Wednesday, 26 October 2011

the executive lounges of Rio de Janeiro airport will be swarming with government delegates making their way home from what could be the most important

Big summit seeks big idea

George Bush George Bush went to Rio; whether Barack Obama will follow is unclear

A little less than a year from now, the executive lounges of Rio de Janeiro airport will be swarming with government delegates making their way home from what could be the most important environmental summit ever held.

Twenty years after the Rio Earth Summit, next year's UN Summit on Sustainable Development is more commonly seen under the name Rio+20... and maybe that's part of the problem.

So far, it's hard to argue that the summit has caught the imagination of many outside the community of professionally interested people who have been going to preparatory meetings, drawing up briefing papers, and contributing think-pieces to highbrow publications.

Among the people it's so far failed to attract are the heads of state and government whose involvement is crucial if the event is to produce more than pieces of paper.

And it's failed to attract a big idea.

Well... some insiders might argue that last comment is harsh, and point to two strands.

One is the "green economy", which the UN is keen to promote. The other is reforming the structures and mechanisms of international environmental governance, which - it's widely acknowledged - have grown organically and messily over the decades.

The green economy and process reform, then, will both feature large in Rio.

Manta ray transported by helicopter Many campaigners believe life in the oceans seriously needs rescuing

They may be important; but they're hardly eye-catching.

The exciting summits so far have happened at 20-year intervals, with less compelling ones in between.

The first, in Stockholm in 1972, saw ground-breaking discussion of urbanisation, nuclear weapons testing, chemical pollution and the expanding human population.

The headline outcome was a vote for ending commercial whaling, and perhaps the most significant was the establishment of the UN Environment Programme - but anyway, as the first summit of the bunch, Stockholm was novel in its own right.

Rio, 20 years later, was positively fecund.

It ushered in UN conventions on biodiversity and climate change, an agreement on principles for managing forests, the over-arching Rio Declaration with its straightforward parameters for sustainable development, and the vast Agenda 21 action plan intended to implement it.

Next year's Rio re-run should be the next in the sequence. And, as I wrote above, it could be the most important environmental summit ever; and here's why.

In all kinds of areas - glacier melt, Arctic ice melt, ocean acidification, Amazon drying, amphibian extinction, pollination, and many more - there's a serious chance that "tipping points" of no return will have been passed by the time 2032 comes along.

So if you're serious about stopping all this and putting society on a genuinely sustainable track, this is the big one.

Yet without a Big Idea, there must be a serious chance that it will fail to engage anyone - leaders, citizens, youth, business, civil society, trade unions, legislators or anyone else.

Quite why there's a dearth of ideas for this one isn't entirely clear, but it probably has something to do with the fact that vehicles already exist that in principle should be taking care of virtually every environmental issue.

The problem is that many are not being implemented as effectively as nature needs.

Oil rig at sunset Should the Sun set on fossil fuel subsidies?

Behind the scenes, a few ideas are under discussion as candidate headline issues for Rio.

One is the oceans.

Outside countries' territorial waters, they are pretty much open for no-holds-barred exploitation.

Where there are constraints on fishing, through Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs), they cover only certain species, and nothing except fishing.

There's a feeling in parts of the environmental community that this is seriously out of date. In the 21st Century, with nine billion mouths to feed in a few decades' time, is it feasible any longer to maintain a frontier-spirited free-for-all over half the planet's surface?

In a quiet way, discussions have begun that could lead to something concrete emerging at Rio. They could even nick a title from the BBC - Blue Planet.

With climate negotiations apparently going nowhere - reports from Bonn this week indicate a whole new outbreak of division - is there scope in Rio for a Big Idea on energy?

In 2009, G20 leaders pledged "to phase out and rationalize over the medium term inefficient fossil fuel subsidies while providing targeted support for the poorest".

Could Rio see targets and timelines set that would actually see fossil fuel subsidies end?


Monday, 24 October 2011

Why were arctic char released into Llyn Padarn to protect stocks




Arctic char released into Llyn Padarn to protect stocks

 800 Arctic char were released into Llyn Padarn, Llanberis, on Monday

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More than 2,000 young fish have been released into two lakes to protect a species whose numbers are declining.
An assessment of Arctic char in Llyn Padarn in Llanberis, Gwynedd, first prompted fears for their future in 2009.
Now, 800 fish which have been hatched and reared have just been released into the lake to reverse the trend.
And a further 1,600 have also been added into Llyn Crafnant, near Trefriw, in the Conwy Valley, to help stocks.
That is on top of the 5,000 fish already stocked there this year.
Back-up
Environment Agency Wales (EAW) and the Countryside Council for Wales (CCW) have been working for three years to preserve numbers of the fish, also known as the torgoch.

“Start Quote

...we are determined to find a way to improve the conditions at Llyn Padarn so they can continue to inhabit the lake”
End Quote David Edwell Environment Agency Wales
They can only be found in a few cold, deep lakes in north Wales where they have developed into distinct populations.
It is the second year in a row that char have been added to Llyn Crafnant after an assessment by the EAW and CCW found the Llyn Padarn population was under threat.
It was recommended that a back up population should be established, and landowners at Llyn Crafnant allowed the lake to be used.
Last year, 800 fish were released into Llyn Crafnant after being hatched at Mawddach Hatchery, near Dolgellau, from eggs taken from 25 Llyn Padarn char.
This year, after making changes to the way they are reared, 7,500 fish were hatched and raised to a length of 15cm, to increase the EAW's restocking programme.
'Safety net'
Fisheries experts advised that only 800 should be re-introduced into Llyn Padarn to reduce the risk of in-breeding among the population.
Young Arctic char A total of 7,500 fish have been hatched and raised by officials from the Environment Agency Wales
The fish released in Llyn Padarn have been clipped to enable anglers to identify their catch as a stocked fish.
"The Arctic char need a good habitat to thrive," said EAW area manager David Edwell.
"Setting up the secondary population is a safety net - but we are determined to find a way to improve the conditions at Llyn Padarn so they can continue to inhabit the lake."
He said char were a "unique and threatened species" in north Wales and the agency was determined to protect them.

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Sunday, 23 October 2011

Australian Shark Attack File

Australian Shark Attack File

Sharks live in all the coastal waters and estuarine habitats around the 35,000 km of Australia's coast.

As the population of the country increases, many more people are entering coastal waters for recreational and commercial reasons throughout the year.

Although Australia continues to have a bad reputation concerning the threat of shark attacks to swimmers, the statistics do not support these claims. The Australian Shark Attack File (ASAF) has been managed from Taronga for over 30 years and aims to gather all known information on shark attacks in Australian waters, provide source material for research and education relating to the causes of attacks on humans and publish analysis of the acquired data.

Population increase since 1900:
1900 = 3.7 million
1950 = 8.3 million
1990= 17 million
2008 = 22 million

Black Tip Reef Sharks
Although Australia continues to have a bad reputation concerning the threat of shark attacks to swimmers, the statistics do not support these claims. In the last 50 years, there have been only 53 human fatalities (1.06 per year) in Australian waters from shark attacks. Some years there are no fatalities recorded, other years there have been up to three in a year, but the average remains around one per year. Yet each year thousands of swimmer-days take place on our beaches, harbours and rivers and the number is increasing with both increasing population and tourism.

The Australian Shark Attack File is co-ordinated at Taronga Zoo and is associated with the International Shark Attack File (managed by the American Elasmobranch Society).

The aims and objectives of the Shark Attack File

  • To chronicle all known information on shark attacks from Australian waters past, and present and to record future attacks.
  • To provide source material for scientific study to identify the common factors relating to the causes of attacks on humans.
  • To provide summary information for public education and awareness and/or publication by the media.
  • To publish information resulting from analysis of the acquired data.

Criteria for inclusion

Any human/shark interaction:

  • Where there is a determined attempt by a shark to attack a person;
  • Where injury occurs by a shark during an attempt to attack a person;
  • Where imminent contact was averted by diversionary action by the victim or others (and no injury to the human occurs)
  • Where the person is alive and in the water at the time of the incident;
  • Where the equipment worn or held by the person is bitten or damaged by the shark during the incident, and;
  • Where there is a determined attempt by the shark to attack a kayak, surfboard or small dinghy operated by a person.

As part of a world wide study into shark behaviour, data from the Australian Shark Attack Files helps to identify the existence, or absence, of common factors relating to the cause of attacks on humans.

The research project is conducted in three stages

1. Compile information on each recorded attack in Australian waters.

2. Assimilate, categorise and transcribe data to computer.

3. Analyse acquired data and publish results.

More research needed

This project is aimed at understanding and documenting the behaviours of sharks when they interact with humans. This information will contribute to conservation of the species and their environment through education and specific research projects. There is a need to learn more about the shark's normal behaviour as well as in circumstances of human interaction.

John West

Contact:
Taronga Conservation Society Australia
Phone:
+61 2 9978 4610

Australia hunts Great White shark that killed US diver

Australia hunts Great White shark that killed US diver

A Great White Shark [file image] Sharks are frequently spotted in Australian waters but attacks are rare

A hunt is under way off the coast of Western Australia for a Great White shark that killed a US diver.

George Thomas Wainwright, 32, from Texas, was diving off Rottnest Island near Perth when he was killed.

Fisheries officials have issued a kill order and laid baited hooks in the hope of capturing what is believed to be a 3m (10ft) Great White.

Mr Wainwright is the third person to be killed by a shark along Australia's west coast in recent weeks.

Bryn Martin, a 64-year-old businessman, disappeared while swimming off Perth's Cottesloe Beach on 10 October. His swimming trunks were later found on the sea floor, with damage said to be consistent with a shark attack.

Last month, 21-year-old bodyboarder Kyle Burden died after being savaged by a shark near Bunker Bay, 260km south of Perth.

Beaches closed

Six baited hooks were laid in waters off Rottnest Island after Western Australia's Fisheries Minister Norman Moore issued an order for the shark to be hunted down and killed - the first time such powers have been executed.

Regional Manager Tony Cappelluti told the Associated Press news agency that the hooks were removed from the water after six hours for fear the tuna bait would attract more sharks to the area.

Start Quote

It sounds a little bit like taking revenge and we're talking about an endangered species”

End Quote Barbara Weuringer Marine zoologist

"There's been no sightings, so that would probably indicate that the shark's left the area," Mr Cappelluti said.

He said the hunt would continue with fisheries vessels - equipped to track, tag or destroy the shark - monitoring the waters around Rottnest.

Rottnest's beaches are to remain closed until Monday.

Mr Wainwright had been living in Perth for several months on a work visa.

He had reportedly entered the water alone from a boat some 500m (1,640ft) from shore on Saturday.

Witnesses on the boat say they became concerned after noticing a large number of bubbles surfacing. Mr Wainwright's mauled body came to the surface a short while later.

Two people on the boat described seeing a 3m (10ft) Great White shark.

Cull mulled

Sharks attack more often in cloudy weather and police said the day had been overcast.

Western Australia Premier Colin Barnett has said he would consider a shark cull, and his government is looking into the possibility of increasing aerial shark patrols.

But scientists have warned against over-reacting.

Barbara Weuringer, marine zoologist and shark researcher at the University of Western Australia, urged against a shark hunt, saying the only way to know which shark attacked is to kill one and open up its stomach.

"It sounds a little bit like taking revenge," she was quoted by AP as saying. "And we're talking about an endangered species."

Sharks are a common feature of Australian waters but, according to the Australian Shark Attack File, attacks are rare with only 53 fatalities in the last half-century.

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