1
June 2004![]()
Headline
story. Ramsar's Secretary General visits Japan.
In late May 2004, the Secretary General, Dr Peter Bridgewater, visited
Japan for a few days and participated in discussions with parliamentarians and
the Ministry of the Environment about recent progress in implementing the Convention
and the issues up for consideration in the forthcoming 9th meeting of the Conference
of the Parties (COP9) in 2005. His discussions with the "Japanese
Lawmakers' League for Increasing Ramsar Sites" covered a broad
range of topics on Japan's wetlands, and his visit with Isao
Matsumiya, Parliamentary Secretary for Foreign Affairs [photo], provided
a number of suggestions for improved funding and management of the Convention.
The Minister of the Environment, Koike Yuriko,
reiterated her support for the Convention and, amongst other topics, stressed
the need for ensuring that the environment conventions are working closely together,
especially Ramsar and the UNFCCC. Peter's
(with
some photos) is available here. [01/06/04]
Now
available. The
Ramsar Manual, 3d edition. This
100-page overview of the Ramsar Convention is now ready (actually, it was ready
this time last year, but publication difficulties arose; never mind, it's been
updated) -- the Convention's history and present structures, the services it
provides, the workings of the Conference of the Parties, the Standing Committee,
the Scientific and Technical Review Panel, and the Secretariat, along with a
brief guide to further information, the guidance documents, and the Resolutions
and Recommendations of the COP. The first edition was compiled by Tim Davis
in 1993, and the 2nd edition came out in 1997; this 3rd edition is current
as of April 2004 and includes the significant results of COPs 7 and 8. A
PDF version will be included in English, French, and Spanish on the forthcoming
CD-ROM publication of the 2nd edition of the Ramsar Toolkit and it's
already available in both HTML and PDF versions on this Web site. ![]()
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[01/06/04]
Headline
story. New face in the Ramsar Secretariat. The
Secretariat is very pleased to welcome Michèle
Stark, who will be joining the team for about six months as a volunteer
research associate working on a MedWet analysis. A UK national with a Matura
in mathematics from Thun, Switzerland, and a BSc Honours degree in marine biology
from the University of Wales in Swansea, Michèle is pursuing an MSc at
the University of Hull in estuarine and coastal science and management and has
until recently been working with the University of Bern in Switzerland. Deputy
Secretary General Nick Davidson writes, "I most warmly welcome Michèle
Stark to the Ramsar team. She will be working on a project with the MedWet Coordination
Unit, but based here in Gland, to develop a knowledge-based assessment of the
status of Mediterranean wetlands. This will seek a wide range of views on how
wetlands have fared in the region since the the establishment of the MedWet
Initiative in 1991 and the pressures they currently face. It is planned that
an initial analysis of the results of this survey will be presented to the 6th
meeting of the Mediterranean Wetlands Committee (MedWet/Com6) anticipated for
November 2004. These results of the status assessment will support the identification
of the future priorities for the MedWet Initiative and the work of its Coordination
Unit, and will be complementary to a planned synthesis of baseline wetland
inventory data compiled by different Mediteranean countries." [29/05/04]
Who's
where?
Dr
Lei Guangchun, Senior Advisor for Asia, is attending the official
launch of the Wetlands Ambassador Campaign,
28-30 May 2004, in Lijiang, China, a high
mountain wetland and Ramsar candidate site. In the Wetlands Ambassador Campaign,
ten selected university teams are to set up campaign centres to raise awareness
amongst government officials, farmers and other stakeholders of the importance
and benefits of conserving wetlands throughout the Mekong River Basin. The campaign
is sponsored by WWF, the Ramsar Convention Bureau, and China's State Forestry
Administration. Representatives from Mekong River Commission, the Government
of China, students, and media will attend the launch ceremony. [27/05/04]
Abou
Bamba, Senior Advisor for Africa, is in Kigali,
Rwanda, 1-5 June 2004, to participate to the "National Workshop
on the Ramsar Convention and the Management and Conservation of Wetlands".
He will make a presentation on behalf of the Secretary General, and will lay
down the foundations for the designation of Rwanda's first Ramsar site and the
establishment of Rwanda's Ramsar National Committee, and discuss Rwanda's role
in the preparation of COP9, November 2005, in Kampala. [01/06/04]
Estelle
Gironnet, Assistant Advisor for Europe, is representing the Ramsar Convention
at the 2nd Steering Committee meeting for the International
Conference on Biodiversity, Paris, France,
1-2 June 2004. [01/06/04]
Sebastià
Semene Guitart, Special Assistant, is in Rhodes,
Greece, for the Ecocinema environmental
film festival, 1-6 June 2004. [01/06/04]
Maria
Anagnostopoulou, MedWet Communications Officer, is representing the Coordination
Unit at the MedWet/Regions project technical
seminar enitled Inventory and mapping of wetlands, in Ajaccio,
Corsica, from 2 to 4 June 2004. Approximately 30 participants (3
from each partner region) involved in inventory issues will discuss the progress
of the associated work of the project and will plan its final steps in view
of the projects closure at the end of October 2004. [01/06/04]
Alex
de Sherbinin of CIESIN is visiting the
Ramsar Secretariat, 1 June 2004, to discuss further developments of Web-based
mapping of information in relation to Ramsar Sites, the CIESIN
Ramsar Data Gateway, and Wetlands International's Ramsar Sites Database
Service. [01/06/04]
|
Who was where? Cumulated record of travels throughout the year. |
|
Highlights from World Wetlands Day. Bulgaria's sticker.
|
Yesterday's News!
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Ramsar
and MedWet inaugurate Ecocinema film prize. The Ramsar Convention
on Wetlands and its MedWet initiative are establishing an award of an annual
prize for a film on water or related ecosystems (especially wetlands) that will
be entered in the competition segment of the Ecocinema international film festival.
The films entering the competition for the Ramsar/MedWet award will have water
and/or aquatic ecosystems as their overall theme and will be judged by a specific
jury. The winner will be awarded a prize of €4.000 (four thousand euro)
provided by the Ramsar Convention and MedWet. At the 4th Ecocinema festival,
which will be held in Rhodes, Greece, from 1 to 6 June 2004, the award will
be presented by the Secretary General of the Ramsar Convention, Dr Peter Bridgewater.
Here is the MedWet press release
on this new endeavor. [27/05/04]
"Moving
ahead on the cultural dimension". The Ramsar Secretary General,
Dr Peter Bridgewater, has recently been
in visiting Australia, and specifically Tasmania, for discussions aimed at developing
COP9 case studies on the cultural values of wetlands in a follow-up to Resolution
VIII.19, and here is his
brief report and photo of how that has been progressing. [27/05/04]
Invitation.
World Environment Day open house in Gland. Festivities
planned for Environment Day at IUCN HQ in Gland, Switzerland, have already been
reported here by Estelle Gironnet (see below), as
Ramsar, IUCN, and WWF International will be cooperating on a 5 June programme
of awareness-raising activities for everyone who lives here and anyone else
who may be passing by. Here is a small PDF
French-and-English invitation to the open house festivities from Achim
Steiner (IUCN), Claude Martin (WWF), and Peter Bridgewater (Ramsar). Be there
or be square. [27/05/04]
Two
vacancies for Mekong River Basin Wetland Programme. The joint UNDP/
IUCN / MRC Mekong River Basin Wetland Biodiversity
Conservation and Sustainable Use Programme is a five-year programme
of activities in the four lower Mekong countries. The Programme will strengthen
the mechanisms for conservation of wetland biodiversity and assist the four
countries with testing sustainable use approaches in demonstration sites. The
programme is being managed from a Programme Management Unit (PMU) in Vientiane,
Lao PDR. The UNDP/IUCN/MRC Mekong River Basin Wetland Biodiversity Conservation
and Sustainable Use Programme is seeking to recruit two new officers: a Regional
Wetlands Training Coordinator, and a Regional
Wetlands Communication and Networks Coordinator. Both of these positions
will be based in the Programme Management Unit (PMU) in Vientiane, Lao PDR and
both positions will initially be for a period of two years with possibility
of extension for a further three years. Candidates from the four Lower Mekong
countries (Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand and Vietnam) will be given preference.
The announcements are available here in PDF format,
for Regional Wetlands Training Coordinator and Regional Wetlands Communication
and Networks Coordinator. [links
later removed][24/05/04]
Announcement.
Deadline
for National Reports announced. In
diplomatic notifications of 22 April, the Ramsar Secretariat passed on the news
that the Parties' National Reports for COP9 will be due by 28
February 2005, and stressed that it is important that the Parties
meet that deadline so that the staff can complete its analyses of the status
of implementation for circulation to the Parties with the agenda papers in advance
of COP9. The National Report Forms were earlier distributed to the Administrative
Authorities but can be requested from the Secretariat (ramsar@ramsar.org) or
downloaded from the Ramsar Web site in English,
Français, or Español.
[21/05/04]
From
the CEPA News. New
international award scheme -- Seed Initiative. [21/05/04]
RIS
update for potential transboundary Ramsar Site in Austria. In Resolution
6.13, the Contracting Parties resolved to give priority to providing updated
maps and completed Ramsar Information Sheets (RISs)
and to revise Ramsar Site data at least every six years. This has been done
for the Austrian Ramsar Site Stauseen am Unteren Inn
(870 ha), one of central Europe's most important waterfowl habitats, contiguous
with the German site Unterer Inn, Haiming-Neuhaus
(1,955 ha). Ms Anita Matzinger, Ramsar Administrative
Authority contact in Upper Austria, says about the collaboration between the
persons in charge, in Austria and Germany (Bavaria), on its management: "The
intention of both managements is to coordinate Ramsar-relevant data acquisition
in order to describe the Lower Inn as one site without national borders (
),
As soon as both managements have gained enough information they will try to
bring the Information Sheet on Ramsar Wetlands (RIS) of Bavaria in line with
the sheet of Upper Austria. At the moment the managements are at an initial
stage. Their last meeting was held on April 8th 2004 and the next will take
place end of July." --
reported, with revised Annotated List
site description, by Estelle Gironnet. [21/05/04]
World
Environment Day approaching. A l'occasion de la Journée
mondiale de l'environnement, toute l'équipe de l'UICN, WWF
et Ramsar vous invite à une journée portes ouvertes: Samedi 5
juin 2004 de 13:00 à 17:00 au siège mondial de l'UICN à
Gland. La Journée mondiale de l'environnement, célébrée
chaque année le 5 juin, nous concerne tous directement. C'est, pour les
Nations Unies, l'un des principaux moyens pour susciter une plus grande prise
de conscience envers l'environnement et promouvoir l'intérêt et
l'action politique. Le thème de la Journée mondiale de l'environnement
retenu pour 2004 "Avis de Recherche! Mers et Océans:
Morts ou Vivants?", est une invitation afin que chacun d'entre
nous prenne position une fois pour toute sur la manière dont sont traités
les mers et océans de la planète. Le thème nous appelle
à l'action. Voulons-nous des mers et des océans sains et vivants
ou pollués et morts? Pour plus d'informations consultez http://www.iucn.org/wed2004/.
On the occasion of World Environment Day, IUCN, WWF and Ramsar welcome you to an openhouse: Saturday, 5 June 2004 from 13:00 to 17:00 at IUCN Headquarters in Gland. World Environment Day, commemorated each year on 5 June, is one of the principal vehicles through which the United Nations stimulates worldwide awareness of the environment and enhances political attention and action. The World Environment Day theme selected for 2004 is Wanted! Seas and Oceans - Dead or Alive? The theme asks that we make a choice as to how we want to treat the Earth's seas and oceans. It also calls on each and every one of us to act. Do we want to keep seas and oceans healthy and alive or polluted and dead?
The programme: Exhibition on the theme of seas and oceans; Games and competitions for children in association with Kiddie Club; Tasting of local food and wine; Music (piano and cello); Tombola, A lot of prizes to be won!; Tour of the IUCN Natural Garden by Florian Meier; Presentation: "Rice Paddies - Wetlands of International Importance"; Theatrical improvization on the theme of water by the Ligue Improvisation Neuchâteloise; Expedition Quiz "Discovering the Blue Planet"; Wine and refreshments. Announcement and programme in PDF. -- contributed by Estelle Gironnet. [20/05/04]
Carpathian
Wetland Initiative Workshop. A
workshop on the possible development of the Carpathian
Wetland Initiative was held in Brezovica, Oravsky dvor, Slovakia
from 28 to 30 April 2004. It was organised by the State
Nature Conservancy of the Slovak Republic and attended by most of
the countries sharing a part of the Carpathian mountains as well as a number
of representatives from international conventions and NGOs (see attached list
of participants). The objective was to investigate the possibility of launching
a regional wetland initiative along the lines of Resolution VIII.30 of the Ramsar
Convention, and also within the context of the Carpathian Convention. Spyros
Kouvelis, MedWet Coordinator, was invited to participate on behalf of the
Ramsar Convention, in order to explain Resolution VIII.30 and transfer the experience
and lessons learned from the case of MedWet-the Mediterranean Wetlands Initiative.
The meeting adopted a number of recommendations for undertaking further steps
in the direction of developing a knowledge base and a regional collaboration
for the protection of Carpathian Wetlands. Here
is the report of the meeting, with related documents in PDF format.
[19/05/04]
Now
available. Report and photos of the Nordic
Wetlands Conference. In early May 2004, the Nordic Council of Ministers
- representing the governments of Denmark and Greenland, Finland and Åland,
Iceland, Norway and Svalbard, and Sweden - and the Directorate for Nature Management
(the Ramsar administrative authority in Norway) organised a Nordic
Wetland Conference and Ramsar Meeting in Brekstad, a coastal village
situated on the flat peninsula at the entrance of Trondheim fjord. Some 50 participants
from 10 countries, including invited delegations from Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania
and the Russian Federation, representing national Ramsar authorities, nature
conservation agencies, local authorities and managers of protected areas, gathered
to discuss how to improve wetland conservation and awareness and possibilities
for strengthening Nordic wetland cooperation. Ramsar's
Tobias Salathé, at the invitation of the Norwegian government,
participated heartily, followed along with his camera on the excursion to Ørlandet
Ramsar Site, did his very best on the ceremonial lunch, then came
home and wrote a succinct report on the meeting and the issues involved, and
the way forward from here, and provided some stunning photographs of the intertidal
Norwegian landscape on a fine day in May. His
report is here, and the Closing
Statement of the Conference is here. [18/05/04]
Ramsar
subregional office slated for Oceania. In
ceremonies in Cairns, Australia, on 13 May 2004, the Ramsar Secretary General,
Peter Bridgewater, announced the creation of a new outposted office of the
Convention's Secretariat to be based in Apia, Samoa, and hosted by the South
Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP). This new post will
provide the Small Island States and Territories of the Oceania region with support
for wetland conservation and management, as well as help in joining and implementing
the Ramsar Convention. Of the 138 countries that have joined the Ramsar Convention,
only four of Oceania's 29 states are presently members, though three more countries
are said to be in the process of joining the Convention soon. An Assistant Programme
Officer will soon be appointed to start building this new regional initiative,
to be funded jointly by Ramsar, the governments of Australia and the USA, WWF
International, and SPREP itself. Here's
the story, here's a more thorough press
release by Sebastià Semene (PDF format), and here's the joint
work plan between Ramsar and SPREP, by way of deep background. [17/05/04]
Global
H2O Partnership Initiative, Cairns (Australia). The
Secretary General, Peter Bridgewater, has
been participating in the Global H2O Partnership meetings in Cairns, 11-14 May
2004, and here is Sebastià Semene's
very brief, but illustrated, report on the proceedings. [17/05/04]
La
República Dominica reduciría sus estándares ambientales
- Una nueva ley aprobada por los diputados amenaza
las áreas protegidas, incluyendo un Sitio Ramsar. La Secretaría
de la Convención de Ramsar ha expresado su honda preocupación
al Presidente de la República Dominicana, S.E.
Dr. Hipólito Mejía, acerca de la nueva ley de áreas
protegidas aprobada por la Cámara de Diputados. Una de las áreas
que podría verse afectada por este proyecto es el Lago Enriquillo, incluido
en la Lista Ramsar de Humedales de Importancia Internacional por el Gobierno
de la República Dominicana el 15 de mayo de 2002. El Lago Enriquillo
es uno de los mayores lagos del Caribe y una de las áreas más
importantes para la conservación de la biodiversidad en la República
Dominicana. Más detalles aquí.
[14/05/04]
Dominican Republic to lower its conservation standards - A new law approved by the deputies may threaten protected areas, including a Ramsar Site. The Ramsar Secretariat expressed its deepest concern about this protected areas law to the President of the Dominican Republic, H.E. Dr. Hipólito Mejía. One of the areas which may be affected by this law is Lake Enriquillo, listed on the Ramsar List of Wetlands of International Importance by the Government of the Dominican Republic on 15 May 2002. Lake Enriquillo is the biggest lake in the Caribbean region and one of the most important areas for the conservation of biodiversity in the Dominican Republic. More details here.
Latvia
names three new boggy sites for the Ramsar List.
The Secretariat is very pleased to announce that Latvia has designated
three new wetlands for the List of Wetlands of International Importance, effective
31 October 2002, bringing that Party's total number of Ramsar Sites to six.
Two of the new sites are at the national frontiers and at least one of them
has the potential to become part of a Transboundary Ramsar Site, i.e., a single
transboundary wetland system managed collaboratively by the Parties concerned,
in this case between Latvia's Northern Bogs and Estonia's Nigula Nature Reserve.
All three valuable sites exhibit a range of Ramsar Criteria for international
importance but all are united in meeting the waterbird Criteria, particularly
Criterion 6 by regularly supporting 1% of the individuals in a population of
one species or subspecies of waterbird. Ramsar's Assistant
Advisor for Europe Estelle Gironnet
has prepared brief summaries of the new sites, which are the Lubana
Wetland Complex west of Riga, Northern Bogs
(Ziemelu purvi) near Estonia, and Pape Wetland
Complex on the southern coastal border.
[14/05/04]
![]()
Headline
story. Inventory workshop
set for Park "W" in Africa. The Ramsar Convention, together
with the Wetlands International Regional Office of West Africa and the UNESCO
World Heritage Centre, is presently setting up a workshop to be held next week
from 17 to 22 May on the Methodologies of Inventories
of Natural Resources, UNESCO/World Heritage Sites and Ramsar Sites.
The workshop will be held on the site of the Park of
"W", a transboundary protected area shared by Benin, Burkina
Faso, and Niger, a Ramsar and World Heritage site and UNESCO Biosphere Reserve.
It is targeting the WH and Ramsar site managers as well as Ramsar Focal Points
and some other candidates. Participants are mainly from: Niger, Burkina Faso,
Benin, Côte d'Ivoire and Senegal. IUCN and WWF's experts are also giving
talks in this workshop, which is generously financed by UNESCO. Ramsar's Senior
Advisor for Africa, Abou Bamba, is presently
passing through Niamey in order to set things up at the venue for the impending
festivities. A brief report will follow. - reported
by Ahmed El-Sabban, Ramsar. [14/05/04]
From
the CEPA News. Practical guidance on communication as a conservation
tool. [14/10/04]
WWF
International press release on Danube Delta's Bystroye canal. WWF
International's Danube-Carpathian Programme
has issued a press release, 10 May 2004, on the projected Bystroye canal in
the Ukraine's Danube Delta (the Kyliiske Mouth Ramsar Site) and it
has been reproduced here. See also related story
here. [12/05/04]
Transboundary
wetlands and Ramsar Sites. On 28-29 April 2004, a seminar on transboundary
wetland sites took place in the town of Lida (Republic
of Belarus), organized by the Environment Ministries of Belarus and Lithuania.
This was the culmination of work undertaken under the coordination of Saulius
Svazas of "OMPO", the non-governmental organization working for "Migratory
Birds of the Western Palearctic", with support of Ramsar's Small Grants
Fund. The second day was devoted by the 30 participants to the preparation of
a specific project for joint management activities for one of the first transboundary
Ramsar Sites: the Cepkeliai-Kotra wetland complex,
situated on both sides of Kotra (Katra) river that forms the border between
Lithuania and Belarus. A very well-illustrated report by Tobias
Salathé explains the issues and views the relevant sites in
the area, and shows why transborder management cooperation can be so productive
here and elsewhere. Here is Tobias'
.
[12/05/04]
Council
of Europe seminar on "Landscape and spatial planning".
Thymio Papayannis, MedWet Senior Advisor,
participated in the recent seminar on Landscape and Spatial Planning
organised in Tulcea by the Council of Europe and the government of Romania.
Here he gives a positive account of the background and substance of the meeting,
but notes that "The
meeting ended in a tense mood, as information obtained indicated that dredging
would start at once for a navigation channel to be built in the Ukrainian part
of the Danube Delta through the core of the wetland, in spite of strong reservations
by both UNESCO and the Ramsar Bureau. It is hoped that the Ukrainian authorities
will re-examine this project and at least proceed with the preparation of an
objective and broad impact study." Here is Thymio's
.
[11/05/04]
Danube
estuary threatened by a waterway project in Ukraine. The Ramsar Convention
Secretariat expressed again today its concern to Ukraine's President, H.E. Mr.
Leonid Kuchma, about the Government's project to build a navigable waterway
through the Ukrainian part of the Danube Delta. The course currently chosen
for this waterway appears likely to affect seriously and irreversibly the ecological
character of the Kyliiske Mouth, a Ramsar
Wetland of International Importance and one of UNESCO's Man and the Biosphere
Reserves, and subject of a Ramsar Advisory
Mission in October 2003. The Secretariat called upon Ukraine to ensure
that it will adhere to the international agreements it has signed, in particular
the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands.
[08/05/04]
Ramsar
outing to the Lac de Tanay. "On the occasion of the 2004 World
Wetland Day inspiring theme "From the Mountains to the Sea, Wetlands at
work for us", the Ramsar Convention, IUCN, and BUWAL (Swiss Environment
Ministry) staff, Pro Natura and Swiss Alpine Club members, and their friends
- 30 people in total - met on the 1st of May to chat about wetlands and the
Labour Day and hike in the Lac Tanay Nature Reserve (above the eastern part
of Lac Léman, or Lake Geneva). Even though the clouds and fog hampered
the vision three meters ahead during most of the trip, we had eventually the
chance to get an overall view of the lovely alpine wetland lying at the bottom
of Grammont Mountain." Here is Estelle Gironnet's
and
seven photos. [10/05/04]
Draft
Ramsar Infopack in Russian, for comment. [out-of-date
file]The official working languages of the Ramsar Convention are
English, French, and Spanish, and seldom does the Secretariat have the resources
to produce the needed information materials about the Convention in additional
languages, however useful they would be. (Earlier editions of the info pack
have been produced in Chinese, Arabic, and perhaps other languages with the
help of Parties and NGOs.) Now, however, Ramsar's Assistant Advisor for Asia,
Ms Liazzat Rabbiosi, has made a draft translation
into Russian of the latest edition of the basic Ramsar Information Pack, and
before it is finalized and made available in the Russian-speaking regions of
Asia and Europe, she would welcome comments on her draft text from anyone who
is able to offer advice. The 19 information sheets are available on this Web
site in PDF format, and the index to them can be found at http://ramsar.org/about_infopack_russian.pdf
- may we ask anyone who would like to suggest improvements to their content
and style to e-mail Liazzat directly at asia@ramsar.org. The English
version, for comparison, can be found at http://ramsar.org/index_about_ramsar.htm#info.
[08/05/04]
Nuevo
libro sobre bioindicadores de calidad del agua. Bioindicación
de la calidad del agua en Colombia: Uso del método BMWP/Col.
Gabriel Alfonso Roldán Pérez, Editorial Universidad de Antioquia,
Medellín, Colombia. De forma tradicional, la determinación de
la calidad del agua se fundamentó principalmente en análisis fisicoquímicos
y bacteriológicos. Hoy en día se han venido implementando sistemas
de evaluación de la calidad del agua con base en la investigación
biológica de los macroinvertebrados en el agua, los cuales han demostrado
su utilidad para establecer los niveles de contaminación de las fuentes
acuáticas y planear, entonces, estrategias para la recuperación
de las mismas. El texto está dirigido principalmente a biólogos,
estudiantes y profesores de las áreas biológicas. También
es de gran utilidad para a todos los profesionales responsables de la planificación,
evaluación, uso y manejo de los recursos acuáticos del país.
El texto se puede ordenar por Internet: www.editorialudea.com/novedades/bioindicacion.html,
mercadeo@editorialudea.com.
New book about biologic indicators of water quality. New techniques of assessing water quality with macroinvertebrates have shown to be very useful. A new book on the subject published in Spanish by a Colombian university, can be ordered through the Internet. [07/05/04]
Biodiversity
of inland water ecosystems. The Secretariat of the Convention on
Biological Diversity has published a thorough and insightful 120-page report
on the "Status and Trends of Biodiversity of Inland Water Ecosystems".
Written by Carmen Revenga and Yumiko
Kura of the World Resources Institute, the publication was assisted
financially by the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs (DGIS) through a project
administered by Wetlands International and the Ramsar Convention Secretariat,
and peer reviewed by experts from the CBD and Ramsar secretariats, Wetlands
International, and others. It covers the following major subjects: the condition
of and threats to inland water ecosystems; a review of inland water species
richness, distribution and conservation status; inland water ecosystems and
habitats identified as high conservation priority; and data gaps and information
needs, and it includes an informative review of 18 other ongoing assessments
of water resources and inland water biodiversity, including those by IUCN, BirdLife,
WWF, the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, CGIAR, LakeNet and others. The Foreword,
co-written by Hamdallah Zedan, Executive Secretary of the CBD, and Peter
Bridgewater, Ramsar's Secretary General, is
and information on procuring this new volume in the CBD Technical Series, no.
11, can be sought from the CBD, secretariat@biodiv.org.
[06/05/04]
Joint
Work Plan signed by CMS, AEWA, and the Ramsar Convention. Long --
long! -- in the gestation, a three-way Joint Work Plan has been concluded
amongst the Convention on Wetlands, the
Convention on Migratory Species (CMS), and
the CMS's African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbird Agreement
(AEWA). Earlier versions have come and gone and have been greeted
warmly by Ramsar COP8 in 2002 (COP8 DOC.24),
but in the fullness of time a final agreed version was signed at the "Waterbirds
Around the World" Global Flyways Conference in Edinburgh, Scotland, on
5 April 2004, by Nick Davidson from
Ramsar, Arnulf Müller-Helmbrecht, Executive
Secretary of CMS, and Bert Lenten, Executive
Secretary of AEWA. The new JWP covers these areas of work: Joint promotion of
the benefits to countries of participation in the Ramsar Convention and CMS,
and, in Africa and Eurasia, AEWA; Cooperation between secretariats, scientific
and technical, and other bodies; Joint actions for the conservation and wise
use of wetland-dependent migratory species and their habitats; Data collection,
storage and analysis; and New Agreements and other related actions under CMS
for migratory species, including endangered migratory species and species with
an unfavourable conservation status. One is led to hope that this new agreement
will propel us forward to productive increases in the already fruitful collaborative
relations amongst the three instruments. Here you will find the CMS's
press release on the event, drafted by Veronika
Lenarz, and the text of the new agreement is
.
[05/05/04]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Impacts of climate change
on Black Sea wetlands. Wetlands
& Climate Change - are you prepared? "An opportunity
to make links with an evolving network of expertise around the Black Sea &
Azov Sea. We are seeking information/contacts on actions to mitigate the effects
of climate change on or using wetlands. Through a UK Government funded project,
the Regional Studies Centre in Odessa, Ukraine are assessing the impacts of
climate change on the Black Sea wetlands. On 17-18th May 2004 a conference of
interested parties will be held to share knowledge and discuss the future implications
and identify possible mitigation options for action. If you have any experience
of practical mitigation for climate change using/benefiting wetlands or would
like further information, please contact us! Many thanks, Natasha Barker (UK),
Igor Studdennikov (Ukraine)". (NATASHA J. BARKER, 29 Raleigh Road, Exeter
EX1 1TQ, UK, natasha.barker@btopenworld.com.)
[05/05/04]
From
the Ramsar Forum. "Wetlands" in other
languages. Suzie Hershberger,
Wetland Educator with Environmental Concern (www.wetland.org) in the USA, asked
Ramsar Forum members around the world
to
supply the word for "wetlands" in their own languages. Now she reports:
"Many thanks to everyone for your interesting and informative responses
to "wetlands" in other languages! So far, the compiled list contains
about 50 different languages from all over the globe, and we have just added
it to Environmental Concern's website at http://wetland.org/educ_world.htm
- so please, take a look!" Suzie's
message and her brief description of Environmental Concern, Inc., and its objectives
can be seen here. [05/05/04]
Mauritius
forms National Ramsar Committee. Following Recommendation 5.13 of
Ramsar COP5 (Kushiro, Japan, 1993), the government
of Mauritius has just established its National Ramsar Committee,
and the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources has nominated the
18 new members. The Committee comprises the Permanent Assistant Secretary of
the parent Ministry as Chairman and the Director of National Parks and Conservation
Service as Vice Chairman. The other 16 members have been selected from all relevant
institutions involved with wetland matters. The committee held its first meeting
on 26 March 2004 and plans to work towards the designation of new Ramsar Sites,
preparation of an inventory of the wetlands on Mauritius Island, 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. [05/05/04]
From
the Ramsar Forum.
Update on Japan's wetlands. The Japan
Wetlands Action Network (JAWAN) is a network of local grassroot conservation
NGOs working throughout Japan on wetland issues. Minoru
Kashiwagi, in a succinct report on the progress of wetland conservation
in Japan in spring 2004, writes: "Understanding that such a huge loss of
tidal flats comes from the underestimation of wetland values in general and
tidal flats
in
particular, we have organized a series of activities to appreciate wetland values
throughout Japan. This year 38 organizations in different locations carried
out some 68 activities, including birdwatching and symposia. Some NGOs baked
cakes and prepared Miso soups with marine products before or after clean-up
campaigns at wetlands. . . . We have appealed some critical conservation issues
to the Ramsar Forum from Japan, namely Isahaya, Awase and Sanbanze. We would
like to update them and add new information on two sites from western Japan."
Here is JAWAN's
on the present situation at some of Japan's most important coastal wetlands.
[04/05/04]
Now
available. Economic valuation of sustainable
management in Peru. Wagner Guzman Castillo,
Instituto de Investigaciones de la Amazonia Peruana (IIAP), has been studying
the economic benefits of sustainable wetland management in Peru and has prepared
a case study of the "aguajal" system in the Reserve Nacional Pacaya
Samiria. The results of his efforts, supported by INRENA and US AID, are available
here as a 72-page (1.2MB PDF) paper (in Spanish), "Valoración
económica de beneficios ambientales en el manejo sostenible de humedales:
Estudio de caso del manejo sostenible de sistemas de "aguajal" en
la Comunidad de Parinari, Reserva Nacional Pacaya Samiria (Región de
Loreto, Perú)", and here
is a brief summary in both Spanish and English. [04/05/04)
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]
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]
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]
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
.
[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
Semene Guitart's brief report on the results. [27/04/04]
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
).
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.