What's
New @ Ramsar
5
January 2004![]()
Headline
story. Ramsar adds new Assistant for Africa.
The Secretariat is delighted to announce that Mr Ahmed
El-Sabban (Egypt) has been appointed to the internship position of
Assistant Advisor for Africa, to replace the irreplaceable Nassima Aghanim in
late February 2004. Ahmed, an agronomist with an MSc in Environmental Management
from the International University for African Development in Alexandria, Egypt,
is currently working with the Egyptian Ministry of Environment on a GEF/UNDP
project on medicinal plants in Egypt. He has previously gained experience in
wetlands management, as well as in Ramsar Site designation, during training
in surveys and field research for compiling the Ramsar Information Sheet with
the French Ministry of Environment and Landscape in Montpellier. He is fluent
in Arabic, French and English. [05/01/03]
Happy
New Year. The Ramsar Convention Secretariat
wishes everyone a happy and productive new year in 2004. Here
is a New Year's message from the Secretary General, Dr Peter Bridgewater:
"This is the final
day in the International Year of Freshwater, but it will be unfortunate if we
simply let the IYF "dry up", like so much of the world's water. For
our New Year's resolution, let us, as the Ramsar family, resolve to continue
to observe 2004, and
every
year, as an international year of freshwater - or even IYW, as managing the
fresh/salty interface is important as well.
IYF was important to our convention, as wetlands are vital components of the world's water cycle, as well as sources of cultural and biological diversity. For the future, we must strive for an understanding of ecological systems - an understanding that places people in the ecological equation. And as the world struggles to understand the needs and demands of water, our convention's role in protecting, purifying and providing water will become even clearer. By bringing together the philosophy and accumulated technical wisdom of our Convention, and using Wetlands of International Importance as "real life" examples, we can approach sustainable living. And with a full understanding of the interlinkage between cultural and biological diversity, and their linkage with the diversity of place, sustainability can be assured.
At present there are 138 Contracting Parties to the Convention (with 3 waiting for action at the depositary), who together have designated 1328 wetland sites (totalling 111,884,289 hectares) as Wetlands of International Importance. The numbers are great: the challenge now is to put all these places to work for the world, to help the human population become more sustainable in it. A happy and watery New Year to everyone!" [01/01/04]
Headline
story. Peatlands workshop set for February 2004.
David Lee (david@genet.po.my), Technical
Officer, Global Environment Centre, has announced that a Workshop
on Integrated Management and Rehabilitation of Peatlands, organized
by the GEC and Wetlands International, will take place 6-7 February 2004 in
Kuala Lumpur, in association with COP7 of the Convention on Biological Diversity
and the 19th Global Biodiversity Forum. It will be "an opportunity to showcase
issues on peatlands that are related to the different items of CBD such as Biodiversity
and Climate Change, and Inland Water and Mountain Biodiversity. . . . The workshop
will also address issues related to the ASEAN Peatland Management Initiative
(APMI)." Further details can be found at the www.peat-portal.net
or from David Lee directly. [01/01/04]
![]()
| Ramsar Trivia: Who can join the Ramsar Convention? Answer. |
Who's where?
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year.
New
on the Site: Frantic
planning for World Wetlands Day, less than two months away; Final
draft of the 3rd Ramsar Manual, for comment; Agenda
documentation for the 30th meeting of the Ramsar Standing Committee,
slated for Gland in mid-January 2004. [20/12/03]
News
from the Wetlands for the Future Fund. News
from Nueva publicación sobre el pastoreo en humedales altoandinos.
La Wildlife
Conservation Society - Bolivia, en coordinación
con
el Grupo para la Conservación de Flamencos Altoandinos
y la Dirección General de Biodiversidad del Ministerio de Desarrollo
Sostenible de Bolivia; ha publicado las memorias del taller: "Uso
pastoril de humedales altoandinos", que tuvo lugar en Huarina
y La Paz - Bolivia, del 28 de octubre al 1 de noviembre de 2002 con auspicio
del Fondo Humedales para el Futuro. / Grazing in High Andean
Wetlands - New Publication. The Wildlife
Conservation Society-Bolivia, in coordination with the High
Andean Flamingo Conservation Group and the Ramsar Administrative
Authority in Bolivia, has published the proceedings of the workshop: "Grazing
use of high Andean wetlands", which took place in Huarina and
La Paz, Bolivia, in late 2002 with support from the Wetlands for the Future
Fund (WFF/01-2/BOL/1). Read more here in Español
and English. [27/12/03]
New
CEO appointed for Wetlands International. Wetlands International's
news announcement: "We are pleased to confirm that Jane
Madgwick has been appointed as the new CEO of Wetlands International.
A UK citizen, Jane Madgwick has an outstanding record of success while working
both in NGOs and government positions, and comes to us from WWF Australia, where
she was also a member of the core team for WWF's global Living Waters Programme.
Jane has over 15 years of experience of work in the field of wetlands conservation
and had previously set up WWF International's Freshwater Programme for Europe
and the Middle East while working with WWF International. She takes up her new
post in March 2004; meanwhile, Douglas Taylor will continue until then as Interim
CEO, to ensure continuity of leadership." [23/12/03]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Second National Conference
on Coastal and Estuarine Habitat Restoration, September 12-15, 2004
at the Washington State Convention & Trade Center and the Grand Hyatt in
Seattle, Washington. Clare
Stark (cstark@estuaries.org), Communications Coordinator for Restore
America's Estuaries, writes: "Restore America's
Estuaries is thrilled to announce that the Habitat Restoration Community
for our coasts and estuaries will be gathering together again - this time in
Seattle. The Second National Conference will advance the knowledge, pace, practice
and success of coastal and estuarine habitat restoration. The Conference will
address habitat restoration in coastal and estuarine areas of the United States,
including the Great Lakes region, as well as international initiatives and issues.
As part of our internatioal focus, we will be having a presentation on the restoration
of Iraq's Mesopotamian Marshlands. The Conference will also feature a focus
on restoration challenges and opportunities in the Pacific Northwest, with an
emphasis on transferable lessons learned. For more information on the Conference,
visit our website at http://www.estuaries.org/2ndnationalconference.php,
or contact Nicole Maylett at nmaylett@estuaries.org. The Call for Presentations
and Posters is available online at http://www.estuaries.org/objects/2004RAECFP.pdf.
[links
later removed] The
deadline for presentations is February 2, 2004 and the deadline for posters
is March 1, 2004. Conference registration is scheduled to begin in March 2004."
[22/12/03]
The
Ramsar Convention in Thailand. In late November and early December
2003, Ramsar's Senior Advisor for the Asia/Pacific, Dr Guangchun
Lei, attended Thailand's National Workshop
on the Ramsar Convention and visited the two Wetlands of International
Importance -- Krabi Estuary and the Nong Bong Kai Non-Hunting Area -- that are
the subject of the DANIDA-funded 2001-2006 project "Implementation of the
Ramsar Convention in Thailand". Here
is Guangchun's brief illustrated report on the workshop and the visits
and his assessment of Thailand's rapid progress since joining the Convention
in 1998. [20/12/03]
Portugal
accedes to AEWA. On 11 December 2003 Portugal deposited its instruments
of accession of the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory
Waterbirds (AEWA). Portugal will become as of 1 March 2004 the 44th Contracting
Party to the Agreement. Portugal covers 89,000 km2 and also has two archipelagos,
the Azores and Madeira. More than 30 Important Bird Areas have been identified
of which several support one or more s
pecies
of Migratory Waterbird, e.g., Little Egret (Egretta garzetta), Eurasian
Spoonbil (Platalea leucorodia), Teal (Anas crecca), Common Crane
(Grus grus), Black-winged Stilt (Himantopus himantopus), Greater
Flamingo (Phoenicopterus ruber), etc. The coastal and inland wetlands
of Portugal are of importance for migratory waterbirds as wintering or staging
sites. Over the past few months several countries of the EU joined the Agreement,
and the last three 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 importance 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 Portugal to the 'AEWA family'. -- reported by Bert
Lenten, Executive Secretary of the UNEP/ AEWA Secretariat. [18/12/03]
Now
available. Pre-publication version of the 3rd
Ramsar Manual. When the Ramsar Manual was first compiled
by T. J. Davis and published in 1994, it was enthusiastically welcomed as an
essential vade mecum through the sometimes bewildering world of Ramsar
resolutions, guidelines, and terminology. A second edition (left)
was published in 1997, incorporating all of the institutional changes of the
preceding three years and including all of the Convention's major documents
at that time. Then, in view of the subsequent publication of the 9-volume "Ramsar
Toolkit" (The Ramsar Handbooks for the Wise Use of Wetlands), the
Manual seemed less useful and was let go out of print. Since then, however,
many people have argued that there is still a need for a brief, printed introduction
to the Convention and its processes, and a new, updated third edition has now
been prepared which will be published on CD-ROM in early 2004 as an adjunct
to the new 14-volume 2nd edition of the Ramsar Handbooks series.
The pre-publication final
English draft of this new Ramsar Manual is now available on the Ramsar
Web site in HTML and PDF versions, and comments are
invited as to improvements or additions that readers might like to see made
to it. In early 2004, this text and its French and Spanish translations
will be professionally laid out and included as an unnumbered supplement with
the 14 volumes of the Ramsar Toolkit. Your comments will be welcome before then
to
.
Click
here for the HTML version, here
for the PDF. [17/12/03]
Millennium
Assessment book now on sale. The Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment (MA) is an "international process designed
to meet the needs of decision-makers and the public for scientific information
concerning the consequences of ecosystem change for human well-being,"
launched by UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan in June 2001. Parties to the Conventions on Biological Diversity,
Desertification, Wetlands (Ramsar), and Migratory Species have been targeted
in this 4-year initiative for scientific information to assist in the implementation
of these treaties. Ecosystems and Human Well-being:
a Framework for Assessment is the MA's first product, the work
of scientists from more than 100 countries, a 245-page book that offers an overview
of the project, describing the conceptual framework that is being used, defining
its scope, and providing a baseline of understanding that all participants need
to move forward. Much of the work of the MA is directly informing the present
efforts of Ramsar's STRP in providing guidance to the Parties on inventory,
assessment, and monitoring and in its review of the "wise use guidelines".
Among the MA's future products will be a Ramsar Synthesis Report that will compile
all of the MA's findings relative to wetlands and be launched at Ramsar COP9
in late 2005. This useful new book has already been distributed by the MA to
Ramsar's "Administrative Authorities" in the Parties, and it is now
available in paper- or hardcover from the Island
Press (http://www.islandpress.com) for US$ 25 (softcover). [16/12/03]
Lough
Neagh Fund invites applications.
Lough Neagh is the largest inland water area in the British Isles, covering
an area of approximately 383 square kilometres. It is located in the centre
of Northern Ireland and is bordered by five of the six counties. It has a very
significant influence on waterways throughout Northern Ireland and parts of
the border counties. The shoreline of the lough extends to approximately 125
kilometres and includes seven local Council areas, Antrim, Ballymena, Cookstown,
Craigavon, Dungannon, Lisburn and Magherafelt. The Lough
Neagh Strategic Fund is a new £3.2 million initiative funded
under the E.U. Programme for Building Sustainable Prosperity to support
work to help achieve implementation of parts of the Lough Neagh Management Strategy.
Many parts of the Strategy are the responsibility of statutory sector bodies,
however much also needs to be done by the community, individuals, local authorities
and private businesses. The Lough Neagh Strategic Fund will seek to fund and
support these bodies to help develop the Lough in an economic, environmental
and socially sustainable way. The Lough Neagh Strategic Fund will operate from
2003 to 2008. More here. [15/12/03]
Announcement.
Delay in the call for proposals for Small Grants Fund 2004.
At its 30th meeting on 13-16 January 2004, the Convention's Standing Committee
will be considering proposals for amendments to the Small Grants Fund Operational
Guidelines 2003-2005. In view of this, the call for project proposals for the
SGF 2004 cycle will now be made in late January 2004 instead of 31 October 2003
as planned, so that any amendments approved by the Standing Committee can be
incorporated into the Operational Guidelines. The Standing Committee meeting
will also select the projects that will be funded in the 2003 proposal cycle
that has just ended. [13/12/03]
[français et/y español]
WasSerleben
brochure highlights Austria's best wetland projects. On
World Wetlands Day 2002, the "WasSerleben" campaign was launched by
the Austrian "Lebensministerium" (i.e. the "Life Ministry",
the Federal Ministry for Agriculture, Forestry, Environment and Water, in charge
of Ramsar), the Austrian League for Nature Conservation (Naturschutzbund Oesterreich)
and the Austrian Federal Forests Ltd company (Oesterreichische Bundesforste
AG), as a major contribution to the implementation of the national CEPA programme.
The "WasSerleben"
(meaning "water life" and "experience something") campaign
focuses upon all sorts of aquatic ecosystems in Austria and has continued to
address many fields during the 2003 UN Year of Freshwater, as outlined in a
leaflet recently produced by the campaign
partners. The leaflet (in German, available from the
Ramsar Secretariat on request)
highlights a number of the campaign's best-practice projects, and a
bit more information is available here. [12/12/03]
Conservation
Finance Guide available on CD-ROM. "As nations around the world
plan and implement biodiversity conservation programmes, a major challenge has
been, and remains, generating adequate long-term funding. In recent years, a
range of sustainable conservation finance mechanisms has been developed
to provide reliable, long-term sources of funding for on-the-ground conservation
programmes." The Conservation Finance Alliance
is made up of a number of leading intergovernmental and governmental agencies
and NGOs dedicated to increasing awareness of the range of finance mechanisms
available -- it includes the Ramsar Convention, UNDP, IUCN, WWF, The Nature
Conservancy, the Wildlife Conservation Society, Conservation International,
USAID and Germany's GTZ, among others. Their CD-ROM Conservation
Finance Guide, a replica of their Web
site, has been reprinted and a copy can be obtained free of charge from
the Ramsar Secretariat (write to Ramsar's Senior Trade and Development Advisor
Alain Lambert, lambert@ramsar.org).
[10/12/03]
Crane
Workshop marks Ramsar COP5 anniversary in Kushiro. To help celebrate
the 10th anniversary of Ramsar's 5th meeting of the Conference of the Parties
(Kushiro, 1993), the government of Kushiro City organized a series of activities
at the Kushiro Tourism and International Relations Center (the same building
where the Ramsar COP5 was convened), one of which was the workshop and symposium
organized by the North East Asian Crane Site Network on the crane and stork
conservation in Japan. Since its launch in 1997 the North East Asian Crane Site
Network (NEACSN) has organized many activities to establish closer links amongst
researchers and site workers from Russia, Mongolia, China, Korea (both North
and South), and Japan (the headquarters of the coordination of the NEACSN is
at the Wild Bird Society of Japan (WBSJ)). Here Simba
Chan of the Wild Bird Society of Japan and Flyway Officer of the North East
Asian Crane Site Network reports on this
14-16 November 2003 workshop and seminar and supplies a few evocative photographs.
[10/12/03]
Seminar
on integrated water management in the Tisza river basin.
The Tisza river is one of the large tributaries in the Danube catchment in eastern
Europe and the major river in the Carpathian basin, originating in Ukraine,
then flowing along the border with Romania and Hungary and touching briefly
upon Slovakia before crossing southwards across the Hungarian plain to reach
the Vojvodina region of Serbia and entering the Danube between Novi Sad and
Belgrade (draining thus a catchment of about 157,000km2). To encourage dialogue,
present the individual views concerning the Tisza river basin management of
the five basin countries, and achieve as much common ground as possible, the
FAO Subregional Office for Central and Eastern Europe organized a seminar on
20-21 November 2003 in Budapest, with the Ramsar Secretariat invited to
moderate the discussions, and further supported by Wetlands
International in the framework of a Dutch-supported project on transboundary
cooperation on Ramsar Site designation in the Upper Tisza river basin. Tobias
Salathé describes the results of the meeting and provides ample background
on the history and issues involved. [09/12/03]
Abou
Bamba joins the Ramsar Secretariat. Mr Abou Bamba from Côte
d'Ivoire has arrived in the Ramsar offices to take up his position as Senior
Advisor for Africa, succeeding Mr Anada Tiéga. Mr Bamba has
been working most recently with the Network for Environment
and Sustainable Development in Africa (NESDA) since 1998, first as Program Officer
and Acting Coordinator, since 2001 as Coordinator, and has most recently helped
to organize the First
meeting of African Parliamentarians on the Ramsar Convention and Wetlands, sponsored
by Ramsar, NESDA, and the Government of Benin in Cotonou, 27-28 November.
The Secretariat welcomes Mr Bamba and looks forward to continued progress in
achieving the Convention's objectives in Africa. [09/12/03]
News
from MedWet. Ramsar visit to the MedWet Team. MedWet reports:
"On 4-5 December 2003, the Deputy Secretary General of the Ramsar Convention
Mr Nick Davidson was in Athens, Greece, in order to work with the MW
Coordinator Spyros Kouvelis, the staff of the MedWet Coordination Unit
and the Senior MedWet Advisor Thymio Papayannis. Nick Davidson, now responsible
for Regional Initiatives on behalf of the Convention, visited the Coordination
Unit in order to exchange information and views on the work carried out and
planned by MedWet and on the associated work of the Ramsar Secretariat (new
title of the former Ramsar Bureau), as well as to provide guidance and maximise
positive synergy and communication between Ramsar and MedWet. The Coordination
Unit wishes to thank Nick Davidson and the Ramsar Secretariat for their interest
and involvement. To view
photos from meeting and dinner, click here." [09/12/03]
Announcement.
Wise Use of Peatlands congress set for June 2004.
The International Peat Society and the Finnish Peatland Society have sent out
a second circular and call for papers for the "Wise Use of Peatlands"
meeting, the 12th International Peat Congress set for 6-11 June 2004 in Tampere,
Finland. The keynote speakers will be Clayton Rubec, Hans Joosten, Sundari Ramakrishna,
and Jukka Laine. The brochure, which presents the schedule of session themes
as well as the field trips and post-meeting excursion options, can be obtained
from the Congress Secretariat, ips2004@congreszon.fi.
[09/12/03]
Austria
and peatlands. With the slogan "Aktiv für Moore" ("Active
for peatbogs"), the Austrian Federal Forest Agency (Oesterreichische Bundesforsten)
and WWF Austria launched a programme in 2000 for the restoration of peatbogs.
As in many temperate European countries, Austrian peatlands have been degraded
to a large extent over the past century through excessive drainage, peat cutting,
afforestation policies, tourist infrastructures (cable lifts, ski slopes, etc.),
or intensive grazing. The Austrian peatland restoration programme started with
a demonstration project in Ueberlingmoos, a bog drained and grazed since the
1920s. Small-scale dams were successfully placed across all crucial drainage
ditches to re-wet this valuable bog ecosystem. Since then, the lessons learnt
have served for restoration measures applied to rehabilitate another 10 degraded
peatbogs, and more activities are now planned to cover another 15 sites. The
project partners have now produced a 24-page brochure that illustrates the variety
of Austrian peatlands, the concrete works undertaken to rehabilitate their functions,
and presents some of the key sites, as well as a map showing the distribution
of peatlands in Austria and the 25 project sites. The brochure also makes reference
to Ramsar's guidelines for global action on peatlands. Our Standing Committee
member Gerhard Sigmund briefly explains
the implementation of the Convention in Austria and lists six Austrian peatlands
that are foreseen for Ramsar designation in the near future. If you would like
to receive a copy of this nicely illustrated brochure (in
German) please contact the Ramsar Bureau (europe@ramsar.org).
-- reported by Tobias Salathé [08/12/03]
Ramsar
Advisory Mission to the Ukrainian Danube Delta. On
27-31 October 2003 a joint mission was carried out by the Man and Biosphere
Programme (MaB) of UNESCO and the Ramsar Secretariat to the Danube
Biosphere Reserve and Kyliiske Mouth Ramsar Site. The core zone of
this protected area covers the most pristine and dynamic part of the large Danube
Delta. The Delta region is internationally recognized as a transboundary Biosphere
Reserve and Ramsar Site, covering nearly 700,000 hectares in Ukraine and Romania.
The State Agency for Protected Areas (Ramsar's Administrative Authority in Ukraine)
of the Ministry of the Environment and Natural Resources invited two experts,
Dr Jan Kvet, chairman of the Czech National MaB Committee and member
of the MaB Bureau, and Dr Tobias Salathé from the Ramsar Secretariat
to advise the Ukrainian authorities about measures to improve the functioning
of the protected area, especially in the light of the planned construction of
a waterway through the Ukrainian part of the Danube Delta. Their recommendations
regarding the different alternatives proposed for navigation routes through
the delta will be available on this Web site as Ramsar Advisory Mission report
no. 53. In the meantime we invite you to enjoy some pictures from Vilkovo, also
known as the "Venice of the East". Brief
report and photos by Tobias Salathé. [05/12/03]
Now
available. Opening address to the Parliamentarians'
meeting. Members of parliaments and representatives of river basin
commissions in the West and Central African subregions gathered for two days,
27-28 November 2003, in Cotonou, Benin, as guests of the Government of Benin,
the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, and the Network for Environment and Sustainable
Development in Africa (NESDA), with financial backing from the Government of
Sweden, to be briefed on opportunities for cooperation on wetland conservation
and wise use and the role of the Convention in assisting countries in the region.
A report of the meeting and the declaration agreed by the participants, as well
as photographs of the field excursion to a nearby Ramsar site, will be ready
soon, but in the meantime, here
is the opening address to the meeting by Ramsar's Secretary General,
Peter Bridgewater, in which he emphasized
the ways in which the Convention can be effective in helping policymakers confront
the challenges of diminishing water quality and quantity in Africa. [04/12/03]
SWS
calls for Ramsar Support Grant proposals.
The Society of Wetland Scientists is soliciting
proposals for their Ramsar Support Grant Programme. The annual grant programme
was 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. Two to five projects are funded each
year at a level of US $5,000 on a competitive basis as reviewed by an evaluation
committee. Only applicants working on Ramsar-related activities in less-developed
countries are eligible to receive grants under this program. Priority is given
to projects being conducted in countries on the OECD Development Assistance
Committee List of Aid Recipients, which can be found on the Internet at <www.oecd.org>.
Grant guidelines, an application form, and a description of previous grant awards
can be found on the SWS
Web site or you can request these materials from: Eric
Gilman, Society of Wetland Scientists, Ramsar Support Grant Program,
2718 Napua`a Place, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA, E-mail: ericgilman@earthlink.net.
Applications must be received by 1 March 2004.
[03/12/03]
Oceania
Wetlands Help-line gaining fans. In May of this year Bill
Phillips (former Ramsar Deputy Secretary General) established the
Wetlands Help-line Web site (www.wetlandshelp-line.com),
created as a service to the community to provide an easy entry point to information
about wetlands, their management, the Ramsar Convention's various tools, and
Ramsar sites of the Oceania region (i.e., Australia, New Zealand, and Pacific
Island States). Wetlandshelp-line.com is designed to support the Ramsar Web
site and the Convention's global program on communication, education and public
awareness (CEPA), and based on the statistics on visitors to the site, it seems
to be helping. Since May the number of visitors to the site has steadily increased
and now averages 2,000-3,000 per week. Although the Web site was established
primarily to assist wetland practitioners from the Oceania region, visitors
have come from more than 50 countries. The site includes a virtual tour of the
Ramsar sites of the Oceania region (still somewhat 'under construction'). A
few weeks ago the site had a facelift - see graphic - and (for those in the
Oceania region) there are now bookmarks available to raise awareness of the
site so that more people can access it and provide further resource materials.
For further information, or some bookmarks, contact wetlandshelp-line@mainstream.com.au.
[02/12/03]
Paraguay
designates its 5th Ramsar site. The Ramsar
Secretariat is very pleased to announce that the Government of Paraguay has
designated "Laguna Chaco Lodge"
(2,500 hectares, 22º17'S, 059º18'W), a private reserve in the Presidente
Hayes department, as its fifth Wetland of International Importance, bringing
its total Ramsar surface area to 777,500 hectares. As described by Ramsar's
Iván Darío Valencia from the accompanying Ramsar Information
Sheet, Chaco Lodge is a saltwater lake, the largest of the water bodies in the
lake system of the Central Chaco, surrounded by xerophytic woods and shrubs
and halophytic vegetation. The site is one of the few relatively undisturbed
natural areas in the Chaco, hosting an impressive biodiversity, including the
endangered Chacoan Peccary Catagonus wagneri and the Brazilian Tapir
Tapirus terrestris. Several wintering shorebird species are abundant,
with up to 25,000 Wilson's Phalaropes Phalaropus tricolor, 4,000 White
Rumped Sandpipers Calidris fuscicollis, and 3,000 Pectoral Sandpipers
Calidris melanotos, all of them figures above 1% threshold. Chaco Lodge
is entirely devoted to conservation and small scale ecotourism, and hunting
and cattle ranching pressures from the surrounding area are very limited. The
greatest threat, however, comes from the intense drought affecting the region
the past few years. The site designation was carried out with the support of
the NGO Fundación DeSdelChaco (Foundation for the Sustainable
Development of the South American Chaco). More
details and photos are available here. [02/12/03] [Español]
[Français]
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New publications on agriculture from Living Waters. WWF's Living Waters Programme has produced two new brochures to help spread awareness of the global water crisis and, specifically, the role of agricultural practices in that. "Agricultural Water Use and River Basin Conservation" (36pp.) provides an assessment of the crops that use most water in nine large river basins that are globally important for biodiversity conservation (Lake Chad, Niger, Zambezi, Indus, Mekong, Yangtze, Murray-Darling, Great Konya, and Rio Grande). It has been adapted from the recent WWF study by Rob de Nooy, "Water Use for Agriculture in Priority River Basins", and also recommends a series of measures for the four thirstiest crops - cotton, sugar, rice, and wheat - that could be adopted by farmers and irrigation engineers to increase water efficiency whilst maintaining output. "Thirsty Crops - Our food and clothes: eating up nature and wearing out the environment?" (19pp.) summarizes many of the same facts and arguments in an attractive and colorful format. The two leaflets, in English only, can be requested in hard copy from Berna Heikamp (bheikamp@wwf.nl) of Living Waters in the Netherlands or Amalia Romeo (aromeo@wwfint.org) of WWF International in Switzerland -- both of them as well as the de Nooy study can be downloaded in PDF format from http://www.panda.org/news_facts/publications/freshwater/index.cfm. [01/12/03]
Mexico
designates 10 Ramsar sites to celebrate the National Conservation Week
[México designa 10 nuevos sitios
Ramsar celebrando la Semana Nacional de la Conservación]. In
the third edition of the National Conservation Week, focusing on the International
Year of Freshwater, Mexico is today announcing the designation of 10 new Ramsar
sites with a total area of 777,814 hectares. This is a very important development
for the implementation of the Ramsar Convention in Mexico, raising its number
of Ramsar sites to 17, and reaching 1,881,790 ha of Ramsar sites in the country.
The National Commission of Protected Areas
(CONANP) promotes this week, celebrated every year in late November
to commemorate the creation of the first protected area in the country more
than 70 years ago. The new Ramsar sites include several National Parks and a
Biosphere Reserve, but also areas not otherwise protected. Worth highlighting
are the efforts to designate sites with coral reefs, karstic systems, seagrass
beds, and mangroves, as well as two wildlife sanctuaries for the protection
of nesting marine turtles. Brief descriptions
of the new Wetlands of International Importance based upon the Ramsar
Information Sheets that accompanied the designations have been prepared by Iván
Darío Valencia, and further
information is available in Spanish on the CONANP Web site. [27/11/03]
[Español] [français]
Bangladesh
enlarges Sundarbans Ramsar site.
The government of Bangladesh has recently provided an updated Ramsar Information
Sheet on its Sundarbans Ramsar site, first designated for the Ramsar List in
May 1992, enlarging its area from 596,000 to 601,700 hectares. Now to be called
"Sundarbans Reserved Forest",
this Ramsar and World Heritage site is one of the most important mangrove forests
in the world and has been significantly threatened from a number of directions
for many years. The nearby Sundarbans mangrove forest across the border in India
is not yet a Ramsar site but it is hoped that it will be soon. This extension
increase the area of Bangladesh's two Wetlands of International Importance to
611,200 hectares. Ramsar's Liazzat Rabbiosi
has distilled from the new RIS a brief summary of the site's main ecological
and cultural features, and that's available, with photographs, right
here. [26/11/03]
Global
wetlands surveyed from space. On 20 November the European Space Agency
(ESA) formally began a project to map wetlands from space, providing data on
around 50 sites in 21 countries worldwide. ESA's new €1 million Globwetland
project is producing satellite-derived and geo-referenced products including
inventory maps and digital elevation models of wetlands and the surrounding
catchment areas. These products are intended to aid local and national authorities
in fulfilling their Ramsar obligations, and should also function as a helpful
tool for wetland managers and scientific researchers. The project will be carried
out by an international consortium headed by the Canadian high-tech company
Atlantis Scientific Inc., and the team is completed by the Dutch company SYNOPTICS,
the German company Remote Sensing Solutions GmbH, and Wetlands International.
More information is available from the ESA's
press release today, the text which has been reprinted
on our site as well. [25/11/03]
Waterbirds
conference planned for April 2004. "Waterbirds Around the World
is the first conference to focus entirely on all major themes and developments
related to the global conservation of waterbird flyways during their full annual
cycle: breeding areas, stop-over sites and wintering areas. It will address
the achievements of the last 40-50 years and consider the need for initiatives
to stimulate future conservation, research and management, not only of the world's
migratory waterbird flyways, but also of threatened non-migratory species"
(from the brochure). This "global review of the conservation, management
and research of the world's major flyways" will be organized by Wetlands
International and hosted in Edinburgh, UK, 3-8 April 2004 by the Joint Nature
Conservation Committee and Scottish Natural Heritage of the UK and the Dutch
Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality, with the US Fish and Wildlife
Service serving as co-chair and the sponsorship of a large number of other organizations,
including the Ramsar Convention. For further information about the conference,
side events, and excursions, and the application forms, visit the Wetlands
International Web site or write to the Conference Secretary General,
Dr Gerard C. Boere, International Programme
Director, gerard.boere@wetlands.org.
[25/11/03]
News
from the Wetlands for the Future Fund. Reserve Personnel
Training in Laguna del Tigre, Ramsar Site in Guatemala
[Capacitación de personal
de reservas en la Laguna del Tigre]. With funding support of Wetlands
for the Future (project WFF/01-2/GTM/1), Fundación
Propetén (www.propeten.org)
carried out in 2002 the "School of Agroforestry
promoters and Wetland Park Rangers" in the Las Guacamayas Biological
Station in Laguna del Tigre National Park (Ramsar site in the Montreux record).
The course was developed by an interdisciplinary group of biologists, agronomists,
environmental educators and sociologists. 39 community leaders and park rangers
graduated from the course, including personnel from the National Commission
of Protected Areas (CONANP). Here
is Iván Darío Valencia's brief report in English and in
Español. [24/11/03]
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] [français
et/y español]
More to follow.
Watch this space. Feedback and suggestions are welcome
to: the Ramsar Convention Secretariat, 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 Secretariat.
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.