Best of our wild blogs: 27 Aug 13



Walk into the Twilight (Sun 1 Sep’13 @16.00hrs)
from a.t.Bukit Brown. Heritage. Habitat. History.

Our Singapore Conversation Survey Findings
from Chope 4 Nature

Why Conservation Is Rubbish
from G33k5p34k's Blog

A glimpse of the glorious beacon area at Chek Jawa
from wonderful creation and Peiyan.Photography

Roosting of Pink-necked Green-pigeons
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Day Out with the Crabs
from Glass Ark and Love our MacRitchie Forest

Naturally foraging monkey and better robots
from wild shores of singapore


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Spectre of haze as hot spots spike

Today Online 27 Aug 13;

SINGAPORE — With a “sharp increase” in the number of hot spots detected in parts of Indonesia over the past few days, a shift in the wind direction could bring back the haze, the National Environment Agency (NEA) warned yesterday.

The number of hot spots detected yesterday was 488 — similar to that recorded when Singapore experienced its worst bout of haze on record in June, when the PSI hit 401. Then, over 400 fires were detected in Sumatra. By contrast, only 29 hot spots were detected last Tuesday. Most of the hot spots detected yesterday were in the Riau province. The NEA said “moderate to dense smoke plumes” were observed over some hot spots in central Sumatra. It added that its Chief Executive Officer Ronnie Tay has written and spoken to his Indonesian counterparts to register Singapore’s concerns over the spike in the number of hot spots, and has “sought an urgent update from the Indonesians on the situation”.

Calling the spike in hot spots “an exercise in frustration”, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Vivian Balakrishnan last night said Singapore has been spared so far because of the wind direction. “We remain at risk. Have to keep up the pressure on the Indonesian authorities and companies to do the right thing for the sake of their own citizens and ours,” he wrote on his Facebook page.

As at 7pm yesterday, the 24-hour Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) reading was 24 to 32, and the 24-hour PM2.5 reading was 12-15 micrograms per cubic metre.

The NEA said dry weather conditions are expected to prevail in central and southern Sumatra, while the low-level winds over Singapore are expected to blow from the south or south-east.

“Should the winds weaken and blow from the south-west over the next few days, there is a possibility that Singapore could experience slightly hazy conditions,” the agency said in a statement yesterday evening.

The NEA said thundery showers are expected today in the late morning and early afternoon. Given the favourable wind conditions, the 24-hour PSI reading until 6pm today is expected to be in the “good” band — 50 and below — and the 24-hour PM2.5 reading is expected to be slightly elevated.

The ASEAN Specialised Meteorological Centre, hosted by the Meteorological Service Singapore, has placed Sumatra on Alert Level 2 — out of three levels — of its regional warning system for the fire and haze situation. Level 2 is activated when 150 hot spots or more are detected on two consecutive days, with dry weather conditions persisting and prevailing winds blowing towards other ASEAN countries.

The alert levels are issued to the interim ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Transboundary Haze Pollution, which in turn disseminates it to member countries.

The public — including the elderly, pregnant women, children and those with chronic medical conditions — can still continue with normal activities for the day. The NEA said it will update the public if there are any changes in the haze situation.

Last Tuesday, the three-hour PSI readings crept up to hit the moderate range of 56 in the afternoon, but dipped back to the good range in the evening, as a result of wind conditions.

Number of hotspots rise, “slightly hazier” conditions expected: NEA
Today Online 26 Aug 13;

SINGAPORE — With a “sharp increase” in the number of hotspots detected in parts of Indonesia over the past few days, expect “slightly hazier” days ahead depending on wind conditions, the National Environment Agency (NEA) warned today (Aug 26).

The latest number of hotspots as of today was 488, of which 267 are in Riau province and 66 in South Sumatra. The NEA also said “moderate to dense smoke plumes” were observed over some of the hotspots in central Sumatra. Last Tuesday, the number of hotspots detected in Sumatra was 29.

The NEA said its Chief Executive Officer Ronnie Tay has written and spoken to his Indonesian counterparts to register Singapore’s concerns over the sharp increase in hotspot counts, and has “sought an urgent update from the Indonesians on the situation”.

Calling the spike in hot spots “an exercise in frustration”, Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Vivian Balakrishnan said, Singapore has been spared so far because of the wind direction. “We remain at risk. Have to keep up the pressure on the Indonesian authorities and companies to do the right thing for the sake of their own citizens and ours,” he wrote on his Facebook page tonight.

As of 7pm, the 24-hour Pollutant Standards Index reading was 24 to 32, and the 24-hour PM2.5 reading was 12-15 µg/m3. The NEA said that dry weather conditions are expected to prevail in central and southern Sumatra, while the low-level winds over Singapore are expected to blow from the south or southeast.

“Should the winds weaken and blow from the southwest over the next few days, there is a possibility that Singapore could experience slightly hazy conditions,” the agency said in a statement.

The NEA said thundery showers are expected tomorrow in the late morning and early afternoon. Given the favourable wind conditions, the 24-hour PSI reading until 6pm tomorrow is expected to be in the “Good” band — 50 and below — and the 24-hour PM2.5 reading is expected to be slightly elevated.

The ASEAN Specialised Meteorological Centre (ASMC), hosted by the Meteorological Service Singapore, has placed Sumatra on Alert Level 2 — out of three levels — of its regional warning system for the fire and haze situation. Level 2 is activated when 150 hotspots or more are detected on two consecutive days, with dry weather conditions persisting and prevailing winds blowing towards other ASEAN countries.

The alert levels are issued to the interim ASEAN Coordinating Centre for Transboundary Haze Pollution which in turn disseminates it to the ASEAN member countries.

The public — including the elderly, pregnant women, children and those with chronic medical conditions — can still continue with normal activities for the day. The NEA will update the public if there are any changes in the haze situation.

Last Tuesday, the three-hour PSI readings crept up to hit the moderate range of 56 in the afternoon, but dipped back to the good range in the evening, as a result of wind conditions.

Haze to return?
Channel NewsAsia 26 Aug 13;

SINGAPORE: The number of hotspots in Sumatra jumped to 488 on Monday to hit its highest in 30 days, says the National Environment Agency (NEA).

The number compared with 225 on Sunday and 86 the day before.

The NEA says moderate to dense smoke plumes could be seen coming from some of the hotspots in central Sumatra.

Currently, low-level winds over Singapore are forecast to blow from the south or southeast.

But the NEA warns that Singapore could experience slightly hazy conditions over the next few days if the winds weaken and blow from the southwest.

NEA's CEO, Mr Ronnie Tay, has written and spoken to his Indonesian counterparts to register Singapore's concerns over the sharp increase in hotspot counts in Sumatra.

The NEA says Mr Tay also sought an urgent update from the Indonesians on the situation.

Meanwhile, Singapore's Minister for the Environment and Water Resources Vivian Balakrishnan described the situation with the haze as "an exercise in frustration".

Posting on his Facebook page, he noted that the hotspots in Sumatra have increased to 488.

Dr Balakrishnan said Singapore has been spared so far of the effects of the hotspots because of wind direction, but remains at risk.

He said Singapore would "have to keep up the pressure on Indonesian authorities and companies to do the right thing for the sake of their own citizens and ours".

- CNA/ir

Haze expected with number of hot spots in Sumatra up at 488
David Ee Straits Times 27 Aug 13;

SINGAPORE may have to prepare for hazier skies over the next few days, after the number of hot spots in Sumatra nearly soared to 488 from 86 over the last three days.

The National Environment Agency (NEA) said last night that dense smoke plumes observed over central Sumatra may be blown here if current southerly and south-easterly winds started blowing Singapore's way instead.

This may cause "slightly hazy conditions", it added.

As of 7pm yesterday, the three-hour Pollutant Standards Index (PSI) reading stood at 32, remaining in the good range. The 24-hour PSI forecast that ends at 6pm today is expected to be in the good range.

A PSI reading above 50 up to 100 is "moderate", while readings over 100 are "unhealthy".

The NEA added that it had registered its concern about the latest surge in forest fires with the Indonesian authorities, requesting "an urgent update" from them.

Just last Tuesday, Singapore woke to find a slight haze, which was caused by farmers in Indonesia burning plantations to clear land for the next planting season, enveloping parts of the island.

The three-hour PSI reading that day hit a high of 56 - the highest since the 71 registered on June 30.

The haze was gone the day after, but the temporary spike in the PSI reading caused a buzz, with memories of Singapore's most severe incident still fresh.

On June 21, the PSI had hit a historic high of 401, making the air here "hazardous" and sparking a surge in demand for protective N95 masks.

Climate scientist Matthias Roth, deputy head of geography at the National University of Singapore, said that it "shouldn't be a surprise" that the haze may threaten to return during this time of year.

This is because of prevailing south-west monsoon winds, he said, which coincide with the ongoing dry season in Sumatra.

The dry season, which experts have said is especially arid this year, is expected to last until monsoon rains arrive around October.


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Malaysia: Only 50 tigers left in Belum-Temengor Forest Complex - WWF

Isabelle Lai The Star 27 Aug 13;


CYBERJAYA: There may be just 50 tigers left in the Belum-Temengor Forest Complex (BTFC), as detected under a comprehensive scientific study, says Dr Mark Rayan Darmaraj.

The WWF-Malaysia’s tiger expert and lead research scientist for the fund’s tiger conservation programme said that its minimum viable population there should be 80.

“This is why we have to secure the forests around BTFC by preventing further fragmentation to ensure there is enough space to support 80 tigers,” he said at Emkay Group’s Hari Raya open house here yesterday.

Darmaraj also found evidence of poachers via the camera traps as well as snares and camps left at the site.

“We found bullet casings in Temengor around the salt lick areas, which we suspect are from local poachers,” he said.

“In Royal Belum, we caught photos of foreigners encroaching mostly for agar wood.”

When asked whether Malaysia could successfully double its tiger population by 2020, he said it could be done in some areas like Temengor, but a lot of work was needed and “if the tigers don’t have enough food then we can forget about doubling their numbers”.

Currently, experts estimate there are 500 tigers left in the peninsula but Darmaraj said the study indicated that it could be around 300 to 400 instead.


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Indonesia: Manta ray trade puts protected animal at risk

Markus Makur, The Jakarta Post 26 Aug 13;

The manta ray is continuously being slaughtered on a number of islands in the Sawu Sea, East Nusa Tenggara (NTT) as fishermen — unaware they are a protected and an engendered species — catch them and sell them in a number of regions and markets located on Flores Island. The manta ray is on the verge of extinction and can be sold for
Rp 500,000 (US$52) each.

The matter was disclosed by Flores Culture and Environmental Democracy Forum head Rofino Kant to The Jakarta Post in Borong recently.

Rofino said he had actually watched fishermen at the Borong beach cut the manta rays into pieces and sold them at the fish market in Borong.

“The fishermen claimed that they were unaware that manta rays are protected. Generally, the manta rays are caught by fishermen as they catch fish in the Sawu Sea,” said Rofino.

He expressed hope that the government, environmental groups and manta ray lovers would provide counseling to the local community living around the Sawu Sea, especially fishermen, on the importance of protecting sea species, including sharks, whales and other protected species.

Rofino said divers from across the world who visit the Sawu Sea would cry if they knew and saw the manta rays being butchered.

Manta rays are a prime attraction for divers, especially ahead of the peak event of Sail Komodo in September when many foreign visitors and participants will take part in diving activities in the Sawu Seas.

Rofino said based on the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), manta rays are on brink of extinction and have been classified under Appendix II of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) since March this year.

In the Convention on Migratory Species of Wild Animals, it has also been stated as protected since 2011.

According to Rofino, manta rays have yet to be protected by law in Indonesia, while the Raja Ampat regency administration in West Papua has issued a local bylaw to protect manta rays.

He said that a manta ray reaches an adult age between 8 and 10 years and also could live up to 50 years. Its gestation period is between 12 and 13 months. A female manta ray is able to give birth to only up to two offspring.

A local fisherman, who requested anonymity, said fishermen do not intentionally catch manta rays but they were accidentally caught in their nets while they fished in the Sawu Sea.

“We are even not aware that the manta rays are protected and always sought after by visitors, or underwater lovers, to watch them. We only know about stingrays, but we did not know that the stingray actually turns out to be the protected manta ray,” he said.


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India bans shark ‘finning’ to protect species

Today Online 26 Aug 13;

NEW DELHI — India has banned hunting sharks for only their fins in a move to protect endangered species from indiscriminate hunting for parts wanted abroad.

The practice of shark “finning”, or slicing off a shark’s fins and throwing it back to die slowly on the ocean floor from starvation or inability to move, has exploded worldwide due to demand from China, where shark fin soup is considered a delicacy.

India lists several of the dozens of shark species in its waters as endangered, including hammerheads, broadfins and whale sharks.

Under the Environment Ministry’s new policy, announced today (Aug 26), fishermen now found with hauls including detatched fins risk up to seven years in prison for hunting an endangered species since identifying species by fins alone is difficult.

Worldwide, sharks are in sharp decline, with some species’ numbers now 10 per cent of what they were three decades ago. Their demise threatens the health of ocean ecosystems, experts say, as the top predators are key to keeping fish and turtle populations in check. Tens of millions are caught every year.

The growth of shark finning to feed the Chinese market has posed a major threat to the world’s oldest vertebrates.

India is the world’s second-largest shark-catching nation behind Indonesia, with the two countries accounting for 20 per cent of yearly shark catches, according to a report by the international wildlife trade monitoring agency TRAFFIC.

Most Indian fishermen catch sharks primarily for food, though they also export the bones and fins abroad. Those fins will now have to be removed once the sharks are on shore.

Last year, Indian fishermen exported US$4.8 million (S$6.14 million) in shark fins to China, less than half the US$11.3 million in 2010 exports despite steady demand, according to data from India’s Marine Products Export Development Authority.

“Fishermen are saying the numbers of sharks they’ve been able to catch has definitely come down,” said Mr C Samyukta of Humane Society International.

Conservationists applauded the ministry’s move as key to ending a cruel practice threatening to push some shark populations to the brink.

“Given the perilous status of many shark species, we urge the state governments to act quickly and work to enforce the policy,” said Ms Belinda Wright of the Wildlife Protection Society of India. AP


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Sea otter return boosts ailing seagrass in California

Suzi Gage BBC News 26 Aug 13;

The return of sea otters to an estuary on the central Californian coast has significantly improved the health of seagrass, new research has found.

Seagrass was deemed to be heading for extinction in this region before the otters returned.

But scientists found that the animals triggered a chain reaction of events that boosted the water-dwelling plants.

The research is published in the journal, PNAS.

The urbanisation of California has led to a huge increase in nutrient pollution in coastal waters, from increasing use of nitrogen-rich fertilizers.

This is said to be the reason for the dieback of seagrass, which has also been declining worldwide.

This research suggests that the hunting to near-extinction of sea otters in the late 19th and early 20th Century may have exacerbated the problem, and conversely that their reintroduction is helping revive ailing seagrass populations, even in the face of hugely nutrient-rich water.
Links in the chain

The researchers assessed seagrass levels over the past 50 years in the Elkhorn Slough in Monterey Bay, and mapped their increases and declines.

They looked at a variety of changes that may have affected the grass, but the only factor that really matched the changes in seagrass was sea otter numbers.

They theorised that sea otters were eating the crabs which prey upon small invertebrates in the water.

These invertebrates eat a type of algae which blooms when there are more nutrients in the soil. It grows on the leaves of the seagrass, shading them from sunlight and causing them to die back.

This is quite a complex cascade of effects, so the researchers tested out their theory by comparing similar estuaries with and without sea otters, and by doing experiments in the lab, and in the field.

These experiments, which included putting cages that sea otters either could or couldn't access, down on the seagrass, confirmed their hypothesis.

Brent Hughes, lead author of the study, said: "This estuary is part of one of the most polluted systems in the entire world, but you can still get this healthy thriving habitat, and it's all because of the sea otters.

"So it's almost like these sea otters are fighting the effects of poor water quality."

Hughes described seagrass as "the canary in the coalmine" in terms of predicting levels of nutrient pollution in the water.
Foundation species

It also acts as a nursery habitat for many species of fish and it uses CO2 from sea water and the atmosphere, thus potentially helping with climate change.

Not only that, but it acts as protection to the stability of the shoreline.

Hughes said: "It's what we call a foundation species, like kelp forest, salt marsh or coral reef. The major problem from a global perspective is that seagrass is declining worldwide. And one of the major drivers of this decline has been nutrient inputs from anthropogenic sources, via agriculture or urban runoff."

These findings are of particular interest at the moment, as a ban on sea otters moving along the coast to southern California was lifted last year. The ban was in place as there was a fear the sea otters would impinge on fisheries in the area.

Hughes told BBC news: "That's important because there's a lot of these kind of degraded estuaries in southern California because of all the urban runoff from places like Los Angeles and San Diego.

"Coastal managers will now have a better sense of what's going to happen when sea otters move in to their systems.

"There's a huge potential benefit to sea otters returning to these estuaries, and in to these seagrass beds that might be threatened."

Sea Otters Promote Recovery of Seagrass Beds
Science Daily 26 Aug 13;

Scientists studying the decline and recovery of seagrass beds in one of California's largest estuaries have found that recolonization of the estuary by sea otters was a crucial factor in the seagrass comeback. Led by researchers at the University of California, Santa Cruz, the study will be published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of August 26.

Seagrass meadows, which provide coastal protection and important habitat for fish, are declining worldwide, partly because of excessive nutrients entering coastal waters in runoff from farms and urban areas. The nutrients spur the growth of algae on seagrass leaves, which then don't get enough sunlight. In Elkhorn Slough, a major estuary on California's central coast, algal blooms caused by high nutrient levels are a recurring problem. Yet the seagrass beds there have been expanding in recent years.

"When we see seagrass beds recovering, especially in a degraded environment like Elkhorn Slough, people want to know why," said Brent Hughes, a Ph.D. candidate in ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz and first author of the PNAS study. His coauthors include Tim Tinker, a wildlife biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, and Kerstin Wasson, research coordinator for the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve, who are both adjunct professors of ecology and evolutionary biology at UCSC.

Hughes and his colleagues documented a remarkable chain reaction that began when sea otters started moving back into Elkhorn Slough in 1984. The sea otters don't directly affect the seagrass, but they do eat enormous amounts of crabs, dramatically reducing the number and size of crabs in the slough. With fewer crabs to prey on them, grazing invertebrates like sea slugs become more abundant and larger. Sea slugs feed on the algae growing on the seagrass leaves, keeping the leaves clean and healthy.

"The seagrass is really green and thriving where there are lots of sea otters, even compared to seagrass in more pristine systems without excess nutrients," Hughes said.

In addition to the sea slugs, small crustaceans known as Idotea are also important grazers on the algae, and they too increase in number when sea otters control the crab population.

This kind of chain reaction in a food web is known to ecologists as a "trophic cascade." Scientists have long known that sea otters have a big impact on coastal ecosystems. Their importance in maintaining kelp forests by preying on animals that graze on kelp is especially well documented. The new study shows sea otters play a slightly different but equally important role in estuarine ecosystems like Elkhorn Slough, according to Tinker.

"This provides us with another example of how the strong interactions exerted by sea otters on their invertebrate prey can have cascading effects, leading to unexpected but profound changes at the base of the food web," he said. "It's also a great reminder that the apex predators that have largely disappeared from so many ecosystems may play vitally important functions."

The sea otter population in Elkhorn Slough has had its ups and downs, reflecting trends in the ongoing recovery of California's sea otters. The slough's initial recolonizing population of about 15 declined in the late 1980s, then grew to nearly 100 in the 1990s before declining again, followed by a recovery over the past decade. These fluctuations in the otter population were matched by corresponding fluctuations in the seagrass beds, Hughes said. Even within the slough, he said, sea otter density varies among the different seagrass beds, and those with more otters have fewer and smaller crabs and healthier seagrass.

The researchers used a combination of field experiments and data from long-term monitoring of Elkhorn Slough to study these interactions. "We used multiple approaches, and they all came up with the same answer," Hughes said.

Eelgrass (Zostera marina) is the dominant seagrass in Elkhorn Slough and elsewhere in the northern hemisphere. Seagrasses in general provide important nursery habitat for juvenile fish, and eelgrass beds along the west coast are especially important for species such as Pacific herring, halibut, and salmon. In addition, seagrass beds protect shorelines from storms and waves, and they soak up carbon dioxide from seawater and from the atmosphere.

"These are important coastal ecosystems that we're losing, and mostly that's been associated with bottom-up effects like nutrient loading. This study shows that these ecosystems are also being hit by top-down forces due to the loss of top predators," Hughes said.

The findings in Elkhorn Slough suggest that expansion of the sea otter population in California and recolonization of other estuaries will likely be good for seagrass habitat throughout the state, he added.

According to Wasson, the study has important management implications, suggesting that to restore valued coastal habitats, it may be necessary to restore entire food webs. "That is a new perspective for us," she said. "Most estuarine managers focus on the bottom-up approach, bringing back marshes and eelgrass and hoping the rest comes along with it. But in this case, it's clear you need to focus on the top and bottom of the food web at the same time."

In addition to Hughes, Tinker, and Wasson, the coauthors of the study include Ron Eby and Eric Van Dyke at the Elkhorn Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve; Corina Marks at California State University Monterey Bay; and Kenneth Johnson at the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute. This work was supported by the National Estuarine Research Reserve System, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, and the U.S. Geological Survey's Western Ecological Research Center.


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