Category Archives: The Guardian

WILDLIFE UPDATE : Reptiles are in trouble….One in five reptile faces extinction

Reptiles Galore

Reptiles Galore (Photo credit: Wes & Eli)

The green vine snake (Ahaetulla nasuta ) is among the world’s reptiles that face extinction. Photograph: Ruchira Somaweera/IUCN/ZSL

Nearly one in five of the world’s estimated 10,000 species of lizards, snakes, turtles, crocodiles and other reptiles are threatened with extinction, according to a study conducted by 200 experts.

But the risk of extinction was found to be unevenly spread throughout the extremely diverse group of animals. According to the paper, an alarming 50% of all freshwater turtles are close to extinction, possibly because they are traded on international markets.

The study, published by the Zoological Society of London in conjunction with the IUCN species survival commission, is the first of its kind summarising the global conservation status of reptiles, and used 1,500 randomly selected reptiles worldwide.

Out of the estimated 19% of reptiles threatened with extinction, in order of magnitude of danger, 12% are classified as critically endangered, 41% endangered and 47% vulnerable.

Three species were found to be possibly extinct. One, a jungle runner lizard, Ameiva vittata, has only ever been recorded in one part of Bolivia. In Haiti, six of the nine species of anolis lizard included in this study have an elevated risk of extinction, due to extensive deforestation affecting the country.

Reptiles threatened with extinction : Chamaeleo LaterispinisChamaeleo laterispinis, found in the mountains of Tanzania, is also on the list of reptiles facing extinction threat. Photograph: Michele Menegon/IUCN/ZSL

The spread of farming and deforestation in tropical regions represents two of the greatest threats to reptiles, says the paper.

“The proportion of threatened reptile species is highest in freshwater environments, tropical regions and on oceanic islands, while data deficiency was highest in tropical areas, such as central Africa and south-east Asia,” the paper says. “Levels of threat remain particularly high in tropical regions, mainly as a result of habitat conversion for agriculture and logging.”

Reptiles threatened with extinction : Chamaeleo Lyriocephalus ScutatusLyriocephalus scutatus, another lizard species on threatened list. Photograph: Ruchira Somaweera/IUCN/ZSL

Monika Böhm, lead author of the paper, said: “Reptiles are often associated with extreme habitats so it is easy to assume that they will be fine in our changing world. But many species are very highly specialised in terms of habitat use and the climatic conditions they require for day to day functioning. This makes them particularly sensitive to environmental changes.”

Reptiles have a long and complex history, having first appeared on the planet about 300m years ago. They play a number of crucial roles in the proper functioning of the world’s ecosystems, in their roles as predators as well as prey.

Philip Bowles, co-ordinator of IUCN’s snake and lizard red list authority, said the findings sounded alarm bells on the state of reptiles.

“Tackling the identified threats, which include habitat loss and harvesting, are key conservation priorities in order to reverse the declines in these reptiles,”

‘Marine snow’ could herald breakthrough in race to save eels

European eel

European eel (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

Marine biologists are racing to solve a unique problem which is crucial to their efforts to save the world’s wild eel populations from catastrophic collapse: recreating a food called “marine snow“. The Guardian reports

In one of the least-understood global conservation crises, spawning rates for the world’s three major eel populations have crashed in the last three decades by as much as 99%, raising fears they could become extinct across the far east, Europe and north America.

Biologists in Japan, where eels are an iconic part of the country’s cuisine and culture, are on the brink of farming eels from birth to fork on an industrial scale for the first time, potentially in the same way as salmon is farmed worldwide.

That breakthrough – being sought too by scientists in Korea and the United States – could dramatically relieve pressure on wild eel populations, and greatly increase the prospects of rebuilding their stocks worldwide.

Yet the goal of producing wholly captive farmed eels, using larvae produced in captivity rather than wild-caught baby eels, is being thwarted by a very significant obstacle: reproducing the larvae’s unique natural diet, which is known to scientists as “marine snow”.

That foodstuff, which is essential to an eel’s growth cycle as they develop and mature from larvae to glass eels, is a mixture of marine detritus, organic waste matter suspended in diffuse clouds, which is proving extremely hard to reproduce on an industrial scale.

Eels are being farmed commercially around the world but only by using baby eels trapped in the wild, adding even greater pressure to the last surviving wild populations. In the UK, young eel or elver numbers are now at 5% of their levels in the 1980s.

Scientists have considered the most unlikely ingredients to help create that peculiar food, including the yolk from shark’s eggs. To exacerbate the feeding problem, eels stay in a larval stage for three to four months, compared with only a few days for cod, and are extremely sensitive at that stage.

Prof Katsumi Tsukamoto, a pioneer in eel conservation in the Pacific who was first discover the Pacific eels spawning grounds, told marine scientists in Edinburgh this week that this obstacle meant it cost €1,000 (£803) to produce a single captive seedling in the laboratory; their goal is to get that cost down to €1.

Speaking after a keynote address to the World Fisheries Congress, Tsukamoto, from the Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute at Tokyo University, said the focus on devising a wholly self-sufficient domestic eel farming programme, while very expensive, was being driven by the need to preserve remaining wild eels.

“We’re now trying to establish a special strain, completely cut off from wild stocks,” he said. “We want to improve the many different characteristics, for example growth rate, metamorphosis rates and disease resistance. It’s a process of domestication, like sheep, pigs, cows or horses.”

Pressure to produce wholly captive eels is being driven by the continuing heavy demand from consumers: eels are the main ingredient in kabayaki, one of three most culturally important styles of Japanese cuisine along with sushi and tempura.

David Righton, from the Cefas marine laboratory in Lowestoft, and a leading figure in the Eeliad project on saving the European eel, said the quest to find a substitute food stuff is one of the most competitive areas in eel conservation.

“Whoever gets there first has made a tremendous discovery; you’re recovering a cultural tradition. Whoever does this is culturally important as well as becoming very rich,” Righton said.

Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/may/11/marine-biologists-eels

Nature deficit disorder in the spotlight

A National Trust property sign at Gordale

A National Trust property sign at Gordale (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

From The Guardian Environment 

Are our children suffering from lack of natural experiences –  and to what extent?

This Friday from 1-2pm, The Guardian is interviewing the outgoing director general of the National Trust, Fiona Reynolds, as well as naturalist and broadcaster, Stephen Moss, to discuss whether today’s generation of children are experiencing ‘nature deficit disorder‘.

Moss authored a report for the Trust recently, that said not enough action is being taken to get children playing in green spaces. It was part of the Trust’s ongoing Outdoor Nation campaign, which recently featured a ‘bucket list of 50 things to do before you’re 12′, and has been hosting a series of guest posts on the subject.

National Trust director general Fiona ReynoldsNational Trust director general Fiona Reynolds on Photograph: Adrian Sherratt for the Guardian
Here’s Malcolm Shepherd, chief executive of cycling charity Sustrans:

Fear of traffic, fear of strangers and major changes to the places we live mean children are often cooped up indoors or are only allowed to play outside after being driven for miles

And Rob Cowen, ‘outdoor enthusiast‘ and author:

Children aren’t fools; they recognise hypocrisy everywhere. It is no good espousing the benefits of outdoor play if we grown-ups don’t share the same sense of connection with wild space. We must remember that the establishing nature in childhood will only happen if we recognise its importance and take the time to let it grow just as strongly in our own lives.

Stephen MossNaturalist and author Stephen Moss

But is access to natural habitats and wildlife really worse for today’s children than previous generations? Does technology help kids connect with nature – through digital photography, or apps for identifying species – or alienate them from it? And if ‘nature deficit disorder’ is a real problem, what are the solutions?

Do you believe in climate change?

Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research

Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This may seem like an odd question for a climate scientist to ask, but it is one Vicky Pope of The Guardian is constantly asked now. Comments here below or at Learn From Nature 

The typical discussion starts: “I know that the climate is changing, but hasn’t it always changed through natural cycles?” Then they will often give an example, such as the medieval warm period to prove their point.

Those asking the question include a wide range of people I meet in the pub, friends, politicians and increasingly even some of those active in sustainable development and the renewable energy businesses. What I find interesting is that I have known many of these people for a long time and they never asked me this before.

Recent studies show that public acceptance of the scientific evidence for man-made climate change has decreased. However, the change is not that great. The difference I find in talking to people is that they feel better able to express their doubts.

This is very hard for scientists to understand. The scientific evidence that humanity is having an effect on the climate is overwhelming and increasing every year. Yet public perception of this is confused. A Cardiff/Ipsos Mori study on public perceptions of climate change, published in 2010, identifies a number of possible contributory factors: the move from being a science issue to a political issue may have introduced more distrust; “cognitive dissonance” – where people modify their beliefs about uncomfortable truths – may be a factor; people may have become bored of constantly hearing about climate change; or external factors such as the financial crisis may have played a role. There is also increased activity among sceptical groups to obscure the scientific evidence in order to influence public opinion.

Around three years ago I raised the issue of the way that science can be misused. In some cases scare stories in the media were over-hyping climate change and I think we are paying the price for this now with a reaction the other way. I was concerned then that science is not always presented objectively by the media and interested parties (even sometimes scientists themselves) in important areas, like climate change. What I don’t think any of us appreciated at the time was the depth of disconnect between the scientific process and the public.

Which brings me on to the question, should you believe in climate change? The first point to make is that it’s not something you should believe or not believe in – this is a matter of science and therefore of evidence – and there’s lots of it out there. On an issue this important, I think people should look at that evidence and make their own mind up. We are often very influenced by our own personal experience. After a couple of cold winters in the UK, the common question was “has climate change stopped?” despite that fact that many other regions of the world were experiencing record warm temperatures. And 2010 was one of the warmest years on record. For real evidence of climate change, we have to look at the bigger picture.

You can see research by the Met Office that shows the evidence of man-made warming is even stronger than it was when the last IPCC report was published. A whole range of different datasets and independent analyses show the world is warming. There is a broad consensus that over the last half century warming has been rapid, and man-made greenhouse gas emissions are very likely to be the cause.

Long-term changes in our climate system have been observed across the globe, from shifts in rainfall patterns to a decline in Arctic sea-ice. The changes follow the pattern of expected climate change and bear the fingerprint of human influence, providing the clearest evidence yet that human activity is impacting our climate. The rate of warming and ice melt varies and some regions warm faster while others don’t warm at all for a while. Again, it’s the big picture that’s important.

Given the overwhelming evidence for man-made climate change, it could be argued that it shouldn’t be necessary to keep going over old ground to prove it time after time. In fact, it’s essential we move on and focus on the future, because climate change will pose challenges for humanity.

Ultimately, as the planet continues to warm the issue of whether you believe in climate change will become more and more irrelevant. We will all experience the impacts of climate change in some way, so the evidence will be there in plain sight.

The more appropriate questions for today are how will our climate change and how can we prepare for those changes? That’s why it’s important that climate scientists continue their work, and continue sharing their evidence and research so people can stay up to date – and make up their own minds.

Vicky Pope is senior scientist at the Met Office Hadley Centre. She will be speaking at the Guardian Open Weekend festival this Saturday

Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2012/mar/23/climate-change-believe-in-it

Wildlife trade : Animal smuggling in Bangkok

A man has been arrested in Thailand, attempting to smuggle 50 snakes onto a plane. It is the latest in a series of exotic animal seizures at Bangkok international airport.

Authorities at Bangkok‘s Suvarnabhumi Airport found this baby tiger cub stuffed among toy tigers in the suitcase of a woman flying to Iran

animal smuggling: A baby tiger cub

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