Travel – home or away… Balancing the costs and benefits
The Independent Traveller yesterday featured New Zealand – my home (see below) – with its unique wildlife as see on Last Chance to See http://www.bbc.co.uk/lastchancetosee/ where two British presenters enjoy other countries and we watch.
The Guardian included a special promotion on Spain’s World Heritage cities. http://www.guardian.co.uk/spanish-tourist-board/spanish-heritage-rome-renaissance-spain.
The Independent Traveller a promoted a competition for Stonehenge http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/uk/best-of-the-stones-the-ancient-structures-at-stonehenge-are-truly-rocks-of-ages-1796727.htmlTnhe
My wife (Aussie) and I (NZer) arguably came to the UK from NZ as a result of wildlife safaring/travelling across East Africa and Western Europe, and we plan to visit Asia in the future. For a number of reasons, we did not travel overseas (from the UK) for more than a year, and then recently visited Athens, renowned for its World Heritage Sites including the Pathenon.
Wishing to be ‘patriotic’ and see more of the UK, we have undertaken some camping breaks in a couple of British and Welsh national parks and hoped to do so again this year, but the cost of rail travel and other things have got in the way…
Should we concentrate on local holidays and breaks, or travel abroad to experience the nature and culture everywhere..and book with companies with green credentials and offset our carbon emissions? Or should we stay in our country and get to know it … and save the environment?
Weblinks
http://whc.unesco.org/ World Heritage Sites
http://www.jpmorganclimatecare.com/ Carbon offsetting
http://www.responsibletravel.com/ Travel with a green edge
http://edu-tourism.blogspot.com/ Green tourism blog
http://www.independent.co.uk/travel/ausandpacific/feather-report-nature-and-nurture-in-new-zealand-1796725.html A rare flightless parrot, ancient reptiles and some of the world’s largest trees are among the wonders to be found in New Zealand’s spectacular landscapes
Last Chance to See: Extinction… Does it matter?
Stephen Fry and Mark Carwardine search for endangered animals on the edge of extinction in the BBC Two television series Last Chance to See.
In Sunday’s edition, the pair were literally chasing critically-endangered white rhino - to help to capture them, for transfer to other partsof the continent. The species is threatened by poaching for their tusk, prized as an aphrodisiac.
I must admit to being in fits of laugher at one stage, their antics being so hilarious; obviously this ‘hilarity’ comes naturally to Stephen and Mark!.
But why, asked my wife, bother with one species… Are they really so important?
My reply: Each and every species has its reason for being - its ‘ecological niche’. Surely, even the grumpy white rhino has a right to exist!?
LINKS AND BACKGROUND
Some links regarding Endangered Species:
http://www.cites.org/ Official website of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. Documents, Species database, News & Highlights
http://www.iucnredlist.org/ Provides a list of animals that are endangered and tells how they are being threatened.
+ for more links, see Resources Pages.
ABOUT THE SERIES From http://www.bbc.co.uk/lastchancetosee/
In 1985 the Observer Colour Magazine paired up the naturalist Mark Carwardine and the writer Douglas Adams and invited them to travel to Madagascar in search of the aye-aye, a strange and little known nocturnal lemur thought to be on the edge of extinction.
Douglas and Mark found that they enjoyed the journey, and each other’s company, to such a degree that they decided to spend a year travelling the globe in search of other endangered animals.
Douglas said of his contribution to the series: “My role, and one for which I was entirely qualified, was to be an extremely ignorant non-zoologist to whom everything that happened would come as a complete surprise.”
The journeys took Mark and Douglas to Zaire in search of the Northern White Rhino, to New Zealand in search of the Kakapo, to China in search of the Yangtze River Dolphin, Rodriguez in search of the Megabat, the Amazon in search of the Manatee, Uganda in search of the Gorilla and the Indonesian island of Komodo in search of the Komodo Dragon.
In 1990 the book Last Chance to See by Douglas Adams and Mark Carwardine was published as a companion to the BBC radio series of the same name.
Though Last Chance to See has enjoyed lives as a hardback book, a paperback book, a radio series, an audio book and a CD ROM, attempts to make a television series have so far foundered.
In 2001 Douglas and Mark were discussing the possibility of new adventures, but before plans were made Douglas suffered a heart attack and died.
Stephen Fry was a close friend of Douglas Adams, and when Douglas and Mark spent a year travelling the world, Stephen lived in Douglas’ house, and recalls “taking urgent phone calls to send maps and lenses to faraway places.”
In 2008-09, exactly 20 years after the original journey, Stephen and Mark are heading off to see what has become of the animals in two decades, and to discover what has affected their fortunes.




Are Africa’s seas getting protection they deserve, finally?
South Africa maps first deep-sea preserve
The Independent/AFP
Underwater canyons, deep-sea coral reefs and sponge banks are part of a unique ecosystem that South Africa wants to save within its first deep-sea marine protected area. After 10 years of consultations, South Africa has mapped the boundaries for the proposed reserve stretching 100 kilometres (60 miles) from the eastern KwaZulu-Natal coast.The mapping required synthesising the many divergent interests in the Indian Ocean waters, with 40 industries from fishing to gas lines to jet skis operating in an area home to about 200 animal species and their ecosystems.”All of this data was then entered into conservation planning software in order to identify areas of high biodiversity while avoiding areas of high (economic) pressure,” said Tamsyn Livingstone, the researcher who heads the project.The conservation area is being born in a spirit of compromise, which will allow people and companies to continue using the protected waters in zones designated as lower-risk threats to biodiversity.The scheme still needs to be passed into law, but would join South Africa’s existing network of marine preserves strung along its 3,000-kilometre (1,800-mile) coast stretching from the warm Indian Ocean to the cold southern Atlantic.South Africa has embraced this “participatory” method to protecting species living in its water, an approach pioneered in California and Australia.Global goals for protecting biodiversity have been debated for two weeks at a UN summit in Nagoya, Japan (http://www.cbd.int/cop10/), in an effort to set goals on saving habitats which would help to end the mass extinction of species.Environmental groups want 20 percent of coastal and marine areas protected, they say China and India are lobbying for six percent or lower. Talks are supposed to wrap up on Friday.Part of the challenge is in protecting species that are more often than not still unknown. Only one quarter of the estimated million species in the oceans have been discovered.A global census of the oceans unveiled in early October uncovered prehistoric fish thought dead millions of years ago, capturing researchers’ imaginations about what else lurks in the deepest parts of the sea.”Offshore biodiversity is not well known,” said Kerry Sink of the South African National Biodiversity Institute.Exploring the seas remains an expensive project, prompting South African researchers to reach agreements to share information with fisheries, coastal diamond mines and the oil industry.”South Africa’s plan is unique in covering all industry sectors to ensure that biodiversity planning minimizes the impact on industry,” she said.”Healthy offshore ecosystems underpin healthy fisheries and keep options open for future generations.”With growing worries about climate change, scientists say the deep seas could become an important source of protein for the planet, because water temperature changes less at great depths.That assumes that the growth of industry can be managed alongside the marine life, especially as oil companies find ways to drill in ever-deeper waters.The explosion of a BP oil rig in April off the Louisiana coast, rupturing a 1,500-metre deep well, highlighted the risks.It took five months to shut off the leak which caused the biggest the oil spill in US history, with 205 million gallons of oil flowing into the Gulf.
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/south-africa-maps-first-deepsea-preserve-2122828.html#
Marine Reserves in UK http://www.marinereserves.org.uk/
South African Biodiversity Inst http://www.sanbi.org/
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