Archive for February, 2008

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Ah Meng, Singapore’s Beloved Orangutan Matriarch, dies at 48

Friday, February 8th, 2008

ah-meng1.jpg8 February 2008 - Never had an animal resident of the Singapore Zoo touched the lives of so many visitors - locals and foreigners alike - like it’s famous and well-loved Orang Utan, Ah Meng.

Yet, it seemed time when the 48-year-old suddenly passed away on Friday, of old age.

She was born in Sumatra, Indonesia around 1960 and came to the Zoo in 1971 when she was about seven years old after being rescued from the Chinese family who had kept her as an illegal pet.

Ah Meng’s big break came in 1982 when she became the star attraction of the Zoo’s ‘Breakfast with an Orang Utan’ programme.

ah-meng2.jpg
Ah Meng, surrounded by her grandchildren.

The friendly Orang Utan rose to fame quickly, and has been featured in numerous travel films and print articles.

In 1992, Ah Meng became the first and only non-human recipient of the Singapore Tourism Promotion Board’s (STB) Special Ambassador award for her contributions.

In her lifetime, Ah Meng has also rubbed shoulders with foreign dignitaries and famous celebrities including Prince Philip and Michael Jackson.

The Zoo’s curator, Mr Alagappasamy (aka Sam) has taken care of Ah Meng since she first came to the Zoo.

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Ah Meng on her 44th birthday.

He is extremely saddened by her departure and though it may ‘take a long time’ for him to adjust not having her around, he is ‘very happy to have had the opportunity to take care of Ah Meng and her family all these years’.

Group CEO of Wildlife Reserves Singapore, Ms Fanny Lai said: ‘We mourn the passing of Ah Meng. She has touched the hearts of everyone who has met her and contributed immensely in helping promote awareness of how each and every one of us can play a role in anti-poaching, anti-deforestation and conservation matters’.

Ah Meng leaves behind two sons Hsing Hsing, Satria, and two daughters, Medan and Sayang and six grandchildren.

She will be reposed at the Zoo’s Garden with a View from 9-11am on Feb 10 where the public can visit her for the last time. Her memorial service will take place shortly after at 11am.

Phto credits:
1- MUGILAN RAJASEGERAN
2- DENISE TAN
3- TAN SUAN ANN
Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest%2BNews/Singapore/STIStory_204484.html
Please visit the source to see more photos of Ah-Meng.

Staples dumps Asia Pulp & Paper over its destruction of virgin rainforests

Friday, February 8th, 2008

© WWF Indonesia
Construction of new logging corridor through dense dry lowland forest in Bukit Tigapuluh, Riau, Indonesia.

8 February 2008 - Office supply giant Staples Inc. dropped Asia Pulp & Paper Co. Ltd. (APP), one of the world’s largest paper companies, as a supplier due to concerns over its environmental performance, reports Tom Wright of the Wall Street Journal.

Calling APP a “great peril to our brand” for its alleged logging of wildlife-rich rainforests in Indonesia, Staples said it will now look to other suppliers for its branded photocopy and office paper. APP had accounted for roughly 9 percent of Staples-branded stock.

“We decided engagement was not possible anymore,” Mark Buckley, vice president for environmental issues at Staples, told the Wall Street Journal. “We haven’t seen any indication that APP has been making any positive strides” to protect the environment.

Earlier Staples said it hoped that engagement with APP would prompt the firm to change its sourcing policies.

The announcement comes at a difficult time for APP, which has faced widespread condemnation from green groups for its environmental record. In October, following an inquiry from the Wall Street Journal, the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC), a forest certification body, rejected APP’s planned use of a logo indicating its products met FSC environmental standards. Earlier a partnership with environmental group WWF soured when it became evident that APP continued to log old growth forests for paper pulp. Still APP has “made up for lost orders from big Western buyers by selling more in the Middle East, India and Bangladesh, where environmental concerns are not such an issue,” writes Wright.

In recent months, logging in Indonesia has garnered worldwide attention due to its impact on global climate. Several studies published over the past year show that emissions from forest destruction in Indonesia have made the country the third largest emitter of greenhouse gases. Politicians are now scrambling to rein in deforestation in an effort to qualify for carbon credits that could be worth billions of dollars. Yesterday Irwandi Yusuf, governor of the province of Aceh, announced he would protect 1.9 million acres of forest in Ulu Masen in order to reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 100 million tons over 30 years.

Tom Wright (2008). Green-Minded Staples Ends Ties With Asia Pulp & Paper. Wall Street Journal, Feb 7, 2008

Photo credit: © WWF Indonesia
Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/rbssConsumerGoodsAndRetailNews/idUSN0844455620080208

Study: Destroying native ecosystems for biofuel crops worsens global warming

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Turning native ecosystems into “farms” for biofuel crops causes major carbon emissions that worsen the global warming that biofuels are meant to mitigate, according to a new study by the University of Minnesota and the Nature Conservancy. The work will be published in Science later this month and will be posted online Thursday, Feb. 7.

The carbon lost by converting rainforests, peatlands, savannas, or grasslands outweighs the carbon savings from biofuels. Such conversions for corn or sugarcane (ethanol), or palms or soybeans (biodiesel) release 17 to 420 times more carbon than the annual savings from replacing fossil fuels, the researchers said. The carbon, which is stored in the original plants and soil, is released as carbon dioxide, a process that may take decades. This “carbon debt” must be paid before the biofuels produced on the land can begin to lower greenhouse gas levels and ameliorate global warming.

The conversion of peatlands for palm oil plantations in Indonesia ran up the greatest carbon debt, one that would require 423 years to pay off. The next worst case was the production of soybeans in the Amazon, which would not “pay for itself” in renewable soy biodiesel for 319 years.

“We don’t have proper incentives in place because landowners are rewarded for producing palm oil and other products but not rewarded for carbon management,” said University of Minnesota Applied Economics professor Stephen Polasky, an author of the study. “This creates incentives for excessive land clearing and can result in large increases in carbon emissions.

“This research examines the conversion of land for biofuels and asks the question ‘Is it worth it”’,” said lead author Joe Fargione, a scientist for The Nature Conservancy. “And surprisingly, the answer is no.”

Fargione began the work as a University of Minnesota postdoctoral researcher with Polasky, Regents Professor of Ecology David Tilman; he completed it after joining the Nature Conservancy. They, along with university researchers Jason Hill and Peter Hawthorne, also contributed to the work.

“If you’re trying to mitigate global warming, it simply does not make sense to convert land for biofuels production,” said Fargione. “All the biofuels we use now cause habitat destruction, either directly or indirectly. Global agriculture is already producing food for six billion people. Producing food-based biofuel, too, will require that still more land be converted to agriculture.”

These findings coincide with observations that increased demand for ethanol corn crops in the United States is likely contributing to conversion of the Brazilian Amazon and Cerrado (tropical savanna). American farmers traditionally rotated corn crops with soybeans, but now they are planting corn every year to meet the ethanol demand and Brazilian farmers are planting more of the world’s soybeans. And they’re deforesting the Amazon to do it.

The researchers also found significant carbon debt in the conversion of grasslands in the United States and rainforests in Indonesia.

Researchers did note that some biofuels do not contribute to global warming because they do not require the conversion of native habitat. These include waste from agriculture and forest lands and native grasses and woody biomass grown on marginal lands unsuitable for crop production. The researchers urge that all fuels be fully evaluated for their impacts on global warming, including impacts on habitat conversion.

“Biofuels made on perennial crops grown on degraded land that is no longer useful for growing food crops may actually help us fight global warming,” said Hill. “One example is ethanol made from diverse mixtures of native prairie plants. Minnesota is well poised in this respect.”

“Creating some sort of incentive for carbon sequestration, or penalty for carbon emissions, from land use is vital if we are serious about addressing this problem,” Polasky said.

“We will need to implement many approaches simultaneously to solve climate change. There is no silver bullet, but there are many silver BBs,” said Fargione. “Some biofuels may be one silver BB, but only if produced without requiring additional land to be converted from native habitats to agriculture.”

Source: http://physorg.com/news121614826.html

A mom of his own

Friday, February 8th, 2008

Mahal is a lucky little guy. He’s getting a mom of his own at the Milwaukee Zoo. The babies at the Nyaru Menteng Rehabilitation Center are not so fortunate. While we do the best we can to raise the orphans, we can’t fully undo the damage the palm oil industry has inflicted on them: It robbed them of their mothers…
Mahal’s story is heartwarming. Please view the original article to see some amazing pictures of him…
~ Rich

mahal_17913.jpg

Motherless 9-month-old travels by private plane to be paired with orangutan surrogate

By JAN UEBELHERR
Feb. 7, 2008

Can a motherless, red-haired 9-month-old find happiness in the arms of a Milwaukee mom?

His name is Mahal, and he landed in Milwaukee on a private jet Thursday afternoon, courtesy of Terry and Mary Kohler, in search of surrogate mom. This little orangutan just might find it in M.J., a 27-year-old hybrid Bornean-Sumatran orangutan at the Milwaukee County Zoo. And while he’s just a little guy - described as playful, cuddly, clingy when he’s teething, and a bit of a tough guy at times - he could one day play a part in the survival of his species. Some experts say they could be extinct in the wild in 10 years.

Mahal landed here with a shock of red hair and hard-luck story that would be hard to make up.

Born on April 4, 2007, at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo in Colorado Springs, Colo., he was rejected by his mother, Hadiah.

Keepers think the main reason was her age. She was just 10. “She just didn’t act like an adult female,” says Dina Bredahl, one of 12 caregivers of Mahal at the Colorado zoo. “She acted more like a juvenile.”

Making matters worse was the dad, Tujoh. “The dad was kind of interfering, so that didn’t help either. The dad seemed to think he was a threat or something,” says Bredahl.

Keepers tried to reintroduce Mahal (whose name means “valuable”) to his mom without dad around. “She started showing less and less interest, the more we tried,” Bredahl says. Mahal’s mom had also been “hand-raised” by humans, which could make her less certain about how to be a mom herself.

“Decades ago, it was common practice to take (orangutan) babies away from their moms, so those females were less likely to take care of their offspring,” says Bredahl. “We’re hoping that it becomes less and less common.”

Mahal also had been born with a foot deformity similar to a club foot. His mother most likely did not reject him because of this, but he would not have been able to cling to her with his back feet. They did intense physical therapy with Mahal, and he wore braces for several months, Bredahl says.

Mahal needed to be held and nurtured, “treated like a baby orangutan would be,” she says. So human caregivers did it, but they made sure he had contact with other orangutans, if only by sight.

About a month ago, keepers matched him up with a surrogate at the Cheyenne Mountain Zoo, 51-year-old Sandra.

They got along great.

“The first day, they were definitely learning about each other. She wanted to have more contact with him than he wanted. But then they just started forming this bond that was just incredible for two unrelated animals,” says Bredahl. Soon she treated him like her own.

“And he was just in love with her,” Bredahl says.

One morning, a keeper realized something didn’t look right. “Mahal seemed to realize it at the same time,” says Bredahl.

Sandra had died in her sleep.

The search was on again for a surrogate. The task fell to the Species Survival Plan coordinator of the Association of Zoos and Aquariums.

The survival plan coordinator looked at all of the orangutan surrogates across North America (there are six) and deemed M.J. the most suitable. She’s what is known as a proven surrogate, a role she took on at the Toledo Zoo in Ohio, where she lived until she was moved to Milwaukee County’s zoo in April - the same month Mahal was born.

“He had just been through a lot,” Bredahl says. . “We just really felt we wanted him to have more of a sure thing.”

Mahal needs 24-hour care and holding, and he’s been getting it from keepers. He’ll keep getting it in his new Milwaukee home. Two keepers from the Cheyenne Zoo, including Bredahl, will stay here for a few days as Mahal’s care gradually is turned over to Milwaukee keepers.

The keepers will continue the holding and care (three bottles of infant formula a day, plus snacks) for the next week or so, when they’ll gradually introduce Mahal and M.J. - at first, just by sight.

It would be a big deal in Mahal’s world if all worked out. But it’s an even bigger deal for his species, which is described as endangered by the U.S. Department of the Interior.

The species is threatened because of a dramatic loss in habitat, natural disasters and illegal hunting. About one-third of the wild population was lost during fires in 1997-’98.

If he thrives, Mahal could end up being sent to another zoo to breed and help the species survive.

“It’s a huge deal to have a baby orangutan,” says Milwaukee Zoo spokeswoman Jennifer Dilberti Shea. Says Bredahl, “Even though this is a male and he’s not going to have babies of his own, he’s still potentially going to be a great dad some day, from learning from the orangutans. We try, but no human can do as good as the real thing.”

For now, Mahal’s keepers hope he and M.J. hit it off.

They’ll watch for eye contact and general interest between this potential mother and son. And they’ll be watching Tommy, too. He’s the zoo’s 25-year-old male hybrid orangutan, a kind of dad figure who will need to get along with Mahal.

“They might pass hay between each other. Eye contact is huge,” says Bredahl. “It’s an important bonding behavior, if they stare into each other’s eyes.”

Source: http://www.jsonline.com/story/index.aspx?id=715991

Towan the Orangutan’s paintings auctioned on Ebay

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

By Susan Gilmore
Seattle Times staff reporter

Source: The Seattle Times

Orangutans at the Woodland Park Zoo are going ape over art.

Towan the Orangutan
Towan the orangutan held the blue-colored chalk in his mouth to draw, giving his lips and face a bluish tinge Wednesday.
Photo: MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Towan
A close up of one of Towan’s paintings that is being auctioned on eBay.
Photo: MIKE SIEGEL / THE SEATTLE TIMES

Zoo officials hope that two paintings by resident orangutan Towan will fetch a fine price on eBay.

Towan, who will celebrate his 40th birthday later this month and is one of five orangutans at the zoo, is an accomplished artist, say zookeepers, who encourage the creatures to express themselves on canvas.

Already, bidding on the two Towan paintings has eclipsed $800. The works will remain for sale on the site until early afternoon on Friday.

“All the orangs like to paint,” said orangutan keeper Felicity Oram. “It’s an enrichment activity. They are very visual creatures and are higher apes and like to express themselves.”

She said each ape has his own style and that painting is one of Towan’s favorite activities. He uses a paint-filled pen, unlike other orangutans, who paint with their tongues, Oram said. That’s why the zoo uses only nontoxic paint.

She said Towan “definitely takes time composing.”

The only problem, Oram said, is getting the paintings when the apes are finished with them.

Towan, however, slides his under the doorway when he’s done, unlike some of the other orangutans who tend to tear up their work.

Carolyn Austin, another orangutan zookeeper, said Towan will work for two hours on one piece; she offers him colored chalk and paint-filled pens and he’ll choose the colors he wants. Towan likes primary colors, Austin said.

Towan and his twin sister, Chinta, were born at the zoo with much notoriety as the first twin orangutans born in captivity.

Austin said the apes are so intelligent they can understand certain words and gestures of the zookeepers. If she says the word “trade,” Towan knows to trade his finished canvas for a blank one.

By far, she said, Towan is the most-accomplished artist in the zoo’s orangutan family. But he doesn’t seem to mind parting with his paintings. “It’s like ‘I did it and it’s done,’ ” said Austin, adding that the paintings have previously been sold at local events. One of them fetched $1,000 at a zoo auction.

Towan’s paintings are on 12-by-16-inch canvases, matted and framed, with a certificate of authenticity.

The money raised will go to support the International Conference of Zookeepers, which will be held at the Woodland Park Zoo in September 2009. It will be the first time the conference has been held in the U.S., said Austin, the organizer.

This is the second time the zoo has sold animal art on eBay. When the Seattle Seahawks were in the Super Bowl two years ago, elephants at the zoo created paintings in Seahawk colors that fetched nearly $1,300 in the online auction.

Source: The Seattle Times

How about a little love for Mexico?

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

guadalajarazoo.jpg

A-me, the orangutan of the Guadalajara Zoo, cuddles her two-month old baby in Guadalajara, Mexico, Friday, Jan. 11, 2008.

Photo By Guillermo Arias, AP Photo

Source: http://www.usatoday.com/

guadalajara2.jpg

The two-month old baby orangutan is pictured at the Guadalajara Zoo in Mexico, Friday, Jan. 11, 2008.

Photo By Guillermo Arias, AP Photo

Source: http://www.flickr.com/

Visit the Guadalajara Zoo’s bilingual website. 

Rain forests fall at ‘alarming’ rate

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

By EDWARD HARRIS, Associated Press Writer
Sat Feb 2, 2008

ABO EBAM, Nigeria - In the gloomy shade deep in Africa’s rain forest, the noontime silence was pierced by the whine of a far-off chain saw. It was the sound of destruction, echoed from wood to wood, continent to continent, in the tropical belt that circles the globe.
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From Brazil to central Africa to once-lush islands in Asia’s archipelagos, human encroachment is shrinking the world’s rain forests.

The alarm was sounded decades ago by environmentalists — and was little heeded. The picture, meanwhile, has changed: Africa is now a leader in destructiveness. The numbers have changed: U.N. specialists estimate 60 acres of tropical forest are felled worldwide every minute, up from 50 a generation back. And the fears have changed.

Experts still warn of extinction of animal and plant life, of the loss of forest peoples’ livelihoods, of soil erosion and other damage. But scientists today worry urgently about something else: the fateful feedback link of trees and climate.

Global warming is expected to dry up and kill off vast tracts of rain forest, and dying forests will feed global warming.

“If we lose forests, we lose the fight against climate change,” declared more than 300 scientists, conservation groups, religious leaders and others in an appeal for action at December’s climate conference in Bali, Indonesia.

The burning or rotting of trees that comes with deforestation — at the hands of ranchers, farmers, timbermen — sends more heat-trapping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than all the world’s planes, trains, trucks and automobiles. Forest destruction accounts for about 20 percent of manmade emissions, second only to burning of fossil fuels for electricity and heat. Conversely, healthy forests absorb carbon dioxide and store carbon.

“The stakes are so dire that if we don’t start turning this around in the next 10 years, the extinction crisis and the climate crisis will begin to spiral out of control,” said Roman Paul Czebiniak, a forest expert with Greenpeace International. “It’s a very big deal.”

The December U.N. session in Bali may have been a turning point, endorsing negotiations in which nations may fashion the first global financial plan for compensating developing countries for preserving their forests.

The latest data from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) helped spur delegates to action.

“Deforestation continues at an alarming rate of about 13 million hectares (32 million acres) a year,” the U.N. body said in its latest “State of the World’s Forests” report.

Because northern forests remain essentially stable, that means 50,000 square miles of tropical forest are being cleared every 12 months — equivalent to one Mississippi or more than half a Britain. The lumber and fuelwood removed in the tropics alone would fill more than 1,000 Empire State Buildings, FAO figures show.

Although South America loses slightly more acreage than Africa, the rate of loss is higher here — almost 1 percent of African forests gone each year. In 2000-2005, the continent lost 10 million acres a year, including big chunks of forest in Sudan, Zambia and Tanzania, up from 9 million a decade earlier, the FAO reports.

Across the tropics the causes can be starkly different.

The Amazon and other South American forests are usually burned for cattle grazing or industrial-scale soybean farming. In Indonesia and elsewhere in southeast Asia, island forests are being cut or burned to make way for giant plantations of palm, whose oil is used in food processing, cosmetics and other products.

In Africa, by contrast, it’s individuals hacking out plots for small-scale farming.

Here in Nigeria’s southeastern Cross Rivers State, home to one of the largest remaining tropical forests in Africa, people from surrounding villages of huts and cement-block homes go to the forest each day to work their pineapple and cocoa farms. They see no other way of earning money to feed their families.

“The developed countries want us to keep the forests, since the air we breathe is for all of us, rich countries and poor countries,” said Ogar Assam Effa, 54, a tree plantation director and member of the state conservation board.

“But we breathe the air, and our bellies are empty. Can air give you protein? Can air give you carbohydrates?” he asked. “It would be easy to convince people to stop clearing the forest if there was an alternative.”

The state, which long ago banned industrial logging, is trying to offer alternatives.

Working with communities like Abo Ebam, near Nigeria’s border with Cameroon, the Cross Rivers government seeks to help would-be farmers learn other trades, such as beekeeping or raising fist-sized land snails, a regional delicacy.

The state also has imposed a new licensing system. Anyone who wants to cut down one of the forest’s massive, valuable mahogany trees or other hardwoods must obtain a license and negotiate which tree to fell with the nearby community, which shares in the income. The logs can’t be taken away whole, but must be cut into planks in the forest, by people like David Anfor.

He’s a 35-year-old father of one who earns the equivalent of 75 U.S. cents per board he cuts with a whizzing chain saw. “The forest is our natural resource. We’re trying to conserve,” he said. “But I’m also working for my daily eating.”

A community benefiting from such small-scale forestry is likely to keep out those engaged in illegal, uncontrolled logging. But enforcement is difficult in a state with about 3,500 square miles of pristine rain forest — and few forest rangers.

On one recent day deep in the forest, where the luxuriant green canopy allows only rare shards of sunlight to reach the floor, the trilling of a hornbill bird and the distant chain saw were the only sounds heard. As forestry officials rushed to investigate, the saw operator fled deeper into the forest, sign of an illegal operation.

Environmentalists say such a conservation approach may work for rural, agrarian people in Nigeria, which lost an estimated 15 million acres between 1990 and 2005, or about one-third of its entire forest area, and has one of the world’s highest deforestation rates — more than 3 percent per year.

But lessons learned in one place aren’t necessarily applicable elsewhere, they say. A global strategy is needed, mobilizing all rain-forest governments.

That’s the goal of the post-Bali talks, looking for ways to integrate forest preservation into the world’s emerging “carbon trading” system. A government earning carbon credits for “avoided deforestation” could then sell them to a European power plant, for example, to meet its emission-reduction quota.

“These forests are the greatest global public utility,” Britain’s conservationist Prince Charles said in the lead-up to Bali. “As a matter of urgency we have to find ways to make them more valuable alive than dead.”

Observed the World Wildlife Fund’s Duncan Pollard, “Suddenly you have the whole world looking at deforestation.”

But in many ways rain forests are still a world of unknowns, a place with more scientific questions than answers.

How much carbon dioxide are forests absorbing? How much carbon is stored there? How might the death of the Amazon forest affect the climate in, say, the American Midwest? Hundreds of researchers are putting in thousands of hours of work to try to answer such questions before it is too late.

Source: Yahoo News - http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080202/ap_on_re_af/60_acres_a_minute_i

Phoenix Zoo planning upgrade to orangutan exhibit

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

kasih_phxzoo.jpg

Jennifer Sondag
Special to the Republic
Feb. 5, 2008

The Phoenix Zoo plans to build a $5 million orangutan exhibit that will provide the animals an improved natural setting and visitors an improved viewing experienced, officials said.

The first phase of the project is a new night house. Aimee Yamamori, director of media and public relations for the Zoo, said this $1 million phase will provide the animals an upgrade shelter from the cold weather.

“We have to make these upgrades and we have to do it soon,” she said.

Yamamori said the orangutans, which are tropical animals, can’t be out when the temperature dips below 65 degrees.

Yamamori said this was the most important part of the upgrades and that the project won’t continue until the shelter is improved.

The second phase would be a new facility with a more natural environment. It would have grass, trees, and water, officials said. The third phase is the remolding to the existing exhibit.

Officials said the zoo is still collecting funds. The zoo is hoping to get funds from private donors, officials said.

Yamamori said it possible the zoo will have to stop housing the orangutans if enough money isn’t collected for the project. Anyone wishing to donate is asked to call 602-273-1341.

Sky Armstrong, a guest service agent for the zoo, said the new exhibit allows the orangutans to live in an environment with real trees, grass and an actual river, rather than the concrete exhibit they have now.

“The fact their having real grass and trees is going to be beneficial for their mental health,” Armstrong said.

Yamamori said the improved exhibit will allow the animals to be more active and engaging. It will also provide visitors more room to view the animals, she said.

Photo of Baby Kasih: Sherrie Buzby/The Arizona Republic
Source: http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0205phx-zoo0205.html

Orangutans in Singapore Get Lunar New Year Gifts

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Lunar New Year
Orangutans in Singapore Zoo peer at their Lunar New Year gift - a “red packet” filled with melon seeds.

Lunar New Year
Orangutans Satria (top) and Budi hold “hong baos” containing melon seeds at the Singapore Zoo Feb. 4, 2008. “Hong baos” are red packets usually containing money given out during Chinese New Year celebrations. Chinese people all over the world usher in the Lunar New Year on Feb. 7. According to the lunar calendar, 2008 is the Year of the Rat.(Xinhua Photo)

Heart Of Borneo: Its Relevance To Global Environmental Issues

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Source: Borneo Bulletin - January 30, 2008
By Mahmud Yussof, Bandar Seri Begawan

The Heart of Borneo (HoB) — three countries — with one conservation vision initiative was officially launched on Feb 12, 2007 in Bali, Indonesia where its declaration was signed by the responsible Honourable Ministers from the three countries, Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia and Malaysia.

Since then, such a sub-regional collaborative initiative has been gaining ground and spurring each country involved to kick-start its implementation and reassess its forest practices and development as to ensure all development projects and national forest programmes well fit into the HoB’s aspirations.

In ensuring Brunei Darussalam active participation in HoB initiative, the HoB project implementation framework study has been prepared to outline the Brunei HoB national guiding principles and prepare a roadmap on how to move forward as well as formulating project recommendations based on the current multi-sectoral issue on forest conservation (including nature and wildlife) and land use management as to bridge the multi-sectoral gap.

Maximisation of the country’s involvement in order to ensure the people and the country will gain full benefits of the initiative within the framework of the roadmap.

Fifty-eight per cent of the total land area has been unanimously agreed to be managed under the HoB framework. This total area of greenmark is equivalent to about two per cent of the total area of the HoB in Borneo Island (240,000 sq km). Despite the small area, the national forest estate has contributed significantly to the central part of the Bornean upland forest that could provide ecological corridor into the South China Sea through unique Peat Swamp Forest of Brunei Darussalam — the world’s remaining peat swamp forest which serves as the great barrier separating the fresh water and marine ecology.

Does the HoB really oppose development projects while emphasising on the need to conserve the forest resources and nature? Certainly not because the HoB is not just forest conservation per se, in actual fact it promotes sustainable development through sustainable land use management and more importantly, HoB further promotes the importance of sustainable forest management as a role model of sustainable development. Thus, it provides better foundation for the country’s international green image — adapting to the climate change as a carbon sink while being as one of the major hydrocarbon producing countries in this region.

On the other hand, the Island of Borneo is known as one of the mega biodiversity hot spots in the region that can provide a green fuel for the economic growth. There had been more scientific discoveries for the past 10 years which contributed significantly to the development of non-timber forest products (NTFP) such as medicinal and herbal or bioceutical and promising ecotourism industry in which do not give a negative impact to the forest environment.

In view of Brunei’s iconic tropical rainforest being still intact, such considerable knowledge-based economic opportunity is yet to be explored with the assistance from the local knowledge inherited from the traditional culture and way of living of some natives in Brunei Darussalam in the past.

COP13, UNFCCC held in Bali, Indonesia on from Dec 3 to Dec 14, 2007, reiterated that the world has been facing the incremental increase in global temperature associated with forest depletion at an alarming rate and accumulative increase in carbon emissions from fossil burning and industrialization. Thus, continuous change in ecological micro-climate is inevitable and irreversible due to this incremental increase in global temperature.

On the other hand, as quoted from a keynote speech by Professor Wangari Maathai, Noble Prize laureate, ISB, BGIC V in March 2007, “The Heart of Borneo is also the Heart of the World”. In light of this, HoB initiative is very globally relevant and compelling sub-regional initiative to combat global warming.

According to the most recent article published by FAO, forests and human health are intertwined — there is a link between deforestation and forest fragmentation, and emergence of new infectious diseases which often originate in mammals. Evidently, the spread of the diseases is due to the expansion of human settlement into forest areas which increases the level of exposure of human to the wildlife; modified dispersal of pathogen hosts and vectors because of forest alteration; and more importantly, altered hydrological functions that favours water-borne pathogens such as malaria.

Forests have dual roles in protecting and improving the air quality better health by absorbing airborne pollutants and hence, the forests can reduce the acid rain effect that pollutes the water catchment area (FAO, 2007). The scientists believe that the highly acidic water itself will destroy the forest mainly by removing the available essential nutrients from the soils and as a result, making the forests more susceptible to pest attack.

Based on global tragic experiences, the HoB initiative is timely as a compelling catalyst of change in the midst of catastrophic phenomena due to global warming—providing a green channel for an integral approach to the country’s natural resources towards a balanced socio-economic growth and enabling stakeholders to grab the opportunities while effectively managing issues and challenges on natural resources conservation. Since COPS, Convention on Biological Diversity held in Brazil on March 29, 2006 and in the United Nation Conference on Climate Change held in Bali, Indonesia from Dec 3 to Dec 14, the fledging HoB continues to expand its international outreach and play a role model in all global initiatives or conventions related to biodiversity and environmental protection issues including United Nation Convention to Combat Desertification, UNCCD.

Furthermore together with the upcoming accession of Brunei Darussalam to CBD as 191st member to CBD, Brunei HoB initiative will be expected to give a firm step towards the achievement of 2010 biodiversity target of Convention on Biological Diversity, CBD by implementing the CBD programmes of work on protected areas and forest biological diversity according to the Mr Ahmed Djoghlaf CBD Executive Secretariat. CBD welcomes the initiative to be tabled in the upcoming COP9 to be held in Bonn, German in May 2008.

For Brunei Darussalam, HoB initiative is the trilateral initiative that can provide a better collaborative environment for the local stakeholders including our neighbouring countries to share experiences, knowledge, information, expertise and views on sustainable development practices, better land use management and environmental sustainability. Most importantly, it inculcates a spirit of sub-regional unity and integrity under a common conservation vision.

Great apes face threat from germs carried by eco-tourists

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Jungle holidays raise funds to protect wildlife, but humans harbour viruses that have killed chimps and could be fatal for gorillas and orangutans.

By Caroline Davies
The Observer
February 3 2008

The thrill of hacking through dense African forest in search of the majestic mountain gorilla is an eco-tourist’s dream. And for those fortunate enough to encounter these great apes, it is a memorable highlight to be captured in photographs and shared later with family and friends.

Ape tourism has never been more popular, despite the high costs. Tens of thousands of visitors each year are willing to pay fortunes to commune with nature. But scientists are growing increasingly alarmed following the publication of evidence that great apes are dying from respiratory viruses directly transmitted to them by humans. They fear that existing safety measures to protect the animals do not go far enough and are calling for stricter precautions, including the mandatory wearing of face masks for all who come into close contact with gorillas, orangutans and chimpanzees.

Their concern follows the first evidence that chimpanzees in Ivory Coast, west Africa, died from HRSV (human respiratory syncytial virus) and HMPV (human metapneumovirus) during outbreaks at the Taï chimpanzee research station. The findings pose a major problem for those protecting the declining populations of gorillas in Uganda, Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo, now numbering less than 650, as well as orangutans in Borneo, thought to number around 15,000. The tourist dollar is essential. It protects the endangered apes from poachers and funds vital work aimed at halting their decline. But this positive aspect of eco-tourism must now be balanced against the negative side-effects if apes, and ape tourism, are to survive.

One of the problems is that tourists may not know they are carriers of the viruses, as there are often no symptoms. The only way to eradicate risks is by the wearing of masks, such as the N95 masks recommended for protection against avian flu. Scientists want to increase the distance that tourists are supposed to keep from the apes from seven metres to at least 10 metres. And they are calling for tourists and research workers alike to produce proof of vaccinations and to disinfect all clothing and footwear before being allowed near the animals.

The new measures are proposed by Dr Fabian Leendertz, a wildlife epidemiologist at Berlin’s Robert Koch-Institut and senior author of the new report, Pandemic Human Viruses Cause Decline of Endangered Great Apes. To date only bacterial and parasitic infections of typically low virulence have been shown to move from humans to wild apes, he said. ‘This is the first evidence of direct virus transmission. It has been suspected before, but this is the first real proof. Although our research applies to chimpanzees, the risk to gorillas and orangutans is exactly the same.’

He said that a seminar was planned with major ape tourism operators to discuss ways to implement new safety measures. ‘If you have spent all that money, the very least you want is a photograph of yourself with the gorillas. And the photograph doesn’t look as good if you have to wear a mask,’ he said. ‘But we hope the type of people who go on these holidays will take that responsibility.’

Dr Jo Setchell, a primatologist at Durham University and member of the Primate Society of Great Britain, who backed the calls for more stringent precautions, said: ‘It is very concerning. It is something that has been raised before, but this is the first report that really demonstrates concretely that these viruses are transmitted by humans.’

The findings follow a 10-year research project at the Taï station during which 15 young chimpanzees died in three outbreaks. It showed the viral strains sampled from the apes were closely related to strains circulating in human epidemics. Tourists visiting gorillas are warned not to trek if they have symptoms of a cold, to turn away from the animals to cough, not to spit in the parks and to bury faeces. But tourists may be unwittingly infected with respiratory viruses before symptoms present themselves.

‘I think the masks are essential,’ said Setchell. ‘One of the major problems is if you go on a fairly short holiday to, say, Uganda, and you have paid a lot for your permit, if you have a slight cold many people will not forgo that money. They’ll take medication to hide their symptoms - because it’s a big tourist experience, they have waited a long time for it, and it is very expensive.’

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/feb/03/conservation.endangeredspecies

Indonesia: Leading Oil Palm Producer. Leading Carbon Emitter.

Monday, February 4th, 2008

Indonesia, a leading producer of palm oil, reached an output of 16 million tonnes in 2006, having tripled the area of land under oil palm plantation between 1995 and 2005.

Though the Indonesian government had established a moratorium on forest conversion for estate crops –though unclear about how long the moratorium should be maintained and whether it referred to a moratorium on actual conversion of forest cover or a moratorium on changing the status of forest lands to allow planting (see WRM Bulletin Nº 124)– the country’s policy on palm oil development seems to continue the increasing trend. There are plans to add some 10 to 11 million hectares to the six million hectares of land occupied with oil palm plantations, in response to the rising global demand for palm oil.

Palm oil is used in numerous food products and consumer goods and is one of the main raw materials for the new biodiesel rush. In early 2007, the European Union endorsed a minimum target for biofuel to constitute 10% of its transport fuels by 2020.

The target of increasing palm oil production to 40 million tonnes in Indonesia by 2020 goes along with the need to add some 300,000 hectares of new estates each year. A report by the Indonesian Forest Ministry and European Union cited by an article of Hilary Chiew (1) says that inevitably, most new estates would come up in wetlands, as the more desirable dry lands are already occupied.

Recently, the Indian edible oil refiner Jhunjhunwala Vanaspati Ltd has announced its plans to buy 20,000 hectares of oil palm plantations in Indonesia for an amount of up to US$ 38 million. According to Reuters (2), the company director S.N. Jhunjhunwala said that they were “looking at either virgin or developed plantations [sic] in Indonesia”. For the Indian firm, the operation has two purposes. First, to reduce costs. The costs of producing edible oils are mounting so for Indian firms the opportunity to buy plantations abroad is a way of bringing down the cost incurred through import of crude palm oil (CPO).

Besides cutting costs, Indian firms in Indonesia can thus avoid the laws that at home limit them to acquire the large areas they need. That’s why they are heading to countries in South-East Asia or South America, with less protective regulations.

However, such happy business plays a heavy toll on the people and the environment. Almost one-quarter of Indonesia’s palm oil plantations is established in the province of Riau, where peatlands abound. The carbon rich peatlands are drained and burned to make way for palm oil plantations thus sending huge quantities of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. According to Wetland International, this gives Indonesia a notorious third place as carbon emitter and contributor to global warming after the United States and China.

The Indonesian Technology Assessment and Application Agency (BPPT) has claimed that the calculation did not include the carbon absorption power of Indonesia’s forest that reduced the total amount.

Whether ranked third or 14th carbon emitter, the destruction of rainforests to grow palm oil in Indonesia represents, as UNDP’s latest Human Development Report 2007/2008 puts it “the erosion of a resource that plays a vital role in the lives of the poor, in the provision of ecosystem services and in sustaining biodiversity.” The UNDP report also acknowledges that the “rapid expansion of the [palm oil] market has gone hand-in-hand with an erosion of the rights of small farmers and indigenous people.” So, good business for whom?

Article based on information from:
(1) “Eco-conscious palm oil”, Hilary Chiew, The Star Online, http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2008/1
/1/lifefocus/19561783&sec=lifefocus;
(2) “India firm eyes oil palm plantations in Indonesia”, Reuters, http://in.news.yahoo.com/071121/137/6nj6g.html; “Indian firms scout for farms overseas”, M.R. Subramani, The Hindu Business Line, http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2007/12/03/stories/2007120350860500.htm; Human Development Report 2007/2008, UNDP, http://hdr.undp.org/en/media/hdr_20072008_en_complete.pdf

Source: http://www.wrm.org.uy/bulletin/126/viewpoint.html#Indonesia