What's
New @ Ramsar
2
June 2003![]()
Headline
story. UN World Environment Day focuses
on water. The United Nations' World Environment Day has chosen "Water
- Two Billion People are Dying for It!" as its theme for its
5 June 2003 celebrations and awareness-raising activities around the world --
a theme dear to every Ramsar heart. The Ramsar community should be encouraged
to participate and ensure that the water message includes wetlands as a key
component. That's what the Secretary General is going to do at the "Providing
Freshwater for All" roundtable at the International Environment House
in Geneva at 10:35 a.m. on 5 June 2003 (book reservations now). Here's
some more detail. [02/06/03]
Headline
story. Wetland management planning for West
Africa. The International
Course on Wetland Management, run by the Dutch government's Wetlands
Advisory and Training Centre (WATC)
annually
since 1994, has introduced some 165 participants from 60 countries to the Ramsar
principles of wetland management. Many of the graduates have returned to their
countries and made enormous contributions, and some have also contributed at
the international level, including quite a few who have subsequently served
as interns in the Ramsar Bureau. In fact, in his Foreword to Wetland
Management Planning: five years of case studies from West Africa,
WATC Director Bart Fokkens says that at
Ramsar COP8 in November 2002, he met 24 of the course alumni. This impressive
new book, edited by Pieter Terpstra and published by Wetlands International
through its West Africa programme in Dakar, includes the
full texts, tables, and photos of 19 draft wetland management plans covering
West African wetlands, including many Ramsar sites, that students of the International
Course produced in the course of their studies. It's extremely valuable for
its information on those key sites, and equally welcome as a big step forward
in their wise use management. The 358-page A4 book, ISBN 910 5882 9642, can
be purchased from NHBS (the Natural History
Book Service), http://www.nhbs.com,
and further information can be sought on the Wetlands International Web site,
http://www.wetlands.org. [Note:
the Ramsar Secretary General is a member of the board of the WATC International
Course.] [02/06/03]
Headline
story. First board meeting for Panama Ramsar Centre.
The Regional Ramsar Center for Training and Research
on Wetlands in the Western Hemisphere, to be hosted by Panama at
the "City of Knowledge" international center, was created in accordance
with Resolution VII.26 with a vision to "promote research on the management
and wise use of wetlands throughout the Americas through training and the development
of tools for evaluating impacts, methodologies and economic use plus mechanisms
for communication". The Agreement
for its creation was signed between the Government of Panama and the
Ramsar Convention Bureau in February 2003 during the 29th Meeting of the Standing
Committee. The Centre's first board meeting took place in Panama on 27 May 2003,
and here is a brief report in
English and Español,
with a few photos. [30 May 2003]
![]()
| Ramsar Trivia: Where was the 1971 Ramsar conference meant to be held? Answer. |
Who's where?
Alain
Lambert, Senior Adviser for Environment and Development Cooperation, is
in Montreal, Canada, for the Convention on Biological Diversity's workshop on
Incentives (3-5 June 2003). Following that meeting, he will go directly to Niamey,
Niger, to attend a workshop on Niger's national strategy to combat poverty.
[02/06/03]
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year.
New
on the Site: Updated
Key Concepts Index to the Ramsar
Convention text, all 200 Resolutions and Recommendations since 1980, and both
of the Strategic Plans, including the results of COP8 in November 2002;
STRP
Work Plan for 2003-2005. [30/05/03]
Wetlands
and Sustainable Development workshop in Panama. SENACYT (National
Secretariat of Science, Technology and Innovation, Panama - senacyt@senacyt.gob.pa)
reports on the first scientific workshop "Iberoamerican Wetlands and Sustainable
Development", which took place this week (26 May) at SENACYT headquarters
in Panama, sponsored by the Iberoamerican Program of Science and Technology
for Development (CYTED). Margarita Astràlaga represented the Ramsar Convention.
Read more in Spanish.
[29/05/03]
Humedales y Desarrollo Sostenible - SENACYT (Secretaría Nacional de Ciencia, Tecnología e Innovación, Panamá senacyt@senacyt.gob.pa) reporta sobre el Primer Taller Científico "Los Humedales de Iberoamérica y el Desarrollo Sostenible" llevado a cabo esta semana en la sede de SENACYT, e impulsado por el Programa Iberoamericano de Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo (CYTED).
Ready for viewing. Costa Rica's World Wetlands Day envelope, bearing the country's new wetlands stamp. For further information, Dr Enrique J. Lahmann, Director Regional, UICN-Mesoamérica, Apdo.Postal 146-2150, Moravia, COSTA RICA (enrique.lahmann@iucn.org). [28/05/03]

Announcement.
I Taller Nacional sobre la problemática de los ecosistemas
de manglar en las áreas de reserva federales y estatales (Workshop
on issues related to mangrove ecosystems in federal and state reserves, June
26-28, 2003 - Tapachula Chiapas, México). El Colegio
de la Frontera Sur, Ecosur Tapachula, El Parque Nacional Lagunas de Chacahua
y la Reserva de la Biosfera La Encrucijada (Sitio Ramsar) invitan a: Directores
y Administradores de áreas de reservas, Investigadores, Profesionistas,
Estudiantes, Tomadores de decisiones, Líderes de Organizaciones de sociales
y Organizaciones no gubernamentales a participar en el taller que se llevará
a cabo del 26 al 28 de junio de 2003 en El Colegio de la Frontera Sur,
Ecosur en la Ciudad de Tapachula Chiapas, México. Más.
[23/05/03]
Announcement.
Wetland restoration course set for Ontario, Canada. The
Temperate Wetland Restoration Training Course
(Ontario, Canada) will take place September 7-12, 2003. "This intensive
6 day training course, involving significant fieldwork and some classroom instruction,
is a collaborative effort, developed by staff from the Ontario Ministry of Natural
Resources, Environment Canada, Trent University and Ducks Unlimited. The course,
in its 7th year, is administered through the Watershed Science Centre at Trent
University. The course examines methods of restoring wetland function in both
agricultural and urbanized settings and offers practical instruction within
the framework of existing Ontario guidelines and policies. Wetland restoration
principles learned at this course can be applied in any environment." The
course instructors will be Kevin Erwin and Dan Mansell. The
announcement has been reprinted here, and more information is available
from http://www.trentu.ca/wsc/training.shtml
and from Leslie Collins, Course Coordinator, Watershed Science Centre,
Trent University (lcollins@trentu.ca).
Final date for applications: June 6th, 2003. [Please
note that the course is not sponsored by the Ramsar Bureau. Please contact the
organizers directly.]
[23/05/03]
Progress
report on Madagascar's work for the wise use of wetlands. Simon
Rafanomezantsoa, WWF- Madagascar Freshwater Officer and until recently
an intern in the Ramsar Bureau, has provided a progress report on an ambitious
project the purpose of which is to develop a National Wetland Strategy, conduct
a national wetland inventory, designate six new Wetlands of International Importance
(with management plans for some of them), and extend the country's two existing
Ramsar sites - for a total of over 800,000 hectares. The government's Direction
Générale des Eaux et Forêts (DGEF) and the Comité
National Ramsar (CONARAMS) have been working with financial and technical support
from WWF's Living Waters Programme and the collaboration of the Durrell Wildlife
Conservation Trust, The Peregrine Fund, the Wildlife Conservation Society, and
WWF-Madagascar and plan eventually to donate over a million Ramsar hectares
as a WWF "Gift to the Earth". Anada Tiéga, the Ramsar Bureau's
Regional Coordinator for Africa, points out three very encouraging features
of this report: 1) It shows the impressive extent to which the new Contracting
Party Madagascar is taking seriously its obligations under the Convention; 2)
it demonstrates the catalytic effect of the Bureau's internship programme, as
former interns return to their home countries and work to advance the Convention's
objectives; and 3) it illustrates the continuing excellent cooperation between
the Convention and its International Organization Partners, in this case the
WWF Living Waters Programme and WWF-Madagascar. The
progress report, with some photos, is available right here (French only).
[22/05/03]
Social
event of the year. A swarm of Interns. Present,
new, outgoing, and former Ramsar interns/assistants to the Regional Coordinators
gathered on 20 May - as Sergei Dereliev reports,
speaking for the RIC (Ramsar Interns Committee), "the largest concentration
of former/present Ramsar interns ever (8)! The farewell-and-welcoming party
took place on 20 May 2003 in Gland, generously hosted by 'Casa Julio', with
rivers of drinks and delicious Neotropic and Algerian cuisine, live Latino music,
and many other surprises. It was a milestone event in the history of the Ramsar
Convention and will certainly bring positive changes soon." Representative
Dereliev continues, "After having carefully checked the Ramsar Criteria,
we certainly think that the concentration of eight interns is more than 1% of
the biogeographical population of this weird wetland (night bird) species (Criterion
6). Consequently, the RIC took the decision to designate 'Casa Julio' as the
first Place (Venue) of International Importance for the Ramsar Convention."
Here.
[22/05/03]
Fête
today. International Day for Biological Diversity.
22 May is Biological Diversity Day, by a decision of the UN General Assembly
in 2000, intended to commemorate the adoption of the text of the Convention
on Biological Diversity, and the theme for this year is "Biodiversity
and poverty alleviation - challenges for sustainable development".
"Many of the Parties to the Convention have fostered creative local public
events to mark the occasion, emphasizing that governments, special interest
groups, academic institutions, communities and individuals are all stakeholders
and have a responsibility to conserve biodiversity and to use our biological
resources in a sustainable way. The Secretariat encourages the Parties and stakeholders
to reach out to young people by assisting teachers to develop biodiversity information
and activity programs for students of all ages, by involving them in local celebrations
of International Biological Diversity Day, and by publicly recognizing outstanding
biodiversity-related school projects." Background info, a press release,
and an inspirational statement from Secretary-General Kofi Annan are available
on the CBD's Web site at http://www.biodiv.org/outreach/awareness/biodiv-day-2003.asp.[22/05/03]
Discussion
paper available.
Economic valuation of wetlands on the river basin scale.
"In all regions of the world, human populations are suffering social, economic
and environmental hardship resulting from the destruction and mismanagement
of their natural resources, notably including their wetlands and water resources.
This destruction, which is continuing at alarming rates in many countries, is
contributing to escalating poverty and water supply and food security problems,
as well as robbing the planet of the biological diversity with which wetlands
are endowed. . . . Although wetlands are amongst the richest life-supporting
ecosystems on earth, they are amongst the most threatened and destroyed. Why
do human beings destroy what are essential elements of their ecosystems? The
answer is relatively simple: because they do not value wetland goods and services
in economic and monetary terms." Alain Lambert,
Ramsar's Senior Advisor for Environment and Development Cooperation,
lays out the need for economic valuation of wetlands and summarizes the issues
involved in this discussion
paper, which will be presented and discussed at the World Parks Congress
in Durban and other fora in the autumn. [21/05/03]
Ramsar
staff news. New members of the regional teams take
up their posts. It's always sad to say farewell to our young colleagues,
but at the same time the Bureau is pleased to announce that two new members
have joined the Bureau staff this week. Ms Liazzat
Rabbiosi of Kazakhstan (asia@ramsar.org) becomes the new Intern/Assistant
to the Regional Coordinator for Asia, Dr Lei Guangchun, taking over from Ms
Ma Jia of China, who is just completing her tenure in the Bureau. Ms Estelle
Gironnet of France (europe@ramsar.org) is our new Intern/Assistant
to the Regional Coordinator for Europe, Dr Tobias Salathé, and is presently
suffering through a concentrated introduction to Bureau procedures with her
predecessor, Sergei Dereliev of Bulgaria. Brief introductions to our two new
colleagues can be found on the Bulletin
Board page from March 2003. [21/05/03]
3rd
Australian Wetlands Forum features top Ramsar speakers. "Ramsar
working in Australia - linking local wetlands to the Ramsar international family"
is the theme of the Third Australian Wetlands Forum, organized by Wetland Care
Australia, in conjunction with WWF Australia, Australian Society of Limnology,
and the Society of Wetland Scientists, Australia, and to be held at the Banrock
Station Wine & Wetland Centre in South Australia, 13 June 2003. (Banrock
won one of the Ramsar Wetland Conservation Awards in 2002 for its innovative
private sector involvement in wetland conservation.) The programme focuses on
the impact of recent Ramsar innovations on the wetland conservation movement
in Australia, particularly with regard to the private sector, landowners, and
the NGOs. Speakers include such well-informed friends of the Ramsar Convention
as Max Finlayson (chair of our STRP), Bill Phillips (our former
Deputy Secretary General), Chris Prietto of The Wetlands Centre, Michelle
Handley of WWF, Doug Watkins of Wetlands International, and Sarah
Young of Environment Australia, among others. The
interesting programme has been reprinted here, and further information
can be sought from Justine Graham, Wetland Care Australia, justinegraham@wetlandcare.com.au.
[20/05/03]
Costa
Rica names high-altitude peatlands as its 11th Ramsar site. The Ramsar
Bureau is delighted to announce that Costa Rica has designated the Turberas
de Talamanca ("Talamanca peatlands") for the Ramsar List,
bringing its total number of Ramsar sites to eleven, covering 510,050 hectares.
The new site, covering 192,520 hectares between 700 and 3281 meters above sea
level in San José, Cartago, and Limón provinces in the interior
of the country, exhibits a rich array of non-forested peatlands, paramos, meadows,
cloud forests, and rain forests, and supports a large number of interesting
plants and mammals, some of them threatened. Two National Parks lie within the
Ramsar site. A brief description
of the site by Ramsar's Julio Montes de Oca is available here in English
and Spanish. The Convention now has 1,284 Wetlands of International Importance
in 136 Contracting Parties, totaling 108.9 million hectares, more than the surface
area of France, Germany, and Switzerland combined. [19/05/03] [français
et/y español]
Now
available. The STRP's work plan for 2003-2005.
Read 'em and weep. The Convention's
Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP) is the subsidiary body of volunteer
experts that provides serious technical advice to the Convention on issues of
ongoing and emerging importance -- it consists of 15 individual members from
the regions, serving in their capacity as independent experts rather than as
country representatives, and delegates from the four International Organization
Partners, with representatives of 18 other multilateral environmental agreements
and non-governmental organizations formally invited as permanent observers (by
Resolution VIII.28). COP8 (the 8th meeting
of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, Valencia, 2002) adopted a Strategic
Plan and 46 Resolutions which between them requested studies and guidance from
the STRP on nearly a quarter of a million distinct topics, which the 29th meeting
of the Standing Committee (February 2003) whittled down to 150,000 and kindly
prioritized. In April 2003, the newly-elected STRP, meeting in Gland, sifted
through those priorities and devised its Work Plan for the next triennium, defining
its Expert Working Groups and their Leads and establishing all the desired outcomes
and timetables. This draft Work Plan 2003-2005 has now been approved by the
Standing Committee and stands officially as very hard reading in itself, but
never mind, as a blueprint for the wisdom and guidance that will likely be made
available for COP9 in Uganda in 2005, it's a well-thought-out, ambitious, and
probably feasible programme of work. It's newly available, in all its profundity
and girth, on this Web site at key_strp_workplan_2003.htm
for the Web version and key_strp_workplan_2003.pdf
for the Acrobat version. The report of the 11th meeting of the STRP, with its
extraordinary photos, is available at strp11_report.htm.
[16/05/03]
Workshop
on lagoon wetlands set for 10th anniversary of Kushiro COP. The "International
Workshop on Wise Use of Lagoon Wetlands" will be held in Kushiro, Hokkaido,
Japan on 23-25 July 2003, and will be organized as a commemoration of the 10th
anniversary of the 5th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the Ramsar
Convention. Ramsar Center Japan is performing the secretariat duties for the
organizing committee, along with the Kushiro International Wetland Center, the
Foundation of Hokkaido River Disaster Prevention Research Center, and the Hokkaido
Development Engineering Center. The RCJ's secretary general, Ms Reiko Nakamura,
has provided a description of the event, and a form for registering yourself,
your paper, and/or your poster presentation. Here
it is. [14/05/03]
'Ramsar
meets Venice: for sustainable management of the environmental heritage'
. . .. was the theme of a meeting organized in the Arsenale di Venezia by the
Provincial Government of Venice on 9 May 2003. Since 1998, the Province of Venice
has included in its strategic plan the designation of the entire Lagoon of Venice
(about 50,000 ha) as a Wetland of International Importance. About 80 participants,
scientists and experts, administrators from different sectors, stakeholders
and locally elected people gathered in the historic Naval Library. It was an
important milestone towards the goal of conferring Ramsar status to the Venice
Lagoon. The meeting
was chaired by Luigino Busatto, the President of Venice Province, and
organized by the Department for Hunting and Fishing, under the leadership of
Assesora Delia Murer of the Provincial Government. In preparation of
the meeting, two Ramsar experts, María José Viñals
(STRP member) and Michael Smart (former Senior Advisor in the Ramsar
Bureau), were asked by the Province to prepare planning guidelines for the management
of Venice Lagoon. Following the meeting, a study tour of the Venice Lagoon was
arranged for the Ramsar visitors -- Tobias
Salathé's brief report, with photos, is available here. [13/05/03]
ICRI
wraps up meeting in Gland, Switzerland. The Ramsar Convention Bureau
and IUCN-The World Conservation Union hosted the International
Coral Reef Initiative's (ICRI) Coordinating and Planning Committee (CPC) Meeting
in Gland, Switzerland the past 8-9 of May, in coordination with ICRI's Joint
Philippines-Sweden Secretariat. This fruitful meeting was highlighted by the
transfer of the ICRI Secretariat to the United Kingdom for the next two year
period, starting July 2003, with the Seychelles as the developing country co-host.
The complete meeting report, including resolutions and recommendations, will
be made available in the ICRI Forum shortly. (www.icriforum.org). A
brief report, photos, and a list of participants are available here.
[13/05/03]
Sustainable
tourism toolkit available in Spanish. Maria
Anagnostopoulou, Ramsar's MedWet Communications Officer based in
the MedWet Coordination Unit in Athens, Greece, reports that "We have uploaded
to our Web site the Spanish version of the recent MedWet toolkit (5 volumes)
for sustainable tourism in wetlands, published in 2002 by SEHUMED (the Spanish
wetland centre - member of the MedWet Technical Network), in collaboration with
the Polytechnic University of Valencia and with the support of the Ramsar Bureau,
and it's available at: http://www.medwet.org/online/online.htm."
[12/05/03]
Wetland
info for the Oceania region.
The Oceania Wetlands Help-line, managed
by Bill Phillips of Mainstream Environmental Consulting
(MainStream@mainstream.com.au),
has now been launched and can be reached through http://www.wetlandshelp-line.com.
The site is designed to assist people within the Oceania region, though some
of the information may have more general interest for practitioners from other
regions. The site is set up to be a Web-based 'filing cabinet' for advice, guidance
and other information which is 'out there', but not always easy to find if you
don't have the contacts. Bill Phillips hopes that others who know of useful
resource materials will let him know about them. Through the site one will find
everything from the (English versions) of the Ramsar Wise Use 'toolkit' handbooks,
additional guidance adopted at COP8, lots of regional information about Ramsar
sites, how to designate more, management planning, organisations that can help,
opportunities for seeking financial assistance.....and lots, lots more. While
it is already a large site, it is still very much under construction, so some
pages are still growing. Bill writes to the Ramsar Forum: "The part of
the site I am seeking particular help with is the so-called Virtual tour of
Ramsar sites in Oceania. I need photos of these sites so that this can become
an exciting and interesting entry point for people who know little about Ramsar
and the concept of Wetlands of International Importance. If anyone has photos
for the Ramsar sites in Australia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea or Palau, please
let me know. The photographers will retain copyright of any material put up
on the site. The photos will also be used at sufficiently low resolution to
minimise piracy." [12/05/03]
Vacancy
announcement. BirdLife International seeks projects manager for Middle
East / Africa projects.
BirdLife International - a global partnership of non-government organisations
working to conserve the world's birds - is looking to recruit an experienced
manager for site-based conservation projects in the developing world, to work
at the Secretariat to the NGO federation, in Cambridge, the UK. This position
will form a part of a conservation project management team at the Secretariat.
The postholder's responsibilities will include management and development of
an 11-country project covering the Middle East and Africa. He or she will also
be involved in the development of new projects working closely with the national
non-government organization Partners in the BirdLife network. A brief description
is available here [link later removed],
and more details can be found at at www.birdlife.org/jobs.
Rosina Abudulai is the contact person (rosina.abudulai@birdlife.org.uk)
and 6 June is the deadline for applications. [12/05/03]
Memorandum
of Agreement 2003 - 2008 between the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC)
and Wetlands International. On 29 April 2003, at a meeting of the
United Kingdom National Ramsar Committee in Peterborough, United Kingdom, the
recently concluded Memorandum of Agreement (MoA) between JNCC (United
Kingdom)
and Wetlands International was officially launched. The MoA outlines the details
of programme support from the United Kingdom through JNCC for a period of five
years with a total budget of over GBP 250,000. This MoA supports three major
programmes and two projects of Wetlands International: Programmes: -International
Waterbird Census - Specialist Groups activities within Wetlands International
- Global Waterbird Flyway Conference 2004; Projects: -Regular update on phasing
out of lead gunshot -Review of the European Status of Ruddy Duck. The meeting
was well attended by representatives of government agencies and NGOs from all
over the United Kingdom. Wetlands International's representative, Dr.
Gerard C. Boere, presented a comprehensive overview of Wetlands International's
present organisation and programme activities both on regional and global level.
He expressed great appreciation on behalf of Wetlands International for the
continued substantial support from the UK for the global activities. Futhermore
he strongly called on other country members of Wetlands International to follow
this example of long term programme support. [10/05/03]
Recent
news from MedWet - two meetings in Athens. On
6 and 7 May 2003, the MedWet Coordinator, Spyros Kouvelis, participated
in two meetings in Athens that will be of interest to the Ramsar community.
The first was a high-level conference organized by the Greek Ministry of Foreign
Affairs (as President of the EU) and the World Bank, on shared
waters and peace in Southeastern Europe. The second was the final
meeting of the SAP-BIO Advisory Committee, organized in Athens by the Regional
Activity Centre for Specially Protected Areas (RAC/SPA) of the UNEP Mediterranean
Action Plan (MAP). Spyros'
brief report is available here. [09/05/03]
ICRI
meets at Ramsar. The Ramsar Convention Bureau is hosting the International
Coral Reef Initiative's (ICRI) Coordinating and Planning Committee
(CPC) Meeting at the IUCN / Ramsar Headquarters, in Gland, Switzerland on the
8th and 9th May 2003, in coordination with ICRI's Joint Philippines-Sweden Secretariat.
The meeting will discuss proposals and new arrangements for the future turn-over
of the ICRI Secretariat in July 2003. Additionally, new ICRI representatives
to the International Coral Reef Action Network (ICRAN) Board will be chosen
as incumbent representatives end their terms. The draft agenda and documents
can be downloaded from: http://www.icriforum.org/router.cfm?show=secretariat/sec_home.html&Item=1.
[08/05/03]
Now
available. Photos from STRP11. The
11th meeting of the Convention's Scientific and Technical Review Panel
(STRP) took place in early April 2003 in order to provide opportunities for
STRP individual members and member organization partners and observer organizations
to talk environmental jargon, "network" with one another, and develop
a work plan for the next triennium that
runs to 52 pages in a small typeface. Here, now at last, at long last -- here
are the photographic memorabilia of these momentous events, subdivided into
"plenaries", "dinner", "reception", "quiz",
and "miscellaneous", the last of which includes the Secretary General's
cowbell, the signing of an MOC with LakeNet, and David Stroud wrapping himself
in the flag (left). Sit up straight and take a deep breath, and then
proceed fearlessly. [08/05/03]
Now
available. Waterbird Population Estimates
- Third Edition is now available for downloading from the Wetlands International
Website. The Wetlands International publication Waterbird
Population Estimates - Third Edition was launched in hardcopy
at Ramsar COP8 in Valencia last November. The publication is now available for
consultation and downloading on Wetlands
International's Web site. Bookmarks in the PDF files make it easy to
find a particular species you may be looking for. The importance of this publication
especially for the Ramsar Convention is that it provides the basis of Criterion
6 whereby any wetland regularly supporting 1% or more of a waterbird biogeographical
population qualifies as a Wetland of International Importance. This new, much
expanded and improved edition in full colour includes a distribution map for
each species kindly provided by Lynx Edicions, publishers of Handbook of
the Birds of the World. It identifies 2,271 biogeographical populations
of 868 species recognised as waterbirds occurring throughout the world. It provides
estimates of the numerical abundance of 1,725 (76%) of these populations, and
estimates population trends (whether declining, stable or increasing) for 1,138
(50%). The publication sets 1% levels for use in applying Criterion 6 for identifying
Wetlands of International Importance, and provides information fundamental to
the application of other Multilateral Environmental Agreements such as the African-Eurasian
Migratory Waterbird Agreement (AEWA) under the Bonn Convention (CMS). Finally,
Waterbird Population Estimates - Third Edition
identifies gaps in knowledge of populations, species and geographical
regions, and users are encouraged to contribute to future editions by helping
to fill these gaps. -- reported by Wetlands International.
[07/05/03]
News
from SGF. News from the Lower Neretva Valley.
Croatia and Bosnia & Herzegovina have successfully completed
their Ramsar Small Grants Fund 2000 project "Preparation
of the project Transboundary Management Plan for the Lower Neretva Valley".
The project has been jointly implemented by two counterpart institutions: from
Croatian side - the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Physical Planning,
and from Bosnia & Herzegovina's side - the Ministry of Civil Engineering,
Physical Planning and Environmental Protection of the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton
through its authorized institution the Faculty of Civil Engineering in Mostar.
A short summary by Sergei Dereliev,
based on the final report, reveals some of the major project activities and
achievements and has some very nice photos. At the same time, MedWet
Senior Advisor Thymio Papayannis reports on the 3 May meeting between
authorities from Croatia and Bosnia & Herzogovina, to advance the progress
of transboundary management cooperation for the area. [06/05/03]
Announcement.
El Sr. Carlos Franco Pacheco, del Foro Ecológico
del Perú (Lince, Perú - foro@sifocom.org.pe) nos informa de los
"Talleres y Seminario Nacional Conservación y Uso Sostenible de
los Humedales en el Perú - ¡Hagamos de los Humedales una oportunidad
para el Perú!", a llevarse a cabo en Chimbote, Arequipa, Huancayo
y Lima, Perú, entre el 16 de Mayo y 4 de Junio del 2003. Sírvanse
encontrar adjuntos los detalles de los eventos. [06/05/03]
Sr. Carlos Franco Pacheco, of the Foro Ecológico del Perú (Lince, Perú - foro@sifocom.org.pe) has informed us of the upcoming "National Workshops and Seminar for the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Wetlands in Peru" to be held in the cities of Chimbote, Arequipa, Huancayo, and Lima, Perú, between may 16 and june 4, 2003. Please find attached the details of the event (Spanish).
Pakistan
designates three new Ramsar sites. The
Ramsar Bureau is particularly pleased to announce three new Wetlands of International
Importance in Pakistan totaling over 1 million hectares, all wildlife sanctuaries
and all in Sindh Province, designated effective 5 November 2002. Deh
Akro-II Desert Wetland Complex (20,500 ha, 26°50'N 068°20'E)
consists of east-west dune systems punctuated by 36 permanent lakes in the inter-dunal
valleys, home to a number of rare species. Indus Delta
(~472,800 ha, 24°06'N 067°42'E) is the 5th largest delta system in the
world and home to the 7th largest mangrove forest system. The Runn
of Kutch (566,375 ha; 24°23'N 070°05'E), part of the great
Thar desert and part of the very large transfrontier wetland system also known
as the Rann of Kutch, is likewise characterized by sand dune systems broken
up by inter-dunal depressions with alluvial soil. Sindh authorities were materially
assisted in the preparation of these site designations by WWF-Pakistan
with the benefit of financial assistance from WWF International's Living Waters
Programme. Pakistan now has 19 Ramsar sites covering 1,343,627 hectares, and
the Convention's 1283 sites now cover a surface area of 108,751,595 hectares.
Further details on the three new sites
are available here. (Note: WWF is also working with the Indian Government
to prepare the designation of several new wetlands of international importance
in India, including the Indian side of the Rann of Kutch. WWF is expecting that
the process under way in India may be completed very soon.) [05/05/03] [français
et/y español]
News
from the SGF. Republic of Moldova completes Dniester restoration
SGF project. Moldova has successfully completed an SGF 2000 project
"Restoration, Rehabilitation and Implementation
of Protective Measures in the Core Wetland Areas in the Dniester River Downstream
in Moldova". This project has been implemented by the Moldova's
Ecological Society "Biotica", which has a long-standing leading role
among NGOs in wetland conservation in the country. Sergei
Dereliev offers a short summary based on the final report on the major project
activities and achievements, with photos. [05/05/03]
Inauguration
of Japanese Lawmakers' League for Increasing Ramsar Sites. Kei
Inami (inami.kei@nifty.ne.jp), writing on behalf of Hiroyuki
Tani, new Secretary General of the Japanese
Lawmakers' League for Increasing Ramsar Sites, informs the Bureau
that 102 people attended the inaugural meeting of the League on 16 April, including
35 members of the Diet (or Parliament) and 22 secretaries of Diet members, as
well as many from the media. Ms Kayoko Shimizu was elected the chairwoman
of the League and Mr Tani was elected secretary general. Congratulatory letters
from Delmar Blasco and from Akiko Domoto, Governor of Chiba Prefecture,
were read out, and a few photos (one of Mr Tani and Mr Blasco) can be seen at
http://www.tani-hiroyuki.com/ramsar.htm (text in Japanese). [05/05/03]
The
Netherlands adds 11 more wetlands to the Ramsar List.
The Ramsar Bureau is very glad to announce the next batch of newly designated
Ramsar sites in The Netherlands, following the listing of 14 new sites and 1
extension announced in February 2003.
The Government of The Netherlands has made another significant contribution
to the Ramsar List of Wetlands of International Importance with 11 more coastal
and inland sites covering 127,680 hectares. The Ramsar Bureau's European regional
team stresses that it's worth mentioning the superior quality of the GIS maps
for these sites. Currently the Netherlands has 49 sites totaling 818,908 hectares.
Soon, after the updates on the other existing sites in the country have been
studied and accepted, it is expected that the total number of sites will drop
by 2 sites to 47 due to the reconfiguration of the Ramsar site of Waddenzee
(Wadden Sea) which will swallow up two smaller ones - Boschplaat and Griend.
The Bureau once again heartily welcomes these significant commitments by the
Government of The Netherlands to the health of its environment.
Here find brief descriptions of the eleven new Dutch sites, prepared
by Ramsar's Sergei Dereliev from the Ramsar Information Sheets. [02/05/03]
Announcement.
Wetland management training for East Africa. The
East African Wetland Management Course (EAWMC) is a regional training
initiative for wetland managers. It is a Ramsar Convention-endorsed programme
and it is designed based on the Ramsar New Guidelines for management planning
for Ramsar sites and other wetlands (Resolution VIII.14). The EAWMC has
been developed and organized primarily by the Kenya
Wildlife Service Training Institute (KWSTI) in conjunction with the
Wetland Advisory and Training Centre (RIZA), the Netherlands, with subsequent
contribution from Uganda and Tanzania to suit the African situation. This year's
six-week (42-days) residential course, based in Naivasha, Kenya, is scheduled
for 17th September to 28th October 2003.
More information here in English and Français.
[02/05/03]
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]
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. Note: A few corrections
have been made to the English version released on 17 April; Parties may wish
to download this revised English version or review
this brief description of the revisions. French and Spanish versions are
not affected. [30/04/03]
Español: Instrumento de Planificación Nacional / Modelo de Informe Nacional
Français: Instrument de planification nationale / Modèle de Rapport national

STRP11 group photo, April 2003
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] [français
et/y español]
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]
[français et/y español]
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 are here." [29/04/03]
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 ramsar@ramsar.org). Updated regularly by Dwight Peck, Ramsar Bureau.
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