Best of our wild blogs: 3 Dec 11


MORE biodiversity happenings for kids for the holidays!
from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Shore birds: Terek Sandpiper
from Life's Indulgences

EduCampSG – my annual immersion amongst inspiring educators
from Otterman speaks

The Power of Youth Voice
from Nature rambles

The Turtle Extinction Crisis – Seminar by Dr Brian D. Home
from Raffles Museum News

Raffles Museum Toddycats’ “Wild Carnivores at Geylang East Public Library” Sat 10 Dec 2011 from Otterman speaks


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Hard for Resorts World Sentosa to advise on dolphin protection

Letter from Christina Lee Campaigns Officer, Animal Concerns Research & Education Society
Today Online 3 Dec 11;

I REFER to the report "Dolphins 'to play vital role in public education'" (Dec 1). The Animal Concerns Research & Education Society (ACRES) is fully supportive of the education programmes that Resorts World Sentosa will be rolling out.

But these should not be at the expense of animal welfare and the survival of wild Indo-Pacific bottlenose dolphins.

We recognise the benefits of exposing students to marine research projects, but these can be achieved without having dolphins at the Marine Life Park. ACRES is in principle not against animal captivity, but we must keep animals who can cope with captivity.

RWS could follow the example of Monterey Bay Aquarium (in California), which draws 1.8 million visitors annually without housing dolphins. Instead, information about dolphins and whales is imparted through life-sized models and signs.

Ultimately, it is difficult for RWS to urge students to help in dolphin protection efforts, since it did not walk the talk.

The issue is not only about how the dolphins are housed and cared for but, most importantly, whether they were acquired ethically and responsibly.

RWS has the opportunity, though, to show the world that it truly embraces the marine conservation spirit by making a moral decision to rehabilitate and return the dolphins to the wild.

How educational is unnatural dolphin behaviour?
Letter from Audrey Tan Ruiping
Today Online 2 Dec 11;

I refer to the article "Dolphins 'to play vital role in public education'" (Dec 1).

Dolphins in the wild display different behaviours from dolphins in captivity. Apart from recognising how a dolphin looks and how they have to exhibit desired behaviours upon command, children will gain nothing from the experience.

It defeats the purpose of learning to expose children to unnatural behaviour and pass it off as education.

Kept in concrete walls, a dolphin's sonar sensory system is deprived. Unlike in their home in the wild, where dolphins play with their pods, they will now play with basketballs and hula-hoops.

It is ironic that Resorts World Sentosa claims it has to train dolphins to perform natural behaviour.

RWS is sending a wrong message about conservation. Bottlenose dolphins are not in danger of extinction, so why do they have to be "conserved"?

A true conservation message should inform people about what they can do in their capacity to conserve marine life and not by keeping dolphins in enclosures that are only a fraction of the space they are used to.

I hope that RWS reconsiders its decision to bring in the dolphins and uses its clout to truly preach the conservation message by releasing them.

Work has begun on marine curriculum for schools
Letter from Krist Boo Senior Vice-President, Communications, Resorts World Sentosa
Today Online 7 Dec 11;

THANK you for the letters "How educational is unnatural dolphin behaviour?" (Dec 2, online) and "Hard for RWS to advise on dolphin protection" (Dec 3), on the Marine Life Park's (MLP) school programme.

Following our presentation to educators in Singapore, we have begun to tailor curriculum for schools.

Getting close to marine life is an enriching experience. Personal and interactive encounters with marine animals have left deep and far-reaching influence on attitudes toward marine conservation among the millions of visitors to zoological facilities each year.

Our animals, including our dolphins, will be integral in this mission. Our dolphins have been with us for over three years. They are well taken care of by an experienced team of marine mammal specialists and veterinarians in a well-established facility.

All aspects of our park, including the collection of our animals, abide strictly with international regulations.

Over the past four years, the MLP has walked the talk on conservation: We conducted shark's fin education, coral conservation and funded anti-poaching patrol boats in the Galapagos Islands.

In 2008, we established the MLP Conservation Fund to support students, researchers and non-government organisations in marine conservation and research.

Zoological organisations have long played a role in wildlife conservation by providing hands-on expertise, funding and research capabilities.

We invite readers to visit http://mlp.rwsentosablog.com/2011/11/08/more-from-our-team-at-subic-bay/ to know the MLP and the marine species under our care.

Related links
Save the World's Saddest Dolphins


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Malaysia: Research on how to save Johor mangrove forests, NGO urged

Mohd Farhaan Shah The Star 2 Dec 11;

JOHOR BARU: A non-governmental organisation (NGO) urged proper studies to be conducted to save mangrove forests especially in Tanjung Piai and Pulau Kukup in Pontian.

Malaysian Nature Society Johor branch chairman Vincent Chow said that the situation of mangrove forests especially in Tanjung Piai are quite worryingly.

He explained that it is never too late to save the mangrove forests and the state government should conduct proper studies that would benefit the rehabilitation of mangrove forests in the long run.

“The new method by the state national parks of mixing mangrove seedlings with sawdust onto soil could prove successful in a short term.

“However, the area along the coastline is widely used by vessels where the shipping waves and sea waves have destroyed the mangroves,” he said adding that such method may not be the smart way to save the mangroves forest.

Chow also urged the state government to look back into the proposal to create a man-made island as a barrier to the strong waves.

“Besides becoming a barrier, the man-made island could also help improve the livelihood of the local fishermen and its ecosystem.

“Due to oil spills and constant pollution in the area, it has caused the numbers of fish and prawns to decrease,” he said adding that the man-made island could also help reclaim some lands lost due to the depleting numbers of mangroves.

It was recently reported that the state’s mangrove forests are being depleted at a rate of 5,000 trees a year due to pollution and oil spills.

The poor state of mangrove forests in Tanjung Piai had been identified and highlighted in the 2010 Auditor-General’s report.

The report also identified that sawdust which was acidic and contained heavy metals had caused the mangroves to die.


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Bangkok: Tunnelling toward a city with no more flood woes

Engineer says B200bn project the only way to stop capital being swamped again
Supoj Wancharoen Bangkok Post 3 Dec 11;

A 100-kilometre tunnel linking Ayutthaya and Samut Prakan has been suggested as the latest solution to tackling floods in Bangkok to better direct water and avoid conflicts among residents.

Although the huge tunnel, 10 metres high and 24 metres wide, would cost an enormous 200 billion baht, engineer Suchatchawi Suwannasawat, who suggested the idea, believed the project "suits Bangkok better than other alternatives".

The super tunnel has won early backing from Bangkok Metropolitan Administration's deputy governor Teerachon Manomaiphibul, who has urged the government also to get behind the project.

Advocates of the tunnel idea say conventional methods for directing water fail to do the job. Many networks of canals are illegally blocked by houses, which limits their effectiveness. Draining water from land which is densely occupied by communities can also lead to conflicts.

The varying topography of the city, with some areas higher than others, makes it difficult for officials to drain and direct water to the routes they want.

But these problems can be avoided if the tunnel is built and "its construction has nothing to do with the expropriation of vast tracts of land as required by the construction of a floodway", said Mr Suchatchawi. He chairs the Thailand Underground and Tunnelling Group under the Engineering Institute of Thailand, which will take part in the 2012 World Tunnel Congress in Bangkok between May 18 and 23 next year.

The tunnel would be built near the Bang Pa-in-Samut Prakan outer ring road, extending 100km from Ayutthaya's Bang Pa-in district to Samut Prakan, which is the exit of the tunnel to the Gulf of Thailand. The tunnel will be divided into two storeys. Its upper half of 5m would be a six-lane road while its lower half would serve as a sewer to drain 130 million cu/m a day of storm water.

But in case Bangkok suffers such a large flood again, Mr Suchatchawi said, the upper half of the tunnel could be turned into a floodway to boost drainage to 260 million cu/m a day.

Bangkok can also earn "added value" as floodwater will be used to produce between 400 and 600 megawatts of electricity with a vertical tunnel called a "Power Generation Shaft" built as part of the project. Construction should take two years if the project is joined by many construction firms building different sections, Mr Suchatchawi said.

"We must have the government implement this tunnel project. The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration alone can't do it. It needs a huge investment," said deputy BMA governor Teerachon. "But I agree with the project."

City Hall has built its own giant tunnel linking Rama IX and Ramkhamhaeng roads. The 5km tunnel, 5m in diameter, which opened in February this year, can drain water at 60 cu/m a second.

The city also plans to build another three tunnels, mostly 5m in diameter, as part of its flood prevention measures.

The Ratchada-Suthisan tunnel, construction of which began in the middle of this year, will run 6km from Ratchada-Sutthisan intersection to the Chao Phraya River. Others are the 13.5km Don Muang tunnel which will help drain water in Dong Muang, Chatuchak, Bang Khen districts and parts of the Sai Mai area and the 9.5km Suan Luang Ro 9 tunnel whose drainage will cover 85 square kilometres, including Phra Khanong.

Thailand is not the only country that is troubled by floods, Mr Suchatchawi said. Others countries face the same problem, but they have tunnels to drain water.

The US has a 174km tunnel in Chicago, and Japan a 64km tunnel to drain stormwater.

Kuala Lumpur has also approved a new 9.7km tunnel divided into levels - a motorway on the upper stretch and a sewer on the other.

Mr Suchatchawi said he was especially upset comparing Bangkok's tunnels with Singapore's 300km tunnel network.
International body goes underground

The World Tunnel Congress is an international conference supported by the International Tunnelling and Underground Space Association.

Civil and mining engineers meet at the conference each year to present and exchange views on technologies and projects relating to underground constructions.

Thailand is among the association's 280 members, which include individuals, organisations, companies and 58 entire countries.

Bangkok will host the World Tunnel Congress on May 18-23, after Canada and Finland held the meeting in 2010 and 2011, respectively.


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India: Olive Ridley turtles fall prey to trawlers

Sib Kumar Das The Hindu 3 Dec 11;

In an alarming development, carcasses of Olive Ridley turtles have started appearing in large numbers close to the coastline of the Rushikulya rookery in Ganjam district of Odisha.

Fishermen from the Gokharkuda and Nulia Nuagoan villages attributed the phenomenon to unchecked activity of fishing trawlers in the area.

On Friday morning, around 100 carcasses of the endangered species were found on the beach near Gokharkuda and Nulia Nuagaon.

The Rushikulya rookery coast is one of the major nesting sites for the Olive Ridley turtles. And with their mating season about to start, they have started reaching the shore there, according to Rabindranath Sahu of the Rushikulya Sea Turtle Protection Committee (RSTPC), an organisation of local villagers involved in conservation of turtles. This year, the Olive Ridley turtles had arrived slightly ahead of schedule.

According to Mr. Sahu, the turtles were falling prey to fishing trawlers that were coming too close to the coastline.

As the trawlers were allegedly not using the Turtle Excluder Device (TED), their gill nets throttled the turtles to death, according to Mangaraj Panda, a social activist working with the fishermen community.

Last week, four traditional fishermen were injured in an altercation that broke out over some trawlers found fishing too close to the coast. These trawlers had destroyed the nets of the fishermen. Trawlers had to keep a distance of 10 km from the coastline, but they were fishing as close as 1 km, according to Mr. Panda.

Despite the restrictions in place since November 1 and owing to lack of patrolling in the region, trawlers from Andhra Pradesh and other areas of Odisha were indulging in fishing, killing turtles, say fishermen.

Mr. Panda and Mr. Sahu said they had never seen such a large number of carcasses of Olive Ridleys on the rookery coast.

The activists demanded strict action against the erring trawlers, and sought intensified patrolling near the rookery coast to check the entry of trawlers there.


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Oil Spills Harm Marine Life Long After Cleanup

Environment News Wire 1 Dec 11;

OSLO, Norway, December 1, 2011 (ENS) - After an oil spill at sea, toxic substances in the spilled oil can continue to damage marine life for a long time, even though the oil appears to be cleaned up, according to a new study by researchers from Norway, the UK, Spain and France.

To help define a European strategy for risk assessment of accidental marine pollution, the two-year research project Toxprof examined the impacts of oil discharges along the coasts of Europe. The researchers studied the effects of several types of oil, including common Arabian light crude and oil from the Norwegian Ekofisk field, in addition to the diesel fuel commonly burned by ships.

"We found that the oil can become more toxic and harmful during the breakdown process," said Toxprof researcher Ketil Hylland, a professor of toxicology at the University of Oslo's Department of Biology.

The experiments were carried out at the University of Oslo's marine biological station at Drobak, located on the Oslo Fjord. Seawater was pumped through coarse sand containing oil that was partially broken down by ultraviolet radiation. The oil then floated into aquariums containing cod, mussels or spotted goby.

In this way, the researchers controlled the concentrations of the oil's environmentally hazardous components.

"We tested how the broken down oils affected cod, mussels and spotted goby," said Hylland. "From the experiments we were able to work out clear profiles for the impacts of the selected oils, yielding some important answers as to which substances are most toxic."

"The project is realistic, simulating what occurs in the natural environment in the wake of an oil spill, where the oil ends up in sand and gravel and eventually seeps into the water masses," Hylland explained. "We measured a variety of biomarkers in the gills and liver of the cod and the digestive glands and gills of the mussels."

"The trials showed that the effects changed over time and lasted more than three weeks," he said.

Each oil type had a different profile in the fish and mussels investigated.

"Using different methods, the project participants observed effects that clearly demonstrated that the contaminants in oil can potentially lead to DNA damage and cause oxidative stress in the experimental organisms," said Hylland.

"The research clearly indicates that even though the oil disappears from the seawater surface and beaches after a spill, the toxic substances in oil can still cause adverse effects long afterwards," he said.

Major oil discharges such as the BP Deepwater Horizon spill of nearly five million barrels in the spring and summer of 2010, or the 2009 grounding of the Panama-registered cargo ship Full City off Langesund, Norway, have "wrought havoc on the natural environment," the researchers said.

"Many sites may experience negative impacts for 15 to 20 years following a large-scale oil spill, as was the case with the Exxon Valdez in Alaska in 1989," Hylland said. "Oil can entail major ecological consequences while breaking down, so the seriousness of oil spills must not be downplayed just because the damage is no longer visible to the naked eye."

The study shows that oil components have widespread long-term impacts that could extend to several generations of fish if exposure to these toxic substances changes the timing of their spawning.

The research originated in 2006, when the Oslo and Paris, OSPAR, Commission requested that the International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, through the Working Group on the Biological Effects of Contaminants, consider and assess the long term impact of oil spills on marine and coastal life and provide a guidance document on the use of biological techniques to remediate oil spills.

The working group concluded that research was needed on the toxicity profiling of the major oil types transported within EU waters. Four oils were selected: Ekofisk (North Sea), Angolan Dalia, Russian Export Blend, and Arabian Light from Saudi Arabia. Heavy fuel oil and diesel also were studied within the project.

The effects of all these oils were examined using the suite of bioassays and biomarkers recommended by the ICES working group.

This research is closely aligned with the RAMOCS project on Implementation of Risk Assessment Methodologies for Oil and Chemical spills in the European Marine Environment, that is developing fingerprinting tools for heavy oils and new products and assessing their risk in spills in different European regional seas scenarios.


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EU launches new 6.5-bln fund to slash over-fishing

AFP Yahoo News 2 Dec 11;

The European Commission unveiled a new 6.5-billion-euro fund Friday to help fishermen move towards sustainable fishing as part of an effort to save fish stocks.

"This new fund will increase economic growth and create jobs in the sector. No more money will be spent to build big vessels," said the EU's fisheries commissioner Maria Damanaki.

"Small scale fisheries and aquaculture will benefit from this budgetary greening of the Common Fisheries Policy," she said.

But environmentalists said the seven-year fund does not go far enough to cut down on over-fishing off Europe's coasts.

It will replace the existing European Fisheries Fund (EFF), which has been criticised by wildlife groups.

"After the poor performance of the EFF, subsidies are only justifiable if they help to end overfishing and stimulate the sustainable management of fisheries," said WWF fisheries expert Louize Hill.

"Unfortunately, the EMFF proposal lacks the ambition to help transform Europe's fisheries management and lay a solid basis for healthy and profitable fisheries in the future," she said.

The new fund notably will help fishermen replace nets with more selective gear in a bid to reduce discards, develop "green" aquaculture and support partnerships between the sector and scientists.

Funds will also be available to spouses of fishermen for training or other economic activities related to fishing.


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Arctic changing 'at record pace': study

AFP Yahoo News 2 Dec 11;

An international team of 121 scientists has found "record-setting" change in the Arctic linked to global warming, including melting ice, warming waters and changing wind patterns.

The 2011 Arctic Report Card, compiled by scientists from 14 countries, "shows that record-setting changes are occurring throughout the Arctic environmental system.

"Given the projection of continued global warming, it is very likely that major Arctic changes will continue in years to come, with increasing climatic, biological and social impacts," the report said.

The authors of the annual report -- first released in 2006 -- said there is now sufficient data to indicate a "persistent decline in the thickness and summer extent of the sea ice cover, and a warmer, fresher upper ocean."

Average temperatures over much of the Arctic have risen some 2.5 degrees F (1.5 degrees C) from a 1981-2010 baseline, and the minimum area of sea ice recorded this year, in September 2011, was the second lowest since 1979.

The "profound and continuing" changes have had an uneven impact on Arctic wildlife, threatening the icy habitats of polar bears and walruses but giving whales greater access to northern feeding areas, the report said.

The warming has also caused new vegetation to sprout in many areas, and has led to a 20 percent increase in phytoplankton, microscopic organisms that are the basis of the oceanic food chain.

The report also found that changes in Arctic winter wind patterns first detected in 2010 have continued.

"The Arctic region continues to warm, with less sea ice and greater green vegetation," said Monica Medina, of the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

"Reports like this one help us to prepare for increasing demands on Arctic resources so that better decisions can be made about how to manage and protect these more valuable and increasingly available resources."


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Best of our wild blogs: 2 Dec 11


Videos: Slugs on our shores
from Psychedelic Nature

a secretive pit viper @ SBWR
from sgbeachbum

111127 Little Sisters Island
from Singapore Nature

Pink-necked Green Pigeon eating sea apple leaf
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Preserving Singapore’s ‘Green Spine’
from the Wall Street Journal Blog by Shibani Mahtani

Potential Campaign Strategy for Bukit Brown
from AsiaIsGreen

Conservation is actually a selfish thing
from Nature rambles


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Singapore farms aim to produce 15% of fish consumed locally

Joanne Chan Channel NewsAsia 1 Dec 11;

SINGAPORE : Farms in Singapore are moving towards the target of producing 15 per cent of fish consumed locally.

Efforts by the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) to boost productivity has seen the percentage of locally-farmed fish rise to seven per cent, up from 4.5 per cent two years ago.

Singapore gets its baby fishes or fry from Taiwan or China. They are flown in and bred to maturity in a local fish farm.

But this also means production is being subjected to seasonal constraints in the source countries.

Alawn Koh, business development manager at Rong-Yao Fisheries, said: "When it comes to the winter months, there is no fry production due to unfavourable conditions up there. So with AVA's assistance, we are then able to assure a consistent supply."

He was referring to a programme by the AVA that aims to close that gap in the supply chain, by helping local farms spawn their own fry.

Following intensive research into the correct diet and spawning methods, AVA had successfully bred the first batch of fry at Rong-Yao Fisheries in July.

The eggs from the brooding stock are harvested and brought to a hatchery on another island, where the fingerlings would grow to 1.5 to two inches before being brought back to the fish farm.

The fingerlings will be bred for another four to five months before they are harvested for the supermarkets.

The first batch of locally-bred golden pomfret is expected to hit local tables and restaurants in May next year.

AVA hopes that local production of the golden pomfret will rise from 20 tonnes this year to 80 to 100 tonnes next year - equivalent to 350,000 golden pomfrets.

Rong Yao's Mr Koh also expects the quality of golden pomfret to be better with locally-produced fry.

He said: "Fry that come in from China and Taiwan...it is a long flight, by the time they reach here, there may be some effect (on quality). With local fry production, the distances are shorter, we are able to monitor, we are able to assure the quality with AVA's assistance.....we are definitely hoping for better survival rates."

Having a secured local source also strengthens Singapore's food supply resilience.

Wee Joo Yong, assistant director of aquaculture technology at the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority, said: "In the event that there is a supply disruption from external sources, then our local consumers will have some degree of assurance that we can still depend on local production."

Meanwhile, a new branding campaign has been introduced to distinguish locally-farmed fish from foreign imports.

Seah Kian Peng, CEO of NTUC FairPrice, said: "Local fishes which are grown here, they will be fresher. Price is a consideration, no doubt, but we have to start somewhere. I think if we want prices to come down, (consumers have to) buy more of them."

- CNA/ms

Local fish supply to get a boost
AVA's effort results in commercially viable batch of golden pomfret fry
Lin Wenjian Straits Times 1 Dec 11;

SINGAPORE'S supply of fresh fish has received a boost since the successful spawning of pompano or golden pomfret fry recently.

The effort in local waters by the Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority of Singapore (AVA) in July was the first time results had been achieved here on a commercially viable scale.

The batch of fry is now at Rong-Yao Fisheries, and the harvest is likely to land in supermarkets by April or May next year.

This transfer of technology is part of AVA's efforts to help farmers increase their productivity, and it is giving similar assistance to other fish farms.

At a press conference yesterday, AVA said it hopes local pompano production will rise thanks to the initiative.

Last year, local fish farmers produced about 4.4 tonnes of golden pomfret using fry imported mainly from China and Taiwan. The figure is expected to reach 80 to 100 tonnes by next year now local fry is available.

Prices of the popular fish, commonly served steamed or baked in households, are seasonal, but are typically between $10.90 and $12.90 a kilogram.

Mr Seah Kian Peng, chief executive of supermarket chain NTUC FairPrice, said locally harvested fish cost a bit more than imported ones as there is less supply.

However, he added: 'With greater awareness and stronger demand, local farmers will have greater incentive to produce. The supply will increase, which will in turn drive prices down.'

FairPrice started selling golden pomfret from local farms two months ago, in addition to other locally bred varieties such as grey mullet and milkfish, which have been offered since 2008.

Fish from local farms now account for 10 per cent of all fish sold at the chain. It reported a 50 per cent rise in sales of local varieties compared with last year, indicating good demand.

Rong-Yao's business development manager, Mr Alawn Koh, said it is using locally bred fry in addition to imported fry to ensure a consistent supply.

He explained: 'Supply from Taiwan and China is disrupted during the winter months in December as conditions then are not favourable for production.'

Ms Wee Joo Yong, an assistant director at AVA's aquaculture technology unit, said Singapore now has a reliable 'Plan B' to maintain a ready supply of fresh fish.

She added: 'Local production plays a crucial role in ensuring a resilient food supply. We aim to achieve some degree of self-sufficiency in key food items like fish. If external supplies are disrupted, there is some assurance that consumers can still depend on local production.'

Singapore has 119 coastal fish farms, which produce 7 per cent of the fish consumed locally - up from 4.5 per cent in 2009. AVA wants to raise the figure to 15 per cent eventually.

With increased supply, housewife Loi Siew Yan, 64, hopes to see cheaper buys come Chinese New Year next month.

'Everything is more expensive - it will be good news if fish prices come down.'

S'pore-bred pomfret to be in stores soon
Joanne Chan Today Online 2 Dec 11;

SINGAPORE - Expect to see Singapore's first batch of locally-bred golden pomfret at supermarkets and restaurants come May next year, as the authorities continue in efforts to boost productivity at local fish farms and improve food security.

The Agri-Food & Veterinary Authority (AVA) hopes that local production of the golden pomfret will rise from 20 tonnes this year to 80 to 100 tonnes next year - equivalent to 350,000 golden pomfrets.

Singapore fish farms have made headway towards producing 15 per cent of the fish consumed in Singapore by 2015, with the percentage now at 7 per cent from 4.5 per cent two years ago.

To improve the productivity of farms breeding golden pomfret, the AVA introduced a programme to produce "fry" - baby fishes - in Singapore, instead of importing them from Taiwan and China. It successfully bred the first batch of golden pomfret fry at Rong-Yao Fisheries in July, after intensive research into the correct diet and spawning methods.

Imported golden pomfret fry is subjected to seasonal constraints but, with the AVA's assistance, Singapore farms are assured of a consistent supply, said Mr Alawn Koh, business development manager at Rong-Yao Fisheries.

The eggs from the brooding stock are harvested and brought to a hatchery on another island, where they grow to 1.5 to 2 inches before being brought back to the fish farm. The fingerlings will be bred for another four to five months before they are harvested for the supermarkets.

Mr Koh expects the quality of golden pomfret to be better with locally-produced fry: "Fry that comes in from China and Taiwan ... it is a long flight, by the time they reach here, there may be some effect."

Local fry means shorter transport times and better ability to monitor the quality of the fish, he said.

Added Ms Wee Joo Yong, assistant director of aquaculture technology at the AVA: "In the event that there is a supply disruption from external sources, then our local consumers will have some degree of assurance that we can still depend on local production."

Meanwhile, a new branding campaign called "SGfish - Fresh in Singapore" has been introduced to distinguish locally-farmed fish from foreign imports.

Said NTUC FairPrice chief executive officer Seah Kian Peng: "Local fishes which are grown here, they will be fresher. Price is a consideration, no doubt, but we have to start somewhere."


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Scientists in Sulawesi Discover New Species Hidden in Mountains

Lydia Tomkiw Jakarta Globe 1 Dec 11;


An endemic Sulawesi large hanging parrot, found nowhere else in the world. Indonesian and American scientists have discovered new species hidden in the mountains of Sulawesi. (Photo courtesy of ICBG Sulawesi Project)

It takes six hours to drive from Kendari in Southeast Sulawesi to the town of Kolaka, and then another three hours to reach the Mekongga mountain range region, where a team of Indonesian and American scientists begin their trek — the real start of their epic journey.

“If you get in there [the Mekongga mountain range], there is no guarantee you can get out,” said John A. Trochet, a field ornithologist at the Museum of Wildlife and Fish Biology at the University of California, Davis. “That’s the truth.”

Since 2009, scientists from the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI), the Ministry of Forestry and the Bandung Institute of Technology have collaborated with American scientists from the University of California’s Davis, Berkeley and San Francisco campuses to survey one of the world’s most biodiverse areas.

Their destination, however, is not an easy one to reach.

“We have to cross a river six times and then it’s a very steep climb to the remnants of an old logging road,” said Trochet, who has broken a finger and hurt his ankles on past treks.

“We follow the logging road, and in many places it’s a wall on one side and a vertical drop on the other,” he said. “In many, many places the logging road has washed away over the years. It’s just very difficult.”

Sometimes more than 80 porters must assist the scientists with their equipment and all of the samples they collect as they head up and down mountains.

“The reason this project is so big is because we are doing everything from plants to birds to microbes,” said Alan T. Hitch, assistant curator at the same institution at UC Davis. “These expeditions in modern times don’t really exist anymore.”

A wealth of new species

It has been about 80 years since the last extensive survey of the area was conducted.

“There are so many insects that are undescribed and so many undescribed microbes,” said Rosichon Ubaidillah, head entomologist at LIPI.

Despite difficult conditions and weeks of Indomie on the menu, the scientists smile with excitement as they describe expeditions that may be among the last of their kind.

Several trips have yielded samples from different elevation classes, many of which still need to be identified.

“Potentially on the vertebrae side, we have at least a few new species of frogs, definitely a new species of bat, probably a couple new species of shrews, and maybe a new subspecies of rodent,” Hitch said.

More than 1,500 vertebrae specimens have been collected, he said, and fish and lizard discoveries may also be classified as new species.

On the plant side of the expedition, 109 species have been collected including a new orchid and a new begonia species.

“This is a new record for us, said Elizabeth Widjaja, a member of the botany division at LIPI, who has potentially found a new genus of bamboo. “For scientific purposes it is very important.”

In addition to the discovery of the Garuda wasp, named after the national symbol of Indonesia, there have been new discoveries of a bright blue sawfly, a long-tongued bee, and numerous flies and tiny wasps, which scientists are currently in the process of describing.

“We estimate that there might be as many as 100,000 different insect species in the region we’re working in, perhaps half of which are new to science, waiting to be discovered and described,” Lynn S. Kimsey, an entomology professor and the director of the Bohart Museum of Entomology at UC Davis, wrote in an e-mail to the Jakarta Globe.

Indonesia’s national collection has gained three species of birds from the expeditions. And that’s only the beginning.

“Out of 80-odd different species of yeasts that we’ve isolated, 37 of them are new to science,” said Kyria Boundy-Mills, a curator at the Phaff Yeast Culture Collection at UC Davis.

Cures in the making

Although studies are still in their infant stages, scientists are excited about their potential yields.

“We are finding potential activity in the plants and microbes that we are collecting in Mekongga — things that have potential for anti-cancer activity, potential effects on the nervous system, they might be new pain relievers or things for treating addictions,” Boundy-Mill said. “We are finding some very good candidates.”

But the scientists worry about protecting the watershed area, as well as the plants and animals of Sulawesi, which, as Trochet put it, “are to a tremendous degree found nowhere else.”

“This area has been logged. It is definitely not pristine rain forest,” Hitch said.

Logging officially stopped in the early 1990s and the area became protected forest, but illegal logging still occurs.

“We have to ask the local people not to go to the forest and do logging again,” Elizabeth said.

Rosichon added that establishing profitable industries in cocoa and coconut plantations could help the region turn away from illegal logging.

“For the people there, it’s easy to just go to the forest and take something from there. We would like to develop an effective biodiversity conservation strategy,” Rosichon said.

Mining interests in the area are also raising concerns.

“Local mining is already open,” Elizabeth said. “Not in the area we visited, but after that on the way to Lasusua. It belongs to Antam [mining company].”

A rise in mining activity could threaten Sulawesi’s biosphere.

“We worry about that [mining],” Rosichon said, adding that the government recently released new regulations to stop the mining in 2015.

“The mining is getting crazy … They are trying to get more and more raw material before they have to stop.”

Despite threats to the region, Rosichon remains optimistic, and the team hopes to approach the government in Jakarta with a proposal to create a larger protective area.

“Hopefully the research from this project will contribute significantly to the broad range of issues, not only for the knowledge of biodiversity in the area, but for conservation and sustainable use of the resources in Sulawesi, and also for the whole country,” Rosichon said.

Grant funding for the project from the US National Institutes of Health will end in 2013.

The scientists are hoping to expand the scope of their research past 2013 with additional grant funding.

“Why should Mekongga be special? The prospect of other areas having similar riches is extremely high,” Trochet said.


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New moss frog species found in Vietnam

Tuoitrenews 1 Dec 11;


Misty Moss Frog. Photo: Jodi j. L. Rowley/Australian Museum

Australian and Vietnamese scientists have discovered two small moss frogs of the genus Theloderma on Kontum and Lang Bian plateaus in the Central Highlands.

Based on analysis on morphology and atom genetics, the two frogs are identified as Misty Moss Frog (Theloderma nebulosum) and Cloaked Moss Frog (Theloderma palliatum).

The Cloaked Moss Frog is named after its ability to change from a dull, mottled brown to a bold, high-contrast pattern while the Misty Moss Frog is named after its mist-shrouded habitat on Kon Tum Plateau in Vietnam.

Some features that make the new species different from other frogs are their body length (under 3cm), absence of vomerine teeth, wrinkles on their skin, brown backs and eyes with two colors, and absence of webbed feet on the first two legs, said Thuy Duong, a local scientist.

According to scientist Jodi Rowley of Australian Museum, one of the people finding the new species, Southeast Asian amphibians are both poorly known and highly threatened.

“That's the biggest reason that my colleagues and I spend weeks searching the montane forests of the region, discovering and documenting the amazing diversity of the amphibians found there,” Rowley wrote in his blog.

“It's a vital first step towards amphibian conservation in the region,” he said.


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