![]() February 2006 Issue Note from the Editor
Hello friends: My guess is that many of us share the same deep concern: the yet unknown repercussions of avian influenza on the migratory birds that we care so much about. What can we do to advance the urgent work of bird/conservation groups in educating decision makers, government officials, and media? How about this. What about a web page (or two) that offers "click" on form letters that people could "ping" (email) to appropriate authorities and media outlets along each flyway? We humans would form a chain of international voices represented along each migratory path. It would be a powerful way to raise our collective concern for the need of careful, thought out actions, rather than the alarmingly hasty reactions we are witnessing today. I hope you celebrate "World
Wetlands Day" on February 2nd.
News From U.S. National Ramsar Committee (USNRC) A draft strategic plan will be posted this week - by February 3. Please click here to find it posted.
This event seeks to save habitat for Ecuador's rarest birds while helping two Important Bird Areas battle for the title of "Birdiest Reserve." It will take place at The Buenaventura, located in southwestern Ecuador, which protects a critically important tract of humid cloud forest in the otherwise arid west-slope foothills of the Andes (and provides habitat for 300 species of birds, nine classified as globally threatened) and the Tapichalaca Reserve, located in southern Ecuador. This is the only known location for the critically endangered Jocotoco Antpitta. All proceeds will be donated to the Jocotoco Foundation to purchase habitat for endangered birds in Ecuador. For more information contact: Craig Thompson at (608) 785-1277 or email: Craig.Thompson@dnr.state.wi.us.
New BBS routes need to be run and new observers recruited. The most important need is attaining better data on long-term population trends for many species by ensuring that all BBS routes are run by qualified observers every year. The BBS, not a difficult methodology, only requires one morning per year. Some participants are described as taking an additional morning to scout the route a day or two ahead of time to make sure bridges are still in place and that they can identify everything that's singing. BBS brochures and training CDs are available from Terry Rich or Keith Pardieck at BBS. To see the status of routes in your state click here.
The Ramsar Convention and its Mediterranean Wetlands Initiative (MedWet) are calling for entries to the Ramsar/MedWet Award for films on water and wetlands. The Award will be granted at the Ecofilms Rodos International Films and Visual Arts Festival, 20 – 25 June 2006 in Rodos, Greece. It is open to film makers from all countries. The deadline for submissions is 1 March 2006. Click here The Ramsar Convention has come into force in these new member countries: Central African Republic, Barbados and Rwanda.
Albania - 1 site For more details click here. News From Wetlands International
Dr. Taej Mundkur brings to our attention a major new development close to Shanghai - on the mudflats of the Chongming Dongtan Nature Reserve, on the Chongming island, a Ramsar site. This is a critically important area for migratory shorebirds and many other waterbirds, including cranes, swans and geese. Last year, a Dunlin "Calidris alpina"was marked here and subsequently caught and released on its nesting grounds in Alaska. Movements of other migratory species have connected this important site to Russia, Australia and New Zealand. To learn more click here for this article "Shanghai Plans Eco-metropolis on its Mudflats" http://www.guardian.co.uk/china/story/0,,1681385,00.html
30 January 2006 - World Conservation
Union - The world needs to take greater care of its groundwater reserves,
increasingly threatened by over-consumption – that is the message
from the International Symposium on Groundwater Sustainability, which
ended yesterday in Alicante, Spain. This in turn has already resulted
in dried-up wells, rivers and precious wetlands around the world. Click
here
28 January 2006 - New Scientist, by Debora MacKenzie - Governments and UN agencies are pointing their fingers at the birds. Prove it, say many bird conservationists, who fear we are about to see an irresponsible and unjustified cull. Click here http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn8648
27 January 2006 - Associated Press,
by Parveen Ahmed - Dhaka, Bangladesh - At least 11 rare spoon-billed sandpipers
have been discovered along the coast of Bangladesh, scientists said Friday,
raising hopes for the survival of the birds, whose population has dwindled
to just 300-350 pairs in the wild. Concern rose over the fate of the small
shore birds, named for their distinctive teaspoon-shaped bills, after
a 2005 expedition failed to find a single bird in their traditional winter
habitat along India's east coast.
26 January 2006 - BirdLife International - A new study published in the journal of the Danish Ornithological Society (DOF, BirdLife in Denmark) documents that birds in west Greenland have undergone a severe decline within the last 100 years. Shockingly, one formerly common breeding species, the Thick-billed Murre, can no longer be found. Click here http://www.birdlife.org/news/news/2006/01/greenland.html
26 January 2006 - Associated Press, by Dave Carpenter - No place too far, no price too high for some bird-watchers attracted to the hunt. While the cost of chasing birds to the far corners of the earth is high, virtually everyone afflicted with this obsession says the rewards are well worth it. "The more you see them, the more amazing they are to you. You can’t ever get enough.” Click here http://www.charlotte.com/mld/thestate/business/13717094.htm?source=rss&channel=thestate_business
25 January 2006 — Reuters, by Alister Doyle, Oslo — Costs of safeguarding the world's fast-disappearing coral reefs and mangroves are small compared to the benefits they provide from tourism to fisheries, the U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP) said. The report, part of a recent trend trying to place a value on the natural world, said that pollution, global warming and expanding human settlements along coasts were among mounting threats to reefs and mangroves. "Day in and day out and across the oceans and seas of the world nature is working to generate incomes and livelihoods for millions if not billions of people," UNEP executive director Klaus Toepfer said... Click here http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticleSearch.aspx?storyID=161061+24-Jan-2006+RTRS&srch=Coral+Reefs
23 January 2006 - Wetlands International - Migrating waterbirds are seen as a major health risk since the outbreak of the avian flu. Millions of wild birds have now reached their winter destination. No serious outbreak due to these migrations has occurred yet. According to Wetlands International, it is now time to shift the attention from wild birds to the poultry sector... Click here http://www.wetlands.org/news.aspx?id=ae6c7b2c-424d-4684-9148-4f8b77bfc870
18 January 2006 - CNN News - Nations attending a bird flu meeting in the Chinese capital of Beijing had pledged $1.9 billion to fight the disease, a U.S. official said, exceeding expectations set by the World Bank. The World Bank says nearly half of the money raised will be spent in Southeast Asia, where the virus is already well entrenched. Click here http://www.cnn.com/2006/HEALTH/01/18/birdflu.wrap0945/index.html
18 January 2006 - World Conservation Union - Three major achievements mark the past three months of Canada’s protected area agenda: the protection of the world’s largest freshwater lake, the doubling in size of Canada’s smallest national park, and the creation of a new national park, supported by the Inuit people. Click here http://www.iucn.org/en/news/archive/2006/01/17_parks_canada.htm
17 January 2006 - News From Bangladesh
- Wildlife Trust of Bangladesh has urged the government to take immediate
effective measures to save the migratory birds, whose visits “indicate
the health of our
16 January 2006 - BBC News - Many birds who migrate to the UK are staying closer to home. Fewer migrating ducks, geese and wading birds are wintering in the UK because more are staying closer to their Arctic breeding grounds due to climate change. New studies by the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) and the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust have revealed the fall. Ducks, geese and waders are attracted by the relatively warmer winter conditions in the Gulf Stream protected British Isles but, claims the BTO, global warming could be persuading migrating birds to stay in cooler northern and eastern waters... Click here http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/4617652.stm
13 January 2006 - Environment News Service - Reef Check, the California organization that conducted the first global reef survey, sent a scientific team to the Indonesian island nearest to the epicenter of the quake and tsunami. Overfishing with destructive methods has damaged the reef ecosystems more than the earthquake and tsunami, the scientists found. Click here http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/jan2006/2006-01-13-07.asp
12 January 2006 - Reuters - Sao
Paulo, Brazil - The world's largest wetland, Brazil's Pantanal, is being
destroyed by increased farming, ranching and mining, according to a report
by the environmental watchdog Conservation International. The report said
deforestation had destroyed 17 percent of the natural vegetation of the
Pantanal and if it continued unchecked, all the original forest would
disappear within 45 years. Click here
12 January 2006 - NatureServe - A new study published in the journal Nature provides the first clear proof that global warming is causing the outbreaks of infectious disease that are wiping out entire frog populations, driving many species to extinction. Click here http://www.natureserve.org/aboutUs/amp_extinctions.jsp
12 January 2006 - Ducks Unlimited News - The U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case in February that could dramatically affect the future of more than half the 100 million acres of wetlands remaining in the United States. Today, Ducks Unlimited joined other conservation organizations and two of the world’s largest outdoor gear retailers in filing an amicus brief addressing whether the Clean Water Act protects wetlands adjacent to small tributaries that flow into larger bodies of water. Click here http://www.ducks.org/News/DU_Partners_Protect_Wetlands_Jan06.asp
8 January - A project is underway to transform the mouth of the Yangtse River into the world's biggest single development, or "the planet's first 'eco-city.'" "The bleak wetlands of Dongtan seem an unlikely place for a neo-industrial revolution, but if the project being planned for its muddy shores is successful, it could arguably change the course of global economic development..." Click here http://www.guardian.co.uk/china/story/0,,1681385,00.html
5 January 2006 - BirdLife International - IBAs are normally located in natural areas, and single-crop cultivation is not what typically comes to mind when one thinks of bird conservation. However, in Cuba, rice cultivation goes through a wet and dry cycle, and since rice is grown constantly over large expanses, there are always fields in varying stages of flooding and draining, leading to high levels of vertebrate and invertebrate biodiversity. Click here http://www.birdlife.org/regional/caribbean/newsletter.html
13 December 2005 - Environment News Service - Washington, DC - Animals, birds and plants are going extinct more quickly now than they have for thousands of years. To help save as many species as possible, scientists have identified endangered species whose global populations are reduced to just one primary site. If that site can be protected with "immediate and direct" action, the Alliance believes, the species living there can be saved. Sites where these 794 species cling to existence are called "centers of imminent extinction" in the study published in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences." Click here http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/dec2005/2005-12-13-06.asp
12 December - In mid-December the Endangered Species Recovery Council submitted a formal petition to remove (delist) the California Brown Pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis californicus) from coverage under the federal Endangered Species Act from the list of species covered by the state's California Endangered Species Act. The case was made that this subspecies represents an ESA success story and that it should be delisted from both federal and state lists (not be merely down-listed from Endangered to Threatened). [news, thanks to Paul Baicich.]
Jointly, the UNESCO-IHE and the Partnership of Water Education and Research (PoWER), offer these courses to professionals interested in the management of natural and constructed wetlands for the treatment of wastewater - but who do not have time to travel abroad for the course. Click here for more information. http://www.unesco-ihe.org/education/ilearning.htm Contact: Anne van Dam, a.vandam@unesco-ihe.org, Wim Douven: w.douven@unesco-ihe.org, or Hans van Bruggen: h.vanbruggen@unesco-ihe.org.
Publications
In the Front Line Produced by UNEP's World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC) in collaboration with the International Coral Reef Action Network and IUCN-the World Conservation Union. Close to a third of corals have gone with 60 per cent expected to be lost by 2030. More than a third of all mangroves have disappeared with the rate of loss greater than that of tropical rainforests. Click here to go to the 36-page report in PDF format. 2006. UNEP-WCMC Biodiversity Series No. 24. http://sea.unep-wcmc.org/resources/publications/UNEP_WCMC_bio_series/24.cfm
Jackson State University (Mississippi,
USA) scientists have developed a model that indicates which wetlands need
environmental protection. It predicts potential habitat changes caused
by changes in water clarity or shoreface slopes as a result of natural
disturbances or restoration efforts. The study is explained in the December
issue of the journal Restoration Ecology. Click here
This book is described as covering many aspects of the study of wetlands in a single, portable volume. It begins by defining wetlands, and describes the many different ways in which they function as environments and habitats both for wildlife and for people. The economic importance of wetlands is given particular attention. 304 pages, softcover. 2005. £9.99 (approx. $18/€15). Philip's. Click here http://www.nhbs.com/catalogue/display/t=140050
Some wetlands and waters that are "isolated" from navigable waters in the United States are no longer under the jurisdiction of the Clean Water Act as a result of a 2001 Supreme Court decision (Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County vs. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (SWANCC), 2001). NatureServe offers an assessment of the potential impacts of the SWANCC decision on the at-risk species and communities that are associated with these isolated wetland systems in all 50 U.S. states. Click here for the complete report and supporting data. http://www.natureserve.org/publications/isolatedwetlands.jsp
This is described as an authoritative
collection of papers on the world's leading wetlands.
The 2006 Canon National Parks Science Scholars Competition This program is a collaboration between Canon U.S.A., Inc., the American Association for the Advancement of Science and the US National Park Service, and will award eight US$80,000 scholarships to Ph.D. students throughout the Americas to conduct research critical to conserving the national parks of the region. Research projects in the biological, physical, social and cultural sciences are eligible, as well as projects in a new category-technology innovation in support of conservation science. Applications must be received by 3 May 2006. Click here for more information. www.nature.nps.gov/canonscholarships
Proposals must contribute to the
implementation of the Ramsar Convention's Strategic Plan 2003-2008 for
the conservation and wise use of wetlands. The Ramsar Secretariat's regional
teams also offer an advisory service to help with the preparation of suitable
proposals, for which drafts should be submitted no later than 15 April
2006 to the Senior Regional Advisors. Click here for more information
and The SGF Operational Guidelines. http://ramsar.org/sgf/key_sgf_index.htm
Asian Waterbird Conservation Fund Provides financial support to projects at site of importance for migratory waterbirds in the East Asia - Australasian Flyway. Cathay Pacific has donated HK$500,000 (approx. US$65,000) to the Fund which is administered by WWF Hong Kong. There will be a single call for applications to the Fund each year with a 31 March 2006 deadline. For further information click here http://www.wwf.org.hk/eng/maipo/awcf/
North Star Science and Technology, LLC and American Bird Conservancy are awarding a total of eight satellite transmitters (Argos Platform Transmitter Terminals (PTTs)), to one or two recipients (8 PTTs to one project or 4 PTTs to each of two projects) anywhere throughout the world. Click here for more information. htp://www.northstarst.com. Deadline for proposals is February 3, 2006. Direct questions to George Wallace at:gwallace@abcbirds.org
This 12-month posting will be located at the Ramsar Secretariat in Switzerland and will begin after 22 May 2006. With an upper age limit for applicants of 30 years old, the post offers an opportunity for young graduates to become acquainted with the workings of an intergovernmental treaty dealing with the conservation and sustainable use of natural resources. Candidates for this internship should be nationals of countries in Asia. Click here for General Terms of Reference for Ramsar internships. The deadline for applications is 24 February 2006. http://www.ramsar.org/about/about_internships.htm
This course will cover basic banding and mist-net set-up, bird identification, determining age using molt limits, taking blood samples and more. A variety of species should be caught - from migrant warblers to trogons, to bats. All banding skill levels welcome. Certificates will be issued. The cost of the course is $950 USD which includes transport from Villahermosa, Tabasco, 3 meals per day, and rustic lodging. Banding equipment is supplied. Participants are responsible for travel to Villahermosa, pre-trip vaccinations and personal field gear. Maximum of 10 students accepted. Contact: Manuel Grosselet:birdninnet@yahoo.com.mx
The successful candidate will convene a technical committee to review the current network of California IBAs, update the data supporting these sites, identify gaps, work with the national IBA team to have IBAs prioritized using the global and continental IBA criteria, ensure that all IBAs are well mapped and documented, and more. M.S. in conservation biology, wildlife biology, ornithology, natural resources, or equivalent. Minimum two to three years professional experience preferred. Contact Graham Chisholm at: gchisholm@audubon.org for more information. International Calendar
2 February
New
March Wetlands for Water Quality - Online
Course April
International Conference on Hydrology and Management of Forested Wetlands, New Bern, North Carolina. Click here http://www.asae.org/meetings/Forest2006/
May 13 May June 20th Annual Meeting of the Society
for Conservation Biology, Conservation Without Borders 11 - 14 June
Ramsar Small Grants for 2006 Cycle July New August 6 – 11 August
New
Great Lakes and Beyond September 1 – 3 September
Jocotoco Birdathon - to take place at two Jocotoco Foundation Reserves - The Buenaventura Reserve, located in southwestern Ecuador. Sponsored by the American Bird Conservancy, the Wisconsin Bird Conservation Initiative and Jocotoco Foundation. This event seeks to raise money to save habitat for Ecuador's rarest birds while helping two Important Bird Areas battle for the title of "Birdiest Reserve." For more information contact: Craig Thompson, (608) 785-1277, Craig.Thompson@dnr.state.wi.us. New
3 – 7 October 2006
9 – 13 December
June 2007
5 - 10 August
2008 New
|