What's
New @ Ramsar
3
November 2003![]()
Headline
story. Uganda and Ramsar sign MOU for COP9.
At a ceremony on 30 October 2003, Uganda signed a Memorandum of Understanding
with the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands to host the 9th meeting of the Conference
of the Parties to the Convention (COP9) in Kampala in late 2005. The offer,
which was first made at Ramsar COP8 in November 2002 and gratefully accepted
by the Contracting Parties, is a highly significant commitment for Uganda, and
is the first time that the global Convention on Wetlands has come to Africa
for its triennial meeting of its Parties, now numbering 138 countries. The new
MOU formalizes the commitments on both sides and lays out the steps to be taken
between now and COP9 some two years hence. The
ceremony was held during a reception hosted by Wetlands International and the
Royal Netherlands Embassy, Washington D.C., USA. Wetlands International's President,
Max Finlayson, invited the Ramsar Convention's Secretary General, Peter
Bridgewater, and the Uganda National Coordinator for COP9, Paul Mafabi,
to sign the Memorandum. More details
here, and a few photos. [02/11/03]
Announcement.
Wetlands
conference set for UK on World Wetlands Day. "Wetlands:
Policy into Action" is the name of a professional conference
scheduled for London around World Wetlands Day, 2-3 February 2004. Sponsored
by CIWEM and organized by CMS-Coastal Management for Sustainability, the meeting
will include speakers from RSPB, the Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust (WWT), WWF-UK,
English Nature and the National Trust, among others. Following a guided tour
on WWD of the WWT's London Wetland Centre in Barnes and a reception in the evening
supported by WWF-UK, the conference on the 3rd will consist of three sessions
-- Policy Development and Practice, The State of Wetlands, and Good Practice
Case Studies - and include the bestowing of the 2004 RSPB/CIWEM Living Wetlands
Award. Here is a reprint of
the CIWEM's announcement and registration form. [03/11/03]
Headline
story. World Wetlands Day 2004 materials ready. 2
February each year is World Wetlands Day, marking the date of
the signing of the Convention on Wetlands on 2 February 1971. WWD
was celebrated for the first time in 1997, and each year, government agencies,
non-governmental organizations, and groups of citizens at all levels of the
community have taken advantage of the opportunity to
undertake actions aimed at raising public awareness of wetland values and benefits
in general and the Ramsar Convention in particular. From 1997
to 2003, the Conventions Web site has posted reports from more than 80
countries of WWD activities of all sizes and shapes, and the Ramsar Bureau
has provided materials free of charge to help planners get the greatest effect
from their activities. This year the Bureau has prepared a
poster on the theme of "From the mountains
to the sea -- Wetlands at work for us", a new
3-fold leaflet "Working for Wetlands",
and a new sticker, all of them in English,
Français, and Español. View
these new materials here, and if you think that they will help you to
get your wetland message across, follow the directions on ordering that you'll
find on that page. All of these hardcopy materials are also available on CD-ROM
in Quark XPress format so that you can if you wish amend them to suit your own
circumstances and produce versions of your own, and limited quantities of WWD
materials from past years can also be requested. But
hurry! [01/11/03]
![]()
| Ramsar Trivia: Who can join the Ramsar Convention? Answer. |
Who's where?
Peter
Bridgewater, Secretary General, goes to Germany on the 20th
October to deliver the keynote speech during the Trilateral
Wadden Sea Cooperation 25th anniversary celebration, then will be
in Brazil on the 23rd October to meet Government
representatives and attend a UNU meeting
on synergies and linkages of environmental conventions, focusing
on the Pantanal. He will then go to Washington for the WI
Board of Directors meeting on the 30th October, followed
by a meeting with Herb Raffaele of USFWS,
the Focal Point for the USA’s Administrative Authority, and a meeting with the
GEF Secretariat and the UN Foundation. [22/10/03]
Tobias
Salathé, Regional Coordinator for Europe, is in Ukraine
participating in the joint Ramsar/MAB Advisory Mission in the Danube Delta.
[29/10/03]
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year.
New
on the Site: Participants'
list from COP3, way back in 1987; Diplomatic
notification 2003/4 on the upcoming Standing Committee meeting;
Draft
agenda for Standing Committee's January 2004 meeting.[30/10/03]
Peru
designates two high altitude wetlands. The Ramsar Bureau is delighted
to announce that the Government of Peru has named two High Andean wetlands in
Arequipa for the List of Wetlands of International Importance, effective 28
October 2003, bringing that Party's total to 10 Ramsar sites covering 6,777,547
hectares. Both are parts of the Reserva Nacional de Salinas y Aguada Blanca.
As described by Ramsar's Iván Darío Valencia based on the
Ramsar Information Sheets, Bofedales y Laguna de Salinas
(17,657 ha., 16º22´S 71º08W) is a salt high Andean lake in the
Puna at 4,300m altitude, lying at the bottom of an endorrheic basin with geothermal
activities amidst snow-capped mountains and volcanoes.
Laguna del Indio - Dique de los Españoles (502 ha., 15º46´S
71º03'W) is a natural high Andean seasonal pool at over 4440m in the Puna
which became permanent with the building of a reservoir serving the water needs
of the city of Arequipa and which is used for hydroelectric power generation
downstream. More details and a map
of their locations within the National Reserve can be seen here. [31/10/03]
7th
Neotropical Ornithological Congress, Chile. Iván
Darío Valencia, Ramsar Assistant for the Americas, attended
the VII Neotropical Ornithological Congress
in Termas de Puyehue, Chile, from 5 to 12 October 2003. The Neotropical Ornithological
Congress is an event hosted every four years gathering ornithologists, birdwatchers
and other people working with birds in the Neotropics. This year it was organized
by UNORCH - Unión de Ornitólogos de Chile and the Neotropical
Ornithological Society, in the vicinity of Puyehue National Park, in southern
Chile, close to the border with Argentina, in a magnificent scenario. The event
convened over 400 people from all of the Americas. Iván
Darío's brief report of Ramsar's participation can be seen here in English
and Español,
with a handful of his excellent
photos from the field trip to the nearby Carlos Anwandter Sanctuary Ramsar site.
[31/10/03]
Conference
on Western Hemisphere Migratory Species. "In a demonstration
of shared commitment to wildlife conservation, representatives from 25 countries
in the Western Hemisphere were joined by members from over 40 international
NGO conservation groups and wildlife conservation stakeholders to develop strategies
for cooperation for conservation of migratory species and collaboration on wildlife
conservation issues among the countries of the Western Hemisphere." So
reports the US Fish and Wildlife Service
in its press release on the Western Hemisphere Migratory
Species Conference held in Termas de Puyehue, Chile, 6-8 October 2003,
with the participation of Margarita Astrálaga,
Ramsar Regional Coordinator for the Americas. As the press release indicates,
an interim steering committee has been chosen to help to build upon the momentum
generated by the Conference, and Ramsar will continue to participate actively
in this initiative. Here is the
US FWS press release. [31/10/03]
Ramsar
Advisory Mission under way for the Danube Delta. Ramsar's Tobias
Salathé is in Kyiv and the Danube Delta Ramsar site called
"Kyliiske Mouth" in Ukraine as part of a Ramsar Advisory Mission,
27-31 October, conducted jointly with the UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Programme
(Jan Kvets) to look at the proposed plans
to construct a navigation channel through the Bistroye river arm in the core
zone of the Biosphere Reserve and Ramsar site. More details to follow. [29/10/03]
Brazil
names National Wetlands Committee. Created under a decree by President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Brazil's newly constituted National
Wetlands Committee held its first meeting on 24 October 2003. Ramsar Secretary
General Peter Bridgewater, who was in Brazil
for discussions with the Ministries of Environment and Foreign Affairs, was
able to participate and noted that the creation of the committee is a doubly
significant step forward because of the natural difficulties of forming such
a group in a federal state. The committee was presided over by João Paulo
Ribeiro Capobianco, Secretary of Biodiversity and Forests, Ministry of the Environment,
and in attendance were Joao Mauricio Cabral de Mello, Environmental Division,
Itamaraty (Ministry of Foreign Affairs); Maurício Mercadante, Director
of Protected Areas - Ramsar Focal Point, Ministry of the Environment; Raquel
Breda, International Adviser, MoE; João Bosco Senra, Secretary of Water
Resources, MoE; Valmir Ortega, Pantanal Program, Secretariat of Environmental
Quality, MoE; Gilney Viana, Secretary of Sustainable Development; Rômulo
Barreto Mello, Director of Fauna and Fisheries, IBAMA; Bernardo Brummer, UNESCO,
and a number of NGOs. Maria Carolina Hazin, Ramsar's daily contact, made a short
presentation on the Convention. The composition of the Committee means that
there will be wide participation and discussion across a complex Ministry as
well as with relevant external bodies and NGOs, which will significantly help
to make the linkages between environmental conventions even more effective in
Brazil and provides an excellent model for the future. [29/10/03]
Kapar
Dedication ceremony on Waterbird Strategy Web site. Taej
Mundkur, Regional Programme Director Asia and Asia-Pacific Waterbird
Strategy Coordination Officer for Wetlands International, writes: "An informative
and illustrated report has been posted on the 10 October dedication ceremony
of the Kapar Ash Ponds to the East Asian-Australasian Shorebird Site Network.
The site is the first for Malaysia. The event was organised excellently by the
Tenaga Nasional Berhad, the national power generation company and owner of the
site. Visit
the Wetlands International Web site for more details." [29/10/03]
Vacancy
announced. AEWA seeks Associate Technical Officer.
The United Nations Environment Programme is seeking an Associate Technical Officer,
to be based in Bonn, Germany, to work on matters concerning the African-Eurasian
Migratory Waterbird Agreement. The official announcement from
UNEP has been reprinted here. [link
later removed] [29/10/03]
International
Symposium on mangrove conservation."The
International Symposium on Conservation and Wise Use of Mangroves in Southeast
Asia",
jointly organised by the Forestry Department of Brunei
Darussalam, University Brunei Darussalam
and the Ramsar Center Japan,
was held on the 6th-8th of October 2003 in Bander Seri Begawan, Brunei Darussalam.
Attended by more than 80 participants and experts from Bangladesh, Brunei, Cambodia,
China, Indonesia, India, Japan, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Philippines, Singapore,
Thailand, Taiwan and Viet Nam, the symposium set out to present the results
of a joint project on the wise use of mangroves by the three organising institutions,
to receive comments and suggestions from the experts, and also to establish
information networks for mangroves in Southeast Asian countries. Ramsar’s Lei
Guangchun, Regional Advisor for Asia, gave a presentation on "The
Ramsar Convention as an International Instrument for Mangrove Conservation and
Wise Use" and strongly encouraged Brunei Darussalam to accede to the Ramsar
Convention in the near future. Here's
a brief report by Reiko Nakamura, Ramsar Centre Japan, with photos.
[24/10/2003]
Trilateral
Wadden Sea Cooperation celebrates its 25th anniversary. During
the celebration, held on 22 October 2003 in Wilhelmshaven,
Germany, Ramsar's Secretary General,
Peter Bridgewater, delivered a keynote address where he praised the
work of the trilateral
cooperation between
Denmark,
Germany
and
The Netherlands
noting “Historically your
three countries have been world leaders in promoting the need to establish and
manage protected areas in a wider context.” The Wadden Sea area includes
8 Ramsar sites, collectively covering over 1,000,000 hectares. From
a Ramsar perspective he urged the three countries “to remain vigilant” in their
efforts to avoid the further loss and degradation of their wetland habitats
as
well as the negative consequences of the intensification of agriculture “and
increase the degree to which your national boundaries become blurred in the
management strategies pursued in the Wadden Sea.” Dr Bridgewater used
the opportunity to launch the Durban Link,
a 10-point action plan towards achieving
more sustainable protected areas while solving other pressing social and environmental
issues, agreed at the recently concluded World Parks Congress in South
Africa. Read Peter's
keynote address here. The
Durban Link is available in PDF format in Danish, Dutch, English and German
here. [22/10/2003]
International
seminar on the shores of Lake Sevan Ramsar site. Current
issues of conservation and wise use of wetlands and wetland biodiversity in
the European New Independent States was the subject of a seminar
organized 15-19 September 2003 by the Armenian Ministry
of Nature Protection and the NGO “Professional
and Entrepreneurial Orientation Union”, with financial support from
Ramsar’s Small Grants Fund and USAID (via Lakenet). The audience, including
64 wetland and Ramsar experts from western countries, central European EU accession
countries and Central Asian states as well as a number of key international
organisations, heard a presentation about Ramsar challenges as well as several
case studies highlighting ongoing major programmes, such as the conservation
of biodiversity in the Caucasus region, global action on peatlands, the trilateral
Ramsar initiative in the Morava-Dyie floodplains and presentations of different
national projects and plans. Ramsar’s Tobias Salathé
attended this meeting and noted that the seminar “provided a useful test for
subregional meetings to exchange and discuss current Ramsar topics and their
relationship to the socio-economic reality of countries in transition”.
Here's his report. [17/10/03]
World
Atlas of Seagrasses launched. At ceremonies held on 15 October at
the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, UK, UNEP's World
Conservation Monitoring Centre launched its new World
Atlas of Seagrasses, a concise, well-illustrated 310-page summary
of opinions and scientific work of the world's leading seagrass experts on the
global status of the ecosystem. Edited by Edmund P. Green and Frederick T. Short,
the book is the result of a project generously financed by the Department for
Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA) of the UK, DFID, UNEP DEWA, the
David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, and
the International Coral Reef Action Network, and is available for purchase from
the University of
California Press. Keynote speakers at the launch ceremony were Mark
Collins, Director of UNEP-WCMC, Elliot Morley, UK Minister for the Environment
and Agri-environment, and Peter Bridgewater, Secretary General of the Ramsar
Convention. Further information about the new Atlas can be found at http://www.unep-wcmc.org/marine/seagrassatlas/.[16/10/03]
Climate
change and deltas seminar. Climatic change and
foreseeable impacts on deltas: a new challenge for the conservation of protected
areas
was the title of a seminar organized 8-9 October 2003 by the Ramsar site managers
network Delta chiama Delta ("Delta
calls Delta") in the small lagoon town of Comacchio, seat of the administration
of the Po Delta Regional Park of Italy's Emilia-Romagna region. The seminar
was followed by a short boat trip to the Valli di Comacchio, the coastal lagoons
transformed for fish farming and waterfowl hunting since ancient times, including
a visit of the former eel harvesting and canning facilities at Serilla Casone,
now turned into a historical museum and visitor centre evoking the many cultural
and natural heritage values of the Comacchio lagoon Ramsar Site. Ramsar's
Tobias Salathé reports on these and related events and concludes
that "these gatherings are a sign of the many bottom-up activities generated
in the Po Delta area by the Emilia-Romagna Regional Park and its many partners
nearby and abroad. They present encouraging signs for the establishment of very
active networks of wetlands (and Ramsar Sites) managers to exchange experience
and lessons to be learned." Here
is his brief report. [15/10/03]
Moldova
designates the Lower Dniester. The Bureau of the Convention on Wetlands
is very pleased to announce that the Republic of Moldova,
which joined the Convention in 2000, has designated its second Wetland of International
Importance, effective 20 August 2003. Lower Dniester
(Nistru de Jos) lies on both sides of the Dniester in Tighina and
Slodozia districts and covers a surface area of 60,000 hectares. As Ramsar's
Estelle Gironnet makes clear in her description
of the site, based on the extraordinarily well-made Ramsar Information Sheets,
the riverine habitats support a number of endangered and threatened bird and
fish species and have an exceptional archaeological importance as well. Moreover,
they help to complete the Ramsar status of the transboundary Dniester Delta,
with two existing Ramsar sites in Ukraine. Here
you will find Estelle's site description, and here
you will find a page of nice photographs of the site, and here
you will find a reprint of the exemplary RIS datasheets that accompanied
this newest commitment by the Republic of Moldova to the well-being of its wetland
resources. [14/10/03] [Français]
[Español]
Vietnam
adopts Decree on the conservation and development of wetlands.
Pham Dinh Viet Hong, Ramsar
Vietnam, reports that "a decision on the approval of a decree on
the conservation and development of wetlands was signed by the Prime Minister
Phan Van Khai on 23 September 2003", thus providing an important legal
basis for promoting sustainable management of wetlands in Vietnam. Following
this decree, she says, the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment will
issue the "Strategic Action Plan on the Conservation and Sustainable Exploitation
of Wetlands to 2010" and will make strong efforts to designate three new
Ramsar sites over the next two years. Here
is her brief report on the decree and planned follow-up. [13/10/03]
Announcement.
Landscape Ecology Symposium set for March-April 2004.
Nita Tallent-Halsell (tallent-halsell.nita@epa.gov),
Research Environmental Scientist , USEPA/ORD/NERL, writes that "Dr. Bruce
Jones and Nita Tallent-Halsell are pleased to announce that the Web site for
the 2004 US-International Association for Landscape Ecology Symposium, 'Transdisciplinary
Challenges in Landscape Ecology', to be held in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, March
31 - April 2, 2004 (Short Courses March 30, Field Trips April 3&4) is now
available at http://www.usiale.org/lasvegas2004/.
We are looking forward to your participation. See you in March!"
[13/10/03]
Now
available. Ramsar-related Recommendations from
the World Parks Congress. The Vth IUCN World Parks Congress was held
in Durban, South Africa, from 8 to 17 September 2003, and Ramsar's Secretary
General Peter Bridgewater participated as leader of the "stream" on
Linkages in the Landscape and Seascape. All of the WPC's 32 Recommendations
are available on the IUCN
Web site, but those from the Linkages stream bear a particularly strong
relevance to the Ramsar community, and those
six have been reprinted here. The full report and other outputs of the
WPC stream on Linkages in the Landscape and Seascape are also available on the
Web site of the IUCN
Commission on Ecosystem Management (CEM). [10/10/03]
Now
available. Standing Committee 30 draft agenda.
The draft agenda is now ready in English, Français, and Español
for the 30th meeting of the Ramsar Standing Committee, which will take place
13-16 January 2004 in the IUCN/Ramsar headquarters building in Gland, Switzerland.
Click here. [10/10/03]
Asian
Waterbird Census Coordinators Workshop. Wetlands International is
sponsoring the Asian Waterbird Census Coordinators Workshop in Kuala Lumpur,
9-10 October 2003, the first such workshop since the establishment of the AWC
in Asia in 1987. Its purpose is to improve the communication between the national
coordinators and to develop a strategy for the development of the AWC during
2004-2006. The Ramsar Bureau was unable to participate in person but contributed
this statement to the Coordinators.
[10/10/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum.
Wader Study Group charts decline in wader populations worldwide.
The International Wader Study Group - a Specialist Group of Wetlands International
and IUCN-The World Conservation Union's Species Survival Commission - has just
held a technical workshop and Conference in Cadiz, Spain, which brought together
132 specialists from 20 countries to review the population and conservation
status of waders (or shorebirds) around the world. The news is grim: David
Stroud writes to the Ramsar Forum, "The Conference concluded
that the majority of populations of waders of known population trend are in
decline all around the world - a matter of international conservation concern.
. . . Of populations with known trends, 48% are declining, in contrast to just
16% which are increasing: thus three times as many populations are in decline
as are increasing." David's
report to the Forum can be seen here, with some cute wader photos, and
the meeting's conclusions and statistics have now been posted on the WSG's Web
site, www.waderstudygroup.org.
In addition, Ramsar's Nick Davidson
has also reported on the meeting and included photos of the salinas
at the Cadiz Bay Ramsar site. [09/10/03]
Appel
de candidature. Secrétaire Exécutif
de la Fondation Internationale du Banc d'Arguin. [link
later removed] [09/10/03]
France
joins AEWA. On 30 September 2003 France deposited its instruments
of ratification of the Agreement on the Conservation
of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA). France will become
as of 1 of December 2003 the 43rd Contracting Party to the Agreement. France
covers 551,600 km2 and is in particular important to congregatory waterbirds.
So are the coastal wetlands of importance for waders migrating to and from breeding
and
wintering grounds. This country is also of importance to wintering waterbirds
e.g. Greater Flamingo Phoenicopterus ruber (40 % of the total European
population), Dark-bellied Brent Goose Branta bernicla, Gadwall Anas
strepera and Pied Avoset Recurvirostra avosetta. Over the last few
months several countries of the EU joined. The last four EU countries are finalizing
the internal process to join the Agreement in due course. The Secretariat hopes
that this might be a clear signal of the value of AEWA regarding conservation
of migratory waterbirds to Ranges States in other regions and that this will
lead to more accessions in the nearby future. Finally on behalf of the Contracting
Parties the UNEP/ AEWA Secretariat welcomes France to the 'AEWA family'. --
reported by Bert Lenten, Executive Secretary of AEWA.
[09/10/03]
Now
available. Wetland restoration in its legal context.
At
the Global Biodiversity Forum 17 preceding
the Ramsar COP8 in Valencia, November 2002, Prof Roy
Gardner of the Stetson University College of Law in Florida, USA,
presented a very-well-received talk on the legal aspects of wetland restoration,
especially in the Ramsar context, now supplemented by his comprehensive article
in the Catholic University Law Review (Washington, D.C., USA), vol. 52,
no. 3 (spring 2003), pages 573-620, entitled "Rehabilitating
nature: a comparative review of legal mechanisms that encourage wetland restoration
efforts". Prof Gardner's article first discusses the definition
of the term "wetland restoration" and then began its analysis with
"Restoration incentives in international law" (with a strong emphasis
upon Ramsar but with due attention to the
CBD, the CMS and its AEWA, and the North American Waterfowl Management Plan,
as well as the UNFCCC and its Kyoto Protocol). Following which, he considers
"Non-regulatory financial incentives to restore wetlands", then "Non-cash
incentives outside of traditional, permit-based regulatory programs" and
then "Restoration incentives in regulatory programs", including consideration
of 'wetland mitigation banking' in the USA. With as much text in the footnotes
as in the article, Prof Gardner's article offers not only a substantial review
of the subject but a fine entry-point into the literature as well. Bill Streever
(BP Exploration, Alaska), who created the Ramsar
mini-Web site on wetland restoration for the Ramsar STRP, has successfully
besought Prof Gardner to permit the re-publication of this important Catholic
University Law Review article on this Web site in PDF format. Here
is the enabling correspondence
from Drs Streever and Gardner, and here
too is the 2.1MB PDF article itself (you'll need Adobe's free Acrobat
PDF Reader in order to view this file). [08/10/03]
Vacancy
announcement. Ramsar opening for Intern for
Africa (Vacance
Ramsar pour stagiaire Afrique). The Ramsar Bureau
welcomes applications for the position of Intern for
the African Region / Assistant to the Regional Coordinator for Africa,
a 12-month posting (possibly extendable to 18 months) in the Ramsar Bureau in
Switzerland to begin 23 February 2004. With an age limit for applicants
of 30 years old, the post offers an opportunity for young graduates to become
acquainted with the workings of an intergovernmental treaty dealing with the
conservation and sustainable use of natural resources. Candidates for this internship
should be nationals of countries in Africa and have lived most of their lives
in the region. Full ability to work in English and French is required for this
post. Prospective candidates: please view
the General Terms of Reference
for Ramsar internships (also available from the Bureau), which includes conditions
of service and salary structure, and send the application form (Word,
PDF) attached to the General Terms of Reference, a covering letter,
both in English and French, explaining your interest in an internship with the
Ramsar Bureau and your future career goals, your CV including a photograph,
as well as two letters of reference from your previous supervisors or
dean of the faculty where you carried out your studies, to the Bureau's Administration
Coordinator, Mrs Annette Keller, keller@ramsar.org.
The deadline for applications is 31 October 2003.
[07/10/03]
Sustainable
management seminar concluded in Argentina. The International
Seminar on Wetland Sustainable Management in Latin America took place
in Paraná, 25-27 September 2003, organized by Fundación Proteger-Amigos
de la Tierra, Argentina, with the support of Wetlands International and the
Ramsar Convention. More than 700 participants from several parts of the world
discussed and shared experiences regarding wetland sustainable management alternatives,
and a number of important recommendations were concluded, including political
commitments for a major Ramsar site designation along the 'Paraná Floodplain
Fluvial Wetlands Corridor'. The press release from the Fundación Proteger
can be seen here in English
and Español, with
photos, as well as a reprint of an article in English from the Buenos
Aires Herald. [06/10/03]
Les
zones humides et la ressource en eau - Guide technique.
Les Agences de l'eau (France) proposent un guide à l'usage des gestionnaires
sur " Les zones humides et la ressource en eau".
Ce guide présente une synthèse des connaissances sur les zones
humides et propose un ensemble de techniques à mettre en uvre pour
contribuer à une meilleure gestion de leur rôle fonctionnel et
patrimonial. ICI. [29/09/03]
The Water Agencies (France) present a French-language guide book addressed to managers dealing with "Wetlands and water resource". This guide proposes a synthesis of the knowledge on wetlands and reports a set of techniques to be implemented in order to improve the management of their functional and patrimonial roles. It answers the most frequent questions through a hundred convenient cards about typology, functions, threats, actions, monitoring. HERE.
Workshop
on Waterbird Conservation, Dafeng City, China, 4-6 November 2003. Zhang
Xiaohong (wetgef@public.bta.net.cn) announces that a workshop on
waterbird conservation, organized by Wetlands International-China
Office and Dafeng
National Nature Reserve will be held in Dafeng City in Jiangsu
Province on the eastern coast of China from 4-6 November 2003. It follows an
initial workshop held at Panjin, Liaoning Province in August 2002, in which
the participants developed a list of recommendations for improving waterbird
conservation in China. This second workshop at Dafeng will review and advance
the implementation of these recommendations, and it will also help to progress
the development of a National Implementation Plan for Shorebird Conservation
in China. The workshop will be followed by a one-day visit to the Dafeng NNR
coastal wetlands, one of the most important wintering and stop-over sites in
the East Asian-Australasian Shorebird Flyway, a Ramsar site and a critical site
for migratory waterbird and habitat management. The workshop and technical visit
will provide a unique opportunity for participants to see examples of how wetlands
conservation for waterbirds and can proceed. Here
is the full announcement and programme and contact details. [28/09/03]
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Czech Biosphere Reserve expanded to include Ramsar sites. Ramsar's Tobias Salathé reports that the Biosphere Reserve Palava (covering essentially limestone hills with an important biodiversity and many sub-mediterranean species), in the south of the Czech Republic, has recently been expanded to include the Dyje-Morava floodplains with its extensive oak forests (again with a specific assembly of important species supported). This brings the UNESCO Biosphere Reserve more in line with (and largely overlapping) the Ramsar sites "Lednice fishponds" and "Floodplain of the lower Dyje River" and can partly also be seen as a result of the international workshop organized in October 2003 by the Czech Man and Biosphere National Committee (with the participation of the Ramsar Bureau and others, reported here). Josef Chytil, until recently secretary of the Czech Ramsar Committee, working in the management authority of the now extended Biosphere Reserve and Ramsar site, has provided further detail and some excellent photographs, and a map as well. [26/09/03]
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Now available. Framework for Himalayan Action Plan. In August 2002, the WWF International, the Ramsar Bureau, and the Government of the People's Republic of China organized a regional workshop in Urumqi, China, on 'Conservation of High Altitude Wetlands in the Himalayas'. This workshop marked the initiation of a regional cooperation on wetland conservation in the high mountain areas with a wide range of participation from countries in the Himalayan-Tianshan continuum. The workshop resulted in the 'Urumqi Call' for specific collaborative actions. In order to implement the Urumqi Call and the Ramsar Resolution VIII.12 on Himalayan wetlands, WWF International, the Ramsar Bureau, and the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) jointly organized a follow-up workshop on 'Wetland Conservation and Wise Use in the Himalayan High Mountains' from August 30 to September 1, 2003, in Kathmandu (reported here). Now one of the outputs of that workshop, the Framework for an Action Plan on "Wetland Conservation and Wise Use in the Himalayan High Mountains", is available here and on the Web sites of the other workshop organizers. [25/09/03]
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
).
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.