Japan designates Fujimae and Miyajima

Japan names two new Ramsar sites
The Government
of Japan has designated two new Wetlands of International Importance, both chiefly
because of their great value for migratory shorebirds. Fujimae-Higata
(Aichi prefecture, 323 hectares, 35°04'N 136°50'E) is tidal flat at
the mouths of the Shonai, Shinkawa, and Nikko rivers as they flow into the port
city of Nagoya. The site is an important
staging
site along the East Asia-Australia Flyway with one of the highest shorebird
counts in Japan - some seven species of shorebird surpass the 1% threshold in
the area, and more than 20,000 waterbirds have been counted frequently. The
wetland is also visited by a number of endangered species, including the birds
Tringa guttifer, Botaurus stellaris stellaris, Tadorna tadorna,
and Sterna albifrons sinensis, among others, and the endangered fish
Chaenogobius macrognathos. Once part of extensive tidal flats in the
northern part of Ise Bay, the site remains relatively unaltered itself amid
widespread transformation of the surrounding areas for development purposes.
A popular site with bird watchers, it is said that, when plans to "reclaim"
the tidal flat entirely for a dumping site were abandoned by the City Council,
"the site became a symbol of the wetland conservation movement in Japan".
Bird watching facilities exist and a wetland education centre is planned for
2003-4.
Miyajima-numa (Hokkaido, 41 ha; 43°20'N 141°43'E) is a small, open, shallow freshwater lake left by the nearby Ishikari river, surrounded chiefly by rice paddy. The lake is one of the most important staging sites for migratory Anatidae species, especially large ones, that winter in Japan, and more than 50,000 Greater White-fronted Goose Anser albifrons stop over in the spring. The government-owned site is used as an agricultural reservoir for surrounding farmlands and is popular with bird watchers.
Japan presently
has 13 Ramsar sites, totaling 84,089 hectares, and these two new designations
bring the Convention's global total to 1200 sites. Descriptions of all of Japan's
Ramsar sites are available here.
For
further information about the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, please contact
the Ramsar Convention Bureau,
Rue Mauverney 28, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22
999 0169, e-mail ramsar@ramsar.org). Posted 21 October 2002, Dwight Peck, Ramsar.