What's
New @ Ramsar
2
May 2000![]()
Headline
story. Memo
of Cooperation signed with Cartagena Convention.
At ceremonies yesterday (1 May 2000) at the International Environment House
in Geneva, Switzerland, Mr Delmar Blasco, Secretary General
of the Convention on Wetlands, and Mr Nelson Andrade, Regional
Coordinator for the United Nation Environment Programme's Caribbean Action Plan,
signed a Memorandum of Cooperation intended to help Contracting Parties to the
Conventions to identify and strengthen conservation of those sites of international
importance that are relevant to both Conventions. The Convention for
the Protection and Development of the Marine Environment of the Wider Caribbean
Region, known as the Cartagena Convention
from its place of adoption in Colombia in 1983, came into force in 1986 and,
through its secretariat, serves to facilitate the direction and coordination
of the legal implementation of the Caribbean Action Plan. The new MOC contains
a 'Statement of Work' which itemizes eight areas of intended cooperation and
information sharing, all intended to assist in identifying potential wetlands
for nomination as Ramsar sites or as protected areas under the SPAW Protocol,
avoiding duplication of efforts and maximizing joint efforts where appropriate,
and mutally supporting both Conventions amongst their Parties. Here
are some news and photos, and here's
the text of the MOC. [2/5/00]
Headline
story. Ramsar Sözlesmesi El Kitabi:
Sulak Alanlar Sözlesmesi Için Rehber. That's
only the beginning. Here's another: A Ramsari Egyezmény kézikönyve:
Kézikönyv a vizes területekröl szóló egyezményhez. The 2nd edition
of the Ramsar Manual has just
been published in Turkish and
Hungarian by the authorities in
those countries, and most recently in Chinese
as well by the Ramsar Administrative Authority in China. (The
Ramsar Manual has been superseded by the events of the 7th Conference of the
Parties in May 1999, and it probably won't be updated, since the Ramsar Info
Pack and the Ramsar "Toolkit" of handbooks now serve the same purpose,
but with proper cautions it can still be immensely valuable in countries where
the Convention's 3 working languages may not be commonly spoken.)
Speaking of translations, Naoko Satoh (satoh@marimo.or.jp) of the Kushiro International Wetlands Centre in Japan has informed us that our Economic Valuation of Wetlands book (1997) has just been published in Japanese, in a translation by former Ramsar Technical Officer Satoshi Kobayashi. In addition, the new Ramsar video has also been produced in a Russian version, produced by Wetlands International - Russia Programme, and a Chinese version by the government authorities. We're also happy to report that an Arabic version of the Ramsar Info Pack has just been completed and will be shipped out in astonishing quantities in the near future. [1/5/00]
Who's Where?
Nick Davidson, Deputy Secretary General, is in Gdansk, Poland, 2-6 May, to participate in the final session of the Coastal - Global Oceanographic Observing System (C-GOOS), part of a large UNESCO Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission activity over the past four years. [1/5/00]
Anada Tiéga, Regional Coordinator for Africa, is in Accra, Ghana, to participate in the 5th Regional Training Course, 2-5 May, on developing National Wetlands Policies, organized by Wetlands International in collaboration with Ghana Wildlife Society and the Ghana Wildlife Department. Other participants include Mike Smart (former Ramsar DSG) on behalf of the Wetland Waterfowl Trust, Abdoulaye Ndiaye and STRP-member Aboubacar Awaďss of Wetlands International, and staff from the Ministries of 19 West and Central African countries. [1/5/00]
New
on the Site: A
brief history of the Convention; Conclusions
of the 3rd meeting of the MedWet/Com, 1-5 April, and -- newly --
the French version.
[19/4/00]
New
Ramsar brochure ready.
The updated Ramsar brochure, designed by Saatchi and Saatchi, with all the very
latest Ramsar info for the neophyte and wetland tyro, is now available in any
reasonable quantities to all practitioners and wetland theoreticians who may
wish to plod through the malls handing them out to any citizens willing to receive
them. The text is already available on this Web
site in the three Ramsar languages, but here we have something you can
fold up and put in your pocket and take away with you. If you should want
some of these, please write to Ms Valerie Higgins, higgins@ramsar.org, and specify
quantity and language (English, French, Spanish).
The loss of Boris Krizan, 1948-2000. Born in 1948 in eastern Slovenia, Mr Krizan graduated in
Geography and served as a secondary school teacher until 1982, when he joined the Regional
Institute for Conservation of Natural and Cultural Heritage in Piran. In the 1980s he was
among the first conservationists who prepared the short and long term plans for the
conservation of natural heritage for the coastal region of Slovenia. He was
internationally involved in conservation of natural and cultural heritage, particularly in
the Mediterranean basin, and became particularly involved in conservation of the Secovlje
salina, which in 1992 became the first Slovenian Ramsar Site. In 1993, he became
the director of the Institute, yet continued his personal and professional active
involvement in the conservation of the Salina. He died on 17th April 2000.
Delmar Blasco, Secretary General of the Ramsar Convention, writes: "Mr Krizan became a valued colleague through his participation in the Mediterranean Wetlands Initiative, notably in the framework of a project on the Secovjle salt pans carried out with the Tour du Valat, and through his leadership of the Slovenian delegation to the Second Meeting of the Mediterranean Wetlands Committee in Valencia in early 1999. Mr Krizans kind and warm personality, and his sense of hospitality, endeared him to all who met him. Working with him was delightful, as his sense of humour brightened the dullest of meetings. All of us in the MedWet Team and in the Ramsar Convention Bureau will remember Mr Krizans valuable contribution to nature conservation, and especially to the preservation of the Secovjle salt pans." [27/4/00]
Ramsar video in Russian. Irina Kamenova has informed the Bureau
that the new Ramsar video has been produced in a Russian version by Wetlands
International - Russia Programme. Ramsar's Alexander Belokurov
affirms that the new production has been very well translated. Several Contracting Parties
have requested production-quality Beta versions of the video for translation into local
languages, but this seems to be the first one to see the light of day. [28/4/00]
Announcement.
Free wetland education materials
from Ducks Unlimited. Rick
Wishart (r_wishart@ducks.ca), Manager of Education Programmes for Ducks Unlimited
Canada, sent this announcement to the Ramsar Forum on 26 April: "For your
information Ducks Unlimited Canada has developed new wetland education resource
materials for teachers and students. These are in pdf manual format (viewed
on Acrobat Reader software which can be downloaded from the DUC site) which
can be viewed, downloaded and printed free of charge. To date senior elementary
and middle school components are available and a high school unit is nearing
completion. For those interested, please view these materials at the following
site on the DUC WebPage http://www.ducks.ca/edu/resource.html Please
provide me with any feedback on how these might be improved and do inform others
who may be interested in these products. Best regards, Rick Wishart
PhD, Ducks Unlimited Canada, P0 Box 1160 Stonewall MB CANADA, ROC2ZO. [28/4/00]
Question.
Salamanders in Japan.
Dr Satoshi Kobayashi,
Ramsar's Technical Officer for Asia 1991-1996, seeks advice about salamanders.
Read his query here.
[28/4/00]
Hint
on Canada. Wetkit now online.
Click on http://www.wetkit.net and
type in "ramsar" as the search keyword, and see lots of good Ramsar-related
things about Canada. Pauline Lynch-Stewart announces the advent
of Wetkit: Tools for Working with Wetlands, a collection of practical wetland-related
tools sponsored by the North American Wetlands Conservation Council (Canada)
and Envirokit Solutions Inc. [28/4/00]
New
Regional Coordinator for Ramsar.
Mr Najam Khurshid has arrived in Switzerland to take up his
appointment as our new Regional Coordinator for Asia, replacing Ms Rebecca DCruz,
who returned to Malaysia at the end of February after a very successful 3-year
tenure in the Bureau. Mr Khurshid, from Pakistan, has been with WWF-Pakistan
for the past ten years and has served as Conservation Director, in addition
to being in charge of the WWF-Pakistan Wetlands Programme. Here
are some more details. [26/4/00]
World
Water Watch launched.
A new magazine has been launched to track developing issues in the global water
crisis and advocate the sustainable use of this precious commodity. Entitled
World Water Watch: the Magazine of the Freshwater
Environment, the publication is planned for four issues
a year -- the first appeared in January 2000, and the second, a special issue
on the impending Second World Water Forum and Ministerial Conference in the
Hague, appeared in early March. Find
out more here. [25/4/00]
Progress towards "The River Basin Initiative". The Ramsar Convention Bureau, in cooperation with the
Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and the support of a number of
partners, is presently planning to launch what may be called "The River Basin
Initiative". The initiative will aim at establishing a network to link and support
activities and projects in which the principles and practice of integrated management of
biodiversity, wetlands, and river basins/ catchments/ watersheds will be demonstrated. The
overall objective of the initiative will be to promote and facilitate integrated
management of wetlands, biodiversity and river basins worldwide. Its expected outcome in
the short term will be a number of successful initiatives in at least 20 countries to
achieve this objective, as well as significant progress by Contracting Parties in
implementing relevant provisions of the CBD and Ramsar, enhanced partnerships in the area
of integrated wetland/ biodiversity and river basin management, and the establishment of
an information network to facilitate exchange of information and experience.
The secretariat of the initiative will be based at the Global Environment Centre in Malaysia, with the support of the Ramsar and the CBD secretariats. It is expected that the initiative will be formally launched on the occasion of the 5th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CBD, to be held in Nairobi, Kenya, on 15-26 May, 2000. For more information on the "River Basin Initiative" (title to be confirmed), write to Faizal Parish, Global Environment Centre, in Malaysia: e-mail fparish@genet.po.my , Fax +60-3 757 7003. -- Reprinted from World Water Watch, March 2000. [25/4/00]
GEF
supports major initiative on the African Eurasian Flyway.
After nine months' intensive work by Wetlands International, the Global Environment
Facility (GEF) has recently approved 350,000 USD (matched by a further ca. 300,000
USD) towards the preparation of a major capacity building initiative for the
critical wetlands that make up the African / Eurasian Migratory Waterbird Flyway.
The project submission was prepared by Wetlands International (-AEME), with
support of the UNEP-GEF (one of the three implementing agencies of the GEF).
Here are the details.
[16/4/00]
Ramsar and World
Heritage cooperation. Following on
from the memorandum of cooperation between the Ramsar Bureau and UNESCOs World
Heritage Centre, signed on 14 May 1999, mutual assistance between the two
Conventions has been growing ever closer. Quite a large number of World Heritage natural
properties overlap with Ramsar sites (see list),
as do World Heritage In Danger sites with Ramsar sites on the Montreux Record, and
discussions are frequent and ongoing between Ramsar Regional Coordinators and members of IUCNs
World Commission on Protected Areas (WCPA), the World Heritage advisory body for
natural heritage. Anada Tiéga, Ramsars Regional Coordinator for
Africa, has recently returned from a joint advisory mission with World Heritage to Ichkeul
in Tunisia, and is presently in Paris, 17-20 April 2000, for the World Heritage
"International Task Force Meeting on the World Heritage Action Programme for capacity
building for outreach, Natural Heritage networking, education, cooperation and training
(CONNECT)". Dwight Peck, Ramsars Web Editor, has just returned
from participating in the "International Expert Meeting on the Revision of the
Operational Guidelines for the Implementation of the World Heritage Convention",
hosted by English Heritage in Canterbury, England, 10-14 April. Plans are under way to
find still more new areas of cooperation to advance to shared objectives of both
Conventions. [18/4/00]
Mediterranean
Wetland Committee 3, Djerba, Tunisia, 1-5 April.
Resolution VII.22 of Ramsar COP7, entitled Collaborative structure for Mediterranean
wetlands, approved "the establishment of the Mediterranean Wetlands
Committee (MedWet/Com) within the framework of the Convention, as a forum for
collaboration on wetland issues in the Mediterranean and as an advisor to the
Convention in this region". MedWet/Com held its 3rd meeting
in the island of Djerba in Tunisia, at the invitation of the Ramsar Administrative
Authority in the country, the Directorate General of Forests. Twenty-three countries
from the Mediterranean basin were present, plus other intergovernmental and
non-governmental MedWet/Com members, making a total of some 100 participants.
The meeting reviewed the work done during the past year under the Mediterranean
Wetlands Initiative and approved a series of recommendations for action until
31 December 2001. The meeting included a Technical Session on "The cultural
aspects of Mediterranean wetlands and their potential contribution to the sustainable
use of wetlands resources", which approved a series of recommendations
for action in this area of the social sciences, which would constitute a new
area for the Conventions work, traditionally focused on the biological
aspects, and more recently the hydrological aspects, of wetlands.
MedWet/Com3 demonstrated that the MedWet Initiative is gaining momentum in terms of the commitment of participating countries and agencies, the number of projects being executed and planned, and donors interest. The approved Conclusions of the meeting are attached (version française). MedWet/Com4 will be held in Portugal in June 2001, at the invitation of the Ramsar Administrative Authority, ICN, the National Institute for Nature Conservation. [10/4/00]
The UK plans to designate the
Thames Estuary. The Department of
Environment, Transport and the Regions has announced: "A significant boost was given
to important wetland habitats on the Thames Estuary today, with the classification of the
Thames Estuary and Marshes as a Special Protection Area (SPA) for Birds and also as a
Wetland of International Importance under the Ramsar Convention. The new site was formally
classified by Environment Minister Chris Mullin. Covering over 5,500 hectares, the site is
of special importance within Britain and the EC for the number of wildfowl and wader
species which use it, both for over-wintering and as a migratory staging post. In winter
the site regularly supports over 20,000 waterfowl. The wintering birds include Avocet,
Ringed Plover, Dunlin and Knot. Other species who regularly visit the site include
breeding common tern, wintering Bewicks swan, hen harrier and short-eared owl. Mr
Mullin said: 'This demonstrates the Governments commitment to recognising the
international importance of these wetland and ornithological sites. I am pleased to give
this important site the status it deserves.'" The Ramsar Bureau looks forward to
receiving the designation papers for this important site. [6/4/00]
Pablo Canevari. The Ramsar Convention Bureau was deeply saddened to learn
of the untimely death of Pablo Canevari in Argentina, his home country,
on 22nd March. He had recently returned to Argentina after spending three years
as Technical Officer at the Convention on Migratory Species in Bonn, and had taken up the
position of Director of the South America Programme of Wetlands International in Buenos
Aires. His education and career reflected his passion for the protection of migratory
birds and, as a researcher, teacher and project organiser, he made major advances in
conservation. Through his work we had a long-standing contributor to the implementation of
the Ramsar Convention in many ways, from COP4 in Montreux to COP7 in Costa Rica, as well
as regional meetings in Bolivia in 1993, Panama in 1995 and Peru in 1998.
Pablo was always cheerful and funny and was able to make the people around him feel relaxed and optimistic. In his free time, which was not much, he painted beautiful water colours which have been used to illustrate many Argentine bird guides. Our thoughts and those of all his friends from Bolivia, Brasil, Colombia, Chile, Argentina and many others who have sent messages to us, are today with Maria Jose, his wife and his children Sofía, 21, Andrés, 17 and Valentina, 12, his brother Marcelo and the rest of his family. [3/4/00]
Reorganization
for Wetlands International - the Americas.
Wetlands International - the Americas has announced some new interim arrangements
for its administration, and the press release includes a tribute to the late
Pablo Canevari, who had recently returned to Buenos Aires to
lead the development of Wetlands International in that region. Here
is the announcement. [5/4/00]
The UK announces planned
extension of Ramsar site. Valuable
winter nesting and breeding sites on the coast of North-East England are to get extra
protection, said Environment Minister, Chris Mullin. The Teesmouth and Cleveland Coast Special Protection
Area (SPA) and Ramsar Site, which is used by more than 20,000 wintering waterfowl every
year, is to be increased in size by nearly 33% (304 hectares). The site, which will now
cover more than 1247 hectares, is also used by populations of Little Tern and by
populations of internationally important migratory species. The whole of the Tees and
Hartlepool Foreshore and Wetlands SSSI and a small part of the Durham Coast SSSI have also
been included. Chris Mullin commented: "This newly expanded protected site will be a
vital refuge for many species of waterfowl, both for wintering and breeding". The
Ramsar Bureau looks forward to receiving this planned extension. [3/4/00]
Colloquium
in honor of Cyrille de Klemm, Paris.
"Biological Diversity and Environmental Law" is the subject of an
international symposium sponsored by the Council of Europe and others in Paris,
30-31 March, one year after the death of renowned legal scholar and longtime
legal adviser to the Ramsar Convention. Here
is a brief description of the colloquium. [30/3/00]
Update.
More news of the Tisza
River. As András
Böhm reports to the Ramsar Forum, it's
not good. [30/3/00]
Announcement.
10th International Scientific Wadden Sea
Symposium, "Challenges to the Wadden Sea Area",
Groningen, The Netherlands 31 October - 3 November 2000. Right here. [30/3/00]
Announcement. 21st Annual Society of Wetlands Scientists
Meeting. Set for Québec, August
6-12, 2000, Dr Montserrat Carbonell announces a symposium: Science and Local Communities: Strengthening Partnerships for
Effective Wetland Management. [30/3/00]
Ecuador designates
4th Ramsar site. Ecuador has named
the Convention's 1023rd Ramsar site, Abras de Mantequilla (22,500
hectares) in Los Ríos province. A natural permanent swampy lagoon-lake system, the
wetland plays an important role in the conservation of bird fauna biodiversity by
supporting 3 migratory species: Anas discours, Chordeiles minor spp. and Catharus
ustulatus; 3 rare species and 8 endemic species, including Furnarious cinnamomeus,
Veniliornis callonotus callonotus, Glaucidium peruanum and Turdus maculirostris.
It also supports a significant population of indigenous fish and at the same time is a
source of food, a spawning site and a development area for those species of fish that
depend upon the wetland. However, over-exploitation of water resources combined with the
introduction of tilapia for fish-farming are resulting in a dramatic decline of the
populations of indigenous species, not only in Abras, but in all coastal area
watercourses. An assessment of the current state of the wetland is foreseen and should
serve as a basis for development of a management plan for the area. [28/3/00]
More
to follow. Watch this space.
Feedback and suggestions to: the Ramsar Convention Bureau, Rue Mauverney
28, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22 999 0169, e-mail
). Updated
regularly by Dwight Peck, Ramsar Bureau.
Back
Issues of the Bulletin Board. Early in every month, the current edition
of the Bulletin Board is copied to the Ramsar Archives
page, and you can dig through the back issues there -- their contents are still
indexed on the Global Index page
in perpetuity.
visitors
to this site since........ Wait . . . . . . . ? . . . . . . ?? Oooh, I
must have dropped it.