![]() April 2005 Issue April 1, 2005
Welcome to NewsLink on–line. This month we officially welcome the U.S. National Ramsar Committee (USNRC) as a sponsor of NewsLink. USNRC's mission is to promote the conservation and wise, sustainable use of US and international wetlands, under the treaty known as Ramsar, or more formally, the "Convention on wetlands of international importance." USNRC will share US–based news on wetlands that is of international interest to NewsLink readers. Recently, USNRC's Vice Chairman, Royal Gardner, led a discussion on efforts to restore the Mesopotamian marshlands in southern Iraq by speaking live with Dr. Azzam Alwash, Director of the Eden Again Project, directly from Iraq. A press release as well as a 55–minute video clip are available on the Stetson University College of Law website. Click here for more details. Until June 1st, I wish you all well.
Heidi Luquer, Editor News from U.S. National Ramsar Committee (USNRC), NewsLink's New Sponsor As a new sponsor of NewsLink, the U.S. National Ramsar Committee and its members are provided space for detailed news – click here.
– Central Valley’s
Grasslands Ecological Area, California The United States has submitted its National Report to the Ramsar Secretariat and is available on the USNRC website: www.ramsarcommittee.us April 20, 2005 Annual meeting of the U.S. National Ramsar Committee Stetson University College of Law
hosted a presentation on the efforts to restore the Mesopotamian marshlands
in southern Iraq. Dr. Azzam Alwash, Director of the Eden Again Project,
spoke live from Iraq via the Internet. For further information click here.
Audubon's "Lights Out" Program Reduces Bird Deaths in Cities Audubon has developed a guide for
cities across the country to form partnerships to save birds' lives. A
new website provides tools to replicate Chicago's "Lights Out"
Program – a cooperative venture between Audubon, the City of Chicago,
and the Building Owners and Managers Association of Chicago, in which
Chicago's tall buildings all turn off their decorative lights during spring
and fall bird migration. In some cities, thousands of birds perish because
the lights on tall buildings confuse their navigation systems. These tiny
creatures make exhausting all night journeys. Many of them fly hundreds
of miles in one night, on their way from Canada to South America. They
find their way by a complex set of instincts and signals that can become
confused by the lights. Ducks Unlimited (DU) and Project WET (Water Education for Teachers) Announce Education Partnership This announcement came on World Wetlands Day (Feb. 2nd) and celebrates the anticipated benefits for the conservation of water, wetlands and wildlife across North America. The new partnership seeks to harness the strength of DU, the world leader in wetlands conservation, and Project WET, the U.S. leader in water and wetlands education, in educating and reaching more young people about the importance of wetlands and water resources. For further information go to: http://www.ducks.org/News/WET_Partnership.asp International Migratory Bird Day – May 14, 2005 This year's theme, "Bird Collisions"
will seek to promote awareness of the large–scale avian mortality
at buildings, communication towers, and other human–made obstacles
during migration. Events and festivals will be held, and education materials
made available through IMBD’s Website: From BirdLife International 21 February 2005 – A growing global family of internet–based systems can now collect observers' personal birdwatching records and make sure the data contributes to conservation around the world. Worldbirds is a joint initiative by BirdLife International and two of its Partners, the RSPB (BirdLife in the UK) and Audubon (BirdLife in the US). It links together existing and new internet–systems to collect and report on bird populations and movements in different countries around the world. Go to: http://www.birdlife.org/news/news/2005/02/worldbirds.html News from Partners in Flight The Partners in Flight North American Landbird Conservation Plan is now available on–line and can be downloaded in PDF format: http://www.partnersinflight.org/cont_plan/ Ramsar News: Jamaica – 2nd site: “Palisadoes – Port Royal” Madagascar – 4th site: The "Marais de Torotorofotsy avec leurs bassins versants" in Toamasina Province. Republic of Korea - 3rd site: Jangdo Island High Moor in Chollanam-do province United Kingdom - 3 new sites: Les Écréhous & Les Dirouilles, Jersey, Les Minquiers, Jersey, Les Pierres de Lecq (the Paternosters). Each of them is part of the shoal systems off-shore from the Channel Island of Jersey. USA – 3 new sites: Tijuana River National Estuarine Research Reserve, California; Grasslands Ecological Area, California; and Oahu's Kawainui/Hamakua Marsh, Hawaii.
China has nine new Ramsar sites, covering 400,000ha as a way to seek their protection from destruction and overuse. Eight of the new sites are high–altitude marshes and lakes in the Qinghai and Yunnan Provinces, and the Tibet Autonomous Region. Aside from "helping safeguard the freshwater source of Asia's most important rivers," said Jim Harkness, WWF China's country representative, the new Ramsar Sites are also considered important for migratory birds including the endangered Black–necked Crane (Grus nigricollis). For more information about wetlands in China contact WWF China Communications Manager, Caroline Liou: caroline@wwfchina.org
According to WWF Spain, the Parque Natural de La Albufera de Valencia, is threatened by water diversison from the Júcar river to the area of Alicante/Benidorm, where it will be used for urban and tourist consumption and irrigation. The water diversion began in 2003 despite 20,000 petitions and the fact that the European Parliament recommended that the transfer be stopped. Recently, Environment Minister, Cristina Narbona, sought to invest 503 million euro as part of an action plan to restore the Albufera wetland. To date over 230 million euros has been spent on the diversion. The Albufera wetland is considered a Ramsar site, a Wetland of International Importance. For further information contact: Guido Schmidt at guido@wwf.es Migratory Bird & Wetland News – in the news
31 March 2005, Bird Conservation Alliance – A coalition of environmental groups, including New Jersey Audubon, Defenders of Wildlife, and National Audubon Society has begun proceedings to have the rufa subspecies of the Red Knot protected under the Endangered Species Act. Red Knot populations have declined globally in recent decades, but the rufa subspecies has fallen as much as 60% since the late–1980s. For the full article go to: http://www.birdconservationalliance.org/news.htm
30 March 2005, Reuters, by Colin Woodard - Great slices of the Larsen-B’s leading edge had broken off, filling the Weddell Sea with icebergs and slush. “It was unbelievable to see how fast it had broken up. The coastline hadn’t changed for more than 9,000 years and then it changed completely in just a few weeks.” Go to: http://www.emagazine.com/view/?2302&src=QHA072 S.Korea Suspects North's Bird Flu Outbreak Extensive 29 March 2005, Reuters, by Jack Kim, Seoul – A bird flu outbreak in North Korea is probably extensive, South Korean officials said on Tuesday, but Pyongyang has yet to request Seoul's help to contain the virus. Go to: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=8021174 Bangladesh : Country Faces Disaster Due to Water Diversion by India 23 March 2005, The New Nation - Construction of dams and barrages in upstream India are shrinking fresh water sources in Bangladesh and adversely affecting its ecological balance, bio–diversity, agriculture, fishery, navigability and public health. Bangladesh will face a big disaster if India implemented its much–vaunted river–linking project. Go to: http://www.rivernet.org/prs05_02.htm#180305b Brazilian Wetlands 'Under Threat'
South America Wetlands May Be 'Next Everglades'–Report 21 March 2005, Reuters, by Alister Doyle – Giant South American wetlands are under threat from farming and house building and could shrink like Florida's Everglades last century, a study by U.N. experts said on Tuesday. The report also said that global warming of 3–4 degrees Celsius could wreck 85 percent of the world's remaining wetlands from Bangladesh to Botswana, home to thousands of animal and plant species. Go to: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=7965317 Senate Votes for ANWR Oil Drilling 17 March 2005, CNN.com, Washington, DC, USA – Amid the backdrop of soaring oil and gasoline prices, a sharply divided Senate on Wednesday voted to open the ecologically rich Alaska wildlife refuge to oil drilling, delivering a major energy policy win for President Bush. The Senate, by a 51–49 vote, rejected an attempt by Democrats and GOP moderates to remove a refuge drilling provision from next year's budget. The action, assuming Congress agrees on a budget, clears the way for approving drilling in the refuge later this year, drilling supporters said. Environmentalists have fought such development and argued that despite improve environmental controls a web of pipelines and drilling platforms would harm calving caribou, polar bears, and millions of migratory birds that use the coastal plain. Go to: http://www.cnn.com/2005/ALLPOLITICS/03/16/arctic.drilling.ap/index.html 38% of India’s Wetlands Degraded, Being Used as Landfills: Study 15 March 2005, Infochangeindia.org – As if news of the situation in the Bharatpur bird sanctuary in Rajasthan were not bad enough, other vital wetlands in India are also fast disappearing. up to 38% of the country’s inland wetlands have dried up in the last decade, and, in some districts, as much as 88% of wetlands have disappeared, says a recent nationwide wetland survey. Almost all the country’s wetlands, once rich in bio–diversity, are now heavily contaminated with pesticides and heavy metals. The lack of a national policy on wetlands is being cited by experts as one of the reasons for their abysmal condition. For more information go to: http://infochangeindia.org/EnvironmentItop.jsp?section_idv=6#3823 Crane Migratory Effort Suffers Setback 16 March 2005, CNN.com – An experimental flock of whooping cranes has lost one of its youngest members to a Florida bobcat but could be on the verge of producing chicks in the wild for the first time. Six older cranes in the five–year effort to establish a migratory flock of the endangered birds between Wisconsin and Florida have formed into pairs and are being monitored closely for signs of nesting and breeding behavior, according to Operation Migration... Go to: http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/science/03/16/whooping.cranes.ap/index.html Vietnam Struggles to Hold Bird Flu at Bay 15 March 2005, Environment News Service – Hanoi, Vietnam – Newly published research suggests a common source for several of the highly pathogenic bird flu viruses circulating in East Asia. The viruses have claimed the lives of 46 people and hundreds of millions of birds since December 2003 when the most recent outbreaks were first reported in Vietnam and Thailand. Go to: http://www.ens–newswire.com/ens/mar2005/2005–03–15–04.asp Water Crisis Looms as Himalayan Glaciers Retreat 15 March 2005, People and the Planet – Himalayan glaciers are among the fastest retreating glaciers globally due to the effects of global warming, and this will eventually result in water shortages for hundreds of millions of people who rely on glacier–dependent rivers in China, India and Nepal, warns WWF, the global conservation organization. Go to: http://www.peopleandplanet.net/doc.php?id=2449 Wetlands, Fish, People Benefit from Rise in Great Lakes' Levels (USA) 11 March 2005, Associated Press, by James Prichard, Grand Rapids, Michigan – Rising water levels in the Great Lakes during the past year not only have delighted property owners, who prefer views of waves over weeds, but the swelling bodies also are feeding commerce and a variety of plants and animals that call the lakes home. It also means the replenishment of wetlands along the state's shoreline, which are havens for countless varieties of fauna and flora. Go to: http://www.newsday.com/news/local/wire/ny–bc–ny––lakelevels0311mar11,0,6437643. Most Lakes' Ecosystems in Indonesia Under Threat 10 March 2005, The Jakarta Post, Medan – Severe chemical pollution threatens most lakes in the country and has the potential to create further environmental disasters, a state minister says. Go to: http://www.worldlakes.org/shownews.asp?newsid=1914 World Fisheries Managers Let Seabirds Perish on Longlines 9 March 2005, Environment News Service, Cambridge, UK - The first review ranking the environmental performance of the world’s 19 intergovernmental Regional Fisheries Management Organizations finds that most are failing to safeguard albatrosses, and the seabird populations are headed for extinction as a result. More than 300,000 seabirds, including 100,000 albatrosses, and thousands of marine mammals and turtles are killed by both legal and illegal longline fishing fleets every year. GO to: http://www.ens–newswire.com/ens/mar2005/2005–03–09–02.asp Malawi's Man–Eaters Meet Their Match 3 March 2005, Reuters, by Ed Stoddard and Shafiek Tassiem Planet Ark, Malawi – Suddenly his target is caught in the glare: a four–metre (13 foot) brute of a crocodile crouching in the mud. "That's a good one," said Hassen, whose energy and agility belie his 69 years, as he and his assistant began the task of loading the 400 kg (1,000 lb) croc onto the boat –– which at five metres is not much longer than the dead animal. It is a perfect shot to the head, laying to rest a potentially lethal menace to local villagers terrorised by crocodiles. Malawi, with its tropical climate, fish–rich waters and abundant game is crocodile heaven. Go to: http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm?newsid=29802&newsdate=03–Mar–2005 Farmers 'Key to Bird–flu Control' 23 February 2005, CNN.com, Hi Chi Minh City, Vietnam – Small–scale farmers across Asia will need to modify their animal husbandry practices if a bird–flu pandemic is to be avoided, world health experts have been told. In particular, farmers will need to start fencing off poultry and animals to stop viruses spreading to humans and mutating into deadlier varieties. Go to: http://www.cnn.com/2005/HEALTH/conditions/02/23/bird.flu.asia/index.html Report Looks at Environmental Impact of Asian Tsunami 21 February 2005, CNN.com, Nairobi, Kenya – Coastlines already damaged by pollution and man's poor land management suffered more from the southeast Asian tsunami than those with healthy coral reefs and other natural protection, the U.N. environment chief said Monday. "Those coastlines with intact coral reefs, mangroves, vegetated dunes and robust coastal forests came off better than those degraded by pollution and insensitive land use," Toepfer said... "so the environment is not a luxury ... It is an economically important insurance policy whose wisdom we ignore at our peril." Go to: http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/science/02/21/un.tsunami.impact.ap/
19 February 2005, Reuters, by Maggie Fox, Washington, DC, USA – Wetlands that once sheltered Marsh Arabs and a host of wildlife in southern Iraq are being partly restored and could offer a haven once again if it is done right, experts said Saturday. Luckily, water coming into the area from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers is unexpectedly clean, washing away toxic salts that built up when the area was drained under Saddam Hussein's regime, the international team of experts reported. Bird species are starting to return, including pelicans, cormorants and wading species. The area was also important for spawning fish and shrimp and, with only 20 percent of the marshes restored, these animals have along way to go, the experts reported. Go to: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=topNews&storyID=7680332 Fewer Monarchs Make Winter Flight to Mexico 18 February 2005, Houston Chronicle,
by Dudley Althaus and Ioan Grillo, Mexico City – Mexico reports
75 percent fewer monarch butterflies in 2004. The number of monarch butterflies
wintering in Mexico has declined by 75 percent this year, and some researchers
warned Thursday that conditions in this country as well as in the United
States and Canada threaten the survival of one of nature's great wonders.
Go to: Chinese Wetlands Protection Extended 11 February 2005, by Jane Kettle – Wetland conservation in China has received a boost in the form of nine new protected sites, now part of the Ramsar Convention, covering a total of 400,000 hectares. The protected sites are especially important for migratory birds, according to Mr. Harkness, such as the endangered black–necked crane. Considered to be a holy bird amongst the local people, villagers in Shangri–la, Yunnan Province are currently working on eco–tourism projects with WWF to try to conserve the birds' habitat. Go to: http://www.worldlakes.org/news.asp Publications & Web Resources All–Bird Bulletin Available online [February 2005 issue] This Bulletin is a news and information–sharing publication for participants of the North American Bird Conservation Initiative. Download the latest 8–page issue for free in PDF format: http://www.nabci–us.org/aboutnabci/bulletin0205.pdf [Source: Roxanne Bogart] Birds of Azerbaijan [The] By Michael Patrikeev, 2004, 380 pp., hardback, €URO 68.80. Pensoft Publishers. For ordering information go to: http://www.pensoft.net/ Manual for Training Bird Guides in Rural Communities (from Mexico) By Barbara MacKinnon, Published by Amigos de Sian Ka'an A.C., 2004. This 100 page manual (in English) seeks to assist organizers and instructors of bird identification workshops in Latin American rural communities. Content is based on the author’s experience in conducting two and three-day “bird identification and guiding” workshops in rural communities, fishing villages and a Mayan forest community, all within protected natural areas on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula. The workshops were conducted from 2000 to 2004. For this free resource in PDF format go to: http://www.birdlife.net/news/news/2005/03/bird_guide_manual_en.pdf Propagation of Wetland Plants, Herbaceous Plants, Shrubs and Trees Co–authored by Dr. Edgar Garbisch, this 350–page book covers more than 100 species and contains over 200 illustrations and combines thirty–two years of wetland horticulture experience in one book. It is USD $54.95 and USD $8.00 for shipping and handling. For more information go to: http://www.wetland.org/ or call: + 1 (410) 745–9620 Remotely–sensed Indicators for Monitoring the General Condition of Watersheds: an Application for Delaware's Nanticoke River Watershed This 17-page paper by Ralph W. Tiner, 2004, introduces a set of "natural habitat integrity indices" that can be used to document the condition of natural habitats and habitat alterations throughout a watershed and provides a set of metrics for revealing the general condition of these habitats mostly from a quantitative standpoint, and for monitoring changes and for comparing between watersheds and among sub–basins. It is available for free in PDF format:http://wetlands.fws.gov/Pubs_Reports/EcologicalIndicatorsTiner.pdf Shorebirds of North America: The Photographic Guide By Dennis Paulson, Princeton University Press, 2005, Paper: USD$29.95/£18.95 or Cloth: USD $65.00/£41.95. This guide to North American and Central American shorebirds offers more than 530 photographs illustrating all shorebird species in their varied plumage, and includes text that points out the variation within common species. Go to: http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/titles/7825.html Tracking Ocean Wanderers: Hot Spots for Cool Birds This BirdLife International report highlights crucial areas for the conservation of albatrosses across the world’s oceans. The full report is available for free in PDF format. Go to: http://www.birdlife.net/action/science/species/seabirds/tracking.html (Source: John Cecil, National Audubon, Important Bird Areas.) Wetland Types in New Zealand By P.N. Johnson and P.J. Gerbeaux, 2004. This 184–page book is the final output of a Ministry for the Environment project on coordinated monitoring of New Zealand wetlands. For more information email: enquiries@wetlandtrust.org.nz.
Celebrating the 10th anniversary of AEWA, this award seeks nominees who have significantly contributed toward the long–term conservation and sustainable use of waterbirds, especially pioneer initiatives or ones that serve as models for others. Awards of USD$5,000 will be offered to one individual as well as one institution. Deadline: 20 April 2005. For more information go to: http://www.unep–aewa.org/ Job Opportunities BirdLife Caribbean Coordinator The successful candidate will be located in the Caribbean (optional location) and will report to the Caribbean Program Manager based at BirdLife Secretariat in Cambridge, UK. (S)he will oversee the management of the Neotropical Waterbird Conservation Project in the Caribbean; coordinate a regional migratory bird program; and assist with regional program development and fundraising. For more information contact David Wege: david.wege@birdlife.org no later than 15 April 2005.
2005
13 – 16 May
June New
Updated
New
October NEW
November NEW
December New
20th Annual Meeting of the Society
for Conservation Biology, Conservation Without Borders August 2006 6 – 11 August
September 2006 1 –3 September
Updated 2 – 7 October 2006
December 2006
2007 June 2007 VIII Neotropical Ornithological
Congress The End 1 April 2005 |