)


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Greenpeace condemns Spain's fishing 'armada'

Yahoo News 3 May 10;

LA CORUNA, Spain (AFP) – Spain's fishing fleet, Europe's largest, is using massive EU subsidies to "plunder" the oceans of the world, environmental group Greenpeace charged on Monday.

"Despite a collapse of European fish stocks and decades of promises to reduce capacity, Spain's industrial fishing has actually grown, fuelled by EU subsidies and short-sighted Spanish policies," the group said in a report.

The report was released as about 200 European government officials, industry professionals and NGO representatives met in the northwestern city of La Coruna to discuss reforms of the sector ahead of a ministerial conference in the nearby city of Vigo.

It said some 400 Spanish vessels, representing more than half of the country's gross tonnage, fish outside the EU for at least 90 percent of their time.

"Spain's fleet has grown into a voracious armada representing nearly a quarter of the entire EU fishing capacity," it said.

The fleet is twice the size of Britain's and three times Italy's, the next biggest fishing nations, and its largest trawlers "can haul in 3,000 tonnes of tuna per trip, double the annual catch of some Pacific nations."

Spain "is now plundering waters as far away as Antarctica and Africa using European taxpayers' money," Greenpeace said.

Between 2000 and 2006, the country received 46 percent of EU subsidies to the sector, ahead of Italy and France, which got 11 and nine percent respectively, Greenpeace said.

The bulk of EU fisheries subsidies went to the country's largest vessels, "instead of being used to support the much larger group of small-scale fishermen, generate employment or promote more environmentally-friendly fishing methods," it said.

The European Commission's official in charge of fisheries policy, Cesar Deben, warned at the conference in La Coruna that the status quo cannot be maintained.

Within 10 or 15 years, "there will be a disastrous scenario, with the collapse of the sector and the risk of undermining the economies of entire regions," he said.

But representatives appeared divided Tuesday over proposed reforms.

Some countries, such as France and Ireland, expressed concerns over the use of transferable quotas, Deben said.

He said a plan to boost aid to small-scale or inshore fishermen, whose work is more respectful of the environment, was also controversial as several states wanted to include small trawlers, which was unacceptable to the Commission.

The conclusions are to be presented to the EU fisheries ministers in Vigo on Tuesday.

As the conference was under way, Greenpeace activists hung a banner on the Tower of Hercules, an ancient Roman lighthouse near La Coruna, urging EU ministers to "Save Our Oceans".

"If Europe wants fish tomorrow, Spain must stop overfishing today," said Greenpeace oceans campaigner Farah Obaidullah.

"Ministers gathering here should immediately take steps to reverse Spain's ocean destruction at this critical time."


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Jordan River could die by 2011: report

Patrick Moser Yahoo News 2 May 10;

ALUMOT, Israel (AFP) – The once mighty Jordan River, where Christians believe Jesus was baptised, is now little more than a polluted stream that could die next year unless the decay is halted, environmentalists said on Monday.

The famed river "has been reduced to a trickle south of the Sea of Galilee, devastated by overexploitation, pollution and lack of regional management," Friends of the Earth, Middle East (FoEME) said in a report.

More than 98 percent of the river's flow has been diverted by Israel, Syria and Jordan over the years.

"The remaining flow consists primarily of sewage, fish pond water, agricultural run-off and saline water," the environmentalists from Israel, Jordan and the West Bank said in the report to be presented in Amman on Monday.

"Without concrete action, the LJR (lower Jordan River) is expected to run dry at the end of 2011."

The river -- which runs 217 kilometres (135 miles) from the Sea of Galilee to the Dead Sea -- and its tributaries are shared by Israel, Jordan, Syria and the West Bank.

In 1847, a US naval officer who led an expedition along the river described navigating down cascading rapids and waterfalls. Today the Jordan is a brackish stream barely a few metres (yards) wide.

A couple of kilometres south of the Sea of Galilee -- which is actually a lake -- a dam cuts off the flow of the river. Just south of the dam, raw sewage gushes from a pipe.

"This is what is today the source of the lower Jordan River," FoEME director for Israel Gidon Bromberg says, pointing to the foul-smelling water.

"No one can say this is holy water. No one can say this is an acceptable state for a river this famous worldwide."

A few metres away, saline water -- diverted from salt springs to protect the nearby lake -- flows into the foaming brown mess.

About 100 kilometres downstream, a Russian clad in a white robe immerses himself in the river at a site in Jordan where many Christians believe Jesus was baptised.

Every year, thousands of pilgrims take the plunge in the biblical river despite alarmingly high pollution.

Israeli, Jordanian and Palestinian communities along the lower Jordan river -- about 340,000 people in all -- dump raw sewage into the river.

Ironically, if the sewage stops flowing into the river -- which Israel plans to do on its stretch -- the damage could be even greater unless additional measures are taken to reduce the salinity of the water.

FoEME believes the solution lies in releasing huge amounts of fresh water into the river.

The Jordan once had a flow of 1.3 billion cubic metres (45.5 billion cubic feet) a year, but now discharges only an estimated 20 million to 30 million cubic metres into the Dead Sea.

"A new study we commissioned reveals that we have lost at least 50 percent of biodiversity in and around the river due to the near total diversion of fresh water, and that some 400 million cubic metres of water annually are urgently needed to be returned to the river to bring it back to life," said Munqeth Mehyar, FoEME's Jordanian director.

Israel, Syria, Jordan must all return water to the ailing river, the report says.

Israel, having diverted the largest share and being a developed nation, should return a proportionally higher percentage of water, it adds.

Better management could save Israel 517 million cubic metres of water a year and Jordan 305 million cubic metres, part of which could be allocated to the Jordan river, the environmental group says.

Improving the flow of the Jordan River would also go a long way towards saving the Dead Sea, which is in turn withering rapidly.


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Asian Development Bank Launches $9 Billion Solar Energy Initiative

Yoo Choonsik and Robin Paxton, PlanetArk 4 May 10;

The Asian Development Bank (ADB) on Monday launched an ambitious project it hopes will attract $6.75 billion of private investment into solar energy projects in the region over the next three years.

The Manila-based multinational lender, which unveiled the initiative at its annual meeting in the Uzbek capital Tashkent, said it would provide an additional $2.25 billion to support a project to generate 3,000 megawatts of solar power by 2012.

Though small in scale, the initiative will mark an important step toward meeting a larger portion of Asia's growing energy demand with clean energy, ADB officials said.

The bank did not specify target regions, but said Central Asia's growing electricity demand, as well as its abundant desert and commitments to offset high carbon emissions, made the area a strong candidate for investment.

"With energy demand projected to almost double in the Asia and Pacific region by 2030, there is an urgent need for innovative ways to generate power while at the same time reducing greenhouse gas emissions," ADB Managing Director General Rajat Nag said in a statement.

"Sustainable solar energy can be the clean power of the future if there are appropriate incentive and financing mechanisms in place," he said.

The ADB said it would set up a separate $500 million fund to help kickstart the Asia Solar Energy Initiative by covering some of the high start-up costs.

ADB President Haruhiko Kuroda told reporters the initiative would be a "major platform for sharing information on solar technologies, projects, products and issues, and facilitate the transfer of financial resources to developing countries to reduce technology costs."

The ADB last year provided nearly $1.3 billion for projects with clean energy components. From 2013, its target investment in the sector will increase to $2 billion a year.

(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)


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Do lawyers have 'moral courage' to fight climate change?

Esther Ng Today Online 4 May 10;

SINGAPORE - Humankind has the ability to stave off climate change, but what is needed is political and legal will. Yesterday, former United States Vice-President Al Gore called on lawyers to find the "moral courage" and "rule of law" to find a solution to the environmental crisis.

"When the mountain glaciers are gone and there's climatic chaos, the next generation of ours will be asking 'What were you thinking? Didn't you have any lawyers?'" he said. The author of An Inconvenient Truth was speaking to a packed hall of some 500 lawyers at the Inter-Pacific Bar Association Conference yesterday.

Mr Frederick Hawke from Melbourne law firm Clayton Utz agreed. "We're the social engineers of society. We produce the financial instruments, the trading scheme details, the contractual agreements and treaties that are necessary to implement the political will," he said.

As climate change is global, solutions have to be just for all countries and just within a country, added Mr Don Henry, an ecologist and executive director of the Australian Conservation Foundation.

Lawyers MediaCorp spoke to said law firms here do not go out of the way to take the lead on green initiatives.

"Truth be told, clients come to us first for legal advice. We don't tell our clients to be green," said WongPartnership's partner and head of its environmental and green economy practice Low Kah Keong.

Stamford Law's director Yap Wai Ming agreed. "We can work with our clients if they think that green initiatives are preferred strategies. There are many facets of business structuring that will impact climate change and not all are measurable in terms of economic benefits," he said.

In deciding to do business, some companies in Europe have asked for a law firm's environmental practices, but local clients have yet to latch onto this practice, said Mr Low.

This, however, could change in a few years' time.

Said Mr Henry: "In 2008, for the first time, we saw global investment in clean energy for power generation outstripped investment in fossil fuels, so businesses are voting with their wallets that a cleaner economy is the way to go."

In Singapore, WongPartnership is the first law firm here to launch an environmental green economy practice, comprising lawyers with regulatory experience in areas like carbon derivatives, green tax matters, emissions trading and environmental regulation claims and disputes.

It is working with The CarbonNeutral Company to measure the firm's carbon footprint and implement initiatives to reduce it.

Law firms Allen and Gledhill and Rodyk and Davidson have in place some green business practices, such as investing in energy efficient appliances.

These measures will certainly hearten Mr Gore who appealed to his audience to do their bit to fend off climate change even though it will be "inconvenient and complicated". That includes pricing carbon to reflect its true cost and a commitment to investing in alternative energy technologies.


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Kyoto Protocol in jeopardy: UN climate chief

Yahoo News 3 May 10;

BONN (AFP) – The Kyoto Protocol is under threat and political leaders should no longer skirt core questions about its destiny, the UN's top climate official told environment ministers from around the world Monday.

"The question is on everybody's mind but, unfortunately, on nobody's lips: what, in all honesty, is the future of the Kyoto Protocol?," Yvo de Boer asked more than three dozen ministers gathered near Bonn to brainstorm on climate.

"It is your responsibility to take this thorny topic by the horn," said de Boer, Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

After the failure of the Copenhagen summit to craft a successor, Kyoto remains the only enforceable global treaty requiring industrialised nations to cut carbon emissions.

Its current provisions run out in 2012.

Whether to tweak, bolster or bury the Protocol emerged as a red-hot issue last year, but was sidelined after the near collapse of the December conference.

Developing countries, which are exempted from its provisions, have made it abundantly clear that they wish to see the Protocol extended.

Some rich countries, especially those of the European Union, have said they remain open to this option.

"But under what conditions?" de Boer asked the ministers.

Framed in 1997 and put into force in 2005, Kyoto legally binds 37 so-called "Annex 1" industrialised countries to cut greenhouse gas output by a total of more than five percent before 2012, compared to 1990 levels.

The efforts demanded from each country vary. Europe has already unilaterally committed to cuts of 20 percent by 2020, and is debating whether to increase that offer to 30 percent.

The United States signed the protocol but never ratified it, objecting to the fact that it did not cover major emerging economies such as China, which has since become the world's top carbon polluter.

Under the Obama administration, this position has not wavered.

The fundamental question, the UN chief said, is what to use as a benchmark: the commitments other developing nations are willing to make, or the actions of the developing world.

De Boer doubted whether the EU and other Annex 1 nations will be willing to take on new commitments if equivalent US efforts are only written into national law.

"How would one explain to voters in some industrialised countries, for example, that they have an international, legally-binding commitment when others do not?" he said.

The presence of a double standard among rich nations -- international laws for some, national laws for others -- could erode the will of even the European Union, "and that in turn will mean the end of the Kyoto Protocol," he warned.

Continuing to ignore the issue will only lead to greater confrontation, he added.

The so-called Petersberg Climate Dialogue is the highest-level gathering of politicians on climate since Copenhagen. The two-and-a-half day closed door sessions ends tomorrow.


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