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What's
New @ Ramsar
The Ramsar
Bulletin Board
26
June 2007 
Headline
story.
Austrian National Ramsar Committee. The Austrian
Administrative Authority for the Ramsar Convention has had 19 years of
experience in running its National Ramsar Committee -- they have good
cross-sectoral representation, as well as representation from their semi-autonomous
states and their key NGOs, and they meet face-to-face on a regular basis,
usually once or twice per year. They hold the meeting in different states/provinces
on a rotational basis and take time out from the meeting room,
papers and powerpoint presentations, to visit Ramsar sites, to talk to
each other more informally and share their many experiences that have
importance for implementing the Convention. Here
is Ramsar's Sandra Hails' report on the most
recent Ramsar Committee meeting, 13-14 June 2007. [25/06/07]
Headline
story. International Danube Day 2007
to celebrate cultures and cooperation. (VIENNA, 25 June 2007)
The rich and varied histories and traditions of the countries sharing
the Danube River Basin will be at the heart of festivities marking the
fourth annual International Danube Day (June 29). Under the theme "Celebrating
Danube Cultures", many educational, entertainment and recreational
activities will be held this week to commemorate the anniversary of the
Danube River Protection Convention, which was signed in Sofia, Bulgaria,
in 1994. ICPDR press release here
(PDF). [25/06/07]
Headline
story. Photographs of the Pantanal.
The Pantanal of South America is one of the most internationally
important wetlands of them all -- one of the most immense, relatively
unspoilt, and biologically active environments on earth. It is a vast
complex of broad savannahs, huge wetlands, rainforest-like riverine forests
and dry decidious forests, as well as a mosaic of rivers, lakes and shallow
lagoons, all nurtured by annual cycles of inundation and drought. A large
portion of Bolivia's share of the system, the 3-million-hectare "Pantanal
Boliviano", was added to the Ramsar List of Wetlands of International
Importance in 2001, and two areas within the Pantanal of Brazil's Mato
Grosso and Mato Grosso do Sul states have also been included in the List.
A new book, Pantanal: Das Herz Südamerikas
(texts in German), by world-famous nature photographer Günter
Ziesler and author Angelika Hofer,
captures the beauty and wild diversity of the landscape and especially
its wildlife in 138 pages of stunning photographs - the hardcover edition
is available for only €38.50 from Tecklenborg Verlag in Steinfurt,
Germany. It includes a foreword from Nick Davidson,
Ramsar Deputy Secretary General, welcoming the book for its powerful celebration
of the values and wonder of one of the world's great wetland systems.
[25/06/07]
Who's
Where?
Peter Bridgewater, Secretary General,
and Tobias Salathé, Senior
Advisor for Europe, are in Rome, Italy,
for the 8th meeting of the MedWet Committee (MedWet/Com-8),
26-28 June 2007. [25/06/07]
For
more old Ramsar Secretariat travel news, see also 'Who Was Where', 2000,
2001, 2002,
2003, 2004,
2006,
2007
Yesterday's
News!

Ramsar
at the "Fête du developpement durable" in Geneva. On
Saturday 9th and Sunday 10th June 2007, the beautiful Botanic Garden of
Geneva, Switzerland, hosted for the first time the very well known sustainable
development festival (Fête du developpement durable). The
6th edition of this very much appreciated event offered two full days
of debates, concerts, artistic interventions and an incredibly lively
atmosphere bringing together individuals and local, regional and international
organizations involved in the promotion of sustainable development and
nature conservation. Again this year, the Ramsar Convention Secretariat
was present together with the World Conservation Union (IUCN) amongst
more than 60 stands focused on the themes of biodiversity, renewable energies,
climate change, social responsibility, organic food, recycling, etc. At
the Ramsar and IUCN stand the volunteers provided information and distributed
brochures, stickers, and leaflets about the importance of wetlands and
biodiversity, their functions and values, the different approaches in
Europe and in other regions worldwide, threats and finally future goals.
A
brief illustrated report from the Ramsar team: Mila Llorens, Catherine
Loetscher, Adrian Ruiz Carvajal, Pragati Tuladhar, and Monica Zavagli.
[22/06/07]
Ramsar-related
activities in the Oceania region - an update. Ramsar staff
members provide weekly updates on their activities for internal use within
the Secretariat, but this condensed summary from Vainuupo
Jungblut, Associate Ramsar Officer based in the Secretariat
of the Pacific Regional Environment Program (SPREP) in Apia,
Samoa, offers a useful summary of recent Ramsar-related activities in
the Oceania region. Among his activities in late May and early June 2007,
Vai lists: Circulating to partners for comments a draft mangrove monitoring
protocol (in the form of a generic manual) for the Pacific Islands region;
drafting terms of reference for a consultancy to coordinate the update
of the Oceania Wetlands Directory; developing a draft agenda for an Oceania
Ramsar Site/Wetland Managers Workshop (now tentatively scheduled for 12-16
November); assisting with the Kiribati Ramsar Small Grants Fund project
- work plan fine-tuning and other implementation issues; developing a
briefing paper on Ramsar issues for the Cook Islands environment minister
to facilitate moves towards accession to the Convention; developing a
concept paper for a Pacific Islands regional mangrove initiative to be
discussed further with IUCN Oceania and other partners; participating
in a regional workshop for Pacific Island LDCs on CBD implementation organized
by SPREP and UNEP (Nairobi); assisting Marshall Islands in planning a
community-based wetlands management workshop to be held at Jaluit Atoll
Ramsar site from 9-13 August; assisting Fiji to submit a Small Grants
Fund proposal for improved management of their first Ramsar site, Upper
Navua CA; organizing a mangrove clean up and replanting in partnership
with the Samoan environment ministry and UNDP to celebrate World Environment
day (5th June). [18/06/07]
New
Director for Ramsar Regional Centre in Iran. The Collaborative
Management Board of the Ramsar Regional Center
for Training and Research on Wetlands in Western and Central Asia (RRC-CWA)
(an independent institution in the city of Ramsar, Iran, that is also
one of the Ramsar "regional initiatives") is pleased to announce
that Ms.Yasaman Rajabkhah has been
appointed as the Executive Director of the centre, and has taken up the
post as of the beginning of June 2007. Ms. Rajabkhah, an Iranian citizen,
has a university degree in Natural Resources Engineering / Environment
from Azad University in Tehran. She has been the national focal point
for the Ramsar Convention at the Department of Environment of the Islamic
Republic of Iran for the past five years, and she has been strongly involved
with Communication, Education and Public Awareness (CEPA) programme development.
In addition, she has been working within the region for the initial development
of the regional initiative since 2005.
The Web site of
the Regional Centre for West and Central Asia can be seen at http://www.ramsarcenter-cwa.org/.
[13/06/07]
Now
available. Spanish and French versions
of the Ramsar Technical Report 'Valuing wetlands'. Valoración
de humedales: Lineamientos para valorar los beneficios derivados de los
servicios de los ecosistemas de humedales (2007). Évaluation
des zones humides : Orientations sur lestimation des avantages issus
des services écosystémiques des zones humides (2007).
Announcement.
International Conference on Managing Wetlands for Sustainable
Development. "MWSD 2008" (International Conference
on Managing Wetlands for Sustainable Development: Innovative Research
and Lessons Learned, Effective Partnerships, and the Need for Co-Management)
will be held from 9 to 11 January 2008 at Thumrin Thana Hotel, Trang,
Thailand in conjunction with 40th anniversary celebration of Prince
of Songkla University, Thailand. The deadline for abstracts
is 30 June 2007. Details are available from: http://www.envi.psu.ac.th/mwsd2008,
and further enquiries can be directed to "Conference Secretariat"
by e-mail at visa.s@psu.ac.th. -- Visa Sae-Chang, Faculty of Environmental
Management, Prince of Songkla University (http://www.envi.psu.ac.th).
[12/06/07]
Secretary General's visit to Uganda. From
30 May to 3 June 2007, the Secretary General, Peter
Bridgewater, visited Uganda for discussions with the authorities
there about the implementation of the Ramsar Convention in that country.
In this brief report (PDF),
Paul Mafabi describes the programme
of the events, including a meeting with the Minister of State for Environment,
the Hon. Jesicca Eriyo, and a visit
to the newly-designated Mabamba Bay Ramsar site. [08/06/07]
Training
in management plans for Ramsar sites in Europe. The German
Federal Agency for Nature Conservation will be holding a training course
entitled "Managements plans for Ramsar sites
in Central, Southern and Eastern Europe (a contribution to the CBD Programme
of Work on Protected Areas)", 18 to 22 October 2007, at
its International Academy for Nature Conservation on the Isle of Vilm.
The
programme of topics to be covered is a very thorough one, and the trainers
will be Tobias Salathé of the
Ramsar Secretariat and Stephan Amend,
a specialist in management plan issues. The deadline for applications
is 20 August 2007. The announcement
is here, with links to the registration form and programme of
activities. [07/06/07]
Now
available.
Report on stakeholder training in Republic of Korea.
An illustrated report from Ramsar's CEPA Programme Officer, Sandra Hails,
on a training course for local stakeholders at the Ganghwa Tidal Flat
Centre, Gangwha Island, 25-27 May 2007, sponsored by the Korean
Federation of Environmental Movement (KFEM) -- here
it is. [06/06/07]
Ramsar
at CITES COP14. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered
Species is holding its 14th meeting of the Conference of the Parties in
The Hague, 3-15 June 2007 -- Ramsar's Adrián Ruiz-Carvajal was
there for the opening sessions and delivered an address from the Secretary
General, Peter Bridgewater on the importance of cooperation among the
biodiversity-related conventions.
Here is the text. [06/06/07]
Tour
of Transboundary Ramsar Sites in Europe. A study tour of transboundary
Ramsar sites took place in Austria, Hungary, Croatia, and Bosnia &
Herzegovina from 28 April to 5 May 2007 under the coordination of Ms Libuse
Vlasáková, Ramsar Administrative Authority in
the Czech Republic. The idea of the study tour was born in June 2004 when
the Trilateral Ramsar Platform (TRP) for the Morava-Dyje-Danube floodplains
was signed and the three Contracting Parties involved, Austria, Czech
Republic, and Slovakia, expressed the need to gain more field experience
in transboundary management through the observation of existing Transboundary
Ramsar Sites in the region. The tour brought together 18 participants
from Austria, Czech Republic, and Slovakia, all of them directly involved
in the TRP management through local institutions, government and NGOs,
as well as a representative from the IUCN Regional Office in Belgrade
and a representative from the Ramsar Convention Secretariat.
Monica
Zavagli
reports on the tour from Ramsar's point of view, with photographs,
and Libuse
Vlasáková
has provided a group report, drawing upon the input from Monica
and other participants, with a list
of those participants. [05/06/07]
Argentina
extends Guanacache site. The government of Argentina has significantly
expanded the Lagunas de Guanacache Ramsar site, first designated for the
List in December 1999 at 580,000 hectares. Now covering additional areas
in San Luis as well as in Mendoza and San Juan provinces, the Ramsar site
now covers 962,370 hectares and has been renamed Lagunas
de Guanacache, Desaguadero y del Bebedero. [04/06/07]
Position
vacancy at the Ramsar Secretariat. The Ramsar Convention is
seeking to appoint a new Senior Regional Advisor
for the Asia/Pacific region. Applications are invited from
all interested and suitably qualified persons. The deadline for applications
is 13 July 2007. Please circulate this announcement to anyone you think
might be qualified and interested. Announcement.
[01/06/07]
The theme for World Wetlands Day 2008 and Ramsar COP10.
In Decision SC35-14 (February 2007), the Ramsar Standing Committee agreed
that the theme/slogan both for World Wetlands Day in February 2008 and
for the 10th meeting of the Conference of the Contracting Parties in October/November
2008 should be "Healthy Wetlands, Healthy People". The SC Decisions
were translated into French and Spanish at that time, but since then there
has been extended discussion of those translations of the slogan itself.
Consensus has finally been achieved, however, and these are the three
official language versions of the WWD and COP10 slogan, superseding those
in th e
meeting's Decisions :
"Healthy
Wetlands, Healthy People"
"Notre santé dépend de celle des zones humides"
"Humedales Sanos, Gente Sana"
Regional
Affairs Officer chosen for Ramsar Secretariat. The Secretariat
is pleased to announce that Dr Alexia Dufour
has been selected for the newly-established position of Regional Affairs
Officer. A Standing Committee decision created this position in order
to provide improved support to the Secretariat's regional teams and, in
particular, enhanced guidance to the assistant advisers (interns). This
will in turn result in increased capacity in the Secretariat to support
Contracting Parties.
A French national,
Alexia has advanced university degrees in environmental sciences and ecology
from the Ecole Nationale du Génie Rural, des Eaux et Forêts
(National School of Rural Engineering, Water and Forests) in Paris and
the Universities of Lausanne in Switzerland and Besançon in France.
She has taught ecology at university level, as well as biology and geology
at high school level. For her doctoral studies she managed a research
project on the links between landscape structure and plant biodiversity
in the Jura region of France and Switzerland. Alexia's practical wetland
experience includes working on a management plan, involving local stakeholders,
at the Estagnol Pond Nature Reserve in Southern France.
The regional teams
will be greatly helped in their work by Alexia's skills and experience
in information management and technology, including the development and
management of databases. The
Ramsar Secretariat looks forward to welcoming Alexia at the end of July
2007. [30/05/07]
CBD
Linnaeus Lecture Series. On 23 May, the Secretariat of the
Convention on Biological Diversity marked the 300th anniversary of the
birth of the father of modern taxonomy, Carl Linnaeus, by launching a
CBD Linnaeus Lecture Series. The first lecture, with the theme 'What Linnaeus
would have thought of climate change', was held with the participation
of the representatives of the diplomatic community accredited to Montreal
as well as United Nations senior officials. Mr. Yvo de Boer, Executive
Secretary of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNFCCC) and Mr. Peter Bridgewater, Secretary General of the Ramsar Convention
on Wetlands were two of the guest speakers. The
CBD's press release is here (PDF). [29/05/07]
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News
from Wetlands for the Future

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Ecuador:
Humedal Isla Santay, "capacitación de las mujeres en actividades
económicas alternativas". La
Fundación Malecón 2000,
a través del proyecto WFF/03/EC/1 "Contribución al
mejoramiento de la calidad de vida de la población del humedal
Isla Santay a través de capacitación de las mujeres en actividades
económicas alternativas" ha logrado capacitar al 31% de la
población femenina y a 9 % de la población masculina de
la isla ecuatoriana Santay en actividades productivas sustentables, tales
como tejido, costura, artesanías y microempresa. Estas actividades
han aumentado los ingresos de las familias en la comunidad. Los
resultados del proyecto se dieron a conocer en una Feria Artesanal, en
la que se dio inicio al proceso de promoción y comercialización
de sus productos. Estas actividades poco a poco han logrado disminuir
la crianza de cerdos en la isla, actividad que ha causado impactos negativos
en los recursos naturales del humedal. Gracias al apoyo de diversas instituciones,
y al programa de capacitación del Municipio de Guayaquil "Aprendamos"
se le ha dado continuidad al proyecto.  
International
Day of Biodiversity in Montréal. The Ramsar Secretary
General, Peter Bridgewater, reports
on the International Day of Biodiversity from Montréal, Canada,
home of the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity: "International
Biodiversity day 2007 was celebrated today in Montréal, at its
Botanical Garden, on the theme of Biodiversity and Climate Change. An
array of speakers talked to the issues Including the Canadian Minister
for the Environment,, The Executive Secretaries of the UNFCCC and CBD.
Video messages came from the President of CBD CoP8 and for the forthcoming
CoP9. A group of students who participated in a Canadian effort called
HabitatNet, which had the students investigate a series of issues. Elisabeth
Dowdswell (former executive secretary of UNEP, Len Good, former GEF CEO
and Hon Clifford Lincoln, former Minister for environment of Quebec, offered
reflections on the relationship between Biodiversity, Climate change and
MDG's.Other partner organisations speaking included Ramsar Convention,
UNESCO, CMS (via video), GEF (via video), IUCN (Canada office) and UNEP/GRID
Arendal. A copy of
the SG's presentation is attached."
The Ramsar Secretary
General and the Executive Secretary of the CBD, Ahmed
Djoghlaf, took the opportunity to issue a joint press release
announcing the launch of the draft of a major new report, "Water,
Wetlands, Biodiversity, and Climate Change", the provisional
outcomes of an expert meeting held at the Ramsar Secretariat facilities
on 23-24 March 2007. The
press release is available here (PDF), and the provisional report
can be found on the CBD Web site (http://www.biodiv.org/doc/case-studies/wtr/cs-wtr-ramsar-en.pdf).
[23/05/07]
South
Africa celebrates International Day of Biodiversity with two new Ramsar
sites. In celebrations to mark the International Day of Biodiversity,
22 May 2007, the Republic of South Africa announced the Ramsar listing
of two new Wetlands of International Importance, the sub-Antarctic Prince
Edward Islands and the Makuleke Wetlands in the far northeast
of the country, part of the Kruger National Park on the border with Zimbabwe
and Mozambique. Ramsar's
Africa regional team, Abou Bamba and Evelyn Parh,
has provided details of the two new sites, with some photographs,
and they draw attention to the particular importance of the sub-Antarctic
site as an example for other Parties with island territories at that latitude.
South Africa has now designated a total of 19 Ramsar sites, covering a
surface area of 543,978 hectares. [22/05/07]
Mexico designates 67th Ramsar site.
The Ramsar Secretariat
is pleased to announce that, just a week after Mexico's 66th Ramsar site
was added to the List of Wetlands of International Importance, the paperwork
has been completed for the designation of its 67th, also effective World
Wetlands Day, 2 February 2007. Ramsar's Assistant Advisor for the Americas,
Ms Mila Llorens, summarizes the new
site thus: Parque Estatal Lagunas de Yalahau
(5,683 hectares, 20º38'N 089º13'W) in Yucatán state,
comprises a series of continental wetlands, with lagoons and deep underground
water reservoirs being the most representative. The underground reservoirs
are typical of the karstic systems of the Yucatan Peninsula. This, combined
with the topography of the region, allows a diversity of habitats which
host a variety of animal and plant species, many of which are migratory,
endemic and/or in danger of extinction; among the latter are the Northern
Tamandua (Tamandua mexicana), the Muscovy Duck (Cairina moschata),
the Tayra (Eira barbara), the Spider Monkey (Ateles geoffroyi),
the Margay (Leopardus wiedii) and the Ocelot (Leopardus pardalis).
During winter, the park gives shelter to migratory birds, and during the
dry season, the lagoons and the deep underground water reservoirs provide
a source of water for species like the Crocodile (Crocodylus moreletti),
the White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) and the Jaguar (Panthera
onca). The dominant vegetation type is tropical deciduous forest with
more than 200 plant species, a high number given the small size of the
area. The low inundated forests, found in small portions adjacent to the
lagoons, are dominated by tree species such as Dalbergia glabra, Haematoxylum
campechianum, and Mimosa bahamensi). Land and cattle activities
are common in the site. Illegal hunting is the main activity negatively
affecting the site. Areas previously affected by anthropogenic activity
are already under restoration. [21/05/07] 
Mexico
designates 66th Ramsar site. Mexico, which already had the
second highest number of Wetlands of International Importance (after the
UK), has designated still another one as of this past World Wetlands Day.
As summarized by Ramsar's Mila Llorens, based on the Ramsar Information
Sheet, Laguna Huizache-Caimanero (48,283 hectares, 22°50'N
105°55'W) is located in the southeastern part of the Gulf of California
in Sinaloa state. The site consists of a series of wetlands, ranging from
coastal and continental to artificial. Due to its location along the Migratory
Corridor of the Pacific, it is a site of high importance for migratory
birds in Mexico, including the American White Pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchus)
and the Roseate Spoonbill (Ajaia ajaia). It is also the habitat
of a wide range of fish, mammals, reptiles, amphibians and invertebrates,
including species in danger of extinction or vulnerable, such as the American
Crocodile (Crocodylus acutus), the Mexican Beaded Lizard (Heloderma
horridum), the Boa (Boa constrictor), the Mallard (Anas
platyrhynchos) and the Olive Ridley (Lepidochelys olivacea).
The riverside of the lagoon is mainly constituted by mangrove forest,
including red (Rhizophora mangle), black (Avicennia germinans)
and white (Laguncularia racemosa) mangroves. The fishing resources
of the lagoon are the main protein source for the surrounding communities
and shrimp fishing is the main economic activity of the area. Among the
negative factors affecting the site are: the sedimentation of rivers Presidio
and Baluarte, deforestation, overfishing, and wastewaters discharge into
the lagoon. According to the IUCN Protected Area Categories, the site
belongs to Category IV and is under the federal jurisdiction of the National
Water Commission of Mexico. [15/05/07]
Star
Alliance airline group launches "Biosphere Connections".
On 14 May in Copenhagen, amid the celebrations of the 10th anniversary
of the Star Alliance Group of Airlines,
a new way of working between Airlines and the Ramsar Convention, UNESCO-MAB,
and IUCN was announced. The
attached press release (PDF) describes the new Biosphere
Connections programme, and the Secretary General, Peter
Bridgewater, was chosen to make a short speech at the anniversary
celebrations, and signed an MoU with Star Alliance CEO Jan
Albrecht, on behalf of all three organisations. This initiative
will develop over the next years as a key means to communicate what the
three organisations are doing to the wider public in a much more effective
way than we have so far been able to achieve. A Web site (www.biosphereconnections.com)
has been established to promote this initiative. The
Secretary General's address can be seen here. (15/05/07)
Ramsar
regional meeting for Europe announced. The Swedish
Environmental Protection Agency, in cooperation with the Ramsar
Secretariat, invites participation in the 6th European Ramsar Regional
Meeting, to take place in Stockholm, 3-7 May 2008. The meeting is intended
to bring together all 45 Contracting Parties in the European region, as
well as three countries that have not yet joined (Andorra, Holy See, and
San Marino), and it will focus on implementation of the Convention in
the region; progress with regional initiatives; the need to improve implementation
capacities through CEPA, as well as project and financial support. It
will also serve to coordinate European positions on the issues to be discussed
at the 10th meeting of the Conference of the Parties in the Republic of
Korea in October-November 2008. More
details are available from the letter of invitation (PDF) here.
[15/05/07]
Other pre-COP10 regional
meetings are set for Africa, 16-19 October 2007 (tbc) in Yaoundé,
Cameroon; for the Americas, 19-21 September 2007 in Mérida, Venezuela;
and for Asia, 19-23 November 2007 (tbc) in Bangkok, Thailand.
Madagascar
adds sixth Wetland of International Importance. In
ceremonies on 12 May 2007, the government of Madagascar is celebrating
World Migratory Birds Day by placing
Lake Bedo and its surround marshes on the List of Wetlands of International
Importance and dedicating the site as a WWF Gift to the Earth. As summarized
by Ramsar's Evelyn Parh Moloko, the
Zones humides de Bedo (1,962 hectares,
19º57'S 044º36'E) in Toliary Province near the western coast
is a wetland complex consisting of the shallow, open Lake Bedo; its surrounding
marshes, which are rich in aquatic vegetation; and a permanent river flowing
across
the forests and feeding the lake and marshes. The Lake Bedo watershed
supplies water as runoff during the rainy season and as seepage from hills
forming springs, ponds and marshes during the dry season. Further
details and a number of photographs by Glyn Young, Durrell Wildlife Conservation
Trust, can be seen here.
WWF Madagascar
and the WWF Global Freshwater Programme were helpful to the authorities
in preparing for this important designation. [12/05/07]
U.N.
Campaign highlights "Migratory Birds in a changing climate".
Bonn, 12-13 May 2007 -- A series of events will take place
around the world this weekend to highlight the impacts of climate change
on migratory birds. Over one hundred separate events in more than 48 countries
will transmit the message of the 2007 World Migratory Bird Day (WMBD)
to local communities and across the globe. (www.worldmigratorybirdday.org)
"The message of World Migratory Bird Day is that we need to act faster
to mitigate the effects of climate change on birds and our ecosystems!"
said Mr. Robert Hepworth, the Executive Secretary of the global Convention
on Migratory Species (CMS). See the
rest of the AEWA press release. [14/05/07]
Swiss
Grant for Africa. The Ramsar Convention
in Congo. A technical workshop organised under the auspices
of the Ministry of Tourism and Environment took place in the Republic
of Congo on the 30th of March 2007, under the
coordination of Mr. Grégoire Moua-Likibi,
Permanent Secretary of this Ministry. This workshop aimed at presenting
the outcomes of the project entitled "Identification
and designation of at least 2 million hectares of new Ramsar sites in
Congo" accomplishing the update of the only existing
Ramsar site in Congo, 'Lac Tele/Likouala aux herbes'. The above project
was jointly financed by the Swiss Grant for Africa (SGA), through
the Ramsar Convention Secretariat, and the World Wide Fund for Nature
(WWF) through the Global Freshwater Program. Evelyn
Parh Moloko provides further details here. [09/05/07]
Ramsar
chooses next Secretary General. Mr
Paul Mafabi (left), Assistant Commissioner, Wetlands Inspection
Division of Uganda and Chair of the Ramsar Standing Committee,
announces that the Standing Committee has unanimously and enthusiastically
chosen a new Secretary General for the Convention, to succeed Peter Bridgewater.
Here is his announcement.
[07/05/07]  
IMoSEB
Regional Consultations for Europe. Last week (26 -28 April)
a regional consultation on IMoSEB (International Mechanism of Scientific
Expertise on Biodiversity ) was held in Geneva for the European region.
IUCN and Ramsar co-hosted this event, although it was held at the Natural
History Museum and International Environment House Geneva. The
report of the consultation is available here (PDF), and all presentations
can be seen at http://www.imoseb.net/regional_consultations/europe.
This consultation has moved the process forward quite a way, and we now
await further regional consultations before a final meeting of the International
Steering committee at the end of the year. As you will see, under the
proposed formulation of an option, Ramsar, through the Chair of STRP would
be involved in the process. -- Peter Bridgewater, Secretary General. [04/05/07]
Swiss
Grant for Africa. Ghana's Wetlands Strategy
and Action Plan. Ghana completed and adopted a National Wetlands
Conservation Strategy in 1999 as one of the outputs of the GEF/World Bank-funded
Coastal Wetlands Management Project. The actions prescribed in the 1999
Strategy document were vague, lacking detailed directions and actions
for effective
implementation of the Strategy. This led to the approval of the Swiss
Grant project in 2005, provided by the Swiss Government through the Secretariat
of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, for a review of the 1999 Strategy
alongside the development of a corresponding Action Plan that corresponds
with the principles, objectives and expectations of the revised National
Wetlands Conservation Strategy, with the aim of enhancing its implementation.
This project was implemented by the Ramsar Administrative Authority in
Ghana (the Wildlife Division Forestry Commission) through a very consultative
and participatory process which involved resource persons, strategically
selected multi-stakeholders, three workshops (+ 1 validation workshop)
and technical assistance from the Dutch Government. The
outcome of this process is the production of a single document entitled
"A National Wetlands Conservation Strategy
and Action Plan", to be implemented over a period
of ten years (2007-2016), which now awaits endorsement by the Minister
of Lands, Forestry and Mines. Evelyn
Parh Moloko provides more detail here. [04/05/07]
Danube
Regional Project's last workshop. The closing workshop of the
UNDP/GEF Danube Regional Project (DRP), which took place from the 18th-20th
April 2007 in Tulcea, in the Romanian section of the Danube Delta, was
the occasion for some 50 participants to discuss their achievements over
the course of this five-year project. Since 2002, the DRP has engaged
in several activities, some of which were presented during the workshop,
including the final stages of a guidance document on the role of wetlands
in nutrient retention; activities related to the development and implementation
of wetland-friendly policies on land-use; and a small grants programme,
which funded numerous pilot projects. . . . Also during the meeting, participants
discussed and finalized the development of a Network of Protected Areas
(most of them Ramsar sites) along the Danube River. Ramsar's
Lucia Scodanibbio provides the details on the meeting and the proposed
network, as well as photographs of the boat trip in the delta.
[04/05/07]
Starlight
Initiative agrees La Palma Declaration. The participants in
the International Conference in Defence of the
Quality of the Night Sky and the Right to Observe the Stars,
meeting in La Palma, Canary Islands, Spain, 19-20 April 2007, agreed a
declaration urging the international community and national governments
to adopt a set of principles and objectives for safeguarding the cultural
and natural heritage of starlight. The
Secretary General, Peter Bridgewater, reports on the meeting, and the
Declaration is reproduced here. [04/05/07]
A
new web site for Wetland Link International (WLI). WLI, a global
network of wetland education centres, and its parent body, the Wildfowl
& Wetlands Trust (WWT), have relaunched their Web site
(http://www.wwt.org.uk). To
visit the WLI pages look here: http://www.wwt.org.uk/wli.
The Ramsar Secretariat signed a Memorandum of Cooperation with WLI at
COP9 in November 2005 in recognition of the capacity of WLI to link wetlands
centres and encourage the exchange of wetland information and expertise.
Read more about WLI and its relationship with the CEPA Programme here:
http://www.ramsar.org/outreach_wetlandcentres.htm.
[02/05/07]
Cameroon creates National Ramsar Committee.
Following Honourable Inoni Ephraim's
Prime Ministerial decree No. 63 of the 8th of March 2007, the government
of Cameroon officially announced the creation of the 'National Ramsar
Committee on Wetlands' within the Ministry of Environment and Nature Protection
(the Ramsar Administrative Authority in Cameroon). This major step is
in accordance with Recommendation 5.7 of the 5th Meeting of the Conference
of the Contracting Parties in June 1993, in Kushiro, Japan, which encourages
the creation of National Committees, and it follows up on Cameroon's accession
to the Ramsar Convention, its ratification of the Convention on Biological
Diversity and other national and ministerial policies, laws and decrees.
[01/05/07]
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 ).
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.
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