Best of our wild blogs: 10 May 10


14 May (Fri): What the Fig!
for nature guides from wild shores of singapore

Magical Encounters With Spotted Wood Owls
from Life's Indulgences

Up a creek with a paddle
from wild shores of singapore

Scarlet-backed Flowerpecker and Indian cherry berries
from Bird Ecology Study Group

双溪布洛五月华语导游活动 mandarin guide walk @ sungei buloh
from PurpleMangrove

Chek Jawa Boardwalk - birds, caterpillars and mudskippers
from Adventures with the Naked Hermit Crabs

Monday Morgue: 10th May 2010
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales

Suria the sun bear first day out
from Bornean Sun Bear Conservation

Raffles Museum Treasures: Malayan tapir
from The Lazy Lizard's Tales


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What makes male youths become litterbugs?

Straits Times 10 May 10;

Teenage boys and men aged 17 to 29 are the biggest culprits when it comes to littering in parks. YouthInk writers try to figure out why male youths are such litterbugs, and suggest what can be done.

Carrots and sticks to combat plain laziness

THE truth is, we men are just lazy.

Lazy, to the extent that we will not walk to a bin 20m away just to dispose of a used tissue.

We also generally don't carry bags or pouches, so it's easier to get rid of a piece of rubbish by letting it drop from our hands. Why, we are not going to keep the trash in our pockets!

Still, that should not be an excuse, and there are ways to curb this problem. The easiest and most common way is to step up efforts in our existing anti-littering campaign.

We could reward people who bin their trash. This was practised in 2008 in Thanet, England, where those who observed the law were thanked by park wardens and their names entered into a lucky draw, in which the first prize was £500.

Since cigarette butts make up the most litter, park authorities could give away cigarette disposal pouches. At 8cm by 8cm, these heat-resistant pouches can be conveniently slipped into a back pocket.

Alternatively, increase fines. Repeat offenders should be made to buy a cigarette disposal pouch, and/or sponsor them for others.

Keith Neubronner, 21, is currently serving national service.


Parental or peer pressure a key way to curb littering

I JUST can't bring myself to litter. I would go the distance to the nearest bin or hold on to my trash rather than accrue the guilt of littering.

I was brought up in a household where littering was frowned upon.

I remember feeling nervous whenever I harboured intentions to conveniently drop a sweet wrapper because I was worried my mum would be looking. If she had caught me, she would have given me a good lecture and made me sweep the house for a week. That 'pressure' has transformed into a good habit which will follow me for life.

For the very few in my social circle who are cavalier, I would pick the trash up in front of them and caution them of the fines they might incur if caught.

This peer pressure usually works because litterbugs are generally embar- rassed about their misdeeds.

So if everyone pays it forward and reminds their peers to observe the habit of binning their trash, our city may be that much cleaner.

Jason Zhou, 24, is a final-year economics student at the Singapore Management University.


Let youths experience being cleaners for a day

I BELIEVE that one of the main reasons young men are such litterbugs is because many of us take cleaners and sweepers for granted.

That is why some have no qualms littering. After all, there are people to clean up after us, and keep Singapore being one of the cleanest countries in the world. What's more, the job of cleaning and sweeping isn't that tough anyway, litterbugs think.

Schools should consider letting all students become cleaners and sweepers for a day, perhaps for community service.

They might get an idea of how tough a job it is clearing up after people, and that cleaners and sweepers do not have it easy. They may learn how not to take them for granted.

And next time, they will consider walking just a slight distance to the nearest bin, and make the lives of cleaners easier.

Calvin Ng, 23, is a final-year mathematics student at the National University of Singapore.


Some are just ignorant about the harmful impact

AS A young man, and one who litters on occasion, I can say that to me, littering boils down to one thing.

Ignorance.

Before I knew about the effect littering had on the environment, rubbish bins were alien to me. After all, what harm could one plastic bottle do to the environment? I might as well throw it by the roadside, and save myself the trouble.

That was until I found out how that plastic bottle I just threw out could contribute to a major environmental disaster if it ended up in a waterway and washed out to sea, where it could choke a marine creature. From then on, I have tried to dispose of my rubbish properly.

Likewise, the majority of young male litterbugs out there probably litter because they do not know the impact of their actions. An anti-littering education campaign showing the devastation that plastic can wreak might be helpful.

But if it falls on deaf ears, then I propose a government clampdown. More environmental officers should be deployed to look out for recalcitrants.

It may be cliched, but if waiting for the litterbugs to lose their ignorance doesn't work, deterrence will.

Bryan Toh, 18, is a final-year mass communications student at Ngee Ann Polytechnic.


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Tan Yit Wee: AVA aquaculturist

Lucky man of the sea
Having to deal with fish as part of his job is a dream come true for aquaculturist Tan Yit Wee
sandra leong Straits Times 10 May 10;

Perched precariously on the edge of a speedboat hurtling through the Strait of Johor, marine aquaculturist Tan Yit Wee is making you ponder on some ominous food scenarios.

In a country where food and flavours are in abundance, running low on staple fish such as grouper and sea bass seems implausible. It is a nightmare scenario that cannot possibly become a reality in Singaporeans' lifetimes. Or can it?

The unassuming 36-year-old thinks so. He says adamantly, above the roar of the engine: 'At the rate that the world population is harvesting fish, we might not be seeing 'sea' fish in the next 50 years.'

He fires off some facts in earnest. Capture fishing, or fishing in naturally occurring environments, is still commonplace. But statistics are beginning to show that these catches have reached a plateau.

There are limits to natural fish supply, he says persuasively, and smart, sustainable farming is the only way forward.

Mr Tan is one of the Agri-food & Veterinary Authority's (AVA) 'fish men', part of a team of 15 marine aquaculturists tasked to work with 106 fish farms here to ensure that Singaporeans will never suffer from a scarcity of fish - and other types of seafood - on their dinner tables.

'I have two passions. Fish and cars. I chose fish,' he says. The motorhead in him has taken a backseat since he married his wife Dawn, a 33-year-old teacher, and fathered two children - three-year- old Luke and one-year-old Beth.

'I love fast cars. I used to drive up to Sepang with my friends. But I drive an MPV now,' he says wryly, referring to his Citroen Grand Picasso.

Now firmly entrenched in his other love, he graduated from the National University of Singapore with a bachelor's degree majoring in zoology. He later pursued a master's in aquaculture at Stirling University in Scotland and has been with the AVA for about 10 years.

His love for the sea was sparked at a young age. Till the age of five, he lived near the sea in Mersing, visiting kelongs regularly. His dad worked in the timber industry in Terengganu but the rest of the family set up home in Mersing to be closer to Singapore.

In school, he was in the canoeing and dragonboating teams. After taking up recreational fishing in his army days, he became fascinated with the study of fish, reading up as much as he could.

He says that unlike the mom-and- pop fishing businesses of yore, where lines and nets are left to the whims of luck and nature, aquaculture is an exact science. It is about researching and implementing farming practices that score maximum yield with minimum impact on socio- economic and environmental factors.

And he has been busy of late. As part of a mission to make Singapore's food fish supply more sustainable, AVA has rolled out plans to increase local fish production from 4 to 15 per cent.

Much of these efforts will revolve around hard science, such as the invention of better farming technologies. But there is also the soft science aspect, which requires Mr Tan - equal parts civil servant, sustainability advocate and man of the sea - to know and feel the ground. Or the waters, for that matter.

He says: 'The most important thing is coming out, getting in touch with the farmers, knowing what they want and need so we can help them. It's difficult to just call them as they might not get reception. Their phones roam to Indonesian networks.

'Our workload has increased but it's good,' he says of the AVA initiative. 'Ultimately, we are still eating fish, right?'

Although AVA allows its staff relatively flexible work hours, he and his colleagues are also the go-to team for farming disasters. 'We are on call 24 hours for any problem that might occur. Like if a kelong catches fire at 1am, we are there.'

With the sun bearing down on him, he looks the very anthithesis of the desk-bound bureaucrat. Tanned and burly, he is dressed in a short-sleeved shirt and bermudas and sports surfer-style shades.

We are en route to FC28W, a marine farm culturing such fish as tilapia and sea bass. It is one of many floating fish farms on the western part of the Strait of Johor, an idyllic body of water that runs between Singapore and the southernmost Malaysian state.

This is as far away from the hustle and bustle of urban Singapore as you can get. The day began at 10am, from a point known as 'the end of Lim Chu Kang Road', a tiny jetty that serves as the gateway to coastal fish farms in the north.

'Many Singaporeans don't even know the presence of these farms,' he laments. Other farming spots include the waters off Pasir Ris and near Pulau Ubin, Pulau Tekong and Pulau Senang.

The day also began gingerly, with Mr Tan nursing a sore back from a bad fall in his home. 'Brokeback mountain lah,' he quips, struggling to lift a bulky backpack brimming with equipment.

Despite the pain, work has to be done. The boat chugs to a stop as it approaches the farm, a cluster of wooden structures bobbing along with the warm current.

One of them is a makeshift office and living quarters, complete with desk, beds, TV and solar-powered radio blaring golden oldies from a Malaysian radio station.

'Careful,' he reminds you as you clamber out of the boat. He has fallen into the water countless times in the course of work. 'I've been through many mobile phones,' he says with a sigh.

Cultivating fish and relationships

Farmer Yeo King Kwee, better known to Mr Tan as Kwee, is waiting. An amiable man with a soft spot for tilapia, he began working with the AVA 10 years ago to adapt this freshwater species to saltwater conditions.

It worked. 'We're finally able to mass-produce this fish,' he says. Another coup is the taste of the fish. 'Marine tilapia won't have that muddy taste you get in freshwater ones,' he claims.

The sea bass are also of special interest to Mr Tan. Dubbed 'super sea bass', they are grown from selectively bred fingerlings that grow up to 15 per cent faster than normal ones.

He spends some time observing the fish for unusual swimming patterns and behaviour before coaxing a few out of their octagonal floating cages. He puts them into a pail to be weighed and measured, then drops a few globules of colourless anaesthetic fluid in. 'They will knock out soon,' he says conspiratorially.

True enough, their darting movements slow after about five minutes. He lays a drowsy sea bass out on a wet towel against a sampling ruler but is careful not to startle or hurt the creature.

'Fish are living organisms too,' says the marine lover quietly. 'They feel pain. They have memories too. When we tap on the cage during feeding time, they come. They remember the cues.'

He counts himself an ethical eater of sorts. 'I don't crave sharksfin. We have so many other types of food to eat.

'And if we go fishing and catch fish that are bigger, we know it's brood stock (sexually mature fish used for breeding) and we will let them go.'

Both men are pleased with the rate of growth so far. 'Last week, they were about 3 to 4 inches. Today, 41/2 to 5 inches,' reports Mr Tan with a beam.

He also peeks under the fish's gills for signs of irritation or parasites. Disease and disaster, he says, are the two worst things that can hit fish farmers.

Farming, adds Mr Yeo, is a 'calculated risk'. There is no guarantee of success but there is much to be reaped.

Indeed, a farm like his can harvest up to 6 tonnes of fish a month. And to keep the production of the fish at an optimum level - a survival rate of above 70 per cent is ideal - a host of factors must be in place to keep the farming environment at its most conducive.

Water samples need to be collected, labelled and analysed. Mr Tan lowers an electronic device called a digital multimeter into the water. It will tell if there is enough dissolved oxygen - DO in marine-speak - and if the temperature is right to keep the fish healthy and happy.

The DO reading is a bit low but there is no great cause for concern. He tells Mr Yeo to have some aeration equipment on standby, 'just in case'.

He tests the water's salinity with a refractometer, a hand-held optical device that checks the concentration of salt water. Peering into it, he gives the thumbs- up. 'It's often a double-edged sword for farmers because different fish thrive at different levels of salinity,' he says.

A separate water sample will also be sent to the AVA laboratory at Sembawang Research Station to check for plankton - an organism that, if left to bloom, can affect some species of fish.

Take the case of the Pasir Ris and Ubin farms last year, where a plankton bloom wiped out fish stock. He recalls: 'It was very sad. I saw people who had not harvested for two years lose their fish. Money is one thing but it was also their blood and sweat that went down the drain.

'Many of us went down to help them clear dead fish to encourage them to carry on. We worked for weeks through the new year, even over weekends.'

There is also the question of predators. Herons and egrets from the nearby Sungei Buloh wetlands circle the farm but do not get close enough to attack because the cages are covered with nets.

But when clearing the nets that surround his farm the day before, Mr Yeo nabbed a barracuda that had attempted to breach his defences.

The fish in question - 0.5m long and sporting dagger-like teeth - lies stiff in a styrofoam box in his open-air office. 'I'm going to sell it at the market,' he quips.

The next stop is a mussel farm a little farther east, FC2W.

This visit is a more personal one. Mr Lim Sim Guan, a 43-year-old farmer who lives on the premises with his father, is suffering from some stomach pains. MrTan is keen to check in on him.

Indeed, there is a sense of camaraderie among those in the fish-farming community. 'I called Ah Guan last weekend and he wasn't feeling well, so I thought I'd pay him a visit. Everybody on the farms here, we are all like family. During Chinese New Year, I visit to give my blessings.

'There's a lot of personal touch required in this job. Once you earn the farmers' trust, they welcome you any time,' he adds.

Thankfully, Mr Lim, a quiet man with a weather-beaten mien, is doing better.

The farm's managing director, Mr Malcolm Ong, 47, has bought a late lunch of chicken buns for his visitors.

We take refuge from the scorching afternoon sun in Mr Lim's floating home, a cosy set-up of rattan chairs surrounded by potted banana trees. The smell of a stir-fry wafts from the kitchen as the men take a break to shoot the breeze.

'Life is different here, isn't it?' asks Mr Ong, leaning back into his chair. Farms on this part of the Strait of Johor are lucky, he says. Few large vessels pass through the channel and so the waters are usually calm and quiet.

But this lull is temporary. There will be a late afternoon harvest of mussels, to be delivered to a customer at 7pm.

Mr Tan wants to check on the shellfish which grow - by the millions - on ropes lowered into the sea. The spats, which refer to molluscs in their larval stage, come from the wild. 'No need to buy,' says Mr Ong. 'They come from nature and attach themselves to any surface.'

Ignoring Mr Ong's pleas to 'watch your back', Mr Tan hauls up a heavy load of mussels. They look healthy, densely packed and gleaming in the sun.

Despite their relatively fuss-free propagation, farmers must still watch the DO levels in the waters here. 'The worry for mussels is that if some of them die suddenly, everyone else will be affected because they grow very close to each other. You will lose a whole bunch,' he says.

Another concern is that the supply of mussels here is also finite. 'Eight to 10 years ago, the mussels here were much more abundant,' says Mr Ong. The key is to make hay while the sun shines.

But today has been a good day, says Mr Tan. The farms are in good shape. 'Water is okay, everything is all right.'

With samples in tow and relations intact, it is time to return to his Sembawang office. As exciting as days out in the sun are, 50 per cent of his job is still paperwork-related.

But his mind will likely be out at sea. 'It's an occupational hazard. If it's rainy in the morning, sunny in the afternoon, and with the right tide, plankton will bloom and I will start worrying.'

The samples collected come back from the laboratory later in the day. Some plankton was found, but mainly beneficial species of the organism, he says.

Work winds down around 6pm, leaving the rest of the day for family at his Potong Pasir home. His son Luke, he says proudly, is already a budding fisherman.

'He's a bit too young to go fishing with me but he watches fishing-related shows on TV, and knows about rods and lines. And he can swim.'

He is tired but happy. 'When you are doing things you like, it doesn't seem like going to work. When people ask me, 'Are you going to work?'. I say, 'No, I'm not.'

'I'm lucky.'


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Ornamental fish farms in Singapore may get tenancy reprieve

Exporters fear lack of time to set up at new sites when leases end
Jessica Lim, Straits Times 10 May 10;

FISH exporters in Jalan Kayu worried about their leases expiring at the year end may well get a reprieve.

The Singapore Land Authority (SLA) told The Straits Times that it is working closely with relevant agencies to extend the tenancies. The 17 affected exporters account for about 80 per cent of Singapore's ornamental fish export industry, which, as a world leader, is worth around $100 million a year.

The land these exporters now occupy is being taken back by the Government for redevelopment. The exporters are worried they may have to wind up their businesses if they cannot be relocated elsewhere by Dec 31, when their leases expire. The SLA has released four plots of land for tender as alternative sites for the fish farms, but the land area is not enough to take in all the affected farms.

Already, 14 of the 17 Jalan Kayu farms have submitted 19 bids for these four plots, with some farms submitting more than one bid; the remaining three affected farms are thinking of shutting down.

The SLA has designated another 10 sites in Yishun for the fish exporters, but these will go up for tender only at the end of the month.

Those in the business are worried on two counts: One is that the entry of new bidders will narrow their chances of securing a site. The other worry - a bigger one - is the lack of time in which to get their new farms up and running by the year end.

For now, it is still not known when the tenders will be awarded. The new plots are little more than empty tracts of land now and it will take at least a year to put in the necessary infrastructure such as fish tanks and warehouses, said Mr Fong Ching Loon, 72, who owns Pisces Tropica in Seletar West Farmway 1.

He welcomes the assurance from the SLA, which has said: 'To ensure a smooth transition between Jalan Kayu and the new site, SLA will work closely with the relevant agencies to extend the tenancies in Jalan Kayu.'

Mr Fong, who also chairs the Singapore Aquarium Fish Exporters' Association, said the association's 44 members hope something can be done - and soon.

'If not, we will be forced to stop business for a while, and we will lose customers,' said the exporter, who is nonetheless hedging his chances by submitting bids for two of the four new plots.

The uncertainty has irked some exporters, who have made Singapore the ornamental fish capital of the world.

Ms Pauline Teo, 46, the third-generation owner of the oldest fish-exporting company here, Teo Way Yong & Sons, said her company has moved four times since the 1920s: 'Each time we move, it costs money. We're always worried we'll be told to move.'

She and Mr Fong noted that the business is given more support overseas.

Mr Fong said he learnt from an ornamental fish convention in China that a tech park there has been kitted up with a communal filter system that cleans water and pipes oxygen to the tanks.

The Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA), which regulates fish exporters here, said it will continue working with them to see what more can be done for the industry.

Dr Ling Kai Huat, its senior ornamental fish specialist, said the tech park Mr Fong mentioned was a commercially driven venture, and that if the exporters here are keen on the system, they can band together to propose and develop it.

'AVA will certainly do its best to support and facilitate such a venture if it is demanded by the local industry.'

Multimillion-dollar industry faces stiff competition today
Straits Times 10 May 10;

FOR Mr Teo Way Yong, catching longkang fish grew from a childhood hobby into a multimillion-dollar business.

Back in the 1920s, armed with a crude net made out of an old T-shirt and wire, he tried his luck in the longkang, or drain, in his kampung, which used to be where today's Central Business District sits.

Netting a couple of guppies or molly fish made for a good day.

When he was in his 20s, he had a stint selling fighting cocks, after which he opened a shop to sell 'drain fish' in Lau Pa Sat, the first wet market here.

His customers were mostly British expatriates.

His granddaughter Pauline Teo, who today runs ornamental fish exporter Teo Way Yong & Sons, said: 'Everyone else was selling live chickens and meat, but he sold ornamental fish. He was definitely a pioneer in his trade.'

His big break came in the 1960s, when a client in Hamburg, Germany, heard of his shop and placed an order for these tropical fishes.

With his son's help, Mr Teo packed scores of them into biscuit tins and put them on a ship docked at Clifford Pier.

The journey took six months, during which the fish were fed and had the water in their tins changed daily - all by hand.

Oxygen pumps were unheard of then, as was shipping fish by airplane, said Ms Teo.

Her grandfather's company went from strength to strength from then, peaking in performance between 1975 and 1990, when its turnover hit $4.5 million a year.

It was on the patriarch's watch over 30 years ago that Singapore became known as the ornamental fish capital of the world.

Today, Teo Way Yong & Sons is one of more than 100 fish exporters here in a market mostly made up of smaller players.

Singapore's share in the global export market went up from 16 per cent in 2003 to 21 per cent in 2007. Figures from the latest United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation report put the earnings for those two years respectively at US$41.4 million (S$58 million) and US$66.1 million.

In 2007, Singapore beat Spain, with 10 per cent of the global export market, into second place; Malaysia was third with 8 per cent.

But the industry strongly depends on the general well-being of the world economy, noted Dr Ling Kai Huat, senior ornamental fish specialist in the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA).

When the economic downturn arrived, the industry took a hit. The value of ornamental fish exports in 2008 stood at $97.23 million; last year, it dipped to $87.1 million, he noted.

Sales figures from January to March this year were at $22.3 million.

Singapore now exports ornamental fish to more than 80 countries and territories, with the United States and Britain being the biggest customers.

Business really took off in the early 1980s with the opening of Changi Airport, said the chairman of Singapore Aquarium Fish Exporters' Association, Mr Fong Ching Loon.

'There were all these new routes to everywhere in the world, from everywhere in the world. Trade was booming, and we were there to enjoy it,' said the founder of fish export company Pisces Tropica, established in 1966.

His company started off as a supplier, selling guppies to Teo Way Yong & Sons. In 1968, he started importing goldfish from Hong Kong.

His break came from a British customer who wanted two goldfish sent to his house in England.

'We packed them and sent them over,' said the 72-year-old, whose daughter will take over the business.

Orders just poured in after that.

The weather here is perfect for rearing tropical fish. The 70 ornamental fish farms account for about half of the exports from here; the rest of the stock - ranging from aquatic frogs and eels to koi and goldfish - comes from countries like Vietnam and Indonesia and is then re-exported.

All ornamental fish imported into Singapore are moved to exporting companies and quarantined for a week before they are packed for export. During that time, the fish are monitored for diseases and are put in water with pH levels similar to that in their destination countries.

Fish bred in farms here are also channelled through exporting companies which pack them into plastic bags for export.

But the industry is not faring as well nowadays.

Economic downturn aside, profit margins have been narrowed with competition coming from countries such as Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam, where land is cheaper and the cost of fish farming, lower.

Even Poland and the Czech Republic are catching on to the game. The companies there rear their own fry and truck them all over Europe.

Ms Teo said the 100 per cent profit which Teo Way Yong & Sons used to make in the 1980s has been whittled down to about 10 per cent.

Another reason is a fall in demand for the fish, said Mr Fong. Rearing them has less of a hold nowadays when put against modern-day pastimes such as the Internet, television and other high tech gadgets.

The AVA's Dr Ling said: 'The overall competing demand for land use for other purposes as well as business succession are some of the issues faced by the industry.'

He added that the AVA will continue to support the industry through technology development and by facilitating trade.

'We will strive to keep Singapore in No. 1 in this business,' he said.

JESSICA LIM


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Phuket Coral Bleaches White as Heat Intensifies

Chutima Sidasathian and Alan Morison
phuketwan.com 10 May 10

BLEACHING has whitened 90 percent of Phuket's and Thailand's coral reefs amid concern about an unusually late hot season that has marine biologists concerned.

Divers confirm the widespread bleaching, as well as the presence of increasing numbers of jellyfish.

Niphon Phongsuwan, the coral reef specialist at the Phuket Marine Biology Centre, said reefs in both the Andaman Sea and the Gulf of Thailand had begun the bleaching process in the first week of April, as sea temperatures remained unusually high.

"The key temperature is 30.1 degrees," he said. "Unless the temperature drops from there, bleaching begins, and continues until the sea grows cooler."

Diver and underwater photographer Adriano 'Wetpixel' Trapani, CEO of Dive Clan Co, confirmed that sea temperatures had remained high, triggering concerns about the coral.

"It is alarming, but I wouldn't be too concerned," Mr Trapani said. "A similar event bleached coral in the Maldives a few years ago and the reefs there have returned to normal. It's a cyclical thing, probably caused by the El Nino phenomenon.

"At first we thought it might just be patches of coral that had been destroyed by the crown of thorns starfish, but now we know differently because the bleaching is so even.

"I was here for the tsunami when some reefs were damaged but now they are back the way they were." He said the larger threats to the reefs remained over-diving and exploitation.

Khun Niphon said coral bleaching occurred on Phuket's reefs between 1991 and 1995. "In that time, there was less cloud protection from the sun and so quite a bit of coral died," he said. From 2003 to 2005, a less damaging cycle occurred, but the coral survived.

"Bleaching does not mean death for the coral, provided the monsoons come in time," he said. "Coral lives on, and recovers, as long as the sun does not become too intense for too long."

No area around Phuket had escaped bleaching, Khun Niphon said. With concern growing about long-term global warming, Khun Niphon is researching which types of coral are most resistant to bleaching so that the hardiest kinds of coral can be encouraged in future.

While the event could be coincidental, Mr Trapani said he had noticed an increasing number of jellyfish in waters near Phi Phi island, between Phuket and Coral Island, on the way to Raya island and in Chalong Bay, on Phuket. The jellyfish were capable of inflicting a mild sting, like sunburn, but not dangerous.

A spokesman for Phuket's weather bureau said that the monsoon usually came soon after the Songkran Festival of mid-April, but this year, extending into May, Phuket and southern Thailand had yet to see the heat break.

The spokesman preferred not to give his name, and said he had no idea why the monsoon was so late this year.

The bureau does not analyse year-on-year statistics and is therefore unable to give detailed information about possible future trends.

There is no way of knowing when the extended spell of heat will break this year.


Bleaching coral off Phuket's Nai Harn beach
Bleaching coral off Phuket's Nai Harn beach
Phuket Coral Reefs Still Hostage to Sunshine
Chutima Sidasathian: Phuketwan 13 Jun 10;

PHUKET'S coral reefs remain at risk despite the arrival of cooling storms, Phuket marine Biology Centre expert Niphon Pongsuwan says. The reefs are one of Phuket's prime tourist attractions.

Bleaching has struck 90 percent of the coral reefs around Phuket, he added, and already between 10 percent and 40 percent could not be saved even if sea temperatures dropped quickly now.

Greater than usual exposure to hot sun in warmer than normal water has placed the entire Andaman region's reefs at risks this year. Other reefs around Thailand and the Great Barrier Reef off Australia have also been affected.

Khun Niphon went diving off Phuket on Tuesday and placed reef temperatures at 30.5 degrees. Prolonged exposure at 31 degrees or above is what has put the colorful reefs at risk.

Last week's thunderstorms and clouds over Phuket and the Anbdaman Sea have helped, but perhaps not enough.

''Half a degree is better however we still need the temperature to move to 29 degrees quickly or there could be residual damage and death,'' he said.

Loss of reefs around Phuket ''would not take many years'' to replace because they were fast-growing varieties, he said. But he said more hot seasons could worsen the situation quickly. ''We just can't tell from season to season because so many factors now come into play,'' he said.

More sophisticated measurement techniques involving taking the temperatures of reefs regularly would help diagnosis but not treatment, he said.

Greater than usual exposure to hot sun in warmer than normal water has placed the entire Andaman region's reefs at risks this year. Other reefs around Thailand and the Great Barrier Reef off Australia have also been affected.

Khun Niphon went diving off Phuket on Tuesday and placed reef temperatures at 30.5 degrees. Prolonged exposure at 31 degrees or above is what has put the colorful reefs at risk.

Last week's thunderstorms and clouds over Phuket and the Anbdaman Sea have helped, but perhaps not enough.

''Half a degree is better however we still need the temperature to move to 29 degrees quickly or there could be residual damage and death,'' he said.

Loss of reefs around Phuket ''would not take many years'' to replace because they were fast-growing varieties, he said. But he said more hot seasons could worsen the situation quickly. ''We just can't tell from season to season because so many factors now come into play,'' he said.

More sophisticated measurement techniques involving taking the temperatures of reefs regularly would help diagnosis but not treatment, he said.


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Battle Brewing Over Forests And Plantations in Papua

Artie Ekawati& Fidelis E Satriastanti, Jakarta Globe 9 May 10;

Environmentalists are up in arms over the latest design for the Merau­ke Integrated Food and Energy Estate in Papua, which they say will see more than 1.1 million hectares of forests converted into agricultural estates.

Jakarta-based Greenomics Indonesia said on Sunday that the latest proposal from the National Spatial Planning Coordination Agency, under the Ministry of Public Works, allocated 1.157 million hectares of primary or natural forests — areas that have not been logged before — to the planned Merauke food estate. This is 90.2 percent of the total 1.28 million hectares to be devoted to the estate.

“President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has encouraged world leaders to inject new economic logic into the development concept, where he underlined that keeping forests is much more beneficial than cutting them down,” said Elfian Effendi, executive director of Greenomics Indonesia.

“It would be strange if the person who said that would eventually allow the large-scale conversion of natural forests into plantation areas.”

The Merauke project, which spans three districts in Papua, is part of the government’s plan to develop agricultural estates in remote areas such as Papua and Kalimantan so they can become self-sufficient in food production and eventually major food exporters.

Merauke has been touted as a major destination of foreign investment and a source of jobs in impoverished Papua, and the government has predicted the population of the district could soar from about 175,000 to 800,000 as a result of the project.

It was scheduled for inauguration in February but has been delayed by land-zoning problems, specifically over which kind of land would be used.

Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan has said the delay was because the government was still mapping the forest area in Papua to avoid protected forests being converted into plantations for the estate. Zulkifli said the government had yet to determine zoning for the food estate and how much forested land could be used.

But according to Elfian, the Ministry of Forestry has now signed an agreement to classify 1.45 million hectares of primary forest within Merauke district alone as Convertible Production Forests (HPK), meaning they can be used for other activities, such as plantations. The conversion still has to be approved by the Ministry of Forestry.

“Of 1.45 million hectares of HPK in Merauke district, about 366,000 hectares have no forests anymore, and 1.06 million hectares are still forested areas,” he said. “If they continue with their plans, they will break their own promise not to open natural forests for this project.”

Greenomics estimated that the allocated forest areas have about 410.9 million cubic meters of timber worth about Rp 120.87 trillion ($13.1 billion) on the domestic market. On the black market, it could fetch as much as Rp 375.5 trillion.

Masyhud, a spokesman for the Ministry of Forestry, did not deny the classification of forest areas in Merauke into HPK, but said the ministry had not yet agreed to the conversion of these areas into agricultural or energy estates for the Merauke project.

He said more detailed surveys were needed to determine which forest areas could be released.


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Elephant Murder Mystery Highlights Threat Faced by Animals in Aceh

Nurdin Hasan Jakarta Globe 9 May 10;

Banda Aceh. A 15-year-old Sumatran elephant was poisoned last month for its tusks, environmental activists and officials confirmed on Sunday.

Kamal Faisal, chairman of environmental watchdog Tamiang Peduli, said dozens of people were involved in the death of the elephant on April 27 near a palm oil plantation owned by PT MPLI in Tamiang district.

He said the case only became public when a forest ranger, M Syahrizal, noticed the elephant missing from its group.

“There were three elephants that lived in the area,” Faisal said. “Two adults and one baby elephant.”

Faisal said Syahrizal drove the elephants back to their habitat whenever they strayed too close to villages in the area. He said that it was only several days after the killing that the ranger realized one of the adult elephants was missing from the group.

Faisal said a farmer claimed he had witnessed the killing when he was working in his field.

“The farmer saw dozens of people cutting up the dead elephant’s tusks and meat,” he said.

Faisal said a small piece of tusk had been secured in his office, but that the farmer was too afraid too speak publicly because he had been threatened by the poachers.

He said it was possible that security officers at plantation company MPLI were involved, noting that no one at the company had yet to issue a statement on the killing.

“The hunters could be people who have been illegally operating in the forests around Tamiang, and they could be working with the company,” he said, adding that he had reported the case to Aceh’s Natural Resources Conservation Agency.

Ridwan, an official at the agency, said it would send a team to the area today. “We are deeply concerned by the case,” he said, adding that the agency would conduct a thorough investigation.

He said there had been cases in several districts in Aceh of elephants destroying homes and fields, but that some people were taking advantage of conflicts between humans and the animals.


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Oil spill could ravage precious Gulf Coast mangroves

Marlowe Hood (AFP) Google News 9 May 10;

PARIS — The BP oil slick menacing the US Gulf Coast poses a direct threat to vast expanses of mangrove forest critical to many of the region's fragile ecosystems, experts say.

Some 2,000 square kilometres (800 square miles) of US coastal mangrove habitat are concentrated in three states most threatened by the estimated 5,000 barrels-a-day of crude oozing into the Gulf: Louisiana, Texas and the southern tip of Florida.

"The oil will basically kill the trees," said Jerry Lorenz, a marine biologist and head of research at Audubon of Florida.

Found in both tropical and subtropical zones, mangrove swamps are a thick tangle of salt-tolerant trees and shrubs that thrive in brackish tidal waters.

Their signature maze of exposed roots serve as a nursery for many commercial and recreational fisheries species, including shrimp, spiny lobster, red fish and snook.

They are also the main nesting and foraging area for dozens of species of wading and other fish-eating birds.

Under pressure from upstream damming and development, mangrove forests along the Gulf Coast have diminished by nearly 30 percent in the past three decades, according to a world survey of mangroves published in 2007 by the Food and Agriculture Organisation.

The massive oil spill, experts say, could destroy much of what remains and severely disrupt the flora and fauna that depend on them.

"Fisheries will be wiped out," Lornenz said. "Birds will not be able to find food, and they will become coated with oil and unable to fly."

One of the biggest ecosystem services mangroves provide human communities is protection from storm surges and wind storms, an especially valuable asset along the hurricane-battered Gulf Coast.

An oil spill deadly to mangroves would not only destroy that buffer, it would also leave a huge stockpile of potentially lethal, hardwood projectiles in its wake.

The first line of defence against the oil is to prevent it from reaching these wetland areas.

Clean-up efforts so far have focused on containing the slick by laying more than 11 kilometres (seven miles) of boom, dropping chemical dispersant, and burning off parts of the slick.

"But for the mangroves, we have to be careful the methods used are not worse than the oil itself," said Gilles Bocquene, an ecotoxicologist at the French Research Institute for the Exploitation of the Sea.

Once the viscous crude does reach the seaside swamps -- which most experts say is a matter of "when" not "if" -- there are few options for removing the oil from the gnarled, slow-growing plants.

"The forests are so tightly bunched, exposed above the waterline, that people will not be able to get in there to wipe them down," Bocquene said. "Besides, there are literally hundreds of millions of trees."

One tactic may be to flush the oil using water under pressure and vacuuming the oil, according to a study on managing oil spills in mangrove ecosystems conducted in the mid-1990s by the Louisiana Environment Research Center at McNeese State University in Lake Charles.

It may also be possible to use natural materials such as matted, dried vegetation to absorb and hold oil and prevent it from settling into the oxygen-poor soil, where microbial degradation takes much longer, according to the study.

Christophe Rousseau of France's Centre for Documentation, Research and Experimentation on Accidental Water Pollution says that the only way to save some forests may be to carefully scrape away a thin surface layer of soil so that the plants can grow.

"But you have to be very, very careful not to push the oil under the surface or to take out the rhizomes, or rootstalks, just under the surface," he said.

And if the oil is abundant, rising and falling tides will simply add new coats of crude with every cycle.

The BP-leased Deepwater Horizon off-shore drilling rig sank on April 22, two days after an explosion that killed 11 workers.


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