|
What's
New @ Ramsar
The Ramsar
Bulletin Board
7
April 2008 
Now
available. Management plan for Wular
Lake. "Wular Lake, the largest freshwater lake within
River Jhelum basin, plays a significant role in the hydrography of the
Kashmir valley by acting as a huge absorption basin for floodwaters. The
lake with its associated wetlands is an important habitat for migratory
waterbirds within Central Asian Flyway and supports rich biodiversity.
It is a major fishery resource in the valley supporting a large population
living along its fringes. The wetland also generates revenue to the state
government through fisheries and auctioning of water chestnut, fodder,
and other economically important species. The catchment of the lake supports
coniferous forests and alpine pastures, adding to the natural beauty and
biodiversity of the wetland area. Recognizing importance of the wetland
for its biodiversity and socio economic values, the Wular Lake was designated
as a Wetland of International Importance under Ramsar Convention in 1990.
. . . . Sectoral developmental activities have, however, failed to recognize
the immense role of the Wular Lake, leading to its degradation."
So begins the "Comprehensive Management
Action Plan for Wular Lake, Kashmir" prepared by Wetlands
International - South Asia under an assignment from the Department
of Wildlife Protection, Government of Jammu and Kashmir. The
6.9MB PDF of this model Ramsar site management plan can be seen here.
[07/04/08]
Headline
story. Additional Ramsar sites for Mexico.
As has become almost a tradition, the government of Mexico has used the
occasion of World Wetlands Day to designate a considerable number of additional
Wetlands of International Importance. At
ceremonies in Mazatlán, Sinaloa, on 2 February 2008, Secretario
de Medio Ambiente y Recursos Naturales, Juan
Rafael Elvira Quesada; the Gobernador del Estado de Sinaloa,
Jesús Aguilar Padilla; and
the Comisionado Nacional de Áreas Naturales Protegidas, Ernesto
Enkerlin Hoeflich, joined the celebrations and announced that
Mexico is designating 45 new Wetlands of International Importance to be
dated as of World Wetlands Day 2008. The hopelessly understaffed Secretariat,
in this case the Americas team of María
Rivera and Mila Llorens,
have been working hard on doublechecking that the data and maps submitted
with the Ramsar Information Sheets conform to the standards set by the
Parties in their COP Resolutions, and seven of the new sites have now
been added to the Ramsar List. With, obviously, many more to come.
Brief site descriptions
for the Annotated Ramsar List have been prepared by Mila Llorens
in English and in Spanish.
Mexico
now has 74 Ramsar sites covering 5,908,968 hectares. [04/04/08]
Headline
story. Nine new Ramsar sites in Nigeria.
The Federal Ministry of Environment of Nigeria has designated an additional
nine wetlands for the Ramsar List, following on from the designation of
"Lake Chad Wetlands in Nigeria" announced a few weeks ago and
all effective as of 30 April 2008. Taken together, the sites present a
fascinating array of wetland types, including swamp forests, river floodplains,
mangroves, and lakes, and all of them are extremely important for their
support for flora and fauna and for the ecosystem services they provide
for the local communities. Most or all of them are formally state-owned
but in practical terms under the customary control of local families and
communities, which brings with it in some cases a challenging set of threats
and opportunities.
The WWF Global
Freshwater Programme has supported the Ministry in developing these
designations, with the contributions of Professors Ogunkoya and Dami
of the Department of Geography, University of Maidugui, and the
Niger Delta Wetlands Centre, and UNEP/DEWA/GRID-Europe has helped
in the preparation of the site maps. Nigeria
presently has 11 sites designated as Wetlands of International Importance,
with a surface area of 1,076,728 hectares. Brief
site descriptions prepared by the Assistant Advisor for Africa, Evelyn
Parh Moloko, can be seen here. [04/04/08]
Who's
Where?
María
Rivera and
Mila Llorens, Senior and Assistant
Regional Advisors for the Americas, are in Havana,
Cuba, 7-11 April 2008, for the Caribbean
Subregional Meeting for the Implementation of the Ramsar Convention,
8-10 April. [07/04/08]
For
more old Ramsar Secretariat travel news, see also 'Who Was Where', 2000,
2001, 2002,
2003, 2004,
2006,
2007,
2008
Yesterday's
News!

Workshop
on Hindu Kush Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau. There is a major
need for better long-term monitoring of glaciers in the Himalayas using
direct observations in the field, as well as for improved sharing of data
among the different countries in the region. These were among the conclusions
drawn by the more than 70 international scientists who met at a three-day
workshop on Cryosphere and Hazards for
the Hindu Kush Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau from 31
March-2 April 2008 to discuss the problems of glaciers, glacial fluctuations,
and loss of permafrost in the mountains and plateaus of the Himalayas.
The meeting, held at the International Centre
for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), was organised
by the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO), Global Land Ice Measurements
from Space Regional Centre for Southwest Asia (GLIMS), Monsoon Asia Integrated
Regional Study (MAIRS), Institute for Development and Innovation (IDI),
Mountain Research Initiative (MRI), and ICIMOD. ICIMOD's
press release on the workshop can be seen here. [04/04/08]
Web
site launched for Wings Over Wetlands. The Wings
Over Wetlands (WOW) Project is a unique partnership of organizations
involved in the conservation of waterbirds and their wetland habitats.
It is a collaborative effort between Wetlands International and BirdLife
International, with support from the United Nations Office for Project
Services (UNOPS) and UNEP/GEF. WOW supports the implementation of both
the African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbird Agreement (AEWA) and the Ramsar
Convention on Wetlands and is sponsored by the Global Environment Facility
(GEF) through the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the German
Federal Ministry for Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety,
the AEWA Secretariat, and several other donors.
The extremely attractive
and well-designed new Web site, launched on 1 April 2008, was developed
by the Communications Officer of the Project in close cooperation with
the Project Coordination Unit and the Communications team at Wetlands
International, and is hosted by Wetlands International. A press release
on the purpose and background of the new site can be found here,
and the site itself, here.
[02/04/08]
Now
available. STRP14 report.
The Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP) met 28 January to 1 February
to progress its work in the lead-up to Conference of the Parties next
October, and the report of the meeting is now ready. In effect, the report
provides a summary of progress and delivery plans and timelines for each
of the STRPs 2006-2008 Immediate and High Priority tasks (as established
in Annex 1 to Resolution IX.2 and STRPs 2006-2008 Work Plan), and
on Lower Priority tasks where it has been possible to progress these.
[03/04/08]
Vacancy
announcement. Wetlands International.
Wetlands International is seeking to recruit a Latin
America Programme Development Officer for its Wetlands
and Livelihoods Programme. This full-time position will be
based in Panama City, Panama, and the
full announcement is available in PDF here. [02/04/08]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Data sought on mudflats
and mangroves. "Dear All, I am looking for an updated
worldwide dataset on the coverage of tidal mudflats and mangrove ecosystems.
Could you please help me to find such data? Thank you very much for any
kind of help." -- Gianluca Polgar,
University of Rome "La Sapienza" (polgar@alfanet.it). [02/04/08]
Action
for culture in Mediterranean Wetlands. A new publication
has just been released by the Mediterranean
Institute on Nature and Anthropos/ Med-INA. Presenting a great
deal of valuable information on cultural values and wetlands, the publication
by Thymio Papayannis and contributors aims to encourage addressing cultural
values in the management of wetlands. It presents information on culture-related
activities relating to 22 wetland sites in the Mediterranean. Well-illustrated,
the book provides up-to-date documentation of characteristic ongoing cultural
activities and examines their significance for the management and protection
of these sensitive ecosystems. A main conclusion is that nature and culture
are two interdependent elements and therefore "we cannot understand
and manage the 'natural' environment unless we understand the human culture
that shaped it". Thus, the values resulting from cultural activities
are important in strengthening the links of people with wetlands, a prerequisite
for wetland conservation and for the sustainable use of their resources
and services. Among other things, the book informs about the work undertaken
in the field of cultural values of wetlands within MedWet and within the
Ramsar Convention on wetlands. PDF versions in English and in French are
available from http://www.med-ina.org/mava01/04_progress/index.html,
and for the print publication, inquiries can be made to Med-INA at afoutri@med-ina.org.
[31/03/08]
 Argentina
names 16th Ramsar site. The government of Argentina has designated
its 16th Wetland of International Importance, the Reserva
Natural Otamendi (3,000 hectares, 34º14'S 058º53'W)
near the Paraná River in the province of Buenos Aires. According
to Ramsar's Mila Llorens, based on
the RIS information, the site is located in a rich biodiversity area where
three biogeographic regions meet: Pastizal Pampeano, Espinal, and Delta
e Islas del Paraná. It supports internationally threatened species
such as the Dot-winged Crake (Porzana spiloptera) and the Chilean
Flamingo (Phoenicopterus chilensis). Some endemic species of the
region include Straight-billed Reedhaunter (Limnoctites rectirostris),
the Bay-capped Wren-spinetail (Spartonoica maluroides), the dark-throated
Seedeater (Sporophila ruficollis), and the Marsh Seedeater (Sporophila
palustris), as well as a number of mammal species locally threatened
by hunting activities, including the Nutria (Myocastor coypus),
Capybara (Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris) and other internationally
threatened species. The site is dedicated to conservation activities and
the main productive activities carried out include livestock, forestation,
tourism and agriculture. Among the potential threats that are found in
Otamendi are the invasion of exotic flora and fauna species, the pollution
of the water bodies, changes in the hydrological system, and extraction
of resources. The site is under national protection as a Natural Reserve
and is part of the National System of Protected Areas. A five-year management
plan is in place. [28/03/08] 
Vacancy
announcement. Ramsar Secretariat seeks
Finance Officer. The Finance Officer is responsible for the
financial administration of the Ramsar Convention, facilitating positive
relationships with donors, providing clear financial information to the
Contracting Parties to the Convention (Member States) and advising the
Secretary General on the financial viability of the Convention. He/she
is responsible for financial management within the Secretariat through
the provision of accurate and timely information on both core and project
finances. The Finance Officer has a major role in the effective management
of the resources of the Convention. Responsible for approximately CHF
4 million in project funds and CHF 4 million in annual contributions to
the core budget. The deadline for applications is 21
April 2008 and the
full announcement is here. [28/03/08]
New
field guide for Australian plants. A new field guide compiled
by Greening Australia in conjunction
with Australian Plants Society has
been launched and is now available. Salt Tolerant
Plants of the Western District Ramsar Lakes is a comprehensive
field guide for anyone interested in the flora of South Western Victoria
and includes both native and introduced plants. It was produced to increase
the knowledge of indigenous, introduced native and exotic salt tolerant
plants found within saline ecosystems. The 182-page guide features technical
illustrations and full colour photographs -- it will be a valuable resource
for land managers, students and Natural Resource Management practitioners
and will increase their capacity to conserve the biodiversity assets of
saline sites at local and regional levels. For each plant there is a description
of the plant - general, foliage, flowers, fruit, where it grows, and its
occurrence. Price: $10. For enquires or an order form contact Ammie
Jackson, aj.westernlakes@bigpond.com. [28/03/08]
Caribbean
Subregional Meeting for the Implementation of the Ramsar Convention on
Wetlands, 8-10 April, Havana, Cuba. During
the Ramsar Pan American Meeting held in Mérida, Bolivarian Republic
of Venezuela, from 18-21 of September 2007, it was decided that the Caribbean
Countries would meet in Cuba to discuss the formulation of a Subregional
Strategy for Caribbean Wetlands, review experiences in the region regarding
the implementation of the commitments agreed to by the Contracting Parties,
and prepare Resolutions and Regional Initiatives for COP10. All Contracting
Parties of the Caribbean are expected to be present during the meeting.
Observers including, Intergovernmental and Non-governmental organizations,
and representatives of Ramsar's International Organization Partners are
also being invited to attend. The working languages of the Regional Meeting
will be English and Spanish. You
can download the Registration Form here. [27/03/08]
Reunión
Subregional del Caribe para la Implementación de la Convención
Ramsar, 8-10 de abril, La Habana, Cuba. Durante
la reunión Panamericana celebrada en Mérida República
Bolivariana de Venezuela del 18-21 de Septiembre de 2007, las Partes
Contratantes del Caribe propusieron tener una reunión en Cuba
para discutir la formulación de una Estrategia Sub regional para
los Humedales del Caribe, la revisión de experiencias en la región
en la implementación de la Convención en el contexto de
los compromisos acordados por las Partes y la preparación de
resoluciones e iniciativas regionales para la COP10. Se
espera que todas las Partes Contratantes del Caribe estén presentes
en la Reunión. Adicionalmente, están siendo invitados
observadores, entre los que destacan aquéllos países del
Caribe que todavía no son Partes Contratantes de la Convención,
organizaciones intergubernamentales y no gubernamentales, así
como representantes de las Organizaciones Internacionales Asociadas
a Ramsar. El
formulario de inscripción lo pueden encontrar aquí.[27/03/08]
Now
available. Ramsar
address to LCBC. The
text of the address by the Secretary General, Anada
Tiéga, for the 54th Ordinary Session of the Council
of Ministers and 12th Summit of Heads of States and Governments held in
Abuja, Nigeria, 25-26 March 2008, is now available. Mr Tiéga could
not attend the event, but he was represented there by Denis
Landenbergue of WWF International, and Denis' further report
of the events and collaboration among Ramsar, WWF, and the LCBC will follow
in a few days.
Vacancy
announcements. WWF's Coral Triangle Network
Initiative. WWF International is seeking to recruit two positions,
one as Leader of the Coral Triangle Network Initiative, the second as
Policy Leader for the same initiative, with an application deadline of
30 April 2008. You
can read the announcements here. [27/03/08]
Now
available. Agenda for SC37.
The 36th meeting of the Ramsar Standing Committee seems only just finished,
and already we are queuing up for the 37th. SC37 will take place 2-6 June
2008, and the draft agenda is now available in English, French, and Spanish.
[25/03/08]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Water purchased for
Australia's Narran Lake Ramsar site. "Some happy news
at long last concerned the water-deprived Ramsar sites in Australia's
Murray Darling Basin. The Narran Lake Ramsar site is a semi-terminal wetland
in the New South Wales northern part of the basin, whose headwaters in
the state of Queensland have had their waters over-allocated for irrigation
farming. The Basin's state and national government Commission has just
purchased 11,000 megalitres of water to top up a modest natural flood
over the next six weeks, to provide the high water levels needed to enable
colonial water birds breeding on the lake to fledge their chicks. The
Ramsar site had been largely waterless for nine years." The
rest of Mr Jamie Pittock's message here. [26/03/08]
Call
for submissions. "Mountains and
People" photo contest. The International
Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) and the
Mountain Forum (MF)/Asia
Pacific Mountain Network (APMN) are jointly organising a Global
Digital Photo Contest to mark the 25th Anniversary of ICIMOD, whose slogan
is "For Mountains and People". On 5 December this year, ICIMOD
celebrates its 25th birthday. A series of events have been planned throughout
the year, and the Global Digital Photo Contest is one of the most important
ones. -- Ms. Nira Gurung, Communications Officer,
ICIMOD. Further
details and submissions form here. [26/03/08]
Announcement.
Conference planned for Dneister basin. The
International Conference "Transboundary
Dniester River Basin Management and the EU Water Framework Directive"
will be held in Chisinau, Moldova, on October 2-3, 2008. It will be a
follow-up to the Dniester River management conferences organized by the
Ecological Society BIOTICA (1998 and 1999) and by Eco-TIRAS International
Environmental Association of River Keepers (2004) in cooperation with
the Ministry of Ecology and Natural Resources of Moldova. The current
Conference is supported by the MARTA Program from the Dutch Ministry of
Foreign Affairs. -- Ilya Trombitsky, Eco-TIRAS,
Moldova. Announcement
in English (PDF). Announcement
in Russian (PDF). [26/03/08]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Fish stocking in protected
areas. "Hi All. Does anyone have any information on the
management and policy approaches with respect to fish stocking in protected
areas? The focus is the Wet Tropics World Heritage
Area in north Queensland, Australia. Research into ecological
impact (gene pools, competition, food web & ecological character,
etc.) would be very helpful. Please email Lucy
Karger at the Wet Tropics Management Authority (lucy.karger@epa.qld.gov.au).
Thanks." George Lukacs, Australian Centre for Tropical Freshwater
Research, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland. [20/03/08]
World
Water Day 2008. World Water Day falls this year on Saturday,
22 March 2008, and the theme for this year is sanitation, in keeping with
the International Year on Sanitation. Visit
the official Web site and check out the calendar of events near
you. [20/03/08]
Stockholm
Water Prize awarded. The Stockholm International Water Institute
(SIWI) has announced that Prof. John Anthony
Allan from King's College London and the School of Oriental
and African Studies has been named the 2008 Stockholm Water Prize Laureate.
Professor Allan pioneered the development of key concepts in the understanding
and communication of water issues and how they are linked to agriculture,
climate change, economics and politics. The USD 150,000 Stockholm Water
Prize will be presented August 21 in the Stockholm City Hall. The
SIWI press release is here. [20/03/08]
USA
National Wetlands Awards for 2008. "Seven citizens have
been recognized nationally for their on-the-ground wetland conservation
efforts and decades-long dedication to protecting these important natural
resources. A diverse panel of wetland experts assembled at the Environmental
Law Institute (ELI) earlier this month to select the winners
of the 2008 National Wetlands Awards. This year's Award winners hail from
all regions of the country and exemplify the extraordinary commitment
and innovation that is so instrumental to conserving wetlands in the nation's
communities." View
the ELI press release here. [20/03/08]
Nigeria's
part of Lake Chad added to the Ramsar List. The Secretariat
is pleased to announce that Nigeria has designated 'Lake
Chad Wetlands in Nigeria' (607,354 hectares,
13°04'N 013°48'E) for the List of Wetlands of International Importance.
The designation is effective 30 April 2008, but the announcement and conferral
of the site certificate will be made at the summit of heads of states
and governments of the Lake Chad Basin Commission
in Abuja on 25-26 March. The WWF Global Freshwater Programme has supported
the Nigerian Federal Ministry of Environment in developing this and nine
further designations by Nigeria that are presently in the pipeline at
the Secretariat.
The
achievement that this designation represents comes as the result of a
decision made by the summit of heads of states and governments of the
LCBC in July 2000, and both Chad and Niger have already
designated their portions of Lake Chad as well - the only remaining part
of the lake to be designated for the Ramsar List is in Cameroon,
where a project supported by WWF is currently underway to achieve that.
(The Central African Republic is part of the Lake Chad basin and
the fifth member of the LCBC.) The designation is seen as a new contribution
to the ChadWet regional initiative
under the framework of the Ramsar Convention. Further
details on the new site, prepared by Evelyn Parh Moloko, can be seen here.
[17/03/08]  
Prespa
Park GEF meeting. The transboundary Prespa Park, which concerns
the two Balkan lakes shared by Albania, FYR of Macedonia and Greece, is
benefiting from a large GEF project, managed by UNDP. The ambitious goals
of the project are to improve the management of ecosystems, to increase
the capacity of the responsible state and NGO organisations, to promote
sustainable activities and better quality of life for the local inhabitants
and to strengthen the cooperation among the three neighbouring countries.
On 7 March 2008, in the small village of Pretor
on the Macedonian shore of Macro Prespa, the Prespa Park Coordination
Committee met in its capacity of GEF Project Oversight Committee. Mr
Thymio Papayannis provides this brief report of the background and conclusions.
[17/03/08]
IUCN's
name change. The World Conservation Union - IUCN, one of the
Ramsar Convention's five International Organization Partners, has adopted
a new logo and changed its name (back) to just "IUCN",
alone and without explanation of the acronym attached to it ("UICN"
in French and Spanish). According to IUCN information office, if an explanation
is required, the text can mention "International Union for Conservation
of Nature" the first time the acronym is used ("Union internationale
pour la conservation de la nature", "Unión Internacional
para la Conservación de la Naturaleza"). The name "World
Conservation Union" is no longer used. [14/03/08]
Reminder
of deadlines. Submission of National
Reports. The
Secretariat would like to remind Contracting Parties once again that the
deadline for submission of National Reports is 31
March 2008. This will allow time for the Secretariat to complete
its analyses of the status of implementation for circulation to the Parties
in advance of the 10th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the
Convention (28 October-4 November 2008). Contracting Parties are reminded
that Reports should be submitted in electronic form, by e-mail or on a
CD-ROM. The National Report is an official status report by each Contracting
Party on its implementation of the Ramsar Convention and, as such, will
be available to the public. The NR form can be found at http://www.ramsar.org/cop10/cop10_nrform_e.doc.
[12/03/08]
Vacancy
announcement. Consultants for Cambodia.
"The Ministry of Environment of Cambodia (MOE) is seeking to competitively
hire national and international consultants to prepare an Environmental
Assessment (SA) for the Cambodia Environment
and Protected Area Management Project (CEPAMP) which is under
preparation. CEPAMP will be funded by the World Bank as an expansion and
continuation of the ongoing Biodiversity and
Protected Area Management Project (BPAMP). The assignment is
based in Phnom Penh, but requires travel to target areas in up to five
protected areas in Cambodia. The consultant will work closely with MOE,
World Bank and the national EA consultant, preferably starting at the
beginning of April 2008, and completing the assignment in early lately
2008. The assignment is funded by a PHRD grant from the Government of
Japan." The specifics
can be seen here (PDF). [12/03/08]
Now
available. SC36 Report
and Decisions. The final report of the 36th meeting of the
Standing Committee (27-29 February 2008) is now available, as well as
the English version of the 28 Decisions of the meeting, the reports of
the four Subgroups, and photographs. French and Spanish versions of the
Decisions should be along in a few days. PDF versions are also available
as well as the Web pages. Here
is the report, with links to the other files. [10/03/08]
Now
available. STRP14 photos. The Convention's
Scientific and Technical Review Panel (STRP)
held its 14th ordinary meeting in Gland, 28 January to 1 February 2008,
chiefly to make a final burst of progress on a large number of priority
tasks and documents for consideration by the next meeting of the Conference
of the Parties and to participate in a strange but hilarious kind of raffle
at the traditional STRP dinner. Some
photographs are available here. [11/03/08]
Now
available. Asia
Regional Meeting photos. The Asia Regional Preparatory Meeting
for COP10 of the Ramsar Convention was held in Bangkok, Thailand, 14 to
18 January 2008. Here are
some photos of the meetings and the field excursion to the Bang Pu Nature
Education Centre. [11/02/08]
World
Wetlands Day in Botswana. The Department
of Environmental Affairs (DEA) in the Ministry of Environment,
Wildlife and Tourism (MEWT) organised a number of activities to commemorate
World Wetlands Day 2008, including included a International Wetlands Conference,
a public panel discussion referred to as Environment and Development Dialogue
and an official ceremony on World Wetlands Day (2nd February 2008) to
celebrate wetlands and for Botswana to showcase the completion of the
planning phase of the Okavango Delta Management Plan (ODMP). Anada
Tiéga, the Ramsar Secretary General, and Minister of Environment,
Wildlife and Tourism, Honourable Onkokame Kitso Mokaila (left)
delivered addresses, and there were any number of festive events. Here
is a very well illustrated report, and here is the text
of the Secretary General's address. [07/03/08]
Announcement.
Mangrove Forest Ecology, Management and Restoration"
training workshop. The seventh "Mangrove Forest Ecology,
Management and Restoration" training workshop will be held at the
Anne Kolb Nature Center, in Hollywood, Florida, USA, March 2-5, 2009.
The training site is within a 500 ha mangrove restoration project at West
Lake Park operated by Broward County. The award-winning project was designed
by Roy R. "Robin" Lewis III, who will be teaching the course.
Mr. Lewis has taught this very successful course in Cuba, Nigeria, Thailand,
Vietnam, India and Sri Lanka. More details at www.mangroverestoration.com
or at lesrrl3@aol.com. [10/03/08]
Now
available. Ramsar Pan-American
Regional Meeting. The Pan-American regional meeting was held
in Merida, Venezuela, in September 2007. The full report of the meeting
is now available in English and Spanish, as well as photographs of the
events. See the
meeting's index page for links. [07/03/08]
Estonia
names new Ramsar site and Transboundary Ramsar Site. The Secretariat
is pleased to announce that the Ministry of the Environment of Estonia
has designated the Sookuninga Nature Reserve
(5,869 hectares, 58°00'N 024°45'E), a Natura 2000 SPA and BirdLife
International IBA, as its 12th Wetland of International Importance. Citing
a Joint Commission set up in February 2006 between the Ministries of Environment
of Estonia and Latvia on "Management of Nature Conservation in Transboundary
Context", the two countries have established a Transboundary
Ramsar Site, including Sookuninga and the Nigula Nature
Reserve in Estonia and the Northern Bogs (Ziemelu purvi) Ramsar
site in Latvia, with the name of North Livonian
Transboundary Ramsar Site.
The Sookuninga NR,
as described by Ramsar's Monica Zavagli based
on the accompanying RIS information, is a complex of six different raised
bog massifs with hummock and hollow complexes as well with numerous pools.
The site supports rare, vulnerable and endangered species of birds and
plants, some of them occurring in great numbers or densities. Highly endangered
and strongly protected are Black Stork, Golden Eagle, Lesser-Spotted Eagle,
Great-Spotted Eagle and Lagopus lagopus Willow Grouse. The site
also supports populations of large mammals including Canis lupus
Wolf, Lynx lynx Lynx, Ursus arctos Brown Bear and Alces
alces Elk. The site plays an important role in the recharge and discharge
of groundwater as well as maintenance of water quality in southwest Estonia
and northwest Latvia. It also has a significant cultural and historical
importance for its small-scale battlegrounds, burials, and war routes.
Due to its remote location the area is sparsely inhabited, and the main
uses are tied to forestry, berry and mushroom picking, and small-scale
hunting - all at comparatively low intensities. [06/03/08]
Deadline
extended. Asian
Wetland Symposium 2008. "Dear Forum Members, The deadline
of abstract and poster submissions for Asian
Wetland Symposium 2008 (22-25 June 2008, Hanoi, Vietnam) was
extended. Submissions are now due on Friday March
14, 2008. A good number of abstract and poster submissions
for AWS 2008 have been received; however, the secretariat is still looking
for more. The deadline for submissions is extended. Please send abstract
and poster submissions to the secretariat by Friday March 14, 2008. We
are looking forward to receiving a wide range of abstracts on various
topics that represents the range of wetland management activities throughout
the region. For more information, please visit http://www.aws2008.net/index.htm.
With warm regards." - Ms Reiko Nakamura, Secretary-General, Ramsar
Center Japan. [07/03/08]
Standing
Committee 36 was a grand success. The 36th meeting of the Ramsar
Standing Committee completed its work on Friday, 29 February, and the
88 members and observers have gone their ways. The last day's report will
be finalized in the next day or two and provided to the Chair of the Standing
Committee for his approval, and the decisions of the meeting will be sent
out for translation. The Report in English, Decisions in English, French,
and Spanish, reports of the four subgroup meetings, photos and presentations,
should all be available over the coming week or two. [03/03/08]
Announcement.
Last MedWet CODDE conference.The MedWet Secretariat
is pleased to extend to you an invitation to attend the closing conference
of the MedWet-Réseau CODDE project, which will be held on the 17-18
March, 2008, in Athens, Greece: Wetland Inventory and Assessment in
the Mediterranean region: Advanced Tools17-18 March 2008, Athens, Greece.
More information here.
The deadline for applications is 6 March 2008.
[03/03/08]
Standing
Committee week gets underway. The 36th meeting of the Ramsar
Standing Committee is getting underway this morning, 25 February, with
a meeting of the Subgroup on COP10
-- this afternoon it will be the turn of the Management
Working Group, and tomorrow there will be the Subgroup
on Finance and the Subgroup on the
Strategic Plan in the morning and afternoon respectively. On
Wednesday the Plenary Sessions begin
and run through the end of Friday -- the agenda
can be seen here, and the agenda
documentation is here. Some 88 members and observers have registered,
and the preliminary list
of participants can be seen here. [25/02/08]
Ramsar
secondment for coral survey in Tanzania. Ramsar's Assistant
Advisor for Europe Monica Zavagli
was in Tanzania from 14 November 2007 to 8 January 2008 to participate
in field work activities with WWF Tanzania in the
Rufiji-Mafia-Kilwa Marine Ramsar site and assist the Government
of Tanzania in preparing the logistics for the Ramsar Advisory Mission
to Lake Natron. This interaction stems from the understanding between
Ramsar and the Convention's International Organization Partners (BirdLife
International, IWMI, Wetlands International, the World Conservation Union
(IUCN), and WWF International) to provide opportunities for their young
professionals to gain experience from the IOPs' projects through short-term
secondments. Here is Monica's
brief illustrated report (PDF). [25/02/08]
Hungary
names two new Ramsar sites. In World Wetlands Day ceremonies
held on 20 February 2008, Mr László
Haraszthy, State Secretary for Nature and Environment Protection,
announced the designation of two new Ramsar sites effective on that date.
Borsodi-Mezoség (17,932 hectares,
47°44'N 020°54'E) is a Landscape Protection Area and Natura 2000
site, a large alkaline marshland on the bank of the river Tisza. Montág-puszta
(2,203 hectares, 46°21'N 020°40'E) is part of a National Park
located on the Hungarian Great Plain. In addition, one of Hungary's first
Ramsar sites, Hortobágy, designated back in 1979, has been
extended by over 8,000 ha. to 32,037 ha. Here
are brief descriptions of the two new sites as summarized by Ramsar's
Monica Zavagli from the accompanying
RIS data. [21/02/08] 
SBSTTA-13
side event on water needs. At the 13th session of the CBD's
Subsidiary Body for Scientific, Technical, and Technological Advice, now
being held at the FAO headquarters in Rome, Italy, a side event was organized
on 18 February by the CBD and Ramsar Secretariats and the International
Water Management Institute (IWMI) entitled "The
world is drying . . . How do we feed the world?" Chaired
by David Coates of SCBD, the workshop featured a panel discussion
and presentations by David Molden of IWMI, Nick Davidson
of Ramsar, and Hans Langeveld of Plant Research International and
the GAWI Project (the "Guidelines on Agriculture, Wetlands, and Water
Resources Interactions Project" being carried out by FAO, several
Dutch institutes, and the Ramsar STRP). A
brief summary of the side event and its conclusions can be seen here.
[21/02/08]
Something completely
different: Nick Davidson's
address to SBSTTA-13 on 20 February on cooperation between the
conventions and related topics. [21/02/08]
News
note. Turkey completes RIS updating.
Turkey's Ministry of Environment and Forestry has completed the revision
and updating of the Ramsar Information Sheets for all of its 12 Wetlands
of International Importance. In Resolution VI.13 (1996) the Parties determined
that all RISs should be updated at least every six years and with every
significant change in the ecological character of the Ramsar sites, in
order to provide more recent site data for planners and the public and
to allow for monitoring change over time at the sites. The Secretariat
congratulates Turkey and encourages other Parties to redouble their efforts
to update their own Ramsar site information. [21/02/08]
Now
available. 6th Ramsar European Regional
Meeting. The 6th European Regional Meeting will take place
3-7 May 2008 in Stockholm, Sweden,
and the draft agenda and programme, registration form, and basic information
about the event are now available -- HERE.
The deadline for registration is 1 April 2008
(for those requiring financial assistance, 1
March 2008). [21/02/08]
Position
vacancy. La Tour du Valat. La Tour du Valat recherche
un Coordinateur pour son programme " Observatoire des zones humides
méditerranéennes " / The Tour du Valat is looking for
a coordinator for its Observatory of Mediterranean Wetlands programme.
Deadline 20 March 2008. Announcement
in Français and English. [21/02/08]
Ramsar
Advisory Mission to Tanzania. In response to stakeholder concerns
about the proposed development of a soda ash extraction facility at the
Lake Natron Basin Ramsar site, the Ramsar Secretariat offered to provide
technical assistance to the government of Tanzania through a Ramsar Advisory
Mission (RAM), and the Minister of Natural Resources and Tourism welcomed
that proposal. The RAM is now underway, 17 to 28 February 2008, and is
made up of a multidisciplinary team which includes: i) the Chair of the
Ramsar Standing Committee (Head of Delegation), ii) a representative of
the Ramsar STRP, iii) the IUCN Species Survival Commission, iv) a representation
of the CMS and its AEWA agreement, v) two consultants to deal with the
wise use and socio-economic aspects of the mission. Senior
Regional Advisor Mr Abou Bamba provides further details here about the
structure and objectives of the mission. [20/02/08]
Ramsar
visit to Krabi Estuary. Following the Asian Regional Meeting
in Bangkok, Thailand, Technical Officer for Asia -Oceania Pragati
Tuladhar visited the Krabi Estuary
Ramsar site in Thailand, 21-25 January 2008, to learn more
about Wetlands International's mangrove work. Wetlands International is
in the process of starting several mangrove rehabilitation projects there,
restoring degraded areas and abandoned aquaculture ponds back to biodiverse
mangrove, with the full involvement and participation of the local communities.
Pragati took this opportunity to get acquainted with related issues and
technical details of these proposed projects by inspecting degraded areas,
discussing with local communities, and offering advice where possible.
Here is a brief report with
photos. [20/02/08]
From
the Ramsar Forum. Update on wetland managers
training program in Australia. "Dear Forum members, In
2006 we reported on a new training program for wetland managers being
set up in Australia with financial assistance from the Australian Government.
Two years on, this program has completed 14 two-day courses on a range
of topics (see below) with nearly 230 wetland practitioners participating
to date. The program, now known by the name Wetlands.edu, has developed
17 training courses (modules), several of which draw heavily on guidance
developed under the Ramsar Convention (in areas such as CEPA, management
planning etc)." Here is
the rest of the update from Bill Phillips. [20/02/08]
From
the Ramsar Forum.
Wetland restoration experts in Central Africa required.
Amir Grossman, IUCN-NL Ecosystem Grants Programme,
writes: "We are currently supporting three projects related to wetland
restoration and sustainable use in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda
and Burundi. These are small grants project (max. 85.000€/3 years).
As the involved NGOs have limited experience we are looking for experts
that will be able to make a visit to the project sites in order to help
the NGOs in developing a restoration plan. These visits should take place
within no more than 6 months. Ideally, a second visit should be made a
year later to monitor progress. We are willing to cover the costs of these
visits." Read
the details here. [20/02/08]
Now
available. The Okavango Delta Management
Plan. The long-awaited ODMP has been launched and is available
in PDF format here and in print form from the Botswana Department of Environmental
Affairs. The ODMP project was begun some years ago, with seed funding
from the Ramsar Convention, and it has been developed under the framework
of the Ramsar Management Planning Guidelines by a number of national and
local government sectors and other organizations such as the Harry Oppenheimer
Okavango Research Centre (HOORC) and The World Conservation Union (IUCN).
Financial support has been provided along the way by the governments of
Denmark, Germany, and Sweden, and by IUCN and Ramsar. The OMDP is endorsed
by the Permanent Okavango River Basin Commission (OKACOM), including Angola
and Namibia, the Secretariat of which was also launched in Maun on World
Wetlands Day earlier this month with the participation of the Ramsar Secretary
General, Mr Anada Tiéga. The
ODMP in PDF (2.8MB). [14/02/08]
Announcement. Wetlands International training courses, 2008. Wetlands
International under its Wetlands and Poverty Reduction Project (WPRP)
calls for applications for four training courses, two each in French and
English. Wetlands
International on behalf of the WPRP African Training Board announces the
call for applications for the 2008 training courses focusing on a modular
system of training. These training courses are part of a series of training
courses being supported by the WPRP. The main modules were developed in
collaboration with various partners such as Wageningen International,
UNESCO-IHE, Oxfam America, Kenya Wildlife Service Institute, Foundation
for Sustainable Development, Ghana Environmental Protection Agency, Uganda
Wetlands Inspection Division and Uganda Wildlife Education Centre through
a series of stakeholder consultations and have further undergone processes
to ensure their relevance to local contexts. The
full announcement, and application forms, are here (in
English et en français).[14/02/08]
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
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Index page in perpetuity. |