Best of our wild blogs: 4 Nov 11


The Story Behind Stalk Eyed Flies
from Macro Photography in Singapore

Wild Red Junglefowl sighted at Sin Min Avenue (Part 2)
from Bird Ecology Study Group

zoanthids @ sekudu - Oct2011
from sgbeachbum and haddon's carpet anemone @ sekudu - Oct2011

Shipside
from The annotated budak

Paint along with Pui San: 27 Nov (Sun)
from Art in Wetlands


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PUB gears up for more rain, possible flash floods

New safeguards include using CCTVs to monitor real-time conditions
Kezia Toh Straits Times 4 Nov 11;

BRACE yourselves for more rain and possibly flash floods from now until the end of January, said the National Environment Agency (NEA).

It expects this monsoon season to be wetter than usual, with rain likely on most days.

The weak La Nina currently prevailing could be one factor behind such higher-than-average rainfall, said the agency at a media briefing yesterday. The term refers to a weather phenomenon in which lower sea temperatures in the Pacific induce more clouds to form.

In anticipation of possible floods, national water agency PUB is ramping up precautionary efforts, for example, by installing CCTVs in flood-prone areas.

By next month, it will have added 55 cameras to the current six, which have been mounted along Bukit Timah Road as part of a trial. The new cameras will be at locations such as Claymore Drive and Cuscaden Road in the central area, Boon Lay Way and Commonwealth Lane in the West, and Kampong Buangkok and Chai Chee Road in the East.

The equipment will allow PUB to monitor real-time conditions, and push out information and alerts more quickly to the media and the public.

In addition, PUB is expanding its network of sensors to track water levels at drains and canals, increasing them from the current 93 to 150 by the year-end.

To prevent drains from being choked, it has stepped up drainage maintenance, especially in areas that are flood-prone, that see heavy pedestrian traffic or large amounts of litter, or that have densely planted trees with heavy leaf fall.

Last month, flash floods hit Singapore three times, affecting many areas. At Woodsville Flyover and the junction of Mandai and Woodlands Roads, PUB officers found choked drains.

Rainfall was higher than normal last month, reaching 216.8mm, compared with the long-term average of 193.7mm for the month, NEA figures showed.

Mr Tan Nguan Sen, the director of catchment and waterways at PUB, said intense rain and the existence of low-lying areas could be partially responsible for the floods. Also, as an island, Singapore is subject to high tides.

While the latest measures might not guarantee that certain sections of the island will be flood-free, they could help reduce the chance of floods, he added.

Mr George Madhavan, the director of 3P Network, which oversees PUB's strategic communications and community relations efforts, said: 'What we can do is try our best to have a robust approach to flood and drainage management, put in our best effort and, with the help of the community, share information about ponding or flash floods occurring.'

The public can report flash floods by contacting PUB's 24-hour call centre on 1800-284-6600.

A panel of local and international experts, set up in July to look into flood problems, will finalise its report by early next year.

In making preliminary recommendations on how to handle freak storms, it said the authorities could study weather patterns and collect more extensive information about the rain - before it falls and even as it is falling. The data could then be used to design canals that are better able to handle the consequences of such storms.

Experts also expect this year's North-east monsoon season to be wetter than usual. Typically, the monsoon dominates conditions between December and March, with a dry surge at the tail end that lasts through February and March.

Associate Professor Matthias Roth at the geography department of the National University of Singapore said: 'The current La Nina conditions are expected to strengthen and continue through the winter into next year, favouring above-average rainfall across the region.'

Meanwhile, shopkeepers operating in flood-prone areas here are already preparing themselves for wet weather.

For senior chef Zakir Ullah, 29, this includes raking up leaves and litter every day from drains around his grilled meat restaurant in Little India.

'If it floods, I would have to close my kitchen and business would suffer,' he said.

High-tech help to keep drains clear of debris
Inspection of drains stepped up; new gadgets make clearing easier
Kezia Toh Straits Times 4 Nov 11;

WITH the current wet weather already causing flash floods, making sure drains are not choked is critical.

In flood-prone Little India, for instance, flushing the drains of leaves, litter and soil is now done weekly.

Inspections by the contractors take place daily instead of two to three times a week.

Mr V. Rajandran, manager of the catchment and waterways department at national water agency PUB, said the frequency of inspections depends on the number of trees - more trees mean more leaves are shed - and amount of pedestrian traffic in the area.

In some areas, inspections could take place once a week but during the monsoon season, the pace is stepped up to twice a week. New gadgets have helped speed up the work of clearing drains.

About two years ago, a two-man team would have to squat and peer into dark drains to manually rake up leaves and litter. Today, a rectangular opening at the sides of roads - called a drop-inlet chamber - allows for the use of a 5m-long extendable funnel which works as a vacuum cleaner. A worker opens the grille and sucks up the debris with the funnel, all under two minutes.

For larger closed drains that are nearly 1.5m deep, a worker lowers a camera at the end of a pole into the drain. Images captured pop up on a tablet's screen.

Mr Rajandran said: 'We are looking out not just for debris such as tin cans, garbage bags and plastic bottles, but also possible ponding of water.'

The latter may provide a breeding ground for mosquitoes which spread dengue.

Previously, workers had to manually lift the drain covers, crouch and take a picture for inspection.

Next, the team flushes the drain by inserting a nozzle with a high-pressure jet, placing a net at the end to catch the litter.

Three drains' worth of litter fill up about one-sixth of a large black garbage bag.

The job is usually done at night along the main roads and in commercial areas, and in the daytime in residential areas.

The fight to keep Singapore dry will also get a boost when work to widen and deepen drains along Syed Alwi Road and Kampong Kapor Road is completed by mid-2013.

PUB to install 55 CCTVs at flood-prone areas islandwide
Kezia Toh Straits Times 3 Nov 11;

National water agency PUB is installing closed-circuit televisions (CCTVs) at flood-prone areas. Currently, there are six cameras along Bukit Timah Road as part of a trial, and by early December this year, there will be 55 more cameras all over the island.

This will help to monitor real-time conditions in flood-prone areas and allow faster response - pushing out information faster to warn the public, for example.

In a media briefing on Thursday, the environment agency said that higher than average rainfall is expected for this north-east monsoon season, which typically lasts between November and January.

It will also expand its network of sensors to track water levels at drains and canals, and has stepped up its drainage maintenance regime to minimise the risk of flash floods.

PUB to install 55 CCTVs in flood-prone areas
Channel NewsAsia 3 Nov 11;

SINGAPORE: National water agency PUB is installing 55 closed-circuit television (CCTV) cameras at flood-prone areas in Singapore, mostly in the central, eastern and western parts of the island.

The installation is expected to be completed by early December this year.

PUB said the installation of more CCTVs follows the success of its trial project along Bukit Timah Road, where six cameras were installed.

The PUB said having these CCTVs help it to respond more quickly during intense storms or flash floods.

Tan Nguan Sen, Director (Catchment & Waterways) at PUB, elaborated: "We have to look at the critical locations like major canals....old low-lying areas. So we choose (where to install the CCTVs) based on these two main criteria."

As for other areas, the PUB is working with the Land Transport Authority (LTA) to use its traffic cameras to monitor real-time conditions in the event of floods.

The installation of CCTVs is part of the PUB's initiatives to step up flood management efforts in preparation for the Northeast Monsoon.

According to the National Environment Agency's (NEA) Meteorological Service,
Singapore can expect more rainy days ahead during the coming Northeast Monsoon season between mid-November this year and end of January next year.

For Singapore, on average there are 19 rain days each in November and
December, and 15 rain days in January.

However, the prevailing weak La Nina in the Pacific Ocean could contribute to a wetter than usual Northeast Monsoon season this year.

To enhance monitoring efforts, the PUB is expanding the network of sensors to
track water levels at various drains and canals.

More water level sensors are being installed and this will bring the total number of sensors from the current 93 to 150 by the end of the year.

The PUB has also stepped up its drainage maintenance regime to keep the drains flowing and minimise the risks of flash floods.

This includes increasing the frequency of inspection and cleaning, especially in the flood-prone areas and areas where there is high pedestrian traffic and litter, and roads densely planted with trees with heavy leaf falls.

The PUB has also gone door-to-door to distribute flood advisories to 371 units in low-lying, flood-prone areas, such as those in Mountbatten Road and Kampong Buangkok.

- CNA/ac/ms/ir

Wet weather affects outdoor businesses
Evelyn Lam Channel NewsAsia 3 Nov 11;

SINGAPORE: Singapore's recent wet weather has not been good news for some outdoor businesses.

Racecraft Infinity at Yishun's Bottle Tree Park said its outdoor racing track is often flooded when it rains, and attempts to shield it with plastic canvas have not helped. It can cost up to S$1,000 to repair the track each time.

Its owner said he has lost 80 per cent of his customers this month.

On a regular weekend, he can earn up to S$5,000 to S$6,000. But with the rainy weather, he's only making about S$1,000 to S$2,000.

The nearby S&E Fishing Services has also seen a 30 to 40 per cent drop in business in the past month. Its fishing pond normally attracts some 50 customers over the weekend, but with the rain, it has been seeing about 10 customers.

The businesses hope things will pick up with the upcoming school holidays. Promotions to reel in customers include adding more fish to the pond and extending operating hours.

-CNA/ac

PUB to install 55 more CCTV cameras in flood-prone areas
Today Online 4 Nov 11;

SINGAPORE - Following a successful trial - in which six CCTV cameras were fitted along Bukit Timah Road to monitor the area during heavy rain - the PUB will install another 55 CCTVs at other flood-prone areas here by early next month.

These CCTV cameras will help to monitor real-time conditions in the areas and allow faster response. The announcement comes ahead of an expectation of more rainy days ahead in the next few weeks.

The Meteorological Service Singapore said yesterday that higher than average rainfall is expected for this north-east monsoon season, which will fall between the middle of this month and end-January.

The north-east monsoon season is characterised by short-duration thundery showers mainly in the afternoon and evening, and about two to four episodes of monsoon surges.

The long-term average number of rainy days is 19 in November, 19 in December and 15 in January.

The PUB has distributed flood advisories to 371 residential units and shop-houses in the central, western and eastern regions. According to the board, these are low-lying areas, some of which are also subject to tidal influence.

Apart from informing the occupants of the possibility of flash floods, information on the precautions they could take to protect their belongings is also provided, it said.

The PUB is also working with building owners on the measures that they could implement to provide additional protection for their premises.

For instance, Liat Towers and Tong Building have installed flood gates.

The PUB will also expand its network of sensors to track water levels at drains and canals and has stepped up its drainage maintenance regime to minimise the risk of flash floods.

Apart from the regular weather forecast, the National Environment Agency will issue warnings when heavy rain is expected.


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Malaysia Ready For Likely Worst Floods In Decades

Bernama 3 Nov 11;

PUTRAJAYA, Nov 3 (Bernama) -- As rain continues to fall daily throughout the country and the wet season of the Northeast Monsoon begins to set in, the authorities are bracing for the worst floods anticipated in decades.

The preparations began as early as July 1, with the unprecedented floods in Thailand serving as a grim reminder of the intensity with which the natural disaster can strike.

National Security Council (NSC) secretary Datuk Mohamed Thajudeen Abdul Wahab said all plans are in place and the feedback has come in from every relevant agency.

"We have held meetings with the various agencies involved, such as the armed forces, social welfare department, the police and others," he told Bernama.

Mohamed Thajudeen said Deputy Prime Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin is scheduled to chair a special meeting on Nov 15.

Muhyiddin had said earlier that the government is preparing to face the floods anticipated to be on a larger scale.

Mohamed Thajudeen said every government agency involved will report on the plans and preparations to face the floods.

He advised the people, particularly those living in flood-prone areas, to ensure their safety and listen to the advice of the authorities when the floods strike.

Parents should make sure that their children are safe and do not play or swim in the floodwaters, he said.

Meanwhile, Fire & Rescue Department director-general Datuk Wan Mohd Nor Ibrahim said the department was ready to render aid during the floods.

He said the department had divulged its plans in facing the floods at meetings held with the various other government agencies.

"The updates on our preparations will be provided at the special meeting on Nov 15 to be chaired by Tan Sri Muhyiddin," he said.

In KANGAR, some people hope that the flood forecast will turn out to be wrong because they have yet to recover from the trauma of the November 2010 and March 2011 floods which struck Perlis.

"I am in no mood to evacuate again if the floods occur. It is impossible to save everything," said Abdul Halim Ismail, 35, of Kampung Tok Kuning.

Recently, Prof Datuk Dr Ibrahim Komoo, director of the Southeast Asia Disaster Prevention Research Institute at Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (SEADPRI-UKM), had named Perlis as one of the places expected to face massive floods with the setting in of the Northeast Monsoon, besides Kelantan, Terengganu, Kedah, eastern Sarawak and Sabah.

He had said that the current wet season could see 40 per cent of 880 millimetres more rain compared to last year's.

Farmer Kassim Ahmad, 58, from Abi and vegetable farmer Ku Ibrahim Ku Ali, 48, of Beseri are keeping their fingers crossed that the anticipated floods will not happen.

Perlis Menteri Besar Datuk Seri Dr Md Isa Sabu had said that the state government has sought a supplementary allocation of RM40 million from the federal government to prepare for the floods.

A check by Bernama showed that work was going on to deepen and clean up rivers flowing into Sungai Perlis to ensure smooth flow of water into the sea.

In IPOH, Perak State Secretary Datuk Seri Dr Abdul Rahman Hashim said the state government would take proactive measures, such as evacuating people in low-lying areas just before the floods strike.

He said this would make evacuation easier and reduce operational cost while saving the property of the evacuees.

Dr Abdul Rahman said the state government had prepared a profile of flood-prone areas and the number of people often affected by the disaster.

The state government has set up a RM100,000 disaster relief fund and instructed district officers to ensure that the drainage system in their areas is functioning smoothly.

In KUALA LUMPUR, the Works Ministry cautioned the people to be wary of landslide risk in view of the rainy season which it expects to prolong until early next year.

In a statement, it advised all relevant agencies and the people to take precautionary measures and make inspections on the areas where landslides are likely to occur.

It wanted them to clean up water drainage systems atop hills and on hillslopes, let collected water flow into drains and ensure that drains were not clogged with vegetation or refuse.

"If an electric pole or a tree on a hillslope is slanting, it is a sign of imminent slope collapse," it said in a statement.

The ministry advised road users and hillslope residents to report to the authorities should they detect signs of an imminent landslide, and said the residents should then move out immediately.

It said it would issue a guide on signs of imminent landslides soon.

Meanwhile, Deputy Inspector-General of Police Datuk Seri Khalid Abu Bakar said the police had made all the necessary preparations to face the anticipated floods.

Its director, Kamaruddin Hussin, said today the personnel would be deployed to flood-prone locations such as Rantau Panjang, Tumpat, Kota Baharu, Jeli, Tanah Merah and Kuala Krai.

He said the Civil Defence Department in Kelantan had 27,000 volunteers who were well trained to assist the other security forces during a disaster.

In JOHOR BAHARU, Menteri Besar Datuk Abdul Ghani Othman said preparations are being made by the state government to face the eventuality of floods.

He said the state government would bank on its experience of having handled the floods which hit the state in 2006, 2007 and early this year in making the preparations.

He also said that 154 residents in flood-prone areas in Taman Melati and Taman Kiambang, both in the Tebrau parliamentary constituency, would be relocated to the Johor Land Berhad low-cost housing project in Taman Bukit Tiram. Johor Land Berhad is a subsidiary of Johor Corporation.

-- BERNAMA


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Relief Is Slow to Reach Cambodia Flood Victims

Thomas Fuller New York Times 2 Nov 11;

BATTAMBANG, Cambodia — The high water is devastating even for a country inured to monsoon rains and waterlogged rice fields: wide swaths of Cambodia’s countryside have become giant lakes, with villagers and livestock marooned on scattered patches of dry land.

The floods that have affected three-quarters of the country’s land area, by the United Nations’ estimate, have been overshadowed by similar troubles in Cambodia’s larger and wealthier neighbor, Thailand, where the government is scrambling to protect central Bangkok from inundation.

Here in Cambodia, though, aid workers describe a more Darwinian struggle and a generally higher degree of desperation among villagers.

“This is the worst I’ve seen in my career,” said Soen Seueng, a 58-year-old doctor who tended to a long line of flood victims on Wednesday, most of them women and children, who were camped on a strip of raised land accessible only by boat.

Dr. Seueng grasped the limp arm of a 6-year-old girl, Lor Chaneut, who received a diagnosis of dengue fever, the mosquito-borne disease that can be fatal without close medical attention. “You must take her to the hospital,” Dr. Seueng urged the girl’s family.

The girl’s mother, Jeok Kimsan, said the family’s savings were wiped out by the floods. “We will go to the hospital when we get some money,” she said, as her husband built a fish trap.

Flood victims, many of whom begged a foreign visitor for help, took shelter here under plastic sheeting, like refugees from a civil war. Cows, pigs and chickens shared the strip of dry land, which was covered with animal and human waste.

“The toilet is everywhere,” said Henry Y. Sophorn, a Cambodian-born American who represents a nonprofit group, Disadvantaged Cambodians Organization, which is part of a syndicate delivering aid to flood victims.

In Thailand, the government has used helicopters, military vehicles and an array of equipment to reach and assist flood victims, but in Cambodia the work of providing basic necessities has been largely left to private organizations.

“The government can only help a small number of people — they don’t have the capacity,” said Mr. Sophorn, whose organization has supplied 3,400 families with medical care, rice, instant noodles, canned fish and bottled water, using money from a donor in Hong Kong who has asked to remain anonymous.

With little or no government assistance, many villagers have been left to fend for themselves.

“The big impact is just starting,” said Sen Jeunsafy, a spokeswoman in Cambodia for Save the Children, an international aid organization. “What we have done is provided immediate relief. But collectively, we have not been able to reach every family.”

Aid workers say the full scope of the flood crisis in Cambodia is not yet known, because many affected areas are remote and out of communication. In all, the United Nations estimates that 1.2 million people out of a population of about 15 million may have been affected.

Rice farmers and fishermen in Cambodia have long abided by the rhythm of the monsoon and dry seasons, which causes the country’s largest freshwater lake, Tonle Sap, to swell and contract. But this year, relentless rains brought flooding to the highest levels in living memory, said Ngin Vath, a 50-year-old fisherman. “Normally at this time of year everything is dry.”

Villagers say the water has finally started to recede. Where only treetops were visible, the tips of ruined rice stalks now peek above the surface. But the floodwaters remain dangerous: two children drowned last week, Mr. Vath said.

With rice crops ruined and houses destroyed, reconstruction will be difficult, Ms. Jeunsafy said. “People will face many problems just trying to survive.”


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Buy a “virtual property” in the Coral Triangle

Bid to preserve coral triangle
Ellalyn B. De Vera Manila Bulletin 3 Nov 11;

MANILA, Philippines — In a bid to preserve the world’s center of marine life known as the “Coral Triangle,” international conservation group World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) encouraged individuals to buy a “virtual property” across the Triangle, encompassing Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands, and Timor L'Este.

The new regional campaign MyCoralTriangle allows participants to buy a “spot” in the Coral Triangle for just US$5.

MyCoralTriangle was launched Thursday in four pilot markets: Hong Kong, Indonesia, Philippines, and Malaysia.

The program will make ample use of social media, a series of print advertisements, and a 30-second television commercial that will lead online audiences to www.panda.org/mycoraltriangle, where they can buy a “spot” in the Triangle.

The money raised will go to WWF’s ongoing efforts to conserve the region’s spectacular environment in protected areas, including Wakatobi and Semporna in Indonesia.

WWF noted that the Coral Triangle is home to six of the world’s seven species of marine turtles, and a place where whales, dolphins, dugongs, and the world’s largest fish, the whale shark, live.

Likewise, more than 120 million people depend heavily on the region’s marine resources for food and income.

WWF Launches Coral Triangle Virtual Property Sales Campaign
Bernama 3 Nov 11;

JAKARTA, Nov 3 (Bernama) -- The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has launched a new regional campaign that encourages individuals to buy virtual property across the Coral Triangle, the world's centre of marine life, said here Thursday.

"For as a little as US$5 - the price of a cup of coffee or an afternoon meal - supporters can invest in the future of the Coral Triangle, a region facing serious challenges including overfishing and climate change," said the head of the WWF Coral Triangle Programme, Dr Lida Pet-Soede.

The money raised will go towards WWF's ongoing efforts to conserve the region's spectacular environment in protected areas including Wakatobi (Southeast Sulawesi) and Semporna (East Coast of Sabah, Malaysia on the island of Borneo).

The Coral Triangle encompasses Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands, and Timor L`Este. It is home to six of the world`s seven species of marine turtles, and a place where whales, dolphins, dugongs, and the world`s largest fish, the whaleshark, live.

More than 120 million people also depend heavily on the region's marine resources for food and income.

"The Coral Triangle is where a big portion of the world's tuna supply comes from. From here, tuna finds its way to local markets and also on to your dinner table. It's very likely that the seafood you enjoy at your favorite restaurants comes from the Coral Triangle, as it is home to thousands of the world's reef fish species," added Dr Pet-Soede.

This is the first time for WWF to launch a campaign at the same time in four countries, namely Hong Kong, Indonesia, the Philippines, and Malaysia.

"In this campaign, we have the target to reach 300,000 thousand spots in three years. The money raised will be used towards WWF's ongoing efforts to conserve by educating people about the major role of the Coral Triangle," said Marketing Director of WWF Indonesia, Devy Suradji.

Located in the heart of Asia Pacific's rapidly expanding economies, the Coral Triangle is facing incredible pressure from the region`s growing financial clout.

Increasing demand for food means that fishing boats are extracting tuna and reef fish out of the sea faster than the fish populations can replenish themselves, and many are caught using highly damaging practices.

"The areas of Indonesia which include the Coral Triangle, have very fantastic biodiversity but they are highly vulnerable so that we have to protect," said actor and diver, Nicholas Saputra, who has diving experience in many areas of the Coral Triangle in Indonesia like Raja Ampat, Wakatobi, Komodo, and many more.

The innovative online MyCoralTriangle campaign will make ample use of social media, a series of print advertisements, and a 30 second television commercial that will lead online audiences to www.panda.org/mycoraltriangle, where they can buy a "spot" in the Coral Triangle for just five dollars

-- BERNAMA

Invest in the future of the Coral Triangle
WWF 3 Nov 11;

Jakarta, Indonesia - The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) has launched a new regional campaign that encourages individuals to buy virtual property across the Coral Triangle, the world’s center of marine life.

The innovative online MyCoralTriangle campaign will make ample use of social media, a series of print advertisements, and a 30-second television commercial that will lead online audiences to www.panda.org/mycoraltriangle, where they can buy a “spot” in the Coral Triangle for just US$5.

The money raised will go towards WWF’s ongoing efforts to conserve the region’s spectacular environment in protected areas including Wakatobi and Semporna.

The Coral Triangle encompasses Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Philippines, Solomon Islands, and Timor L'Este. It is home to 6 of the world’s 7 species of marine turtles, and a place where whales, dolphins, dugongs, and the world’s largest fish, the whaleshark, live.

More than 120 million people also depend heavily on the region’s marine resources for food and income.

“The Coral Triangle is where a big portion of the world’s tuna supply comes from. From here, tuna finds its way to local markets and also on to your dinner table. It’s very likely that the seafood you enjoy at your favorite restaurants comes from the Coral Triangle, as it is home to thousands of the world’s reef fish species,“ said Dr Lida Pet-Soede, Head of the WWF Coral Triangle Programme.

“For as little as US$5 - the price of a cup of coffee or an afternoon meal – supporters can invest in the future of the Coral Triangle, a region facing serious challenges including overfishing and climate change,” added Dr Pet-Soede.

Why we need your commitment: growing challenges

Located in the heart of Asia Pacific’s rapidly expanding economies, the Coral Triangle is facing incredible pressure from the region’s growing financial clout.

Increasing demands for food means that fishing boats are extracting tuna and reef fish out of the sea faster than populations can replenish themselves, and many are caught using highly damaging practices.

People are also feeling the crunch, with climate change now dramatically altering the lives of millions of people.

“The Coral Triangle is a place the world simply cannot do without. We urgently need your support to protect the future of this globally-significant ecoregion,” said Dr Pet-Soede.

MyCoralTriangle will be simultaneously launched on 3 November in four pilot markets: Hong Kong, Indonesia, Philippines and Malaysia and driven by the WWF national offices in these countries.

The campaign has been developed through partnership of the WWF Coral Triangle Program and Dentsu Asia, together with WWF-Hong Kong, WWF-Indonesia, WWF-Malaysia, WWF-Philippines and the Asia Pacific Growth Team (APGT), with the support of WWF International.

Visit www.panda.org/mycoraltriangle now and invest in your future.


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Australia: Saving Queensland's marine life

Alice Roberts and Jacquie Mackay ABC Net 4 Nov 11;

Concerns over the impacts of dredging on marine life in Gladstone have been raised by locals and environmental groups recently.

Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority protected species expert Dr Mark Read addressed a national forum on ways industry are already working to manage human related impacts on turtles and dugongs.

He says this year they've recorded over 1200 turtle strandings along the Queensland coast.

"Whilst the level of marine strandings this year has obviously been alarming and disturbing, in terms of the overall population, we're not likely to have a long term impact and so the population is not going to be threatened," he says.

"However the story for dugongs is probably a little bit different because the population of dugongs along what we call the urban coast, which is from Cooktown down to the New South Wales border, that population is experiencing a number of threats.

"It has had some significant declines so any additional stresses like what we're seeing at the moment is actually going to be, in many ways, compromising that population over time."

So can populations of turtles and dugongs recover from this?

"One of the inherent challenges with turtles and dugongs is that their biology in many ways doesn't allow them to engage in or to have rapid population recoveries, especially dugongs," says Dr Read.

"So yes they can recover but we need to be thinking long term strategies if we're going to see numbers come back to anything that we've had in the past."

So what impacts are we seeing?

"The main impacts have essentially been from Cairns, south," he says.

"We've had significant impacts from the wet season and of course from tropical cyclone Yasi so we've seen a degradation and a decline of seagrass beds.

"Now if you're a dugong that relies almost exclusively on seagrass beds or a green turtle that uses that as a big part of your diet, that's really going to impact on you."

He says as a result they've seen the highest record of turtle strandings since the program started in 1996.

"We're just starting to see some recovery in seagrass beds in some areas whereas in others we're not seeing any recovery at all," says Dr Read.

"In many ways the long term prognosis is thinking about the focus on the habitat that supports these animals and making sure we can minimise the threats."

He says DEEDI and the Department of Resource Management is monitoring the situation in Gladstone.

He says they're keeping track of strandings and working closely with the Ports Corporation to ensure that industry and marine life can live alongside each other.

"We receive advice from DERM about what is happening there and certainly at this stage, the difficult thing is that there's really no data that links what's happening to the turtles and dugongs to the dredging," he says.

He says while there's little we can do about natural events affecting turtle and dugong numbers, we can help in other ways.

"Various government agencies have been working with commercial fishers and the Queensland Seafood Industry Association to minimise the potential impact of inshore netting on turtles and dugongs," says Dr Read.

"It's highlighting things like go slow areas where you can minimise the potential for hitting a dugong or a turtle.

"So the slogan we've talked about is 'go slow for those below'.

"It's about other groups like traditional owners making the decision to voluntarily cease traditional hunting in recognition that the animals that they have a connection to, are at this particular point doing it pretty tough.

"The other things is the really big programs like the reef water quality protection plan to minimise the outflow of sediments and nutrients from the land into the Great Barrier Reef which is going to give the seagrasses the best possible chance of recovery."


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Vulnerable islands urge climate deal before end-2012

Reuters 3 Nov 11;

(Reuters) - A group of island states most vulnerable to global warming have lashed out against rich nations for wanting to delay a new international climate pact until years after the Kyoto Protocol on curbing carbon emissions expires in 2012.

The 42-member Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) said countries such as Japan and Russia were "reckless and irresponsible" for promoting a delay in the adoption of a new international agreement until 2018 or 2020, just weeks before the start of a United Nations climate summit in Durban, South Africa.

"If we allow this to happen, global warming problems are going to worsen and the impact on a country like Grenada will be devastating," Joseph Gilbert, Grenada's environment minister and current chair of AOSIS, said in a statement.

"We therefore cannot continue to delay making decisions, to 2018 or 2020, as there will not be sufficient time for countries to take action," he said.

If world governments fail to agree a pact that sets tough climate targets then small island countries in the Caribbean, the Pacific, Africa and elsewhere will be further exposed to severe drought, rising sea levels and stronger hurricanes as a result of climate change, Gilbert said.

AOSIS said a large number of developed and developing countries also want a climate deal done before the end of 2012 and are calling for that timetable to be agreed at the climate summit in Durban.

Representatives from more than 190 nations will meet in the South African city from November 28-December 9 to resume climate talks, but a binding pact to reduce emissions looks unlikely to be delivered and may take several years due to deep divisions between rich and poor nations. [nL5E7LE2PU]

KYOTO DIVISIONS

The 1997 Kyoto Protocol covers only emissions from rich nations that produce less than a third of mankind's carbon pollution and its first phase is due to expire end-2012. Poorer nations want it extended, while many rich countries say a broader pact is needed to include all big polluters. [nL3E7L30B0]

Russia, Japan, Canada and others have said they will not sign up to a second commitment period unless it includes all major emitters.

Two years ago, industrialized nations set a 2 degree Celsius warming as the maximum limit to avoid dangerous climate changes including more floods, droughts and rising seas. Some experts say a 1.5 degree limit would be safer.

Scientists have said carbon emissions need to be cut by 80 to 95 percent by 2050 to keep warming levels reasonably safe.

This is well above the collective commitment by developed countries for a 5.2 percent reduction from 1990 levels under the first phase of Kyoto, and well above developed country targets currently on the table.

The AOSIS chair urged developed countries not to renege on their legal commitment and "historical responsibility" to commit to new targets under the Kyoto pact after 2012.

Otherwise, he said: "What this will do is ruin the Kyoto Protocol, wreck the international carbon market, and undermine the credibility of the legally-binding international climate regime that has taken the world more than 20 years to build."

Benchmark U.N.-issued carbon credits traded at an all-time low of 6.35 euros ($8.76) earlier on Thursday, before recovering somewhat. ($1 = 0.725 Euros)

(Reporting By Jeff Coelho)

Island states slam slow pace of climate talks
Marlowe Hood AFP Yahoo News 4 Nov 11;

Island states facing rising seas driven by global warming slammed on Thursday suggestions by some rich nations that a comprehensive climate deal can wait until 2018 or later.

Such proposals are "both environmentally reckless and politically irresponsible," Joseph Gilbert, Grenada's environment minister, said on behalf of the 42-nation Association of Small Island States (AOSIS).

"If we allow this to happen, global warming problems are going to worsen and the impact on a country like Grenada will be devastating," he said in a statement.

Australia and Norway have proposed setting a 2015 deadline for a climate deal that would lock in commitments from all major carbon-emitting nations.

But negotiators from Japan and Russia have said such a deadline is unrealistic, with Moscow suggesting it could be pushed out as far as 2018 or 2020, AOSIS said in a statement.

Russia's top climate official, Oleg Pluzhnikov, told Interfax news agency earlier this week that there was a strong probability "that no new agreement will be adopted in the four or five years after the expiry of the Kyoto Protocol."

Kyoto's current roster of pledges runs out at the end of 2012.

Gilbert's comments come ahead of a new round of high-level UN negotiations in Durban, South Africa, from November 28 to December 9.

Some progress has been made on "building block" issues such as finance and technology since the near-collapse in 2009 of climate talks in Copenhagen.

But sharing out cuts in the greenhouse gas emissions that stoke warming remains blocked.

"The world's climate scientists have told us that global emissions need to peak well before 2020" to keep global temperatures from rising more than the 2.0 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial levels, widely seen as a threshold for dangerous warming, Gilbert said.

"We cannot continue to delay making the decisions, to 2018 or 2020, as there will not be sufficient time for countries to take action."

The window of opportunity for staying under the 2.0 C (3.6 F) cap is shrinking rapidly, scientists say.

Many developing nations in the Caribbean, the Pacific, Asia and Africa have already experienced more frequent droughts, stronger hurricanes and rising seas, with even more severe climate impacts on the horizon, according to the final draft of a major scientific UN report to be released later this month.

The Australia-Norway proposal, submitted in September, calls for a scaling up of national carbon-cutting targets and the step-by-step construction of an international system for verification.

This could be done as an extension of the Kyoto Protocol, or a new treaty that incorporates some of its attributes, it said.

The end-point objective would be "a new, legally-binding Protocol for all Parties" -- including developed and developing countries -- in 2015.

The Kyoto Protocol currently only covers some three dozen rich nations that account for about 30 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions.

China, the world's top carbon emitter, was excluded at the outset as a developing nation, and the United States -- the No. 2 global polluter -- opted out after playing a major role in crafting the treaty.

"This is a live issue that is being discussed," Alden Meyer, top climate policy analyst at the Washington-based Union of Concerned Scientists, said of the proposal.

"But it is very political. Different countries have opposing positions, which makes getting to a 'yes' very hard on this."


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