4 Mandai research projects awarded $600,000 funding

Teams will study area's environmental conditions, effects of eco-tourism plans
Lee Qing Ping Straits Times 30 Jul 19;

Four local environmental research projects have been awarded a total of $600,000 to study conditions in the Mandai precinct.

Some of the projects will also help identify ways to address the impact of developments to turn the area into an eco-tourism hub.

The grants were announced yesterday and will be disbursed by Mandai Park Development (MPD), the body overseeing the precinct's development.

It envisions the area becoming an integrated nature and wildlife district that will include a new rainforest park in addition to the Singapore Zoo, Night Safari, River Safari and Bird Park, which will be moved over from Jurong.

"Having been allocated this land for development, our aim is to strive for a better outcome than before," said Dr Lee Hui Mien, MPD's vice-president of sustainable solutions.

"The additional research will allow us to proactively identify knowledge gaps and delve deeper into specific issues which may be unique to the Mandai district.

"New data could also add to the scientific advancement of our local biodiversity knowledge."

Researchers working on the latest projects say that the data will be crucial in monitoring changes to the ecosystem and highlighting risks.

One of the research projects awarded a grant was the Mandai Insect Survey, a two-year project that is studying the rich insect diversity in the secondary forests of the Mandai precinct.

It is led by Dr Hwang Wei Song and Dr Ang Yuchen, curators of the entomological collections at the Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum. Both are lecturers at the National University of Singapore.

Dr Hwang noted that "80 to 90 per cent of Singapore's biodiversity is made up of insects alone".

"We've lost most of the big vertebrate groups in Singapore. But the forest patches we have left are still very rich; we are still finding new species."

Dr Ang added: "Without insects, the forests would die. The bigger mammals who used to support all the ecosystem functions here are all gone; it's primarily the insects that are keeping our forests alive. And yet we're still attacking them with fumigation and pollution.

"How did they survive? How have they adapted? We need to understand what is still around, and how to conserve them."

While the team acknowledges that the Mandai development will definitely impact the surrounding forest and insect life, they are not concerned for the insects' survival.

"These are secondary forests, which means that they've already endured human interference and still survived," said Dr Hwang.

"Our data thus serves as a baseline to help (Mandai) have a measure of how much restoration work is required to, say, bring back 80 per cent of biodiversity."

Funds have also been allocated to a study on the use of black soldier flies to manage carnivorous waste to build a closed loop waste management system for the new parks.

A project that studies how Singapore's hot climate will affect visitors' reception of the educational environmental messages in the Mandai parks also received funding, as did research to improve movements in the Mandai district for the Sunda colugo, a type of flying lemur common in the area.

Love chocolate? Thank insects, say researchers who get cash boost to study Mandai creepy crawlies
LOW YOUJIN Today Online 29 Jul 19;

SINGAPORE — Most people go out of their way to avoid creepy crawlies. But a team of researchers, bolstered by a slice of S$600,000 of fresh funding from the Mandai Research Fund, is aiming to study up close every type of insect in the Mandai area.

The two-year study is one of four scientific projects to receive largesse from the fund, which is being disbursed over two years by Mandai Park Development (MPD), the body that oversees development of the precinct, including a new resort, as well as the Singapore Zoo, Night Safari and River Safari.

Dr Hwang Wei Song, the principal investigator of the Mandai insect survey, said on Monday (July 29) that it will study the insect population of the Mandai secondary forest and their possible impact on public health and the environment.

When the resort opens in 2023, it will be useful to have the information on hand to know which insects could pose public health hazards, he said. “If anything sprouts out later on, they can also check back and see if this (insect) is something that is inherently here, or it was brought in (unintentionally).”

The data will also allow for the devising of appropriate mitigation measures, said Dr Hwang, the curator of the Entomological Collections at the Lee Kong Chian Natural History Museum, National University of Singapore.

Field sampling for Dr Hwang’s project, called “Pollinators, decomposers and blood-suckers”, which commenced in late January this year, will continue until the end of the year.

After that, researchers will proceed with imaging, sequencing, specimen curation and data analysis for selected species.

By the end of their study in 2021, Dr Hwang and his team will have created an inventory list of the insect diversity present in the buffer zones and the retained forests within the Mandai development project area.

Information on the species found will also be uploaded for the public on the Biodiversity of Singapore website.

The other three projects will revolve around research on thermal comfort, the impact of Mandai developments on movements of the Sunda colugo, also known as the flying lemur, and managing carnivore dung with black soldier flies.

Dr Lee Hui Mien, MPD’s vice president for sustainable solutions, said that the research will allow them to identify knowledge gaps and delve deeper into “specific issues which may be unique” to the Mandai district.

She added that new data collected could also add to the scientific advancement of Singapore’s biodiversity knowledge.

MAINTAINING A DELICATE BALANCE

Dr Hwang said the Republic may have lost a number of big animals, but the areas of forest that remain are still very rich in biodiversity. “We are still finding new species here. We are still finding new records as well, species that were identified elsewhere (around the world) that we didn’t know we had.”

Fellow researcher and curator Dr Ang Yuchen added that about 80 to 90 per cent of Singapore’s biodiversity consists of insects.

While the presence of some species may be a cause for concern, others play an “important service” to the environment which humans often take for granted.

“They are the cleaners (of the environment) and they are the pollinators. Without insects, such as a certain fly, you will not have chocolate,” said Dr Ang. The fly, a biting midge, pollinates the tiny flower of the cacao plant.

Insects such as the assassin bug also help to prevent the overpopulation of other creatures such as spiders or caterpillars.

Left unchecked, large numbers of these creatures could have a negative cascading effect on the environment.

Dr Ang said that insects provide a snapshot of what is happening in the forest. “One of the easiest ways to find out about the health of the ecosystem is just to sample the insects. It’s basically like our immune system.”

He said: “If you have a lot of one species, you know that place is in trouble because there is no balance any more.”

Dr Ang is worried that this delicate balance might become upset through a combination of pest-control measures, such as fogging, and invasive species of insects that could oust their native counterparts.

“All the ecosystem functions that were originally being supported by the bigger mammals like tigers and deers are all gone. The only thing that is just supporting it are insects, and they are being hammered left, right, centre.”
Read more at https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/love-chocolate-thank-insects-say-researchers-who-receive-cash-boost-study-mandai-creepy