What's
New @ Ramsar
5
August
2002![]()
Headline
story. Further workshop proceedings from the
Dakar International
Conference on Wetlands and Development.
Two new books have newly been released as long-awaited products of the 2nd International
Conference on Wetlands and Development, Dakar, Senegal, November 1998. These
A4-format 116-page volumes contain the proceedings of two of the most substantial
workshops of the conference and present the full texts of the presentations.
Integrated Wetlands and Water Resources Management,
edited by Ger Bergkamp, Jean-Yves Pirot, and Silvia Hostettler, contains 14
articles and the conclusions and recommendations of the workshop -- Strategies
for Wise Use of Wetlands: Best Practices in Participatory Management,
edited by Meg Gawler, includes 16 articles and an overview article by the editor.
Further information
can be sought from Wetlands International in Wageningen, The Netherlands, tel.
+31 317 478854, e-mail wetlands@wetlands.agro.nl,
and in the meantime more information, including the tables of contents, can
be seen here. [05/08/02]
Announcement.
ECRR study tour on river restoration set for 9-13 September.
Ute Menke writes: "The main goal of the study tour is to contribute to
the further development of a Pan European network on river restoration, which
is to carry out its activities under the umbrella of the European Centre for
River Restoration (ECRR). Next to the ECRR international conferences, organised
once per four years and bringing together representatives from all European
regions, ECRR starts to organise yearly study tours. These are regarded as relatively
low key activity with interactive exchange of experiences within a smaller group.
The study tour is open for all those involved in the fields of management, research
and communication of river restoration in Europe. We will start this year with
the organisation of the first ECRR study tour in the Netherlands, but in the
next years other countries in Europe should take their chance of organising
a ECRR study tour and of course the ECRR secretariat will support the activity
as much as possible." The full
announcement and sign-up details are available here. [05/08/02]
Headline story. Field Guide to the Fish
of Tasek
Bera
Ramsar Site, Pahang, Malaysia. Tasek
Bera, a freshwater swamp system situated in Central Peninsular Malaysia, was
declared a Ramsar Site in November 1994 when Malaysia became a Contracting Party
to the Ramsar Convention. The lake has a range of conservation values, of which,
it is important for its fish biodiversity. At least 94 species have been recorded
so far including the endangered Asian Arowana Scleropages formosus and
Silver Shark Balantocheilos melanopterus. The majority of fish species
found at the site are indigenous to Peninsular Malaysia and the site meets Ramsar
criteria 7 and 8 relating to fish conservation, amongst others. Recognising
the importance of conserving this unique fish biodiversity in Tasek Bera, Wetlands
International-Malaysia Programme has published A Field Guide to the Fish
of Tasek Bera Ramsar Site, Pahang, Malaysia with funding from DGIS in
July 2002. More detail is available here.
[01/08/02]
Who's
where?
Najam Khurshid, Regional Coordinator for Asia, is Beijing and Urumqi, China, for the workshop on "Conservation of High Altitude (Himalayan) Wetlands Lakes, Catchments and Glaciers (A WWF- Ramsar initiative)", 5-9 August 2002. The conference has these objectives: 1) identification of suitable sites for Ramsar listing, World Heritage declaration, Protected Area notification etc., 2) exchange of information and knowledge between countries on experiences in conserving these sites, 3) dialogue on initiating methodology, process for identification of suitable transboundary sites, which could become Ramsar sites, and 4) initiating specific steps to continue the process. [05/08/02]
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year.
New
on the Site: Wetlands
International's review of scientific support for Ramsar's STRP; Pan-American
Ramsar meeting report in English
and Español;
Brief report of allocations for 2002
under the Swiss Ramsar Grant for Africa.
[25/07/02]
The
Cultural Heritage of Wetlands available in Macedonian. Metodija
Velevski, secretary of the Macedonian National Ramsar Committee,
writes that a new 25-page full-color illustrated translation of Ramsar's "Cultural
Heritage of Wetlands" info pack has been published by the NRC and the Bird
Study and Protection Society of Macedonia, including an additional two-page
case study with text and photos detailing the ancient fishing techniques on
Dojran Lake, a transboundary lake shared by the FYR of Macedonia and
Greece. This attractive publication was funded by the IUCN Netherlands Committee
under their Small Grants for Wetlands Programme and provides an excellent model
for countries wishing to adapt Ramsar public-awareness materials into local
languages with Bureau staff assistance and financial support from sympathetic
sources. More information here.
[31/07/02]
Bolivia
names high-Andean Ramsar site. The Ramsar Bureau is delighted to
announce that, effective 11 July 2002, Bolivia has designated its 8th Wetland
of International Importance. "Lagos Poopó
y Uru Uru" (Oruro department, 967,607 ha, 18°46'S 63°13'W),
a National Ecological Reserve, are two associated brackish lakes at over 3,600m
altitude which fulfil all eight of the Ramsar Criteria and are excellent representatives
of the high-altitude Andean wetlands of the Puna ecoregion. Some 76 species
of birds have been reported for the site, including about 120,000 individuals
of flamingos Phoenicopterus chilensis, Phoenicoparrus andinus,
and Phoenicoparrus jamesi. Endemic and endangered fauna and flora, such
as vicuña and pumas, are supported, as well as the cactus Opuntia
and Trichocereus. Two pre-Hispanic cultures, the Aymaras and Urus, the
latter believed to be one of the oldest ethnic groups on the continent, dating
from 2000-1500 before the common era, are present in the area and practice subsistence
agriculture and fishing, with some mining and limited grazing and illegal bird
hunting also in evidence.
Hectares
sweepstakes.
In terms of total area, Bolivia (6,471,995 ha) has now passed Brazil into 5th
position in total Ramsar hectarage, behind Canada, the Russian Federation, Botswana,
and Peru. There are presently 1180 Ramsar sites, covering 103,250,356 hectares,
brought by the 133 Contracting Parties under the Ramsar designation. [30/07/02]![]()
Ramsar
Joint Work Plan with SPREP. At the Ramsar Oceania Regional meeting
hosted by the South Pacific Regional Environment Programme
(SPREP) in Samoa in May 2002, the participants reviewed a draft Joint
Work Plan between the Ramsar Convention and SPREP, which will implement the
Memorandum of Cooperation
between the two organisations signed at the Samoa meeting. Here is the final
JWP prepared by SPREP and the Ramsar Bureau with the assistance of former Bureau
Deputy Secretary General Bill Phillips. The Plan is designed to help support
strengthening capacity in Pacific Island States for wetland conservation and
wise use throughout the Pacific Region. Click
here please. [26/07/02]
|
Report now available. Pan-American Regional Meeting report. Just as the hilarity begins to fade into memory, the meeting report appears to bring back those poignant moments. Ninety representatives of Ramsar Contracting Parties in both the Neotropical and North America regions, countries not yet Parties, intergovernmental organizations, and national and international NGOs gathered in Ecuador earlier in the month to assess their implementation of the Convention and discuss common regional positions on matters soon to be debated at Ramsar COP8 in Valencia in November 2002. The governments of Canada, Ecuador, Spain, and the United States made the events possible through their generous support. The meeting report is now available in English and Español, and some evocative photos of the meeting and the excursion to the Isla Santay Ramsar site may well begin bobbing to the surface in a matter of a few days. [25/07/02]
News
from the SGF. Lithuania completes 1999 SGF project on GIS capacity-building.
Ramsar's Sergey Dereliev reports on Lithuania's
Small Grants Fund project to provide hardware, software, and training on GIS
applications for the management staff of all five Ramsar sites in that country.
Read it here before the
wire services get hold of it and shape it to their own agendae. [25/07/02]
Volunteer
intern in the Bureau.
The Bureau is pleased to announce that Ms Maya Kanetsuka has joined
the Ramsar staff for the summer months on a volunteer basis, chiefly to assist
in preparations for Ramsar COP8. Maya is presently living in Geneva and is
also working with the World Health Organization as an intern. [25/07/02]
Asia-Pacific
Migratory Waterbird Strategy meeting. The Asia-Pacific
Migratory Waterbird Conservation Committee (MWCC), which is responsible
for coordinating the development, monitoring and implementation of the Asia-Pacific
Migratory Waterbird Conservation Strategy: 2001-2005, held its 7th Meeting in
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, between 19-20 June 2002. The MWCC comprises representation
from seven governments (Australia, People's Republic of China, Japan, India,
Russia, Indonesia and USA), the Ramsar and Bonn (CMS) Conventions, BirdLife
International, the World Wide Fund for Nature, Chairs of Species Working Groups
(Anatidae, cranes and shorebirds), UNDP/GEF and Wetlands International Specialist
Groups. Here is a brief report of the meeting,
with a few subtle photos. [24/07/02]
MedWet
Unit staff up to full complement. Spyros Kouvelis,
head of Ramsar's MedWet Coordination Unit, based in Athens, Greece, writes:
"I am pleased to announce that at last the MedWet Coordination Unit team
is complete. Last week, Angela Kyriazis took
up her responsibilities as Programme Development Officer, seconded to the MW/CU
by EKBY. Angela has a biology background and a good experience on EU-Funded
projects as she had been responsible for managing all the LIFE-Nature projects
in Greece from 1991-1997, being responsible of the external unit of the Commission's
DG XI.D.2 in Athens. Her addition to the team is very good news for us, as we
expect her to give a valuable hand with developing a good set of projects for
MedWet. She has already started working on developing a concept for the upcoming
LIFE-Nature call, for which she will soon get in touch with the MedWet centres.
Angela's direct email is kyriazis@medwet.org." [18/07/02]
Restoration
of Mediterranean Wetlands (2002). The Greek Biotope/Wetland Centre
(EKBY) in Thessaloniki and the Hellenic Ministry of the Environment, Physical
Planning and Public Works have published, in conjunction with the MedWet Initiative,
a new book on wetland restoration in the Mediterranean region. Edited by Ramsar
STRP member George Zalidis of Aristotle University, T. L. Crisman of the University
of Florida (USA), and P. A. Gerakis of EKBY, the 237-page softcover volume contains
(in addition to a preface by the Ramsar Secretary General, Delmar Blasco) 15
essays on 1) physical, chemical, and biological aspects of restoration, 2) site
selection, design, and monitoring of restoration, and 3) case studies of regional
restoration experience, authored by a wide range of distinguished scholars,
a number of whom are familiar to the Ramsar community, such as Mike Smart, Christian
Perennou, Jan Pokorny, and Maria José Vinals. Further information can
be sought directly from EKBY, ekby@ekby.gr.
[18/07/02]
Photo
opportunity. Football
at Ramsar. Ramsar staff do not only save wetlands -- some of them,
in fact, run after footballs as well. Here's a collectors'-item
group photo of the football team of the Three Mighty Environmental Institutions
of Gland, Switzerland (IUCN, WWF International, and Ramsar), which regularly
trots out onto the field of play against all comers and hopes for the best.
[18/07/02]
Tour
du Valat seeks Mediterranean project leader. The Tour du Valat Biological
Station, a private non-profit organisation, is a research centre for the conservation
of Mediterranean wetlands. Located in the Camargue, it has a staff of approximately
100 people and cooperates with a wide network of institutional and private partners
in and outside France, mainly within the Mediterranean basin. Tour du Valat
plays a key role in MedWet, an initiative devoted to the conservation and rational
use of Mediterranean wetlands, and now it welcomes applications for the post
of
Project Leader, Integrated
Management of Mediterranean Wetlands. The announcement is available here.
[link
later removed] [17/07/02]
![]() |
![]() |
Ramsar and Akrotiri wetlands, Cyprus. The Akrotiri wetland complex in Cyprus is an important aquatic ecosystem of several interconnected parts: the Akrotiri salt lake, the Phasouri marshes (reedbeds and surrounding wet grasslands), flat open and shrub habitats, and salt marshes connecting the marshes and the salt lake. The Ramsar Bureau was contacted in 2001 by Cypriot individuals and NGOs concerned about construction works inside the ecosystem in the UK's Western Sovereign Base Area on the island's Akrotiri peninsula, for an additional large communications antenna. In August 2001, the British High Commission in Cyprus and the Cyprus Ministry of Foreign Affairs issued a joint statement on the Akrotiri antenna, in which they agreed among other things to cooperate on resolving the question and work towards Ramsar designation for the site. On 19 June 2002, the Cyprus Green Party convened a seminar on issues related to Akrotiri, and the Ramsar Bureau was invited to participate, together with some 60 local stakeholders and local and national elected officials, NGOs, scientists, legal experts, Cypriot civil servants, and representatives of the Sovereign Base Administration Authority. Here Ramsar's Tobias Salathé reports on the meeting and provides the Bureau's mission report, which offers suggestions for the way forward based upon his discussions with the authorities on the scene. [12/07/02]
Report
on Euro Med Ministerial Conference. The Euro
Mediterranean Ministerial Conference on the Environment took place
in Athens 8 to 10 July 2002, invited by the Greek Ministry of Environment, Physical
Planning and Public Works, organized jointly by the Ministry and the EU Commission,
and chaired jointly by the Greek Minister for the Environment and the Danish
Minister for the Environment (who is currently the President of the European
Council of Ministers). Spyros Kouvelis, the MedWet Coordinator, was present,
and here are both his brief
report of the conference and his presentation
to the High-Level Forum portion of the proceedings. [12/07/02]
Germany
extends Schleswig-Holstein Wadden Sea Ramsar site. The Waddensee,
shared by the Netherlands, Germany, and Denmark, is the largest coherent area
of tidal flats in the world and of immense international ecological importance.
The entire area is managed under a tri-national agreement overseen by the Common
Wadden Sea Secretariat, but in Ramsar terms many of the various parts of it
are broken up in a number of designations of Wetlands of International Importance,
for example, one large one in the Netherlands and five in Germany. Now Germany
has significantly extended its Ramsar site called "Schleswig-Holsteinisches
Wattenmeer" (first designated in 1991) from 299,000 hectares
to 454,988 hectares, in a revised Ramsar Information Sheet that Nick Davidson
calls a model of a well-compiled RIS, "a great example of how to present
information for a large and complex site". As such, the RIS itself will
be reproduced here in the coming days. [11/07/02]
Announcement.
Call
for applications for Ramsar Intern for Africa. The Ramsar Bureau
is seeking applications for the position of Intern/Assistant
to the Regional Coordinator for Africa, to replace Simon Rafanomezantsoa
of Madagascar at the end of his successful tenure in the secretariat. For this
internship the applicants must be nationals of countries on the African continent
and have lived most of their lives in that region. The position requires a very
high level of English or French and an ability to work in the other language.
The age limit for applicants is 30 years old. Qualified candidates from that
region are encouraged to read the general
terms of reference for Ramsar Internships and apply by 31 August 2002,
to begin on 16 December 2002. [09/07/02]
Reminder.
Applications
still welcome for Ramsar Secretary General. The Bureau is still welcoming
applications for this most senior post in the 20-member Ramsar secretariat based
in Gland, Switzerland, near Geneva. The deadline for applications is 30 September
2002, and interviews with shortlisted candidates will take place just prior
to the 29th meeting of the Standing Committee, 5-7 February 2003 -- the starting
date is foreseen as 21 July 2003. The vacancy announcement, including qualifications
sought and terms of reference, is available here in English, Français,
and Español. [link
later removed] [09/07/02]
Announcement.
Additional grant for Global Peatland Initiative.
Marcel J. Silvius, Senior Programme Manager
at Wetlands International (Silvius@wetlands.agro.nl),
writes to Ramsar Forum: "Dear all, I am pleased to announce that the Netherlands
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, DGIS, has provided an additional grant to the Global
Peatland Initiative, as part of its cooperation with Wetlands International
under the 'Partners for Wetlands Programme'. The programme will run until 31
December 2003. The GPI is a partnership programme of the International Mire
Conservation Group (IMCG), the International Peat Society (IPS), Alterra - Green
World Research, IUCN-Netherlands Committee, and Wetlands International. Information
on the deadlines for proposal submission and how to develop project applications
can be found on the Wetlands International
Web site." [10/07/02]
Spain
names Iberia as official air carrier for Ramsar COP8. The
Ministry of Environment of Spain has designated IBERIA as the official carrier
for Ramsar COP8. IBERIA offers the special fares described here. Interested
participants should contact Iberia and make reference to the code given at the
end of this text. / El Ministerio de Medio Ambiente
de España ha designado a la compañía Iberia como transportador
oficial para la COP8 de Ramsar, la que ofrece las ventajas que se describen
a continuación. Para hacer de uso de esta oferta los interesados deben
contactar a Iberia y hacer mención del código que se menciona
al final del texto. / Le Ministère espagnol
de l'Environnement a désigné la compagnie aérienne Iberia
comme transporteur officiel pour la COP8 de Ramsar. Iberia propose à
cette occasion les tarifs spéciaux indiqués ci-dessous. Pour en
bénéficier, les intéressés doivent se mettre en
rapport avec Iberia et mentionner le code indiqué à la fin du
présent document. [05/07/02]
[The
links are out of date and have been removed.]
Burundi
becomes the Convention's 133rd Party. The Bureau is very pleased
to report that Burundi deposited its instrument of accession with the Director-General
of UNESCO on 5 June 2002, which means that the Convention will come into force
for Burundi on 5 October 2002. The new Party's first Ramsar site is Delta
de la Rusizi de la Réserve Naturelle de la Rusizi et la partie nord de
la zone littorale du lac Tanganyika (1,000 hectares, 03°20'S
029°20'E), part of the Rusizi Nature Reserve. Comprising the Rusizi delta
and northern shore of Lake Tanganyika, part of the lower Rusizi plain shared
with the Democratic Republic of Congo and Rwanda, the site is considered an
"ornithological paradise" for its stopover and nesting places for
migratory waterbirds and makes an ecological connection between Lakes Tanganyika
and Kivu. In addition to large numbers of aquatic birds, the site supports the
reptiles crocodiles and tortoises in significant numbers and a fish life, dominated
by the Cichlidae, which presents a marked endemicity - the lungfish Protopterus
aethiopicus is also present. Among mammals the hippopotamus is most abundant,
and the sitatunga or marshbuck (Tragelaphus spekei), becoming rare throughout
Africa, can be found within the site. The use of cattails Typha domingensis
in basketry forms an important source of revenue for local people, and customary
fishing is practiced in the lakes of the delta. Rice and cotton growing is carried
out in the surrounding area, and the use of fertilizers and pesticides is seen
as a potential threat to the biodiversity of the delta and lake. The
Ramsar family welcomes this new Party and its fascinating new Ramsar site.
[04/07/02] [français et/y español]
Ramsar
Award winners announced for 2002. The Ramsar Wetland Conservation
Awards were created by the Conference of the Parties in 1996, and the first
Awards were conferred at the opening ceremonies of Ramsar COP7 in San José,
Costa Rica, in 1999. The awards for 2002, to be presented at Ramsar COP8 in
Valencia in November 2002, have now been announced. Their purpose is to recognize
and honor, every three years, individuals, organizations, and government agencies
that have made a significant contribution to wetland conservation and sustainable
use in any part of the world.
This
year the Awards are recognizing a private company in Australia, a government
agency in India, and a consortium of NGOs in Central Europe. The Ramsar Award
is complemented by the Evian
Special Prize, consisting of US$10,000 generously donated
by the Danone Group (France), owner of Evian Mineral Waters, as part
of a programme of support to the Ramsar Convention.
The 2002 Award winners are: Banrock Station Wines (Australia); The Chilika Development Authority (India); The NGO Trinational Initiative for the Morava-Dyje Floodplain (Czech and Slovak Republics and Austria). In addition, two Recognitions for Excellence have been bestowed upon Dr Monique Coulet of France and Dr Max Finlayson of Australia. The press release is available here, and there you'll find links to the citations and photos of each of these five laureates. [01/07/02] [français et/y español]
Belatedly
available.
Summary of Ramsar Small Grants Fund projects in the 2001 cycle.
The Conference of the Contracting Parties to the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
established the Ramsar Small Grants Fund (SGF) with
a view to providing assistance for wetland conservation and wise use in developing
countries and countries with economies in transition.In the 2001 cycle of project
proposals, a total of 49 completed proposals were evaluated by Ramsar staff
and presented to the Standing Committee at its 26th meeting, 3-7 December 2001.
Within the funds available, a total of nine project proposals were approved
for funding in this year's cycle, for a total of 334,890 Swiss francs. In addition,
a further five of the SGF proposals were taken over for funding by Wetlands
International, as part of its agreement with the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign
Affairs (DGIS), and by the World Wide Fund
for Nature's Living Waters Programme, for an additional total of
193,979 Swiss francs. Thus, thanks to this additional assistance, a total of
14 Small Grants Fund projects have received funding in the 2001 cycle, for a
total of SFR 528,869 [ca.US$ 330,000 at that time]. Voluntary contributions
directly to the Small Grants Fund in the 2001 cycle have been made by Austria,
Germany, Japan, the UK, and
the USA, and
by WWF Living Waters Programme in addition to its two adopted projects.
Here is a brief description of the 14 projects.
[02/07/02]
Wetlands
International launches Strategy 2002-2005. Wetlands International
has launched its new Strategy, a document that represents the culmination of
two years of collaborative effort from staff, members and partners to re-organize
Wetlands International's programme activities into a coherent and integrated
global plan - it re-defines and clarifies the organization's focus and presents
a clear vision for the future, articulating its major aims for the next four
years. The strategy portrays the organization as "a science-based international
provider of information and advice for the wise use of wetlands worldwide".
The launch letter from Dr Max Finlayson,
President of Wetlands International, is available here, and the document
itself can be downloaded in PDF format from the Wetlands International Web site
at http://www.wetlands.org.[27/06/02]
West
Africa Subregional Meeting reported. On 5-7 June, some 63 representatives
from Ramsar Contracting Parties, the International Organization Partners, and
regional and international organizations gathered in Cotonou, Benin, for the
Convention's subregional meeting for West Africa, Madagascar, and Comoros, with
the hospitality of the Agence Beninoise de l'Environnement and generous financial
assistance from the Governments of Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland. The participants
identified challenges and outlined actions in five major areas: a unified voice
in COP8; the wise use of all wetlands; designation and management of Ramsar
sites; international cooperation; and implementation capacity. The
agreed conclusions are now available here in English [French to follow],
with a few representative photos. [20/06/02]
More to follow.
Watch this space. Feedback and suggestions are welcome
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 . . . . . . Take a number and a plastic
chair -- we'll call you when there's room at the head of the queue.