What's
New @ Ramsar
1
May 2003![]()
Headline
story. Global Biodiversity Forum for Eastern Europe and the CIS.
On 23-25 April 2003, the GBF held its first Regional Session for
Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (of the former USSR)
in Chisinau (Kishinev in Russian), the capital of the Republic of Moldova which
joined the Ramsar Convention in 2000. The meeting was perfectly organized by
IUCN-the World Conservation Union, through their Moscow-based office for Russia
and the CIS, and by Biotica, the Ecological Society of Moldova. It brought together
more than 150 participants from Moldova, Russia, most of the CIS states, Estonia,
Lithuania, and Romania, as well as representatives of the World Bank, UNDP,
UNEP, GEF, UNESCO Man and Biosphere, the European Centre for Nature Conservation,
the Ramsar Convention and others. Here
Ramsar's Tobias Salathé supplies a brief report on the meeting
and a subsequent field visit to the Prut River floodplain, with a few photos.
[01/05/03]
Headline
story. Estonia names 11th Ramsar site.
The Ramsar Bureau is pleased to announce that the Government of Estonia
has designated Laidevahe Nature Reserve (2,424
hectares, 58o18'N 022o49'E), a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve and Important Bird Area,
for inclusion in the Ramsar List. A mosaic wetland complex with broad diversity
of lagoons, shallow coastal lakes, more than 40 islets, coastal saltmarshes,
and extensive reedbeds, the new site is part of the core area of the West Estonian
Archipelago Biosphere Reserve (1990). Among the wetlands occur patches of boreo-nemoral
broadleaved forests, alvars and dry meadows. When water levels are low, mudflats
are exposed and several islets connect with each other. The site preserves representative
examples of several wetland types of the Boreal biogeographic region within
one complex, and it is a refuge for many rare and endangered plant and bird
species. Two migratory species - the Barnacle Goose Branta leucopsis
and the Dunlin Calidris alpina schinzii - are present with more than
1% of their biogeographic populations, and the site is an important foraging,
spawning and nursery ground for a long list of fish. Among the main human uses
are small-scale farming and forestry, livestock grazing, reed harvesting, subsistence
fishing and hunting. Famous cultural monuments situated nearby are Püha
Church and Valjala Castle. An Estonian traditional, but threatened, race of
horses is bred nearby. Overgrowing of meadows due to a decrease in grazing and
mowing rates is seen as a potential threat, as are intensification of commercial
and recreational activities and privatization of land. A master "green"
plan for local municipalities, including references to Laidevahe, has been adopted
by the authorities, and a separate management plan for the reserve is to be
drafted by June 2003. The Estonian Native Horse Conservation Society and the
Society for the Protection of Seminatural Communities have initiated restoration
of coastal meadows and pastures within the site. (Site description by Sergei
Dereliev, Ramsar.) Estonia now has 11 Ramsar sites covering 218,374 hectares.
[30/04/03]
Now
available. The
National Planning Tool / COP9 National Report Form, as adopted by the 29th Meeting
of the Standing Committee in February 2003, is now available in MS Word format,
in a self-extracting ZIP file. Download
the English version here. [30/04/03]
Español: Instrumento de Planificación Nacional / Modelo de Informe Nacional
Français: Instrument de planification nationale / Modèle de Rapport national
Headline
story. Brazil chooses Pantanal site for the
Ramsar List. The
Bureau of the Convention on Wetlands is delighted to announce that Brazil has
designated a significant portion of the Pantanal in Mato Grosso State as a Wetland
of International Importance, the Reserva Particular
do Patrimonio Natural SESC Pantanal, to complement the related 135,000-hectare
Pantanal Matogrossense Ramsar site. An extraordinarily interesting feature of
Brazil's 8th site is the fact that it is an extensive privately owned protected
area, with government authorization, and includes such management aids as 5
fire control towers, an airplane, 6 boats, 6 all-terrain vehicles, and 26 professional
staff and 16 trained rangers, and 1 airplane pilot. The separately-managed hotel
employs 100 people, a 500-square-meter visitors' centre is in construction,
and a nearby social ecotourism lodge on the other side of the Cuiabá
River has 120 beds -- currently, around 10,000 visitors come to enjoy the reserve
per year. The Serviço Nacional do Comercio (SESC) is a non-profit organization
created by law and funded through an annual contribution from private enterprises,
with branches in every state in the country. As a reserva particular de partimônio
natural (RPPN), its legal status is said to differ from a national park
only in terms of ownership; the owner could legally sell the area but, under
the RPPN law, only if the objective of nature protection would not be altered.
Here is a brief description of the site,
in English and Spanish,
drawn from the Ramsar Information Sheet by Ramsar's Julio Montes de Oca. [30/04/03]

STRP11 group photo, April 2003
![]()
| Ramsar Trivia: Where was the 1971 Ramsar conference meant to be held? Answer. |
Who's where?
Delmar Blasco, Secretary General, is participating in a roundtable on
post-conflict environmental issues in Iraq at UNEP headquarters, Tuesday 29
April, in Geneva, Switzerland. [29/04/03]
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year.
New
on the Site: Report
of the 11th STRP meeting; Participants
list from STRP11, and contacts
in PDF; Memorandum of Cooperation
with LakeNet; Small
Grants Fund allocations for 2002. [29/04/03]
Seminar
set for Armenia. Karen Jenderedjian (jender@nature.am),
Leading Specialist, Ministry of Nature Protection, writes that, with the help
of a 2002 grant from the Ramsar Small Grants Fund, "The Ministry of Nature
Protection of Armenia, the Ramsar Convention Bureau, the Professional and Entrepreneurial
Orientation Union, and LakeNet are pleased to announce the International Seminar
Current Issues of Conservation and Wise Use of Wetlands
and Wetland Biodiversity in The European New Independent States to
be held in Sevan, Armenia from 15 to 19 September, 2003. Information
letter and application form in English and in Russian (Word format)
are here." [29/04/03]
IV
Simposio Internacional Humedales 2003. El Lic.
Angel Alfonso Martínez, Director de la Unidad de Medio
Ambiente CITMA, Matanzas (uma@atenas.inf.cu) nos informa del IV Simposio Internacional
Humedales 2003: "La Conservación y Uso Sostenible de los Humedales
en el próximo milenio", a llevarse a cabo en Ciénaga de Zapata
(sitio Ramsar), Matanzas, Cuba en Octubre del 2003. Sírvanse
encontrar adjuntos los detalles del evento, incluyendo el llamado a
contribución de trabajos y el formulario de inscripción.
Lic. Angel Alfonso Martínez, Director, CITMA Environment Unit, Matanzas, Cuba (uma@atenas.inf.cu) has recently informed us of the upcoming "IV International Symposium on Wetlands - 2003: Conservation and Sustainable Use of Wetlands in the Next Millennium", to take place in Ciénaga de Zapata (Ramsar site), Matanzas, Cuba, October 2003. Please find attached a description of the event (Spanish), including the call for papers and registration form. [29/04/03]
Vacancy
announcements. BirdLife International seeks Communications Manager
and
Indonesia Forests Campaign Coordinator. The
Communications
Manager - Campaigns and Media, based in the UK, will lead the press
and media activities of BirdLife International, coordinate collation and redistribution
of news from national Partner organizations, and manage press work for BirdLife
public campaigns. The Indonesia Forests Campaign Coordinator,
also based in the UK, will act as Coordinator of the BirdLife International
campaign "Saving the Rainforests of Indonesia", an exciting new position
requiring excellent campaigning experience, networking, lobbying and coordination
skills. Further details
of these positions and application information here. [link
later removed] [25/04/03]
Now
available. Socio-Economics of Wetlands.
Launched at Ramsar's COP8 by Wetlands International and RIZA (Institute
for Inland Water Management and Waste Water Treatment), The Socio-Economics
of Wetlands, is now available in PDF format from Wetlands
International's Web site. In the Foreword to this 34-page booklet, Ramsar's
Delmar Blasco and RIZA'a Bart Fokkens write "Until
it is widely accepted that wetland values can be significant and should be investigated
prior to making development decisions, the world's wetland resources will continue
to decrease despite many good intentions. The challenge now is to raise the
awareness of these facts; a challenge that this booklet takes up. It explains
the fundamentals of the socio-economic wetland values, their evaluation and
role in decision making in a clear and accessible format." The booklet
will soon be available for purchase on-line in hard copy through the Natural
History Book Service, the distributors of
Wetlands International titles (check
the WI Web site under "Publications"). [23/04/03]
Vacancy
announcement. Wetlands International: Technical Assistant (Ramsar
Sites Database Service). Wetlands International provides services
to the Bureau of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands and now invites applications
for the full time post of Technical Assistant supporting the Ramsar Sites Database
Service. The Ramsar Sites Database Service holds official information about
designated Ramsar Sites and manages this information on behalf of the Convention
in a dedicated web-based database, as well as maintaining extensive paper records.
The post of Technical Assistant (Ramsar Sites Database Service), part
of WI's Inventory, Assessment and Monitoring Programme, contributes work on
the Ramsar Sites Database and reports to the Senior Technical Officer (Wetland
Inventory), and it is located within Wetlands International's offices in Wageningen,
The Netherlands, where the global operations team is based. The post will be
offered to the successful candidate for an initial period of one year, renewable
by mutual consent. The announcement is reprinted here [link
later removed] and is also available on Wetlands International's
Web site. The deadline for applications is 30 April
2003. [Please do not contact the
Ramsar Bureau directly about this post.] [17/04/03]
MedWet
joined by Administrative Assistant. The MedWet Coordination Unit,
the Convention's regional initiative for the Mediterranean based in Athens,
has announced that Ms Efrossyni Mantziou
has joined the now-five-member team at Villa Kazouli as of early April. Spyros
Kouvelis, the MedWet Coordinator, says "Frosso will be responsible
for all secretarial duties in the Medwet Coordination Unit, organising and updating
the MedWet network databases, providing support for the organization of the
MedWet/Com meetings, organising other office meetings and events, and undertaking
as appropriate in-office and out-of-office tasks. Frosso speaks very good English
and French, as well as her mother tongue of Greek." Previously she has
worked with the Greek Deputy Minister for the Environment, the Ministry of Culture,
Greenpeace-Greece, and as an archaeologist with the Department of Underwater
Antiquities. Her e-mail address is mantziou@metwet.org. [17/04/03]
Now
available. Ramsar COP8 proceedings on CD-ROM.
The CD-ROM version of the COP8 proceedings is available now. It has a language-choice
starting page which leads to parallel French, English, and Spanish mini-Web
sites, each of which has the Conference Report; the Resolutions in HTML, Word,
and PDF; the other COP8 documents; the National Reports in PDF; and the participants
lists in PDF. There is an autorun on it, so if you're using a Windows PC it
should start up automatically. All of this material has been available
on the Ramsar Web site for some time, but if you need the CD-ROM version
please send your postal address to Valerie Higgins, higgins@ramsar.org.
[17/04/03]
Announcement.
Foro Internacional de Humedales Urbanos / International Urban Wetlands
Forum, Colombia, 28-30 May 2003. Conservación Internacional
Colombia y el Acueducto de Bogotá han unido esfuerzos desde el año
1999 para la puesta en marcha de un proyecto de recuperación y rehabilitación
de los humedales urbanos de la ciudad de Bogotá. En el marco de este
proyecto se esta organizando un Foro sobre el manejo de humedales urbanos, con
la
participación de expertos internacionales que darán a conocer
sus múltiples experiencias. Más.
[16/04/03]
Conservation International of Colombia and the Aqueduct of Bogotá have joined efforts since 1999 to carry out a project for the recuperation and rehabilitation of the urban wetlands of Bogotá. One of the Project's objectives is to strengthen the knowledge about wetland management and conservation in the region. With this purpose, a Forum on the management of urban wetlands will be held, with the participation of international experts, who will share their vast experience on the subject. More details here. [16/04/03]
Society
of Wetland Scientists announces Ramsar Grants for 2002. The Society
of Wetland Scientists manages a Ramsar Support Grant Program, established in
1999, to advance Ramsar Convention objectives, including the selection, designation,
management, and networking of Ramsar sites; and the promotion of Ramsar's Wise
Use guidelines. Projects are funded at a level of US$5,000 per year on a competitive
basis as reviewed by an evaluation team, which typically includes 3 SWS International
Chapter members, a Ramsar Bureau representative, and a representative of the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Division of International Conservation. The following
three projects received support by the grant program's 2002 round of grant-making.
Two additional projects may also be funded pending the availability of matching
funds. 1. Mr. Le Dien Duc, National University of Hanoi, Vietnam, is
receiving a grant to establish a community-based bee keeping industry in the
mangroves of the Xuan Thuy Ramsar Site, Red River Estuary, North Vietnam. 2.
Dr. Enrique Bucher, Universidad de Cordoba, Argentina, is receiving a
grant to develop a Management Plan for Mar Chiquita, Argentina, a Ramsar Site
designated in 2002. 3. Dr. Vitalii Lobcenco, BIOTICA Ecological Society,
Moldova, is receiving a grant to pursue designation of a new Ramsar Site at
the middle Dniester River. Eric Gilman of
the National Audubon Society and Chair of the International Chapter of the SWS
here provides more background on the
SWS and descriptions of the three successful proposals. [15/04/03]
New
Assistant to the Regional Coordinator for the Americas. The Bureau
is very pleased to announce that Iván Darío
Valencia Rodríguez from Colombia has been chosen to replace
the irreplaceable Julio Montes de Oca in the Bureau's post of intern/assistant
to the Regional Coordinator for the Americas, to begin in mid-June depending
upon Swiss permit processes. Iván Darío studied geography and
graduated from the Universidad Nacional de Colombia in Bogotá in December
2002, with a thesis on the habitat and geographical distribution of the lark
Eremophila alpestris peregrine on the Altiplano Cundiboyacense in Colombia.
Through the Asociación Bogotana de Ornitología (ABO), one of the
leading birdwatcher associations in Colombia, Iván Darío has been
involved in environmental education activities including bird surveys, celebrating
World Wetlands Day, writing articles, designing an educational programme for
teachers working near urban wetlands, and currently he is coordinating the aquatic
bird censuses in the region. Spanish is his mother tongue and besides being
fluent in English, he also has a good knowledge of Norwegian and Portuguese
and some French and German. The secretariat is very pleased to be able to welcome
Iván Darío to our team. [15/04/03]
Ramsar
and LakeNet sign MOC. The LakeNet NGO (based in Annapolis, Maryland,
USA), with its global initiative to protect and restore the health of the world's
lakes, is making an active contribution to the protection of lake
ecosystems
and the human communities that depend on them by promoting the wise use of the
wetland resources and, through its online information services and stakeholder
and expert networks, providing a source of information and expertise. LakeNet
and the Ramsar Convention share a common goal in the conservation and wise use
of lake ecosystems for people and nature, and the conservation aims of LakeNet
and the aims expressed in the text of the Ramsar Convention and its Strategic
Plan 2003-2008 are fully synergistic. Both LakeNet and Ramsar, in order to formalize
the cooperation between their secretariats, seized the occasion of Ramsar's
11th meeting of the Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP) to sign a Memorandum
of Cooperation to run the duration of the Strategic Plan 2003-2008, with Delmar
Blasco, Ramsar's SG, and David Read Barker, President of LakeNet,
applying ink to the parchment on 11 April 2003 in the Ramsar facilities in IUCN
HQ in Switzerland. View the brief text
of the MOC and photos of the signing right here. And then view LakeNet's
brilliant Web site at http://www.worldlakes.org/.
[14/04/03]
Further
results from the STRP. The 11th meeting of the Scientific and Technical
Review Panel has completed its third day with thankfully few casualties, and
closes its agenda and lightens its heavy brows today with the final adoption
of its work plan for 2003-2005 for transmittal to the Standing Committee. The
Expert Working Groups have been established for the six priority areas of work
mandated by the Standing Committee, and each of them has worked through its
own work plan and timelines, and there have been sparkling debates on the other,
lower priority areas and "cross-cutting issues", and then a nice dinner
in Nyon on the penultimate evening. Today, Friday, the whole thing will be finalized
and everybody will go home, if the airlines are still operating. In the meantime,
the best news is still the Marsh Toads'
victory over the Swamp Rats, truly something for the annals of trivia
quizzing, and the Guinness book is rumored to be interested in securing rights
to the photo just below. [10/04/03]
Early
results of the 11th meeting of the STRP: Marsh Toads 63,
Swamp Rats 52. In the Grand Battle of the IOPs, the Swamp
Rats squandered a sizable early lead of 42 to 34 and were roundly
buffeted by the Marsh Toads -- "humiliated"
would not be too strong a word -- in the 45 Ramsar quiz questions. At the end
of day one of STRP11 (results of which will be announced in due course), two
of the Ramsar Convention's International Organization Partners (Wetlands International
and IUCN-The World Conservation Union), going by the name of the Swamp Rats,
squared off against the other two (WWF International and BirdLife International),
the Marsh Toads, and gave new meaning to the words "apparently rendered
helpless by a demonstration of greater knowledge and preparation and some help
from the judges". Contestants strove earnestly to name the Convention's
four Founding Fathers, identify the smallest Ramsar site and the largest, unscramble
the letters of stork varieties, identify a sitatunga and the Ramsar hotel where
the Convention was signed in 1971, and name the future Chair of the Scientific
and Technical Review Panel pictured left in 1974. More
details here. [09/04/03]
River
basin task force for China's Yangtze River. Top-level government
officials and international development organizations together launched a task
force aimed at providing policy recommendations to top leaders of China's State
Council on how to implement an integrated approach to solve river basin issues
and restore the balance of nature and people in the Yangtze. CCICED (China Council
for International Cooperation on Environment and Development) is a high-level
consultative body providing strategic consultation to China's State Council
concerning the environment and development issues. Its Task Force on Integrated
River Basin Management (IBRM) was officially launched in Beijing on 27-28 March
2003, and consists of twelve prominent experts, six from China and six international
experts from the Netherlands, UK, US, Japan, the Ramsar Convention Bureau, and
WWF International -- Alain Lambert will
be representing the Ramsar Bureau. Here
is WWF's press release with further details. [08/04/03]
Southwestern
Switzerland girding loins for STRP's 11th meeting. The 11th meeting
of the Convention's advisory subsidiary body, the Scientific and Technical Review
Panel (STRP), will be taking place in Gland in the Suisse Romande area of Switzerland,
where civil defense units are leaping to orange alert. [Thumbnail
left: New STRP chair Max Finlayson at STRP10, with George Zalidis and Mike Alexander.]
The 15 expert members,
newly-elected
by COP8 in Valencia in November, are already joining the airport security queues
all over the world on a regionally proportionate basis, and will be joined in
Gland by representatives of the Convention's four International Organization
Partners (BirdLife International, IUCN-the World Conservation Union, Wetlands
International, and the Worldwide Fund for Nature International), as well as
still more expert representatives of a large number of observer scientific organizations
and of some of the other global Multilateral Environment Agreements, some 70
participants in all (not counting the hired help). STRP VIPs are arriving today,
Monday, for preliminary planning meetings, and the ponderous plenaries get underway
tomorrow, under Max Finlayson's hopefully able chairmanship. The chief purpose
of this meeting is to sort through all of the many tasks requested of the STRP
by the Convention's Strategic Plan 2003-2008 and the 46 Resolutions adopted
by the COP in Valencia, cogitate upon the priorities suggested by the Standing
Committee at its 29th meeting, February 2003, and then develop its own work
plan for this triennium 2003-2005, with Expert Working Group assignments and
their planned outputs and timelines and what not else. A very busy week for
a lot of people, but, for many more people in this world, enviable nonetheless.
Reports and, eventually, photos will be available here as these historic events
unfold. [07/04/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum.Advice on golf courses.
"Dear Forum members - I am interested to make contact with anyone who has
experience or knows of resource materials relating to artificial wetlands created
in a golf course setting and that are designed to provide broader waste water
(meaning storm water runoff here) benefits within a local catchment as well
as biodiversity and amenity improvements. I have a situation where a golf course
manager is seeking to link up (if you'll excuse the pun!) with others
that are trying to make the 'water hazards' on their course perform other functions
like water polishing, biodiversity conservation etc. Any feedback would be appreciated."
Dr Bill Phillips, Director, MainStream Environmental Consulting, 8 Huon Place,
Lyons, ACT, 2606, Australia, Email: mainstream@mainstream.com.au, Web site:
www.mainstream.com.au. [07/04/03]
A
new publication on páramos and high mountain ecosystems for Latin America.
The
Institute of Hydrology, Meteorology and Environmental
Studies (IDEAM) of Colombia has recently published the title Páramos
y Ecosistemas Alto Andinos de Colombia en Condición HotSpot y Global
Climatic Tensor (Páramos and High Andean Ecosystems in Colombia Under
HotSpot and Global Climatic Tensor Conditions), in the framework of the World
Congress on Páramos, which took place in Paipa, Colombia, 13-18 of May,
2002, with financial support from the Ramsar's Wetlands for the Future Fund
(WFF) and Conservation International - Colombia. Julio Montes de Oca provides
more detail on the book, in English
and Español,
and some photos.
El Instituto de Hidrología, Meteorología y Estudios Ambientales (IDEAM) publicó recientemente el libro Páramos y Ecosistemas Alto Andinos de Colombia en Condición HotSpot y Global Climatic Tensor en el marco del Congreso Mundial de Páramos, llevado a cabo en Paipa, Colombia, del 13 al 18 de mayo del 2002. Cabe mencionar que la organización del Congreso recibió el apoyo financiero del Fondo Humedales para el Futuro (FHF) de la Convención de Ramsar, así como de Conservación Internacional - Colombia.
Job
announcement. BirdLife
seeks Cambodia Programme Manager.
Rosina
Abudulai, Human Resources/Training Officer, BirdLife International,
announces that BirdLife in Indochina is seeking a Cambodia
Programme Manager, an initially 3-year posting to be based in Phnom
Penh. The overall purpose of the job is to initiate, manage, develop and strengthen
the BirdLife Cambodia Programme so that it can play an ever more effective role
in conservation in Cambodia. Here are the terms of reference and the contact
details. [link later removed] [03/04/03]
South
Australia launches landmark Wetland Strategy. Bill
Phillips (mainstream@mainstream.com.au) writes: "The state government
of South Australia chose World Wetlands Day this year to launch what is now
considered the benchmark wetland strategy in Australia. Why a benchmark ? This
is the first time one of our state governments has deliberately positioned such
a policy document under its State Water Plan, meaning that the primary delivery
mechanism will be through what are called the Catchment Water Management Boards.
As the name suggests these are catchment-based multistakeholder bodies that
are responsible for developing and implementing integrated water resource management.
The wetland strategy sits beside and is designed to work in an integrated way
with the actions being taken to manage riparian zones, floodplains, water-dependent
ecosystems and the allocations of water for the environment. Also important
is the fact that the strategy sets out a range of actions to promote local actions,
institutional and resourcing arrangements, community awareness, the recognition
and management of Ramsar sites, wetland inventory and data management and priority
research directed at guiding future management." Photos
of the strategy development team are available here.
[02/04/03]
New
publication for Argentina's Laguna Iberá. Dr.
Jorge Casciotta (jrcas@museo.fcnym.unlp.edu.ar), of the Museum of La Plata,
La Plata National University, Argentina, informs us about the presentation of
the new Spanish language publication "Los peces
de la Laguna Iberá" (Fishes of Laguna Iberá) produced
in the framework of the Ramsar Wetlands for the Future-sponsored
project, "Ichtyofauna of Laguna Iberá
and its importance in the Reserve's designation as a Ramsar site".
/ El Dr. Jorge
Casciotta (jrcas@museo.fcnym.unlp.edu.ar), del Museo de la Plata en la Universidad
Nacional de La Plata, Argentina, nos informa de la presentación de la
nueva publicación "Los peces de la Laguna
Iberá", la cual ha sido desarrollada en el marco del
proyecto "La ictiofauna de la laguna Iberá y su importancia en la
designación de la reserva como sitio Ramsar" apoyado por el Fondo
Humedales para el Futuro de la Convención de Ramsar. More
details right here [español].
[01/04/03]
Club
Pantanal Otuquis and the Puppets of the Pantanal. During the week
of March 24 through the 31, the city of Santa Cruz, Bolivia, is hosting a Puppet
Festival organized by the "Duendes de la Caverna" (Cave Goblins) and
the Municipal Cultural authority. Among its participants are a group of 9 children
known as "Club Pantanal Otuquis" from the city of Puerto Suarez, located
in the Bolivian Pantanal. Ana Alicia Eid,
Communications Coordinator, WWF Bolivia in Santa Cruz, provides more
details and two photos. [01/04/03]
MedWet/Regions'
first meeting held in Palma. The kick off meeting (first meeting
of its Steering Commitee) was held in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, on 6 and 7 March.
In that meeting, the programme partners discussed and agreed on administrative
and technical aspects of the project. This is a project that was prepared by
Tour du Valat on behalf of Ramsar's MedWet Initiative and approved by the EU
INTERREG MEDOC funding programme. It brings together 11 Regions from Spain,
France, Italy, Portugal and Morocco, and includes activities for wetlands management,
inventory and public awareness. The approval of this project is a great success
and big news for MedWet. For comprehensive information on the programme objectives,
partners, sites and activities (and some photos too) see: http://www.medwet.org/news/MWRegions.htm.
Progress
on the Prespa Park. On 29 March 2003, the Prespa Park Coordination
Committee, bringing together representatives of Albania, Greece and the FYR
of Macedonia, as well as Ramsar / MedWet, held a special meeting in the Greek
village of Aghios Germanos. This
extraordinary session had as a purpose to evaluate the proposed structure and
management of a project development phase (PDF B) for a large (close to €
15 million) GEF programme, which will address biodiversity and sustainability
issues in the Prespa Lakes region. Already the German government, through KfW
- the Bank for Reconstruction, has committed a considerable part of the necessary
funds. Here is Senior MedWet Advisor
Thymio Papayannis' brief report of the outcomes. [01/04/03]
Now
available. Ramsar and the Small Island Developing
States. "Since 1994, when the Barbados Programme of Action for
the Sustainable Development of Small Island Developing States was adopted, the
Ramsar Convention Bureau has supported a number of activities to assist these
States in its implementation.Within the 14 agreed priority areas and actions
related to environmental and development planning that should be undertaken
by SIDS with the cooperation and assistance of the international community,
Ramsar concentrated its support on activities related to providing support for
developing and implementing integrated coastal zone management plans and strategies;
design of monitoring programmes for coastal and marine resources, and support
for accession to the Ramsar Convention and the United Nations Environment Programme
Specially Protected Areas Protocol for the Wider Caribbean." Here Ramsar's
Margarita Astrálaga provides
an overview of Ramsar's work with the SIDS, complete with annexes showing
Ramsar sites located in those states and Ramsar SGF and WFF financial support
for projects for their benefit. [28/03/03] [Left: Lake
Pangua on the Fly River floodplain, Papua New Guinea (Photo: Roger Jaensch)]
In memoriam. Jan Rooth. "With the recent death of Jan Rooth, a man who had been involved in the Convention since its earliest days, Ramsar has lost another of its oldest supporters and warmest advocates." Mike Smart remembers the man who was involved in the evolution of the Convention from the MAR Conference in the Camargue in 1962, through the Noordwijk Conference in his native Netherlands in 1966, to the inaugural conference in Ramsar in 1971 and subsequent meetings of the Conference of the Parties. Here is Mike's brief tribute to the life and career of Jan Rooth. [27/03/03]
New
member of the Ramsar Asia team announced. The Ramsar Bureau is delighted
to announce that Ms Liazzat Rabbiosi of Kazakhstan
has accepted the position of Intern/Assistant to the Regional Coordinator for
Asia, to begin in late April 2003 and to replace, as if that were possible,
Ms Jia Ma of China. Liazzat has a BA in English and French languages
(1996) from Kazakh State University of World Languages, Almaty; in addition,
her native language is Russian, she has a good knowledge of Kazakh, and some
basic knowledge of Italian. She has worked as an interpreter in Almaty and as
a assistant on the project "Water Resources of the Aral Sea" under
the direction of the Kazakh State Academy of Architecture and Construction.
In 2000, she obtained a master's degree in environmental studies from the University
of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK (Graduate School of Environmental Studies), with
a thesis on environmental problems related to the Caspian Sea. Since October
2001 she has been working as a researcher with an environmental management consultancy
firm in Edinburgh, Scotland, particularly in the field of oil and gas industry
experience. Liazzat's experiences and language skills will assist the Bureau
in spreading the Ramsar message in Central Asia. [27/03/03]
New
Ramsar Assistant for Europe named. The Bureau is also very pleased
to announce that Ms Estelle Gironnet of France
has been selected to replace Sergei Dereliev of Bulgaria as our Intern/Assistant
to the Regional Coordinator for Europe, to begin in May. Estelle has a master's
in biology from the Paul Sabatier University in Toulouse, France, having focused
on the functioning of a water treatment station. Her work experiences are diverse:
In 2000, she worked briefly in the Nature Park of Luberon in southern France,
assisting the manager of this wildlife rescue centre. In 2001, she spent nine
months at the Doñana research station (Spain) to study the impact on
birds of the Aznalcollar mine spill, followed by six months in Greece with the
Katelios Association for Research and Protection of Wildlife, where she worked
in the field of environmental education for the conservation and reproduction
of marine turtles. Besides her native language, French, Estelle is fluent in
English and Spanish and has some knowledge of Italian and Greek. In providing
the information for this announcement, Ramsar's Administrator Annette Keller
points out that Estelle, from Western Europe, will be succeeding four Ramsar
interns in a row from Eastern Europe. [27/03/03]
Now
available. Turkey's National Wetlands Strategy for
2003-2008. Turkey has been accepted as one of the most important
countries of both Europe and the Middle East as regards wetlands. The two main
reasons for this are 1) the rich and widespread wetland habitats (71 wetlands
of international importance have been determined according to Ramsar's fish
and waterfowl criteria. Following the evaluations which will be realized according
to vegetation and other animal species this amount will be increased), and the
geographical characteristics which give rise to the passage of two main migratory
routes of the west palearctic region. Since becoming party to the convention,
4 sites in 1994 and 5 sites in 1998 have been designated as Ramsar site in Turkey.
In 2002, the Regulation on Conservation of Wetlands was put into force, and
became an instrument for improving the conservation of these wetlands - the
"National Wetlands Committee" which was established through this regulation
became an important tool to develop coordination and collaboration between relevant
institutions. "2003-2008 National Wetlands Strategic Plan for Turkey"
was prepared with the participation of delegates from all relevant governmental
institutions, NGOs, and stakeholders based on Ramsar 2003-2008 Strategic Plan
approved by COP8, and will become an important guidebook for the conservation
and wise use of wetlands. [text adapted from the introduction]
Turkey's English version of
its new strategy has been reproduced here. [26/03/03]
HumedAndes
wetland inventory initiative launched in Colombia.
An institutional cooperation initiative to promote and carry out inventories
on Andean wetlands is being launched in Colombia. Currently Fundación
Humedales and a number of other NGO and academic institutions have agreed to
join efforts in order to build a common conceptual framework for the cooperative
development of wetland inventories in the highlands of Cundinamarca and Boyacá,
and the upper Cauca river valley, covering critical endangered wetland habitats
of the country. More details here
in English and in Spanish.
[24/03/03]
France
names four new Ramsar sites for World Wetlands Day. The
Ministère de l'écologie et du développement durable, Direction
de la nature et des paysages, has celebrated World Wetlands Day by designating
four interesting new Wetlands of International Importance. They are the Bassin
du Drugeon (5,988 ha) in the Franche-Comté near Pontarlier near the
Swiss frontier; Etangs du Lindre, forêt du Romersberg et zones voisines
(5,308 ha) in Lorraine, near Dieuze not far from Nancy; Lac du Bourget -
Marais de Chautagne (5,500 ha) in the Rhône-Alpes region, between
Geneva and Grenoble; and Marais du Fier d'Ars (4,452 ha) on the Atlantic
island of Ré off the coast of La Rochelle. Here
are the details. [21/03/03] [français
et/y español]
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.