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The Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP), Ramsar's scientific subsidiary body The Scientific and Technical Review Panel of the Ramsar Convention was established by Resolution 5.5 (Kushiro, 1993) as a subsidiary body of the Convention to provide scientific and technical guidance to the Conference of the Parties, the Standing Committee, and the Ramsar secretariat. Its individual members are elected by the Standing Committee, based upon nominations from the Parties, on the same regionally proportionate basis that is used for electing the Standing Committee itself, but they serve in their own capacities as experts in the scientific areas required by the STRP's Work Plan and not as representatives of their countries. Resolution VII.2 (San José, 1999) modified the composition of the STRP, and Resolution IX.11 (Kampala, 2005) established the present modus operandi and terms of reference of the STRP. In addition to the 12 individual STRP members, delegates from the five International Organization Partners -- BirdLife International, International Water Management Institute (IWMI), IUCN-The World Conservation Union, Wetlands International, and the World Wide Fund for Nature International -- represent their organizations as full members of the Panel. In addition, representatives of the 18 subsidiary bodies of other Multilateral Environment Agreements and non-governmental organizations and associations specified in Resolution IX.11 are also invited to participate as permanent observers during each triennium, and representatives of other organizations are invited to participate in the work of the STRP as required by the nature of the tasks under study. The STRP's Work Plan for each triennium is built around the priority tasks determined by the Standing Committee, which are based upon requests from the Conference of the Parties by means of its Strategic Plan and COP Resolutions and Recommendations. The STRP members and observers are assisted in their work by a network of STRP National Focal Points who advise them directly on STRP matters and provide a liaison between the STRP and the networks of other relevant experts within each of their countries. The STRP's Expert Working Groups and the National Focal Points communicate by means of electronic mail and Internet discussion groups. The terms of reference for the STRP National Focal Points is available at http://ramsar.org/strp/key_strp_nfp_tor.htm. The work of the STRP is further assisted by the STRP Support Service, which is operated by Wetlands International under contract with the Convention. The purpose of the Support Service is to provide the STRP Expert Working Groups and National Focal Points with additional contacts among the expert networks of the International Organization Partners and other groups, identify gaps in needed expertise and endeavor to fill them, assemble a clearinghouse of additional information resources for the tasks of the Work Plan, and facilitate communication amongst the Working Groups, the Focal Points, and other sources of expertise. The Scientific and Technical Review Panel, 2006-2008
Regional representatives, with networking responsibilities:
Thematic experts (for STRP priority work areas):
The Convention's five International Organisation Partners (IOPs):
The Oversight Committee has appointed Dr Heather MacKay as Chair of the STRP for 2006-2008, and Ms Rebecca D'Cruz as Vice-Chair.
National Focal Points for STRP matters Reports of STRP meetings are available here. The Scientific and Technical Review Panel, 2003-2005
Prof. Teresita Borges (Ms), Senior Officer, Direction of the environment, Ministry of Science, Technology and Environment, Cuba (environmental policy and legal framework development including on protected areas, impact assessment, coastal zone management and biological diversity and cultural heritage, including for inland wetlands) Prof. Francisco
Contreras Espinosa, Professor-Investigator, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana-Iztapalapa,
Mexico (coastal lagoon research, including inventory assessment and management) Dr Max Finlayson, Director, Environmental Research Institute of the Supervising Scientist, Australia (inventory, assessment and monitoring, wise use, local communities, wetland management, restoration invasive species, and collaboration with other conventions) Prof. Ho Sinn-Chye, Director, National Oceanography Directorate, Ministry of Science, Technology and the Environment, Malaysia (aquatic biology and limnology, restoration, management and capacity building) Dr Jorge Jiménez Ramon, Director, Organisation for Tropical Studies, San Pedro, Costa Rica, Costa Rica (wetland restoration, site and basin management, mangrove conservation and wise use) Mr Najam Khurshid, Pakistan (waterbird and wetland research and conservation and project implementation, conservation and rural development, development of education materials and education centres) Prof. Eckhart Kuijken, Director General, Institute of Nature Conservation, Belgium (wetland conservation ecology and conservation policy preparation, including assessment, management planning, landscape ecology, education, training and policy advice; migratory goose ecology) Dr Heather MacKay (Ms), Research Manager and Head: Water and the Environment, Water Research Commission, South Africa (sustainable management of aquatic ecosystems, especially water quality and allocations and management, including environmental flows and groundwater issues) Mr Puttoo Manikchand, Research and Development Officer, National Parks and Conservation Service, Mauritius (wetland monitoring and management) Mrs Tatiana Minaeva, Senior Researcher, Tsentral'no-Lesnoy Biosphere Nature Reserve, Russian Federation (peatland science and conservation, national wetland policy and legislative development) Prof. Steven Njuguna, Managing Director & Environmental Consultant, SPARVS Agency Ltd. Environmental Consultancy Services, Kenya (management planning, wise use, biodiversity inventory and assessment and environmental impact assessment, training, education and awareness, monitoring and evaluation and strategic planning) Prof. Francisco Daniel Rilla Manta, Prof. of Environmental Management, Universidad Catolica del Uruguay, Uruguay (strategic development of wetland research and management, management planning and monitoring, restoration, and migratory species conservation) Mr David Stroud,
Senior Ornithologist, UK Joint Nature Conservation Committee, United Kingdom
(bird monitoring programmes, peatlands, Ramsar site designations) INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION PARTNERS (institutional members)
The Scientific and Technical Review Panel, 1999-2002
AFRICA Aboubacar Awaïss, Abdou Moumouni University of Niamey, Republic of Niger (inland hydrology, ecotechnology of inland water, fishery management, wetland management) Geoff Cowan, Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism, Republic of South Africa (landscape ecology, geography, hydrology, geomorphology, biogeography, water resource utilization) Harry Chabwela, University of Zambia (environmental impact assessment, biodiversity inventory, ecosystem evaluation, wetland and watershed management, community resource conservation, ecological zoning, game ranching, tourism) ASIA Mohammad Shatanawi, University of Jordan (hydraulics and irrigation, water resources policy and planning, water harvesting and conservation in arid zones, training) Angel Alcala, Commission on Higher Education, Philippines (tropical coastal/marine biology and ecology) EUROPE Jan Pokorný, Institute of Botany, Trebon, Czech Republic (botany, monitoring of ecological change, restoration, wetland management teaching/training) Toomas Saat, University of Tartu, Estonia (marine biology, hydrobiology, ichthyology, ornithology, wetland management planning) George Zalidis, University of Thessaloniki, Greece (wetland inventory and monitoring, soil science, GIS) Peter Maitland, Fish Conservation Centre, Scotland, United Kingdom (freshwater ecosystems, invertebrate monitoring, conservation of freshwater fish) NEOTROPICS Yara Schaeffer-Novelli, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil (coastal areas, especially mangroves and invertebrates, oil impacts, marinas and aquaculture) Jorge Jiménez, Organización de Estudios Tropicales, Costa Rica (coastal areas, mangroves and swamp forest, plant ecology, protected areas, watershed management) NORTH AMERICA Arthur Hawkins, US Fish and Wildlife Service, USA (watershed biology, local and regional planning, wetland and floodplain assessment, habitat restoration, biological indicators) Substitute Randy Milton, Department of Natural Resources, Canada (wildlife management in freshwater and coastal wetlands) OCEANIA Max Finlayson, Environmental Research Institute of the Supervising Scientist, Australia (impact assessment, inventory, training, Ramsar issues) Substitute Bronwen Golder, WWF International, New Zealand (community programmes, capacity building, economic and social assessment) INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION PARTNERS BirdLife International STRP 1996-1999 At the 6th Meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, held in Brisbane, Australia, 19-27 March 1996, the member states of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands selected new members for its Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP), which is charged with advising the Conference of the Parties, the Standing Committee, and the Bureau (secretariat) on technical issues of importance for the implementation of the Convention. The following wetland experts were chosen to serve from the close of the 6th Meeting of the COP until the end of the 7th Meeting of the COP (Costa Rica, 1999):
Members Alternate Members
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