What's
New @ Ramsar
3
May 2004![]()
Headline
story. Nordic Wetland Conservation.
The Nordic Council of Ministers has recently published an excellent,
well-illustrated 176-page book entitled Nordic Wetland
Conservation, covering 30 years of conservation experience in Denmark,
Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden and including self-governing territories
like Greenland, Åland, and the Faeroes. Available from bookstores in Norwegian,
Swedish, Danish, and English versions, it provides superb coverage of the general
wetland issues, the wise use concept, the Ramsar Convention and other international
regimes, and the status of wetlands in each of the Nordic countries. The back
cover offers the following brief description: "Conservation of wetlands
has formed an important part of the Nordic nature conservation effort, particularly
in the last 30 years. This work by the Nordic countries has been closely linked
with the task of fulfilling their obligations as signatories of the Ramsar Convention
and, as regards the nations that are EU members, the requirements of the more
recent Birds and Habitat Directives. . . . This report attempts to sum up the
status of wetland conservation in the Nordic region after 30 years. It also
points out a number of unfulfilled tasks and makes recommendations for how the
work should proceed in the years ahead." A
brief review, with illustrations and reprints of the prefaces and recommendations,
and with ordering information, can be seen here. [01/05/04]
Headline
story. Nordic Wetland Conservation bis. On a related
note, on Monday, 3 May 2004, the "Nordic Wetland
Conference & Ramsar Meeting" will convene in Ørlandet,
Norway, with plenary sessions on the 4th and 5th of May, a field excursion on
the 6th, and a brief closing summary on the 7th. Subjects for discussion include
overviews of wetland conservation in the region (including the launch of the
book cited just above) and of the work of Ramsar, the CBD, CMS and AEWA, and
Wetlands International, followed by country reports on Ramsar Sites conservation
and case studies of individual sites and projects in the Nordic and Baltic regions.
The conference will be chaired by Finn Katerås and will feature among
the speakers Tobias Salathé, Torsten Larsson, Gunn Paulsen, Øystein
Størkersen, Gisli Már Gislason, Tatiana Minaeva, and many other
wetland and Ramsar-related experts. Tobias Salathé will provide an enlightening
report when he returns, and in the meantime here
is the agenda and programme (PDF). [01/05/04]
Headline
story. Cooperation for water resources management.
At a 27 April side event at the 12th meeting of the UN Commission on Sustainable
Development, New York, USA, co-organized by the Swiss Agency of Environment,
Forests and Landscape, the Japanese Ministry of Environment, and the Ramsar
Convention, and chaired by IUCN's Director General Achim
Steiner, the focus was upon the need to have an integrated international
approach to managing the world's scarce water resources. Following presentations
by Ambassador Beat Nobs (left)
of Switzerland and Mr Tomohiro Shishima of
Japan on experiences in their countries,
Peter Bridgewater, Ramsar's Secretary General,
emphasized the unique and lengthy experience the Convention has had with cooperation
on water resources management. Here
is Sebastià Semene's brief illustrated report on the side event
and his media release in PDF format.
[29/04/04]
| Ramsar Trivia: Who can join the Ramsar Convention? Answer. |
![]()
Who's where?
Nearly
all of the Secretariat staff are at the UN Palais des Nations in Geneva
today, 3 May, for a briefing session on Ramsar issues for representatives of
the permanent missions to the United Nations. [03/05/04]
Spyros
Kouvelis, the MedWet Coordinator, is in Brezovica,
Slovakia, 28 April, at the invitation of the Carpathian
Wetland Initiative project, to make two presentations on Thursday
about Resolution VIII.30 on regional initiatives and the history and work of
MedWet. On Monday, 3 May, he will be in Paris, France, to participate
in the Regional Steering Committee meeting of the
MedWet/Coast project. [28/04/04]
|
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year. |
|
Highlights from World Wetlands Day. Bulgaria's sticker.
|
Yesterday's News!
![]()
SWS
Ramsar Grants for 2004. The Society of
Wetland Scientists' Ramsar Support Grant Programme was established
in 1999 to help advance the Convention's objectives in the developing world,
and since that time some 18 grants, totaling US$ 90,000 have been made with
funding assistance from the Society and the US Fish and Wildlife Services. The
grants for the 2004 cycle have just been announced by Eric
Gilman, the grant programme manager, and the winners are Ms
Thu Hue Nguyen for work at the Xuan Thuy National Park Ramsar Site
in Viet Nam; Mr Carlos Bento and Dr
Richard Beilfuss for work in Mozambique's Marromeu Complex of the
Zambezi Delta; and Mr Alvin Lopez in order
to provide assistance for the accession of Lao PDR to the Convention. The
details are available here. [26/04/04]
Ramsar
participates in GEF lake basin steering committee. At the World Bank
in Washington, USA, 22-23 April 2004, Secretary General
Peter Bridgewater and
Sebastià Semene Guitart participated in the second Steering
Committee meeting for the Global Environment Facility medium-size project entitled
Towards a Lake Basin Management Initiative.
The project is designed to draw together global expertise on the management
of lakes, in a lake basin context, and to produce a report which can act as
guidelines and future support for all interested in the subject of lake basin
management. It is to be based on the experiences gained and lessons learned
from some 28 GEF projects on lakes, and will provide more general experience
and advice from practitioners, covering a range of subjects from the natural
and social science bases needed, through policy development, CEPA and management
interventions. Here is Sebastià's
brief report on the results. [27/04/04]
From the Ramsar Forum: Netherlands-based aid contacts.
Côte
d'Ivoire names National Ramsar Committee. In response to Recommendation
5.13 of Ramsar COP5, Kushiro, Japan, 9-16 June 1993, the government of Côte
d'Ivoire has just established its National Ramsar Committee
- by Ministerial Decree no. 00336/MINEF/CAB, 19 April 2004, the Ministry of
Water and Forests has nominated the new members who include, in addition to
government authorities, researchers, university professors, government organizations
and NGO representatives with different qualifications in the field of wetland
management and who have taken up their new responsibilities from the date the
decree was signed. The committee will work on the designation of new Ramsar
Sites, preparation of an inventory of the wetlands in Côte d'Ivoire, and
reactivation of the Convention's implementation in the country. The Ramsar Secretariat
urges other Parties that have not yet established their National Wetlands/Ramsar
Committees to do so soon, as they are useful tools for facilitating the implementation
of the Convention at the national level. [26/04/04]
Ramsar
at the CSD12. The 12th meeting of the UN Commission on Sustainable
Development is taking place 14-30 April 2004, and Ramsar's Sebastià
Semene here reviews the Ramsar presence there, including a side event on the
International Corporate Wetlands Restoration Partnership, a private sector partnership
in which Ramsar is a participant; the Secretary General's address
to the plenary session; IUCN's "Environmental Flows for Sustainable
Development" side event; and a look ahead to a special event co-organized
by the Ramsar Convention, the Swiss Confederation, and the Ministry of Environment
of Japan to take place on 27 April. Here
is his brief report. [22/04/04]
Now
available. Draft agenda for Ramsar COP9.
The Ninth Meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties is scheduled
to be held in Kampala, Uganda, 7-15 November 2005. A provisional draft agenda
is being sent to the Parties this week by diplomatic note in English, French,
and Spanish for their general information -- further developments will be noted
in future revisions of the document as the COP planning progresses. The
English version is available here. [23/04/04]
New
report on Venice Lagoon. "The
Lagoon of Venice as a Ramsar Site" is the title of a 63-page
illustrated report prepared by Ramsar experts Michael Smart and María
José Viñals, now published by the Province of Venice in Italian
and English. As a follow-up to last year's seminar "Ramsar meets Venice"
(cf. our short report, also providing an introduction to the Lagoon and its
values: www.ramsar.org/mtg_venice_2003.htm),
Asessora Delia Murer of the Provincial
Government, in charge of Hunting, Fishing and the Provincial Police, presented
the document to the media on a fishing boat during a trip in the northern part
of Venice Lagoon on 14 April 2004, followed by a rich tasting of the Lagoon's
varied food products in a fishermens' hut near Mazzorbo island. Here
is Tobias Salathé's report on the launch and lunch and a
reprint of the English version can be read here. [21/04/04]
Réseau
Ramsar Est Atlantique - Atelier 21-23 avril 2004. Le site de la baie
de Somme a été intégré au Réseau Ramsar Est-Atlantique
dès 1999, dans le 1er programme de partenariat entre la Convention internationale
dite de
Ramsar
et l'entreprise Danone Evian, partenariat soutenu alors par l'Etat français
notamment. Outre les événements organisés lors de la Journée
Mondiale des zones humides, le 2 février de chaque année, le SMACOPI
en liaison avec le Conservatoire du Littoral et leurs partenaires dans la Somme,
ont été particulièrement actifs dans la mise en place des
échanges techniques du Réseau Ramsar Est-Atlantique. Le premier
des trois ateliers s'est tenu en baie de Somme en 1998. . . . En tant
que membres de EUROSITE, le SMACOPI et le Conservatoire du littoral, accueilleront
un atelier en baie de Somme, du 22 au 24 avril 2004: "Dans
les estuaires -- L'homme et la nature peuvent-ils avoir un avenir commun? L'oiseau
est-il l'avenir de l'homme?" Plus
des renseignements ici. [20/04/04]
Mongolia
names five new Ramsar Sites. The Ramsar Secretariat is extremely
pleased to announce that Mongolia has designated five new Wetlands of International
Importance, covering nearly 809,000 ha, bringing the number of Ramsar Wetlands
in the country to eleven. The nominations and Ramsar data sheets were prepared
with the help of
WWF
Mongolia as part of a project co-funded by the Ramsar Small Grants Fund jointly
with the WWF International 'Living Waters Programme'. Mongolia,
which joined the Convention on Wetlands in 1998, now has 11 Ramsar Sites covering
a surface area of 1,439,530 hectares. Ms Liazzat Rabbiosi
of the Ramsar Secretariat has prepared brief site descriptions based on the
Ramsar Information Sheets submitted by the Administrative Authority in Mongolia,
the Department of International Cooperation, Ministry
of Nature and Environment, from research by B.
Ouyngerel and N. Tseveenmyadag
of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences and Batnasan N.,
Freshwater Officer for the WWF Mongolia Programme Office. Liazzat's brief site
descriptions are accompanied by some very beautiful photographs as well, so
click here at once. [15/04/04]
![]()
"Edinburgh
Declaration" available now. The
recent global flyways conference "Waterbirds around the World" (Edinburgh,
UK, 3-8 April 2004), organised by Wetlands International and the governments
of the UK and the Netherlands, was one of the largest gatherings ever on the
topic, with 456 waterbird scientists and wetland and waterbird conservation
practitioners from 90 countries worldwide, and with the Ramsar Convention represented
by the Deputy Secretary General. It provided a major opportunity to review the
(generally declining) status of waterbirds in the light of the 2002 World Summit
on Sustainable Development and its 2010 biodiversity target. A first key output
of the conference is "The Edinburgh Declaration", developed
by participants during the meeting. This highlights the perilous state of many
of the world's waterbirds, recognising that this is driven by the continuing
decline in the quality and extent of the world's wetlands, and sets a agenda
for urgent and collaborative national and international action on wetlands and
waterbirds, including through implementation of the Ramsar Convention. The
Declaration is reproduced here, and further outputs from the conference
will be a Conference Summary (due later in 2004) and a two-volume set of conference
proceedings (in 2006). [13/04/04]
Ramsar
List updates. The United Kingdom has completed
a review of its structure of Ramsar Sites and consolidated some which had formerly
been counted as separate sites for legal reasons -- this process reduces the
UK's and global totals by 11 formerly distinct RSs and 12,129 hectares, with
no loss of actual wetland area covered. Similarly, Switzerland has restudied
its 8 Ramsar Sites and submitted revised RISs, including several changes in
the names of RSs and the correction of a surface area of the Rive sud du lac
de Neuchâtel from 3,063ha to 1,705ha. [14/04/04]
Riversymposium
2004, Brisbane, set for late August. "Threats
to Sustainable River Systems - beating the odds" is the theme
of the 7th International River Management Symposium, 31 August - 3 September
2004 in Brisbane, Australia, part of the annual Brisbane Riverfestival.
The traditional International Riversymposium celebrates the ecological
and social value of rivers by examining world's best practice in river and watershed
management and providing an international forum for science, research, management
and policy development. "Since its inception in 1998, Riversymposium
has established itself as one of the premier events on both the Australian and
international calendar for river basin managers and policy makers. By facilitating
solid partnerships between key stakeholders, Riversymposium has become a major
forum for river and watershed management. Through river management case studies,
presentations by keynote and other speakers, plus the awarding of the International
and National Thiess Riverprize, Riversymposium provides an opportunity to celebrate
and focus on rivers throughout the world." To
learn more, visit the Riverfestival Web site. [12/04/04]
Closer
cooperation between Ramsar and the Danube Commission. The
Danube Commission (ICPDR) established for the period 2001-2004 an Ecological
Expert Group - ECO EG (cf. our earlier report on the group's earlier
meeting in Bavaria, which also
supplies
some background on the Danube Convention). The ECO
EG met on 22-23 March 2004 in the South Moravian city of Brno (Czech
Republic) to review the progress of its work before the 7th ICPDR COP and Ministerial
Conference to be held in Vienna, 13-14 December 2004, and begin planning its
future tasks and responsibilities for the period 2005 and beyond. Austria proposed
to reinforce cooperation with the Ramsar Convention, notably in view of Ramsar
issues to be fed into the Joint Action Programme of the Danube river basin states
- a very interesting proposal that will be explored in more detail during the
upcoming meeting of the ECO EG, scheduled for 6-7 September 2004 in Sofia, Bulgaria.
Here is Tobias
Salathé's brief but rewarding report of the ECO EG meeting and
its context, with some very good photographs to go along with it. [08/04/04]
STRP
midterm workshops set for July 2004. As laid down by Ramsar COP8
in its "modus
operandi" for the Convention's Scientific
and Technical Review Panel (STRP), in the triennium 2003-2005 the
Panel would meet only twice as a body, instead of annually, with the possibility
of "midterm workshops" for those Working Groups whose work would require
them. Now Max Finlayson, Chair of the STRP, and Nick Davidson,
the Secretariat's STRP focal point, have announced that arrangements have successfully
been made to hold 1- and 1½-day workshops for the four Working Groups
that will benefit most from them, to be held sequentially at Wetlands International
in Wageningen, The Netherlands, 20-24 July 2004,
just before the 7th INTECOL International
Wetlands Conference scheduled for nearby Utrecht 25-30 July. Here
is the announcement from Max and Nick with further details and the particulars
about each of the four Working Groups. [07/04/04]
Flyways
Conference update.
News from Edinburgh. A press release from the conference
organizers emphasizes the threats of climate change to waterbird populations
and is reproduced here.
In a side event on 5 April, Wetlands International launched the publication
of the Asian Waterbird Census (following
story) by presenting a hardcopy and CD-ROM version to Nick Davidson, Ramsar's
Deputy Secretary General, and in the evening of 5 April a new three-way Joint
Work Plan was signed by Nick, representing the Ramsar Convention,
Arnulf Müller-Helmbrecht representing the Convention on Migratory
Species, and Bert Lenten of the CMS's AEWA Agreement -- an earlier
draft version of this new JWP was viewed with interest by the Parties
at Ramsar's COP8 in November 2002, and the final agreed text ought to be coming
here in the next day or two. [06/04/04]
Launch
of Asian Waterbird Census 1997-2001. The
Asian Waterbird Census, organized by Wetlands
International, takes place annually in January and is carried out by volunteers
interested in collecting information on waterbirds and wetlands as a basis for
contributing to their conservation. Since it began in 1987, the AWC has covered
more than 5,700 wetlands in 25 countries, and the publication edited by David
Li Zuo Wei and Taej Mundkur and
launched
at the Global Flyways Conference on 4 April 2004 summarizes the results of counts
from 1,392 sites in 22 countries, including 61 Ramsar Sites. The AWC is a vital
part of the assembly of data for the global Waterbird Population Estimates,
regularly published by Wetlands International and now in its 3rd edition, which
are used by Ramsar Contracting Parties to evaluate potential Ramsar Sites according
for Criteria 5 and 6 for designating Wetlands of International Importance (Resolution
VIII.38). The 166-page softcover publication is available from the Natural
History Book Service, http://www.nhbs.co.uk, and perhaps available for PDF download
soon as well (to be confirmed). Here
you will find a reprint of the Foreword by Ramsar's Secretary General, Peter
Bridgewater, and the Summary of results and here is a press
release from WI. [06/04/04]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Performance standards for
wetland restoration. Dr Bill Streever,
who as an expert adviser to the Ramsar STRP developed the Convention's mini-Web
site on wetland restoration in 2001, writes: "During the Society
of Wetlands Scientists (SWS) conference in Seattle, Washington, 18-23 July 2004,
we will be holding a workshop on wetland restoration performance standards.
. . . In preparation for this workshop, I am looking for examples of performance
standards that have been proposed or used on actual wetland restoration projects."
Please read Bill's message
to the Forum and respond if you can. [06/04/04]
Global
Flyways Conference under way. "Waterbirds Around the World"
is the title of the Global Flyways Conference 2004 ("A global review of
the conservation, management and research of the world's major flyways")
that has just got under way in Edinburgh, Scotland, UK, 3-8 April 2004. The
conference has been organized by Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH), the UK's Joint
Nature Conservation Committee (JNCC), Wetlands International, and the Governments
of the UK and the Netherlands, and here
is the first press release from the SNH, on the subject of waterbird
declines. Ramsar's Deputy Secretary General, Nick Davidson,
with David Stroud of JNCC, made a plenary
presentation on 4 April on African-Eurasian flyways ("current knowledge,
status, and future challenges") and that
is available here as well.
More
news will follow: the launch of the Asian Waterbird Census 1997-2001, the signing
of a Joint Work Plan among Ramsar, CMS, and AEWA, and what not else. Background
documentation on the conference is available from the Web
site of Wetlands International. [05/04/04]
Now
available. Nordic Ramsar meeting programme.
The Nordic Wetland Conference and Ramsar Meeting
is scheduled for 4-7 May 2004 in Norway, and the applications deadline is 8
April. The tentative programme
is available right here in PDF format. [05/04/04]
Updated
information. China Peat Workshop, July 2004.
New information about the International Workshop on
Peatland Conservation and Sustainable Use has
been sent by David Lee of the Global Environment Centre. Here
is the third announcement as updated, with some photographs. [05/04/04]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Incentives for constructed
wetlands for wastewater treatment. From Svetoslav
Apostolov (spapostolov@hotmail.com): "Dear all, I am doing my
MSc thesis based on review of possibility to use constructed (man-made) wetlands
for treatment of wastewater in Bulgaria, where this technique is still at the
feasibility studies and pilot projects level. In that relation, I am now looking
for information on all kind of incentives designed especially to encourage the
use (where appropriate) of constructed wetlands for treatment of wastewater
in favour of the classical wastewater treatment plants. Looking forward to any
information you'd find relevant and worth sharing! All contributions to the
thesis will be acknowledged, and all sources of information will be referenced!
Thank you in advance and apologies for any possible cross-mailing! Svetoslav
Apostolov, MS, Environmental Sciences and Policy Dept., Central European University,
Nador u. 9, H-1051 Budapest, Hungary." [05/04/04]
MedWet
Unit seeks new Communications Officer. The MedWet Initiative is a
long-term collaborative effort under the Ramsar Convention for the conservation
of Mediterranean wetlands. The MedWet Coordination Unit (based in Kifissia,
Athens, Greece), an outposted unit of the Ramsar Convention Secretariat, announces
the position vacancy (full-time) of the MedWet Communications
Officer. The MedWet Coordination Unit collaborates closely with the
expert wetland centres around the Mediterranean that make up the MedWet Team,
in order to develop and implement the programme of activities of MedWet. The
terms of reference are available here -- the deadline for applications
is 24 April 2004 with a starting date of
June 2004. [02/04/04]
WetKit
Ramsar launched in Canada. Wetkit Ramsar is a brand new Web site
designed to help Canadians find information and resources on the Ramsar Convention
and their own Wetlands of International Importance. This extremely attractive
and well-organized site provides resources for learning about wetlands and wetland
conservation; for nominating a Ramsar site; for managing wetlands in a sustainable
manner; and for assessing Canada`s progress on the Ramsar Convention. WetKit
Ramsar is supported by the Canadian Wildlife Service of Environment Canada,
the North American Wetlands Conservation Council (Canada), and Ducks Unlimited
Canada, and is a subset of the popular WetKit
Web site. Here is the announcement.
[02/04/04]
UK
designates salt lake on Cyprus. The Ramsar Secretariat is extremely
pleased to announce that the United Kingdom has designated as it latest Wetland
of International
Importance
a salt lake and associated marsh located within its Sovereign Base Area of the
Royal Air Force on the Akrotiri Peninsula in southernmost Cyprus. "Akrotiri"
(2,171 hectares; 34°37'N 032°58'E), also an Important Bird Area, is
being added to the Ramsar List today but its designation is effective as of
a year ago, 20 March 2003, because of some minor technicalities in sorting out
the RIS data for the site. Ramsar's Assistant Advisor for Europe, Estelle
Gironnet, has prepared a succinct description of the site based upon
the RIS information provided by the UK's Department for Environment, Food, and
Rural Affairs (DEFRA), right here.
In addition, in June 2002 the Senior Advisor for Europe, Dr Tobias
Salathé, was invited to visit Akrotiri and advise the authorities
and local NGOs and stakeholders on its conservation and wise use, and his
report on that visit can also be viewed here. [01/04/04] ![]()
Now
available. Ramsar intervention at Global Ministerial
Environment Forum. UNEP's Global Ministerial Environment Forum has
been taking place in Jeju, Republic of Korea, in recent days, and Ramsar's Secretary
General, Peter Bridgewater, made a number
of contributions to the discussions, including this
intervention on Ramsar and emerging water issues. [01/04/04]
From
the Ramsar Forum, 31 March 2004: Preliminary
results of the WWF waterbird survey of the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze
River, China, from Mark Barter;
The third "Mangrove
Forest Ecology, Management and Restoration" training workshop will be held
in Florida, USA, 21-24 February 2005, from R.
R. Lewis. [01/04//04]
Ramsar
visit to Uganda to scope out COP9 preparations. In mid-March 2004,
a Ramsar team of three -- Peter Bridgewater, the Secretary General, Abou
Bamba, the Senior Advisor for Africa, and Sebastià Semene
-- visited Kampala in order to liaison with Ugandan government officials and
wetlands staff on the progress of the preparations for the 9th
meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties, scheduled for
mid-November 2005, and to assess the planned facilities in light of the past
COP exigencies, which are many and varied. The Ramsar team came away profoundly
cheered by the level of COP-enthusiasm in all the people they met and confident
that suitable facilities will be readied for the occasion. With the help and
prior planning of Paul Mafabi, Assistant
Commissioner for Wetlands and for many years our 'daily contact' in the Ministry
of Water, Lands and Environment, Dr Bridgewater's team had the opportunity to
view the prospective
facilities, take part in delayed World
Wetlands Day celebrations, meet
ministers, hold press conferences, and liaison with the in-country COP team,
and promulgate a "media
release". It's all here. [31/03/04]
Spotlight
on the Evian Project. Since early 1998, the private-sector Danone
Group has devoted considerable sums of money to assisting the Ramsar
Convention in achieving our common goals for the conservation and sustainable
use of wetlands and water resources. Dedicated principally to capacity-building
and outreach activities, Evian Project funds have
been
instrumental in holding training and awareness workshops all over the world,
facilitating the setting up of Ramsar information centres, producing communications
and CEPA materials for the Convention (including our leaflets, our magnificent
exhibition, and most of our World Wetlands Day materials provided free to the
public), and ... and ... and too many more things to mention here. An
additional protocol signed in Paris on 22 March 2004 will provide matching
funds for the WWF Living Waters Programme in the pursuit of Ramsar objectives
in the Andean paramos region, the Niger River Basin, the wetlands of the Himalayas,
and the Mekong River Basin. For the occasion of that ceremonial signing, Christophe
Lefebvre produced a succinct PowerPoint summarizing the achievements of
the Evian Project over the past six years, and you
may view that here (in French, English to follow) as a Web page. And
further to honor the occasion, we've revised our
introductory page on the Evian Project to gather as much of our disparate
material into one place as can conveniently be done without having to hire a
consultant. [30/03/04]
Now
available. Mangroves and the Ramsar Convention. In
the burgeoning series of indexes -- "burgeoning" is not too strong
a word! -- to Ramsar and other materials on "under-represented wetland
types in the Ramsar List", another bud, leaf, or sprout has newly emerged,
to wit, mangroves. Mangrove swamps are forested
intertidal ecosystems that occupy sediment-rich sheltered tropical coastal environments,
occurring from about 32ºN (Bermuda) to almost 39ºS (Victoria, Australia),
and are represented in the Ramsar Classification Scheme chiefly by Wetland
Type I ("Intertidal forested wetlands; includes mangrove swamps, nipah
swamps and tidal freshwater swamp forests"). Mangroves join coral reefs
and peatlands in our under-represented indexes, and may soon be followed by
wet grasslands, seagrasses, mountain wetlands, temporary pools, and what not
else. Each index page provides links to 1) relevant Ramsar Resolutions, Recommendations,
and guidance documents; 2) pertinent and up-to-date external Web resources;
3) related news stories and background materials on the Ramsar Web site; 4)
up-to-date lists of Ramsar Wetlands of
International
Importance that have that wetland type as its dominant wetland type or significantly
present within the site (in PDF format, exported from the Ramsar
Sites Database at Wetlands International); and 5) related Ramsar
background documents on our Web site. These index pages are meant to be dynamic
and we earnestly solicit readers' suggestions for additional links, especially
to high-quality external Web resources. Here is the new
mangrove page and here is the general under-represented
wetland types index. [28/03/04]
Now
available and more soon. New Zealand symposium
on wetland restoration - results are coming in. In early February,
Dr Philippe Gerbeaux (pgerbeaux@doc.govt.nz),
New Zealand's Ramsar STRP National Focal Point based in the West Coast Conservancy,
Department of Conservation, in Hokitika, informed us of the forthcoming the
National Wetland Symposium "Restoring Wetlands
- a practical forum", Wellington, New Zealand, 27-28 February
2004. The Symposium was "intended to be a highly practical, participant
driven, forum for knowledge exchange, training and networking for landowners,
iwi, people committed to wetland biodiversity, local government staff and wetland
scientists", with details
here. Now Philippe writes: "Melanie
Dixon from Greater Wellington Regional Council, one of the organisers, has just
sent me a notice that information on presentations made at the Forum had started
to be loaded on http://www.biocommunity.org.nz/detail.php?ar_id=197.
More will be loaded in the near future but for those interested they can already
open the link and read a few interesting items. It would be great to put another
article on your Ramsar News (with the link) when you can." [29/03/04]
Now
available. "NigerWet" recommendations
from the Mopti workshop. A Ramsar Network
for Niger River Basin: "Atelier sur l'Établissement d'un
Réseau de Sites Ramsar dans le Bassin du fleuve Niger", a workshop
supported by local and national authorities of Mali, the Ramsar Convention,
WWF's Living Waters Programme, and the Danone Evian Project, took place in late
January 2004 in Mopti, Mali, on the shores of the Niger River. Amongst the significant
conclusions of the meeting was a recommendation to begin work on creating a
NigerWet regional wetland initiative for
the Niger Basin nations, modeled on the Ramsar Convention's MedWet regional
initiative. Here you may see the Report
of the workshop (in French only), the Recommendations
(in French so far, but English to follow, we're told), the List
of Participants (in PDF), and a page
of photos of the participants with and without fish and stranded on
the associated field trip with an overheated automobile engine. [26/03/04]
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 ramsar@ramsar.org). 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.