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July 2009 Archives

Efforts to rebuild fisheries are starting to pay off in some places around the world, an international team of scientists with divergent views on ocean ecosystems has determined.

The study "puts into perspective recent reports predicting a total collapse of global fisheries within 40 years," the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the agency responsible for administration of U.S. fisheries, said in a statement about the research.

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Small haddock: The haddock fishery in the Northeast is rebuilding, one of the positive signs in the U.S.

Photo courtesy NEFSC/NOAA

In a paper published in the July 31 issue of the journal Science, study co-author Mike Fogarty of the Northeast Fisheries Science Center (NEFSC) of NOAA's Fisheries Service in Woods Hole, Masachusetts. and 20 co-authors say that efforts made to reduce overfishing are succeeding in five of ten large marine ecosystems studied. Some of the successes are in U.S. fisheries.

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It's good news for several regions in the U.S., Iceland and New Zealand.

"These highly managed ecosystems are improving" says Ray Hilborn of the University of Washington, another author of the paper. "Yet there is still a long way to go: of all fish stocks we examined, 63 percent remained below target and still needed to be rebuilt."

But in spite of this good news, the researchers found that two thirds (68 percent) of the worldwide fisheries examined by the team "need rebuilding and that even lower rates of fish removals are needed to reverse the collapse of vulnerable species."

The researchers estimated that lightly fished and rebuilding ecosystems account for less than 10 percent of world fisheries area and catch, but represent examples of opportunities for successfully rebuilding marine resources elsewhere.

"Finding a balance between fishing and conservation, while difficult, is possible and has been accomplished in a number of fisheries."

Fogarty, head of the NEFSC's Ecosystems Assessment Program and a specialist in ecosystem based management, says finding a balance between fishing and conservation, while difficult, is possible and has been accomplished in a number of fisheries.

"Sometimes small changes have a big effect. It is not a 'one size fits all' management approach since each fishery has its own unique circumstances," Fogarty said.

"Many of the world's fisheries have a long history of overexploitation.

"Different management tools are needed, depending on the situation, to restore marine ecosystems and rebuild fisheries. It takes time. There have been successes in New Zealand and on the U.S. West Coast, and there are promising solutions in other areas, but rebuilding efforts have to be done on an ecosystem basis and from a global perspective."

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President Nicolas Sarkozy of France today announced his country's support for a ban of international trade in endangered Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin tuna, joining a growing call to list the overexploited fish under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), WWF reports.

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NGS illustration of bluefin tuna by Stanley Meltzoff

"Speaking at the close of a national stakeholder consultation on France's future sustainable fisheries and maritime policy, the 'Grenelle de la Mer,' President Sarkozy said, 'France supports listing bluefin tuna on the CITES convention to ban international trade,'" WWF said in a statement.

"Ours is the last generation with the ability to take action before it's too late--we must protect marine resources now, in order to fish better in future."

-- Nicolas Sarkozy, President of France

"Sarkozy put this in the context of France's support for a broader sustainable fisheries policy. 'Ours is the last generation with the ability to take action before it's too late--we must protect marine resources now, in order to fish better in future. We owe this to fishermen, and we owe it to future generations,'"

The Principality of Monaco was first to communicate its willingness to sponsor a proposal to ban international trade in Atlantic bluefin tuna, and has this week launched a formal CITES consultation process to seek the support of other range states--countries through whose waters the species swims, WWF added.

"WWF welcomes the Monaco initiative and the position of France, whose fleets have traditionally caught more bluefin tuna than any other country," said Sergi Tudela, Head of Fisheries at WWF Mediterranean.

"We now urge France to put its words into action and be the first country to formally sign up to Monaco's proposal for CITES Appendix I, which would ban international trade.

"WWF also appeals to other range states to follow this lead and support the proposal to list Atlantic bluefin on the CITES convention--if they want to give bluefin tuna a break and see a healthy fishery again in years to come. This iconic species is simply at the end of its tether."

CITES contracting parties meet again in Doha, Qatar in March 2010, but proposals need to be submitted by October 17 to be eligible for consideration at the Conference of the Parties.

Atlantic and Mediterranean bluefin tuna is in big trouble, and the fishery is insufficiently policed, WWF said.

"Contributing to the species' dramatic decline are the huge overcapacity of fishing fleets, catches that far exceed legal quotas, pirate fishing, the use of illegal spotting planes to chase tuna, under-reporting of catch, fishing during the closed season, management measures that disregard scientific advice - all driven by the insatiable appetite of the world's luxury seafood markets where bluefin tuna fetches record prices."

"In terms of eligibility for a listing on CITES Appendix I, Atlantic bluefin tuna ticks every box--and then some," said Susan Lieberman, Director of WWF's Global Species Programme.

"CITES contracting parties would surely regret failing to protect this commercially overexploited species, and an icon of the oceans, from collapse on their watch - while they have this historic chance."

"Fisheries managers have failed to get to grips with the complex fiasco of the Mediterranean bluefin tuna fishery," added Tudela, the Head of Fisheries at WWF Mediterranean.

"WWF hopes to see a sustainably managed and thriving fishery in future, but to enable this recovery the species must be given a breather--if the world does not put the brakes on its voracious appetite now, an amazing species and fishery could be lost forever."

A new study of thirty-million-year-old fossil "megadung" from extinct giant South American mammals reveals evidence of complex ecological interactions and theft of dung beetles' food stores by other animals, according to a study published in the journal Palaeontology.

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NGS photo of modern dung beetles by Chris Johns

"Thirty million years ago South America was home to what is known to paleontologists as the South America Megafauna, including some truly giant extinct herbivores: bone-covered armadillos the size of a small car, ground sloths 6 meters [20 feet] tall and elephant-size hoofed mammals unlike anything alive today," Palaeontology says in a statement released today.

"Megafauna would have produced megadung."

"And of course, megafauna would have produced megadung!"

The research was done by Graduate Student Victoria Sánchez and Dr Jorge Genise of the Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

dung-beetle-picture-2.jpgThey report traces made by other creatures within fossil dung balls.

"The beetles certainly had their work cut out for them and although the dung beetles themselves did not fossilize, we know they were fully engaged in business because, amazingly, the results of their activities are preserved as fossil dung balls, some more than 40 million years old, and some as large as tennis balls," Palaeontology says.

NGS illustration of white dung beetle by Hashime Murayama

"Now paleontologists in Argentina studying these dung balls have discovered that they have even more to tell us about the ecology of this lost world of giant mammals, but at a rather different scale."

"Some of these are just the results of chance interactions" Sánchez explains.

"Burrowing bees, for example, dug cells in the ground where the dung balls were buried, and some of these happen to have been dug into the balls.

"But other traces record the behaviour of animals actively stealing the food resources set aside by the dung beetles.

"The shapes and sizes of these fossilized burrows and borings in the dung balls indicate that other beetles, flies and earthworms were the culprits.

"Although none of these animals is preserved in these rocks, the fossil dung balls preserve in amazing detail a whole dung-based ecosystem going on right under the noses of the giant herbivores of 30 million years ago."

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NGS photo by Chris Johns

Extinct Dung Beetles "Deserve a Medal"

"The dung beetle has fallen on hard times," the researchers note in Palaeontology. "Once worshipped by ancient Egyptians its status has now slipped to that of unsung and forgotten hero, the butt of scatological jokes. Yet the dung beetle is truly heroic."

"Were it not for the dung beetle the world would be knee-deep in animal droppings."

"It is a well known 'fact' that were it not for the dung beetle the world would be knee-deep in animal droppings, especially those of large herbivores like cows, rhinos and elephants which, because they eat more food, produce more waste," the researchers continue.

"By burying that waste dung beetles not only remove it from the surface, they improve and fertilise the soil and reduce the number of disease-carrying flies that would otherwise infest the dung.

"If the modern dung beetle deserves praise for these global sanitation efforts, then the extinct dung beetles of ancient South America deserve a medal."

The dung beetle research by Sánchez and Genise was funded by CONICET, The Argentinean National Research Council for Science and Technolology.

More from National Geographic News:

Dung Fossils Suggest Dinosaurs Ate Grass

Dino Dung: Paleontology's Next Frontier?

For Dung Beetles, Monkey Business Is Serious Stuff

Dung Beetles Navigate by the Moon, Study Says

 

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Canada took top honors at the ninth National Geographic World Championship held today at the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City, the National Geographic Society announced today.

The United States came second, and Poland, just one point behind the United States, was third.

 

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canada-flag.jpgThe winning team members from left are Chris Chiavatti of British Columbia, Peter Brandt of Manitoba, both 15, and Graham Tompkins, 16, of Nova Scotia.

NGS photo by Tyrone Turner

"This is the second time Canada has won the geography competition. It was victorious at the third National Geographic World Championship in 1997, when it beat eight other teams in Washington, D.C.," the Society said in a statement.

Fifteen national teams competed in the competition this year.

 

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The U.S. team members were Kenji Golimlim, 11, of Southgate, Michigan; Milan Sandhu, 15, of Bedford, New Hampshire; and Eric Yang, 13, of The Colony, Texas.

 

 
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Poland's team members were Piotr Byrski, 16, of Łodygowice, Ślaskie; Wojciech Kaczmarczyk, 16, of Racibórz, Ślaskie; and Gabriel Stachura, 16, of Lublin, Lubelskie.

 

"In an Olympics-style ceremony, medals were awarded to the first-, second- and third-placed teams. Alex Trebek, host of the U.S. television quiz show "Jeopardy!", moderated today's finals," a National Geographic news release said.

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NGS photo by Tyrone Turner

"Canada, the United States and Poland qualified for the final round after obtaining the highest combined scores in a written contest on Sunday and in Monday's preliminary activity that included a hands-on map activity. Canada was the highest scorer in these earlier rounds."

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NGS photos by Tyrone Turner

Students were eligible to take part in the World Championship competition by winning or being a top finisher in the national competitions of their home regions. The 12 other teams competing this year were from Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Chinese Taipei, Czech Republic, Germany, Hungary, Mexico, Romania, Russia, Slovakia and the United Kingdom.

The presenting sponsor of this year's international contest organized by the National Geographic Society was Telmex Foundation, with supporting sponsorship from the Mexican Academy of Sciences, CONACYT, JW Marriott Mexico City and Televisa Foundation.

"The competition enhances international dialogue and understanding and promotes friendships around the globe."

John Fahey, president of the National Geographic Society, said the competition was a great way for talented young geographers around the world to match wits against each other and to enjoy a rewarding cross-cultural exchange. "The competition enhances international dialogue and understanding and promotes friendships around the globe," he added.

The World Championship is held every two years. The first contest, held in London in 1993, was won by the United States, which beat teams from the United Kingdom and Russia. The Australians, competing against four other teams, won the 1995 competition in Orlando, Fla.

The third championship, held in 1997 at National Geographic headquarters in Washington, D.C., was won by Canada, which bested eight other teams. The United States won the next four competitions: against 11 other teams in Toronto, Canada, in 1999; against 12 other teams in Vancouver, Canada, in 2001; against 17 other teams at Busch Gardens, Fla., in 2003; and against 17 other teams in Budapest, Hungary, in 2005. The 2007 competition at SeaWorld, San Diego, was won by Mexico, which beat 16 other teams.

Major China-based producers and users of palm oil have committed support for sustainable palm oil, "an important boost for efforts to halt tropical deforestation," WWF reported today.

The public statement, made at the 2nd International Oil and Fats Summit in Beijing on July 9, committed the companies to "support the promotion, procurement and use of sustainable palm oil in China,'"as well as "support the production of sustainable palm oil through any investments in producing countries." (The full text of the statement is at the bottom of this page.)

China is the world's largest importer of palm oil, accounting for one third of all global trade.

"Increasing demand for palm oil, which is used in everything from soap to chocolate bars, is causing considerable damage to fragile rainforest environments, threatening endangered species like tigers, and contributing to global climate change," WWF said.

palm-oil-plantation-picture.jpgConvoluted rows of oil palms march across a plantation in aerial view in Malaysia.

NGS photo by James P. Blair

Palm oil is the most produced vegetable oil in the world, with about 37 million tonnes produced per year around the world, according to WWF.

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Although palm oil is a more sustainable source of vegetable oil than other crops such as soy and rapeseed (canola oil), there are concerns that growing global demand for palm oil for food and biofuel could lead to rapid and poorly managed expansion of oil palm production that could have serious environmental and social consequences.

Palm oil producers and buyers signing the statement of support for sustainable palm oil included Wilmar International, IOI Group, KLK Berhad, Kulim Malaysia Berhad, Asian Agri., Premier Foods and Unilever. Oxfam International, TransAsia Lawyers, and Solidaridad China have also signed the statement.

"Given the massive of volumes of palm oil now being purchased, any move China makes towards using sustainable palm oil will have a big influence on protecting tropical forest resources in South East Asia and other areas," said WWF-China Country Representative Dermot O'Gorman.

palm-oil-picture-2.jpgNGS photo of a vendor selling palm ooil in a market in the Democratic Republic of Congo by W. Robert Moore

WWF and Unilever helped set up the international Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) in 2004, with the aim of establishing global standards for sustainable palm oil production and promoting the use of products containing sustainable palm oil.

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A credible standard that defines sustainable palm oil production has been developed and a system for certification and trade mechanisms in certified sustainable palm oil are in place. However, there have been concerns that consumers worldwide have been slow to support products that use certified palm oil (see news links below).

WWF-China first introduced sustainable palm oil to Chinese companies in 2004, and continues to encourage the country's buyers, producers, and traders to participate in RSPO, the Switzerland-based environmental organization said.

"Sustainable palm oil received a massive boost in November 2008 when Dr. Huo Jiangguo, President of China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Foodstuffs and Native Produce, attended the RSPO annual conference in Indonesia and announced that China supported the drive for more sustainable palm oil products."

"Industry in China acknowledges that sustainability is one of the key criteria of ensuring competence in the global market."

"Industry in China acknowledges that sustainability is one of the key criteria of ensuring competence in the global market," said Bian Zhenghu, vice president of the China Chamber of Commerce during his opening address to the forum. "The Roundtable encourages the entire industry chain to make a move towards sustainability, and also gives Chinese stakeholders a big opportunity to play a significant role achieving the aims of RSPO."

Statement of Support: Promotion of Sustainable Palm Oil in China

This Statement of Support is a non-legally binding expression of support by the signatories on the promotion of sustainable palm oil in China.

Recognizing that
• China is the largest consumer of palm oil which is an important and versatile raw material for both food and non-food products, including biofuel
• It is important that palm oil is produced in a sustainable manner as defined by the Principles and Criteria of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO)
• Certified sustainable palm oil is now available in commercial quantities

The signatories of this Statement of Support commit themselves to
• Support the promotion, procurement and use of sustainable palm oil in China.
• Support the production of sustainable palm oil through any investments in producing countries that are consistent with the principles for sustainable palm oil production, national laws and China's guidelines for sustainable agriculture.

 

Further reading:

Clearing Land for Biofuels Makes Global Warming Worse (National Geographic News)

Biofuels Could Do More Harm Than Good, UN Report Warns (National Geographic News)

The slippery business of palm oil (The Guardian)

Backers Don't Buy 'Friendly' Palm Oil (Wall Street Journal)

Once a Dream Fuel, Palm Oil May Be an Eco-Nightmare (New York Times)

How the palm oil industry is Cooking the Climate (Greenpeace)

Why Biofuels Are the Rainforest's Worst Enemy (Mother Jones blog)

Slow Sales Of Sustainable Palm Oil Threaten Tropical Forests (WWF press release)

Cruel Oil: How Palm Oil Harms Health, Rain Forests0 and Wildlife (Center for Science in the Public Interest)

 

Chinese alligators reintroduced into China from the United States are breeding successfully in the wild on an island in the mouth of the Yangtze River, the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society said today.

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Photo © WCS

"The alligator hatchlings--15 in number--are the offspring of a group of alligators that includes animals from the Wildlife Conservation Society's Bronx Zoo," WCS said. "The baby alligators represent a milestone for the 10-year effort to reintroduce the Chinese alligator on Chongming Island, located at the mouth of China's Yangtze River."

The announcement was made at the International Congress for Conservation Biology, convened by the Society for Conservation Biology in Beijing, China (July 11-16).

"The success of this small population suggests that there's hope for bringing the Chinese alligator back to some parts of its former distribution."

"This is fantastic news," said WCS researcher John Thorbjarnarson, an expert on crocodilians and a participant in the project. "The success of this small population suggests that there's hope for bringing the Chinese alligator back to some parts of its former distribution."

Plans to reintroduce Chinese alligators (Alligator sinensis) started in 1999 with a survey conducted by WCS, the Anhui Forestry Bureau, and the East China Normal University in Anhui Province.

Anhui was the only remaining location where the reptiles were still found in the wild, in a small fraction of the alligator's former range. "The results of the survey were dire, with an estimate of fewer than 130 animals in a declining population," WCS said.

An international workshop on the species was held in 2001, followed by recommendations for the reintroduction of captive-bred alligators. The first three animals released in Hongxing Reserve of Xuancheng County in Anhui in 2003 were from the Anhui Research Center of Chinese Alligator Reproduction (ARCCAR).

Chinese-alligator-picture-2.jpgPhoto © WCS

To ensure the maximum genetic diversity for the effort, project participants imported 12 more animals to Changxing Yinjiabian Chinese Alligator Nature Reserve from North America, including four from the Bronx Zoo, WCS said. "From this group, three animals from the U.S. were released in 2007 along with three more alligators from Changxing.

"The alligators were given health examinations by veterinary professionals from WCS's Global Health Program and the Shanghai Wildlife Zoo and fitted with radio transmitters for remote monitoring before being released.

"Experts reported that the reintroduced alligators successfully hibernated, and then in 2008, bred in the wild."

With a former range that covered a wide watershed area of East China, the Chinese alligator--or "tu long," which means "muddy dragon"--is now listed as "Critically Endangered" on IUCN's Red List of Threatened Species and is the most threatened of the 23 species of crocodilians in the world today, WCS added. "It is one of only two alligator species in existence (the other is the better known, and much better off, American alligator)."

Chinese-alligator-picture-1.jpgPhoto © WCS

The Yangtze River, where the reintroduction of these alligators took place, is the third longest river in the world (after the Amazon and the Nile) and is China's most economically important waterway. The world's largest hydro-electric dam---the Three Gorges Dam---is also located on the river.

"The high levels of development along the river have become a challenge for native wildlife," WCS said. "In 2006 a comprehensive search for the Yangtze River dolphin, or baiji, didn't find any, although one isolated sighting of a dolphin was made in 2007."

Other participants in the alligator reintroduction project include the East China Normal University, Shanghai Forestry Bureau, Changxing Yinjiabian Chinese Alligator Nature Reserve, and Wetland Park of Shanghai Industrial Investment (Holding) Co. Ltd.

 The project is being supported by the Ocean Park Conservation Foundation, Hong Kong.

The first integrated analysis for all coastal areas of the world has ranked hotspots of human impact.

The hottest hotspot is at the mouth of the Mississippi River, says Benjamin S. Halpern, lead author of the study, with the other top 10 in Asia and the Mediterranean.

Nutrient runoff from farms draining into the Mississippi has caused a persistent "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico, where the river runs into the ocean. The dead zone is caused by an overgrowth of algae that feeds on the nutrients and takes up most of the oxygen in the water.

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The hottest hotspot of land-based impact on marine ecosystems is the Mississippi River. The river plume is shown here as seen from space.

Image by NASA

The Mississippi mouth and the other hotspots are areas where conservation efforts will almost certainly fail if they don't directly address what people are doing on land upstream from these locations, said Halpern, who is based at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) at the University of California in Santa Barbara (UCSB).

The study was published in the Journal of Conservation Letters.

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Global hotspots where human activities on land are impacting coastal marine ecosystems. The numbers show the rank order of the hottest hotspots (red dots). The blue and green dots are land-based activities that are having an important effect on marine systems but not as much as those areas marked by the red dots.

Illustration courtesy B. Halpern and colleagues, NCEAS

"Resource management and conservation in coastal waters must address a litany of impacts from human activities, from the land, such as urban runoff and other types of pollution, and from the sea," Halpern said.

"One of the great challenges is to decide where and how much to allocate limited resources to tackling these problems."

"One of the great challenges is to decide where and how much to allocate limited resources to tackling these problems," he said. "Our results identify where it is absolutely imperative that land-based threats are addressed--so-called hotspots of land-based impact--and where these land-based sources of impact are minimal or can be ignored."

The study surveyed four key land-based drivers of ecological change:

  • nutrient input from agriculture in urban settings
  • organic pollutants derived from pesticides
  • inorganic pollutants from urban runoff
  • direct impact of human populations on coastal marine habitats.

 

Not All Coastal Waters Fully Impacted

A large portion of the world's coastlines experience very little effect of what happens on land, nearly half of the coastline and more than 90 percent of all coastal waters, Halpern said.

"This is because a vast majority of the planet's landscape drains into relatively few very large rivers, that in turn affect a small amount of coastal area.

"In these places with little impact from human activities on land, marine conservation can and needs to focus primarily on what is happening in the ocean. For example: fishing, climate change, invasive species, and commercial shipping."

Coauthors from NCEAS are Colin M. Ebert, Carrie V. Kappel, Matthew Perry, Kimberly A. Selkoe, and Shaun Walbridge. Fiorenza Micheli of Stanford University's Hopkins Marine Station and Elizabeth M. P. Madin of UCSB's Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology are also co-authors. Selkoe is also affiliated with the University of Hawaii's Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology.

NCEAS is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the National Marine Sanctuaries, and an NSF Graduate Research Fellowship provided additional support for this research.

Rising demand for pangolins, mostly from mainland China, compounded by lax laws is wiping out the unique toothless anteaters from their native habitats in Southeast Asia, TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network, said today.

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Undercover photo courtesy TRAFFIC

"Illegal trade in Asian pangolin meat and scales has caused the scaly anteaters to disappear from large swathes of Cambodia, Vietnam and Lao PDR," TRAFFIC said a panel of experts had concluded.

The investigation was funded in part by Sea World & Busch Gardens Conservation Fund and the National Geographic Society's Conservation Trust. (A description of the research grant can be read at the bottom of this page.)

"China has a long history of consuming pangolin as meat and in traditional medicine," a TRAFFIC report on the investigation states. "Due to continual demand and the decreasing Chinese wild population, in the past few years pangolin smuggling from Southeast Asia has resulted in great declines in these producing countries' wild populations, as well."

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Undercover photo courtesy TRAFFIC

Although the animals are protected under national legislation in all Asian range states, and have been prohibited from international trade through the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) since 2002, this legislation is having little impact on the illicit trade, TRAFFIC said in a statement.

Watch this National Geographic video "What in the World is a Pangolin?"

Pangolins are the most frequently encountered mammals seized from illegal traders in Asia, and are highly unusual in not possessing teeth, TRAFFIC said.

"Pangolins, like the laws designed to protect them, lack bite," said Chris Shepherd, acting director for TRAFFIC Southeast Asia.

"Pangolin populations clearly cannot stand the incessant poaching pressure, which can only be stopped by decisive government-backed enforcement action in the region,"  Shepherd added.

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Undercover picture of pangolins courtesy TRAFFIC

According to pangolin hunters and traders, there are so few pangolins left in forests throughout Cambodia, Vietnam and Lao PDR, they are now sourcing animals from their last remaining strongholds in Southeast Asia and beyond, TRAFFIC said.

"Recent large seizures back up these reports. They include 24 tonnes of frozen pangolins from Sumatra, Indonesia, seized in Vietnam this March and 14 tonnes of frozen animals seized in Sumatra this April. There have also been recent instances of African pangolins seized in Asia."

"Pangolins save us millions of dollars a year in pest destruction ... we cannot afford to overlook their ecological role as natural controllers of termites and ants."

"Pangolins save us millions of dollars a year in pest destruction," says Simon Stuart, chair of the IUCN Species Survival Commission. "These shy creatures provide a vital service and we cannot afford to overlook their ecological role as natural controllers of termites and ants."

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Pangolin photo by Bjorn Olesen/TRAFFIC

The key to tackling the pangolin crisis is better enforcement of existing national and international laws designed to protect pangolins, better monitoring of the illegal trade, and basic research to find where viable pangolin populations still exist and whether ravaged populations can recover given adequate protection, according to TRAFFIC

The experts on pangolins consulted in the investigation included scientific researchers, government law enforcement officers from most Asian pangolin range States, CITES management and scientific authorities and animal rescue centres, who convened at a workshop hosted by Wildlife Reserves Singapore at the Singapore Zoo.

Watch this TRAFFIC video "Pangolins in peril":

National Geographic Grant

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The National Geographic Conservation Trust contributed to the funding of the TRAFFIC investigation with a grant made in 2007.

Here is the project description:

Regardless of there being no legal trade permitted under national or international regulations, pangolins are the most numerous mammal species found in confiscated cargoes throughout Southeast Asia.

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Photo of traditional medicines using pangolin body parts courtesy TRAFFIC

The majority of these shipments are bound for China, for use in traditional medicines and for consumption as wild meat and tonic food.

The bulk of the pangolins currently in trade are likely Manis javanica sourced from Malaysia and Indonesia, as populations in most other range countries have already been decimated.

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Undercover photo of pangolin scales courtesy TRAFFIC

Middlemen in Singapore are likely to play a significant role in directing trade, but pangolins have been seized regularly in Malaysia, Thailand, Lao PDR and Vietnam en route to end-use markets.

However, very little is known of the actual dynamics of this trade, making focused interventions difficult.

TRAFFIC aims to examine and document the trade in detail and work closely with relevant authorities to take action to save pangolins from further illegal exploitation.

More about pangolins from TRAFFIC:

The full report, "Proceedings of the workshop on trade and conservation of pangolins native to South and Southeast Asia" can be downloaded at http://www.traffic.org/species-reports/traffic_species_mammals51.pdf

There are four species of pangolin in Asia; Thick-tailed pangolin (Manis crassicaudata), Philippine pangolin (M. culionensis), Sunda pangolin (M. javanica) and Chinese pangolin (M. pentadactyla).

All pangolins in illegal trade are wild-sourced as they cannot be captive bred on a commercial scale.

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Photo of pangolin courtesy TRAFFIC

In the wild, pangolins breed slowly, producing just one young at a time, making populations particularly vulnerable to over-exploitation.

TRAFFIC, the wildlife trade monitoring network, works to ensure that trade in wild plants and animals is not a threat to the conservation of nature. TRAFFIC is a joint programme of IUCN and WWF.  

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Undercover photo of pangolins courtesy TRAFFIC

Guests at the Island Beachcomber Hotel on St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin islands received an unexpected visitor from the ocean last night. A giant leatherback turtle came ashore to deposit her eggs at the feet of guests, a rare but welcome surprise that delighted all who experienced it.

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Photo courtesy Doug Norwood

"It thrilled our guests," said hotel general manager Rebekah Saville in a telephone interview today. "Our staff who have been here for as long as 30 years say they have never seen anything like this before."

The leatherback was one of three turtles known to have come ashore to lay eggs on St. Thomas in recent weeks. The turtle that came on to the Lindberg Beach in front of the Beachcomber went as far as a line of beach chairs before digging a hole to bury her eggs in the sand.

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Photo courtesy Doug Norwood

Hotel staff cordoned off the area and the nest has been placed under 24-hour security guard.

"We thought she was going to go to the bar for a beer," quipped Doug Norwood, a hotel guest from North Carolina, who made the photographs on this page. "But all she did was cover her nest and go back out to sea."

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Leatherbacks are the largest living sea turtles, growing up to seven feet (two meters) long and exceeding 2,000 pounds (900 kilograms). Their evolutionary roots have been traced back more than 100 million years.

They are designated as endangered worldwide under the U.S. Endangered Species Act. The main threats to them are loss of habitat (including fewer suitable beaches for nesting), entanglement in fishing lines, and ingestion of plastic bags they mistake for jellyfish, their preferred food.

"We called experts from Coral World and several government departments to alert them to this," Saville said.

"It's a miracle that this has happened now, right before dredging of St Thomas harbor is about to start to accommodate new cruise ships. The sand from the dredging is supposed to be dumped in our bay, which threatens our marine life. Now we hope that the presence of the turtle eggs will stop those plans," she said.

The leatherback may have been passing St. Thomas when she felt the urge for one final round of egg-laying, said Coral World Ocean Park assistant curator Erica Palmer. "This is the end of the leatherback nesting season and she could have laid her first eggs somewhere else before heading back to her feeding grounds, when she felt the urge to lay her last eggs," Palmer explained.

St. Thomas had seen a increase in leatherback nesting in recent years, Palmer added, most likely because the turtles' numbers were increasing in the Atlantic Ocean. "There have been a lot of studies of these guys on St. Croix, which is a very popular nesting site for them. As the population grows they are starting to nest in different locations."

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Photo courtesy Doug Norwood

Palmer said the rise in leatherback nesting on St. Thomas, a popular Caribbean tourism destination visited daily by cruise ships, started being properly studied by conservationists and government agencies only recently. "We are trying to get a general sense of what beaches they are using so we can make special efforts to protect them," she said.

The eggs left in front of the Beachcomber Hotel last night will be carefully guarded, Palmer said. "As we approach the time for hatching--about 60 to 75 days after the eggs were deposited--volunteers will be posted to sit by the nest through the night to make sure that the hatchlings make their journey to the ocean safely.

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Photo courtesy Doug Norwood

"The contents of the nest will be examined to make sure no stragglers are left behind. The egg shells will be studied to look for undeveloped eggs and deformed hatchlings, count the number of eggs hatched, and make an overall assessment of the health of the turtles," Palmer said.

Coral World is currently researching turtle populations and the effects of lighting on turtles.

Nat geo World Camp picture 1.jpgBy Karen Gilmour

Teams from Canada, Poland and the United States will compete Wednesday in the finals of the ninth National Geographic World Championship, an every-other-year competition being held this year in Mexico City.

Fifteen three-member teams from around the world took a written test yesterday, then competed in a geography activity this morning.

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The three finalists are the highest-scoring teams on the written and activity rounds.

The championship finals will be held at the National Museum of Anthropology and History.

The defending world champion is Mexico.

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Photos by Tyrone Turner

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South Africa's Karoo region is a sprawling heartland that separates the grasslands and industrial northern and eastern parts of the country from the vineyards and craggy coastal belt of the Cape.

Travelers speeding by road or rail between Cape Town and Johannesburg see little more than scrubland broken by flattop hills South Africans call koppies. Small towns flash by, seemingly assembled from a standard construction catalog of churches, general trading stores, and hotel-saloons to provide services to outlying sheep ranches every fifty miles or so.

It's not unlike the arid interiors of Australia and North America, you might imagine.

But traversing the Karoo via the main transportation corridor reveals nothing about the region's distant past, when it was lush and swampy and the stomping ground of dinosaurs.

There is also little to indicate that the modern greater Karoo is a special and fascinating place.

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The Karoo's thousands of species of succulents make the region a paradise for botanists.

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

Few people know, for example, that the international environmental organization WWF has called the Karoo the world's most extraordinary desert, a designation that has earned it a place as the world's only biodiversity "hotspot" that is entirely arid. One-third of the world's 10,000 species of succulent plants grows in the Karoo. Among them thrives a host of insects, reptiles, birds, and small mammals.

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Migrating springbok herds once stretched from horizon to horizon in the Karoo.

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

The Karoo is where the earliest European explorers reported seeing single herds of tens of thousands of springbok, the small, hardy, fleet-footed gazelle that is South Africa's national animal.

On its coastal side, on the fringes of the desert created by the cold Benguela current that courses up the western side of southern Africa, one of the greatest spectacles of nature can be experienced. For a few weeks of the year vast parts of the Succulent Karoo are carpeted with wild flowers, a profusion of color that paints entire landscapes purple, green, red, and orange.

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The aloe is a common site in the Karoo. The plant has a variety of medicinal uses.

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

Part of the Karoo is also the home of the San, the people who have been found to be the most closely related, genetically, to human ancestors. Recent research suggests that modern humans probably originated in the general area of the Karoo, perhaps somewhere along the Orange River, which today forms the border between South Africa and Namibia. The real Garden of Eden.

It's in this strange and magnificent land that husband-and-wife travel journalists Chris Marais and Julienne du Toit settled a few years ago. From their home in the Karoo town of Cradock, they set out to discover, explore, and document the South African heartland.

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Windmills like these are a common site throughout the Karoo. These have been collected in a "windmill museum."

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

In their new book "Karoo Keepsakes" (MLM Publishers, 2009), Marais and Du Toit showcase the awesome scenery, magnificent wildlife, and eccentric characters of the Karoo. It's a book that reveals and celebrates South Africa's best-kept travel secret.

"Rush hour traffic, strange faces that drive past without smiling, ten-day downpours, crime waves, and vast swathes of boxlike developments--we don't have them here in the Dry Country," they write in the book.

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Itinerant laborers travel with all their possessions from farm to farm in search of work. Many of these nomads are descendants of the San.

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

What is on offer in the Karoo can be seen in 270 pages filled with hundreds of images and wry vignettes--a tapestry of experiences that range from one of the last clear night skies left on Earth (a great place to see the diamond arc of our home galaxy, the Milky Way, stretching away from our sun) to unconventional art festivals.

"Karoo Keepsakes" reminds me of old postcards that sell for exhorbitant prices on eBay. The postcards recall days and sites long forgotten. But in "Karoo Keepsakes" the photos document what can still be seen today, one of the last travel destinations that retains its authentic local character. 

From the global significance of the unique geology, plants and wildlife, to the flavor of the smallest villages, to a cast of unforgettable characters, "Karoo Keepsakes" has captured the essence and spirit of a genuinely unique part of the world.

Richtersveld-Stockpost.jpgSarah and Kous Joseph with their goats at a grazing outpost. Nomadic goat herding has been a family tradition for generations.

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

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The Karoo is a great spot to observe the stars. Several observatories have been built to take advantage of the thin, dry air, remoteness from big cities, and predominantly clear skies.

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

For more about the Karoo and "Karoo Keepsakes," visit Karoo Space >>

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                                                                              Julienne du Toit and Chris Marais in the Karoo.

Photo courtesy Chris Marais

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The risks of legalized farming of tigers are too great a gamble for the world to take, the World Bank told the 58th meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Standing Committee, meeting in Geneva, Switzerland this week.

"We cannot know for sure if tiger farming will work. And if it does not work the downside risks are just too high--irreversible harm," says a formal statement read to the CITES meeting yesterday by Keshav Varma, director at the World Bank and leader of the World Bank's Global Tiger Initiative.

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NGS stock photo of wild tigers in a pen by Michael Nichols

CITES is an international agreement between 175 governments that aims to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival.

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The Bank's position on tiger farming repudiates a controversial suggestion that poaching of wild tigers for traditional medicine and aphrodisiacs would diminish substantially if tigers, which breed prolfically in captivity, could be farmed--much like other animals are farmed for food.

"Tiger farming has proven to be a divisive issue and one that has distracted many in the conservation community from the common goal of saving wild tigers in their wild habitats, " the Bank says in its statement.

tiger-picture-6.jpg"Too much faith has been placed lately upon the guidance that economics and market mechanisms can bring to this very complex issue.

NGS photo by Michael Nichols

"Economics is an extremely useful guide to policy, but as the World Bank can authoritatively say from the position of its vast professional and practical experience, narrow economic approach has its limits and it cannot meaningfully apply to this subject.

"There are clever theories that tell us that tiger farming is and could become the panacea for conservation. But there are an equal number of experts and theories who inform us otherwise.

"This is not surprising. There are myriad unknowns and even more unknowables that no amount of research can cast light upon."

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NGS photo of seized illegally traded tiger parts by Michael Nichols

World Bank identifies serious risks in tiger farming:

  • Will legalized farming facilitate laundering?
  • Would it create new markets and an even higher demand for wild tiger products--for those who want a luxury good--the "real thing"?
  • And why if farming is so effective are wild bears still poached when there is a surplus of farmed bear bile in the world?

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"The truth is that we cannot provide answers to these counterfactuals that can only be known after the fact," the bank says in its statement.

"And this is why we need to exercise caution. Extinction is irreversible, so prudence and precaution suggest that the risks of legalized farming are too great a gamble for the world to take.

NGS photo by Michael Nichols

"We cannot know for sure if tiger farming will work. And if it does not work the downside risks are just too high--irreversible harm."

Having carefully weighed the economic arguments, the Bank says, it urges the CITES community to uphold the ban on wild tiger products and for all countries to continue to ban the domestic trade of wild tigers.

"We also call upon the international community at large to join efforts in providing the necessary technical and other support to the respective countries in phasing out tiger farming. This is the only safe way to ensure that wild tigers may have a future tomorrow."

The World Bank's statement was endorsed by WWF International, a global environmental organization with headquarters in Switzerland.

"Stopping all trade in tiger parts, and phasing out these tiger farms, is of the utmost urgency if the tiger is to survive in the wild."

"Stopping all trade in tiger parts, and phasing out these tiger farms, is of the utmost urgency if the tiger is to survive in the wild", said Susan Lieberman, director of the Species Programme of WWF International, "It is time for the world community to join together, with tiger range state governments, to stop all poaching of tigers for illegal trade, and WWF welcomes the engagement of the World Bank in these efforts".

Tiger trade is prohibited internationally and banned domestically in all of its range countries, including China--historically the largest market for tiger products, WWF said. 

"However, owners of privately run tiger farms and a contingent of wealthy business men across China have been pressuring the Chinese government to allow legal trade in tiger parts within China and lift its domestic tiger trade ban, implemented in 1993."

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National Geographic Magazine published a cover story about wild tigers in December, 1997. "No one knows how many wild tigers exist today," the article said.

"The commonly cited estimate of 5,000 to 7,000 is a guess, since census methods can be faulty, some governments inflate numbers, and cat experts may understate numbers for fear of losing protected status.

"What is certain: If tigers are to survive in the wild, they need massive human intervention."

Save the Tiger Fund, a program of the National Fish and Wildlife Foundaton, estimates that there were less than 5,000 tigers left in the wild by 2005--down from an estimated 100,000 in 1980. Only two countries had populations of more than 500 wild tigers.

By contrast, according to Save the Tiger Fund, there were more than 15,000 tigers in farms, safari parks, and menageries.

Video: Tiger Eye: Up Close and Personal
Watch how National Geographic photographers used motion-sensitive cameras to capture tigers in the wild.

More from National Geographic News:

India's Tigers Number Half as Many as Thought

Chinese Tigers Learn Hunting, Survival Skills in Africa

As Tigers Disappear, Poachers Turn to Leopards in India

Black Market Tigers Linked to Thai Temple, Report Says

Saving Jaguars, Tigers Can Prevent Human Diseases?

Captive Tigers Harbor Rare "Purebred" Genes

Tiger Habitat Plummeted 40 Percent in 10 Years, Survey Finds

Siberian Tigers Stable, According to Landmark Survey

Big Cats Kept as Pets Across U.S., Despite Risk

Washington D.C.'s giant panda cub, Tai Shan, officially celebrated his fourth birthday this morning--complete with singing, guests and a massive, three-tiered "veggie-sicle" cake, Smithsonian's National Zoo said.

 
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"The frozen masterpiece was made over the course of two weeks by Zoo commissary staff by freezing a combination of water, beets and beet juice while enhancing it with bamboo and fruit. Tai quickly took to the frozen treat, licking at the ice, spotting his furry face with the melting beet juice.

Tai Shan is on the cusp of adulthood, the zoo added "At age four, he is considered a teenager in 'bear years.'"

Tai Shan (pronounced tie-SHON, meaning "Peaceful Mountain") was born early in the morning on July 9, 2005. He is the first offspring of Mei Xiang and Tian Tian, the National Zoo's second pair of giant pandas. They were born at the China Research and Conservation Center for the Giant Panda in Wolong, Sichuan Province.

The birth of Tai Shan was a triumph for the National Zoo. Breeding of pandas in captivity has been difficult to achieve, particularly outside China.

Read more about the National Zoo's giant pandas >> 

Smithsonian's National Zoo photos by Mehgan Murphy

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DNA "fingerprinting" has become a reliable way to identify individual humans or animals. A biological sample such as blood, semen, or hair can be matched to an individual.

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Eastern imperial eagle chick in Kazahkstan picture courtesy Andrew DeWoody

In the world of bird research a DNA match can be made with a feather. Each feather found in a nest or on the ground can be mapped back to the individual that shed it, much like a sampling of scat can be used to identify individual leopards, wolves or other animals.

Purdue University researcher Andrew DeWoody gathers feathers shed by endangered eagles, a technique that yields plenty of information about them.

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Andrew DeWoody studies eagles by using DNA in their feathers to track their movements and habits. This technique allows DeWoody to study larger populations and prevents injuries to birds because they aren't captured.

Purdue Agricultural Communication photo/Tom Campbell

"Many birds are small, easy to catch and abundant," said DeWoody, professor of genetics, in a Purdue University news release. "With eagles, the effort can be 100 to 1,000 times greater than catching chickadees."

"Eagles can be hard to find, they often require live bait to attract and, with sharp talons and beaks capable of snapping off human fingers, they pose a risk to their would-be captors," DeWoody added.

"Instead of catching eagles, DeWoody collects their feathers and uses the small amount of DNA in them to create a tag that corresponds to a particular bird. Those tags can be used to determine population, parentage, roosting patterns and sex ratio."

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DeWoody's research method is described in a chapter of the "Handbook of Nature Conservation : Global, Environmental & Economic Issues" (Nova Science Publishers, July 2009) which was released this week. The chapter is a compilation of his research on the topic.

"In an afternoon, you can go out and pick up hundreds of feathers," DeWoody said. "As field work goes, it's about as easy as it gets."

Most birds are studied by catching them in nets and attaching tracking devices. Researchers can then follow the birds and use radio technology to triangulate their locations.

Eagles and other large birds present several challenges, however, even beyond catching them.

"Eagles will literally fly hundreds of miles in two days," DeWoody said. "They fly in areas where you can't track them in a pickup truck."

Capturing a bird as large as an eagle can often be traumatic to the animal.

"They're wild animals that don't want to be caught," DeWoody said. "They can get hurt as well.

"Using feathers, you avoid all that."

Costs can be as high as U.S. $5,000 for the tracking technology that researchers must attach to eagles, a prohibitive cost if studying more than a few birds.

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DeWoody's studies were done in Kazakhstan with eastern imperial eagles, a top predator of international concern because its population is declining. A 2006 field trip to Kazakhstan to gather and study the bird's feathers was funded in part by the National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and Conservation. (Photos DeWoody made of eagles in Kazakhstan are above and below.)

"The feathers give a good picture of recent eagle habits because they do not survive long in Kazakhstan's winters," Purdue said. "Any feathers collected after the winter thaw, then, had to have been recently dropped.

"In one study, DeWoody's team found that an area thought to have about 40 juvenile eagles living in it based on human observation actually had closer to 300."

The work also helped researchers understand more about the roosting habits of some eagles that use a nest for months at a time versus others who float around from roost to roost.

Another study showed that DNA could be used to distinguish eagle species from one another, and that imperial, golden and white-tailed eagles often utilized the same roosts at the same time.

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Eastern imperial eagle chick in Kazahkstan picture courtesy Andrew DeWoody

Rhinos are falling to poachers at the rate of two to three per week in some areas as Asian demand for their horns escalates, according to a report to the 58th meeting of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) Standing Committee this week in Geneva.

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Photo of white rhino poached for horn by Martin harvey/WWF-Canon

Poachers in Africa and Asia are killing an ever increasing number of rhinos to meet a growing demand for horns believed in some countries to have medicinal value, says the briefing to the international wildlife trade regulation body by WWF, the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and their affiliated wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC.

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An estimated three rhinos were illegally killed each month in all of Africa from 2000-05, out of a population of around 18,000, the groups said in a news statement today. "In contrast, 12 rhinoceroses now are being poached each month in South Africa and Zimbabwe alone."

"Illegal rhino horn trade to destinations in Asia is driving the killing, with growing evidence of involvement of Vietnamese, Chinese and Thai nationals in the illegal procurement and transport of rhino horn out of Africa," the briefing states.

NGS photo of knives made with rhino horn on sale in Yemen by Steve Raymer

Rhino poaching is also a problem in Asia. About 10 rhinos have been poached in India and at least seven in Nepal since January alone--out of a combined population of only 2,400 endangered rhinos.

"Rhinos are in a desperate situation ...This is the worst rhino poaching we have seen in many years and it is critical for governments to stand up and take action."

"Rhinos are in a desperate situation," said Susan Lieberman, director of the Species Programme, WWF-International. "This is the worst rhino poaching we have seen in many years and it is critical for governments to stand up and take action to stop this deadly threat to rhinos worldwide.

"It is time to crack down on organized criminal elements responsible for this trade, and to vastly increase assistance to range countries in their enforcement efforts."

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Almost all rhino species are listed in CITES (the Convention on Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) in Appendix I, which means that any international trade of any rhino parts for commercial purposes is illegal.

"Increased demand for rhino horn, alongside a lack of law enforcement, a low level of prosecutions for poachers who are actually arrested and increasingly daring attempts by poachers and thieves to obtain the horn is proving to be too much for rhinos and some populations are seriously declining," said Steven Broad, executive director of TRAFFIC.

NGS photo of slices of rhino horn sold in Japan as aphrodisiacs by Steve Raymer.

The situation is particularly dire in Zimbabwe where such problems are threatening the success of more than a decade's work of bringing rhino populations back to healthy levels, the briefing said.

"For example, earlier this week a park ranger arrested with overwhelming evidence against him for having killed three rhinos in the Chipinge Safari Area, was acquitted without any satisfactory explanation for the verdict.

"Similarly, in September 2008, a gang of four Zimbabwean poachers who admitted to killing 18 rhinos were also freed in a failed judiciary process."

Firm International Action

The briefing concludes that governments need "an accurate and up-to-date picture of the status, conservation and trade in African and Asian rhinoceroses, as well as the factors driving the consumption of rhinoceros horn, so that firm international action can be taken to arrest this immediate threat to rhinoceros populations worldwide."

"Rhino populations in both Africa and Asia are being seriously threatened by poaching and illegal trade," said Jane Smart, director of IUCN's Biodiversity Conservation Group. "IUCN and its African and Asian Rhino Specialist Groups are working hard to gather data and information on rhinos so that CITES parties can make informed decisions and ensure that rhinos are still here for generations to come."

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NGS photo of live rhinos in Africa by Robert Sisson

The 58th meeting of the CITES Standing Committee is being held in Geneva from July 6 -10 . This issue will be further discussed at the 15th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to CITES, which will be held in Doha, Qatar March 13-25, 2010.

CITES is an international agreement between 175 governments that aims to ensure that international trade in specimens of wild animals and plants does not threaten their survival.

For 60 years scientists did not know why the adult Bourret's horseshoe bat (Rhinolophus paradoxolophus, the bat on the right in the picture below) has a nose so much larger than the nose of a typical horseshoe bat species (left).

Now Rolf Mueller, an associate professor with the Virginia Tech mechanical engineering department and director for the Bio-inspired Technology (BIT) Laboratory in Danville, Virginia, thinks he has an explanation: The bat uses its elongated nose to create a highly focused sonar beam.

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Photos by Rolf Mueller

"Much like a flashlight with an adjuster that can create an intense but small beam of light, the bat's nose can create a small but intense sonar beam," Virginia Tech said in a statement released with these photos.

"Mueller and his team used computer animation to compare varying sizes of bat noses, from small noses on other bats to the large nose of the paradoxolophus bat.

Perfect Mark of Evolution

"In what Mueller calls a perfect mark of evolution, he says his computer modeling shows the length of the paradoxolophus bat's nose stops at the exact point the sonar beam's focal point would become ineffective."

Bourret's horseshoe bat, from the remote rainforests of South East Asia, emits ultrasonic beams, or sonar, from its nose. The echoes of the sound wave convey a wealth of information on objects in the bat's environment.

The findings with the paradoxolophus bat are part of a larger study of approximately 120 different bat species and how they use sonar to perceive their environment. Set to finish in February 2010, it is hoped the study's focus on wave-based sensing and communication in bats will help spur groundwork for innovations in cell phone and satellite communications, as well as naval surveillance technology.

A tiny robot with wings that flap like a bat is being developed by researchers at North Carolina State University. Built with emerging smart materials, metal muscles and elastic joints, "robo-bat" is expected to be able to maneuver in tight conditions.

robo-bat-picture.jpgThe skeleton of the robotic bat uses shape-memory metal alloy that is super-elastic for the joints, and smart materials that respond to electric current for the muscular system.

Photo by Gheorghe Bunget, North Carolina State University

"Tiny flying machines can be used for everything from indoor surveillance to exploring collapsed buildings, but simply making smaller versions of planes and helicopters doesn't work very well. Instead, researchers...are mimicking nature's small flyers--and developing robotic bats that offer increased maneuverability and performance," NC State announced this week.

Detection Missions

"Small flyers, or micro-aerial vehicles (MAVs), have garnered a great deal of interest due to their potential applications where maneuverability in tight spaces is necessary," says researcher Gheorghe Bunget. For example, "due to the availability of small sensors, MAVs can be used for detection missions of biological, chemical and nuclear agents."

But, due to their size, devices using a traditional fixed-wing or rotary-wing design have low maneuverability and aerodynamic efficiency.

So Bunget, a doctoral student in mechanical engineering at NC State, and his advisor Stefan Seelecke looked to nature. "We are trying to mimic nature as closely as possible," Seelecke says, "because it is very efficient. And, at the MAV scale, nature tells us that flapping flight--like that of the bat--is the most effective."

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NGS photo of fishing bulldog bat by Bruce Dale

The researchers did extensive analysis of bats' skeletal and muscular systems before developing a "robo-bat" skeleton using rapid prototyping technologies, NC State said.

"The fully assembled skeleton rests easily in the palm of your hand and, at less than 6 grams [less than one fifth of an ounce], feels as light as a feather. The researchers are currently completing fabrication and assembly of the joints, muscular system and wing membrane for the robo-bat, which should allow it to fly with the same efficient flapping motion used by real bats."

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"The key concept here is the use of smart materials," Seelecke says. "We are using a shape-memory metal alloy that is super-elastic for the joints. The material provides a full range of motion, but will always return to its original position - a function performed by many tiny bones, cartilage and tendons in real bats."

The research team is also using smart materials for the muscular system. "We're using an alloy that responds to the heat from an electric current" Seelecke said. "That heat actuates micro-scale wires the size of a human hair, making them contract like 'metal muscles.'

"During the contraction, the powerful muscle wires also change their electric resistance, which can be easily measured, thus providing simultaneous action and sensory input. This dual functionality will help cut down on the robo-bat's weight, and allow the robot to respond quickly to changing conditions--such as a gust of wind--as perfectly as a real bat."

NGS illustration of flying bat by William H. Bond

In addition to creating a surveillance tool with very real practical applications, Seelecke says the robo-bat could also help expand understanding of aerodynamics. "It will allow us to do tests where we can control all of the variables - and finally give us the opportunity to fully understand the aerodynamics of flapping flight."

Bunget will present the research this September at the American Society of Mechanical Engineers Conference on Smart Materials, Adaptive Structures and Intelligent Systems in Oxnard, California.

Why is sex the dominant form of reproduction on the planet? Scientists think they know why--and it all has to do with evasion of parasites.

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NGS photo of elephants mating by Michael Nichols

Sex may have evolved in part as a defense against parasites, an article published in the July issue of the academic journal American Naturalist suggests.

"Despite its central role in biology, sex is a bit of an evolutionary mystery," says a news release about the article.

"Reproducing without sex--like microbes, some plants and even a few reptiles--would seem like a better way to go. Every individual in an asexual species has the ability to reproduce on its own.

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"But in sexual species, two individuals have to combine in order to reproduce one offspring. That gives each generation of asexuals twice the reproductive capacity of sexuals.

"Why then is sex the dominant strategy when the do-it-yourself approach is so much more efficient?"

One hypothesis is that parasites keep asexual organisms from getting too plentiful.

NGS photo of water spiders mating by Robert Sisson

"When an asexual creature reproduces, it makes clones--exact genetic copies of itself.

"Since each clone has the same genes, each has the same genetic vulnerabilities to parasites. If a parasite emerges that can exploit those vulnerabilities, it can wipe out the whole population.

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"On the other hand, sexual offspring are genetically unique, often with different parasite vulnerabilities. So a parasite that can destroy some can't necessarily destroy all.

"That, in theory, should help sexual populations maintain stability, while asexual populations face extinction at the hands of parasites."

There have been few attempts to see if this hypothesis holds in nature, according to the article.

"Enter Potamopyrgus antipodarum, a snail common in fresh-water lakes in New Zealand. What makes these snails interesting is that there are sexual and asexual versions. They provide scientists with an opportunity to compare the two versions side-by-side in nature."

NGS photo of Gelaba baboons mating by Michael Nichols

Jukka Jokela of the Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Mark Dybdahl of the University of Washington and Curtis Lively of Indiana University, Bloomington began observing several populations of these snails for ten years starting in 1994. They monitored the number of sexuals, the number asexuals, and the rates of parasite infection for both.

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NGS photo of ladybugs mating by Robert Sisson

The team found that clones that were plentiful at the beginning of the study became more susceptible to parasites over time.

"As parasite infections increased, the once plentiful clones dwindled dramatically in number. Some clonal types disappeared entirely.
"Meanwhile, sexual snail populations remained much more stable over time."

This, the authors say, is exactly the pattern predicted by the parasite hypothesis.

"The rise and fall of these female-only lineages was surprisingly fast and consistent with the prediction of the parasite hypothesis for sex," Jokela said. "These results suggest that sexual reproduction provides an evolutionary advantage in parasite-rich environments."

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NGS photo of giraffe mating by Michael Nichols 

More from National Geographic News:

Prehistoric Undersea Sex Was No Fluke 

Study Links Origin of Sexual Reproduction With High Mutation Rates

"First Sex" Found in Australian Fossils?

Sex Speeds Up Evolution, Study Finds

The Amazon River originated as a transcontinental river around 11 million years ago and took its present shape around 2.4 million years ago, European researchers said yesterday.

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Amazon River mouth picture courtesy NASA

The finding was based on analysis of two boreholes drilled near the mouth of the planet's largest river by Petrobras, the national oil company of Brazil.

One of the boreholes was nearly 3 miles deep (4.5 kilometers), allowing the scientists to get a look at the sediment that has accumulated on the ocean floor near the mouth of the river over millions of years.

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A team formed by the Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics of the University of Amsterdam, the University of Liverpool and Petrobras used the new oceanic record provided by the drilling core to reconstruct the history of the Amazon. The study was published in the July 2009 issue of the academic journal Geology.

NGS photo of Amazon River by Winfield Parks

"Until recently the Amazon Fan, a sediment column of around 10 kilometres [around 6 miles] in thickness, proved a hard nut to crack, and scientific drilling expeditions such as Ocean Drilling Program could only reach a fraction of it," the University of Amsterdam said in a statement.

"Recent exploration efforts by Petrobras lifted the veil, and sedimentological and paleontological analysis on samples from two boreholes, one of which [was] 4.5 kilometres below sea floor, now permit an insight into the history of both Amazon River and Fan.

"Prior to this publication the exact age of the Amazon River was unknown.

"This research has large implications for our understanding of South American paleogeography and the evolution of aquatic organisms in Amazonia and the Atlantic coast. It is a defining moment as a new ecosystem originates which at the same time forms a geographic divisor," the university added.

Sediment aprons in the proximity of major rivers often hold continuous records of terrestrial material accumulated by the river over time. These records provide a unique insight into the historic climate and geography of the land, , the university said. 

"The information released from this 4.5 kilometre borehole is a scientific breakthrough and stresses the value of cooperation between academia and industry."

More from National Geographic News:

Amazon River Once Flowed Other Way, Study Says

Amazon Longer Than Nile River, Scientists Say

Two types of mosquitoes capable of transmitting the dengue fever virus are invading Southern and Mid-Atlantic states, creating conditions more favorable for an outbreak, according to a report released today by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).

"Areas of the United States previously inhospitable to the disease now support populations of mosquitoes capable of carrying the virus--a problem that may worsen with global warming," NRDC said in a statement.

"An estimated 173.5 million Americans live in counties that now contain one or both of the mosquito species."

Dengue vulnerability in the United States

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Among the social and environmental factors that increase community vulnerability to dengue and other infectious diseases are poor municipal infrastructure and frequent storm damage to homes. Red areas of the map show U.S. counties that have reported the presence of one or both of the mosquito species (Aedes aegypti and Aedes albopictus) that can potentially transmit dengue fever; blue regions highlight the area encompassing most of the positive counties.

Map courtesy NRDC

"Milder winters, hotter, wetter summers and even droughts can bring this insect-borne threat closer to home," said Kim Knowlton, NRDC senior scientist. "Usually relegated to tropical and exotic locales, dengue fever has rarely been an issue in the United States outside of the Texas-Mexico border region. But a changing climate may allow certain species of dengue-spreading-mosquitoes to flourish in nearly half of the United States."

NRDC's report, "Fever Pitch: Mosquito-Borne Threat Spreading in the Americas," finds that mosquitoes capable of transmitting dengue have spread into at least 28 US states, including Texas, Florida, Arizona, and even states as far north as New York and New Hampshire.

"In the United States, the number of physician-reported cases of the disease has more than doubled in the past decade. Nearly 4,000 cases of imported and locally-transmitted dengue were reported to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) between 1995 and 2005, and when the Texas-Mexico border region is included, the number jumps to 10,000 during that time.

"International rates of dengue infection have increased 30-fold in the last 50 years, to an estimated 50 to 100 million infections, a half-million hospitalizations, and 22,000 deaths annually in more than 100 countries."

"International rates of dengue infection have increased 30-fold in the last 50 years, to an estimated 50 to 100 million infections, a half-million hospitalizations, and 22,000 deaths annually in more than 100 countries. In Mexico, Central and South America more than 900,000 dengue fever cases were reported in 2007."

Factors Contributing to Rise in Dengue

Many factors may be contributing to the rise in dengue fever, including increasing international travel and trade, densely-populated communities living in poverty in many countries including the United States, and the effects of global warming, NRDC said.

"Researchers project that because of global warming, in the next 75 years 3 billion additional people will become at risk for the disease across the globe."

Known as "Breakbone Fever" because of its classic symptoms, dengue is characterized by agonizing aching in the bones, joints and muscles, a pounding headache, pain behind the eyes, a high fever and a classic rash.

There is no cure or vaccine against the virus, only preventative and supportive care.

Actions Can Reduce Spread

Both large-scale and individual actions can reduce the spread of dengue fever, NRDC said.

"Individuals can protect themselves and their families from mosquito-borne illnesses by wearing loose-fitting long sleeves and pants when outdoors and using DEET (not more than 30%) on exposed skin when the bugs are biting.

"Individuals can also make sure windows and doors have tight fitting screens and that they don't leave open containers of water in or near their homes. Further precautions should also be taken while traveling to countries where dengue fever is already established.

"At a national and international level, strong climate legislation is needed to slow global warming.

"The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) should require reporting of dengue fever so the spread of the disease within the US can be accurately tracked."

NRDC's report recommends that local and national governments train clinicians, share surveillance data, enhance lab capacity, and coordinate with international partners to prevent future outbreaks and reduce the threat to public health.

The National Resources Defense Council is a nonprofit environmental action group based in New York.

Relax guys, the British scientist who led the team that created human sperm from stem cells in a laboratory does not believe that the technique makes men redundant.

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"However, researchers believe that the issue does need to be debated and legislated for," says Professor Karim Nayernia at Newcastle University and the North East England Stem Cell Institute (NESCI).

"As work progresses and results improve at Newcastle and elsewhere, it may, in theory, be possible to develop IVD [in vitro derived] sperm from embryonic stem lines which have been stored," he says on the NESCI Web site.

Illustration courtesy NIH

NESCI announced today that human sperm has been created using embryonic stem cells for the first time in a scientific development. The tecnique "will lead researchers to a better understanding of the causes of infertility," the Institute said in a statement.

The work is published today (July 8, 2009) in the academic journal Stem Cells and Development.

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"This is an important development as it will allow researchers to study in detail how sperm forms and lead to a better understanding of infertility in men--why it happens and what is causing it," Nayernia said. "This understanding could help us develop new ways to help couples suffering infertility so they can have a child which is genetically their own."

"It will also allow scientists to study how cells involved in reproduction are affected by toxins, for example, why young boys with leukaemia who undergo chemotherapy can become infertile for life--and possibly lead us to a solution."

The team also believe that studying the process of forming sperm could lead to a better understanding of how genetic diseases are passed on.

In the technique developed at Newcastle, stem cells with XY chromosomes (male) were developed into germline stem cells which were then prompted to complete meiosis--cell division with halving of the chromosome set. These were shown to produce fully mature sperm, called scientifically in vitro derived sperm (IVD sperm), NESCI said.

"In contrast, stem cells with XX chromosomes (female) were prompted to form early stage sperm, spermatagonia, but did not progress further. This demonstrates to researchers that the genes on a Y chromosome are essential for meiosis and for sperm maturation."

The IVD sperm will not and cannot be used for fertility treatment, NESCI added. "As well as being prohibited by UK law, the research team say fertilization of human eggs and implantation of embryos would hold no scientific merit for them as they want to study the process as a model for research."

The ability to make sperm in a lab does not mean an end to men, Nayernia says. "In this technique IVD sperm could only be produced from an embryo containing a male (Y) chromosome."

"This does not mean that humans can be produced 'in a dish' and we have no intention of doing this."

"While we can understand that some people may have concerns, this does not mean that humans can be produced 'in a dish' and we have no intention of doing this. This work is a way of investigating why some people are infertile and the reasons behind it. If we have a better understanding of what's going on it could lead to new ways of treating infertility," Nayernia said.

In theory it might be possible to make a baby from IVD sperm, Nayernia says on the NESCI Web site, as the IVD sperm show all the characteristics of sperm--that is they act and look like sperm. "However, this work is not being done to make a baby which is prohibited by law."

sperm-picture-4.jpgIllustration courtesy NIH

The work is in early stages and much more investigation needs to be done on understanding the process and for testing the suitability and safety of IVD sperm as a possible fertility treatment.

"Nayernia believes that in 10 years this could be a treatment offered for example, to young boys who have to undergo chemotherapy which currently often leaves them infertile," NESCI says.

"When combined with other pioneering stem cell techniques, specifically somatic cell nuclear transfer, it could also allow men who are currently infertile the chance to have a child which is genetically their own but again, this will be many years away--at least a decade."

The North East England Stem Cell Institute is a collaboration between Newcastle and Durham Universities, Newcastle NHS Foundation Trust and other partners.

A newly discovered salamander, which is the second-smallest salamander species in the U.S. and one of the smallest in the world at just two inches long, could change what scientists know about some amphibians, the University of Georgia Warnell School of Forestry and Natural Resources said today.

The new salamander is so distinct that it belongs in its own genus (a grouping of related species), according to Carlos Camp, Piedmont College professor who first recognized it as a news species. "It represents the first new genus of four-footed creature discovered in the United States in 50 years."

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Photo of new salamander courtesy UGA

Researchers weren't looking for anything new when they went exploring in the northeast part of Georgia. "But they ended up making a big discovery of a tiny animal," the University of Georgia said in a statement about the discovery.

The salamander is now under study by a diverse group of researchers from several U.S. colleges. The team is searching for more of the salamanders, which are described in a new paper appearing in the Journal of Zoology.

The initial discovery came in spring 2007 near Toccoa, Georgia, when University of Missiouri graduate student Bill Peterman and Warnell graduate student Joe Milanovich stumbled across it while collecting another species of salamander in Stephens County.

"They knew they'd found an animal not known in that region but did not yet know it was a new species," Warnell said in the statement.

Milanovich consulted John Maerz, a Warnell assistant professor of wildlife, who advised the students to take the salamander to Carlos Camp, professor at Piedmont College, who recognized it as a new species. Trip Lamb, a professor at East Carolina University, used genetics to confirm the new species and establish its relationship to other species in the region.

After the students found the first salamander, a female with eggs, in a creek, researchers went back repeatedly looking for others, Warnell said. "That is when Maerz's then 10-year-old son Jack and Milanovich found the first male specimen."

The research team has since found several individuals at the original site, including larvae, and they have found the new species at two other nearby locations in Georgia. Collaborators also found the species at a nearby site in South Carolina, Warnell added.

Evolution of Stream Salamanders

This discovery, according to Maerz, could yield exciting new information on the evolution of stream salamanders in this region.

"Whenever you find something new, it has the potential to change what we know about a range of related species," he said. There are more than 560 species of salamanders worldwide, and approximately 10 percent are found in Georgia."

But that's not the only reason Maerz is excited, Warnell added. "The new species was found in a well-traveled area in the middle of a creek right next to a road, almost hidden in plain sight."

"To make such a find in an area with extensive human activity proves that there are still things out there to discover. It makes you wonder, what else is out there?"

"To make such a find in an area with extensive human activity," Maerz said, "proves that there are still things out there to discover. It makes you wonder, what else is out there?"

With funding from The Environmental Resources Network (TERN), Milanovich and Camp are leading research efforts to describe the ecology of the tiny creatures.

"It is truly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be involved in such a big find, particularly one right in our backyard," Milanovich said. "The fact that it is such a unique animal makes it all the better and gives us more opportunity to continue to learn about the species. One of the best parts of being involved with this project is the collaboration that has come out of the species description, so I am excited to continue working with the other coauthors as we keep unpeeling the onion of U. brucei."

Patch-nosed Salamander

The research team's suggested common name is patch-nosed salamander, based on the lighter coloring on the tiny salamander's nose. The formal Latin name is Urspelerpes brucei for Richard Bruce, professor emeritus at Western Carolina University and a well-respected, longtime salamander researcher who has connections to many members of the research team.

"Dr. Bruce has done much of the foundational work on stream salamander ecology in the region and on the evolution of miniaturization in salamanders, so naming this species after him is a good fit," Maerz said.

More from National Geographic News:

New Salamander Found -- One of World's Smallest

"Ugly" Salamander Lacks Lungs

Elephants, giraffe, impala and other animals in Kenya are declining at the same rates within the country's national parks as outside of these protected areas over the long term, according to a study released this week.

Elephants-in-Amboseli-picture.jpgNGS photo of elephants in Kenya's Amboseli National Park by Frank and Helen Schreider

"This is the first time we've taken a good look at a national park system in one country, relative to all of the wildlife populations across the whole country," said David Western, an adjunct professor of biology at University of California San Diego and the founding executive director of the African Conservation Center in Nairobi, who headed the study published in the July 8 issue of the journal PLoS One.

"And we found that wildlife populations inside and outside of the parks are declining at much the same rate," he said in a UC San Diego statement about the research.

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Western said this finding, "while surprising to those who regard national parks as sanctuaries where wildlife populations are protected, illustrates the problems that maintaining these protected areas can create on wildlife and ecosystems inside as well as outside of the parks."

"What we're now beginning to understand is that the pressures around the parks are also affecting the wildlife in the parks," said Western, a former director of the Kenya Wildlife Service, which commissioned the study two years ago. His research team--which included Samantha Russell, a research scientist at the African Conservation Center, and Innes Cuthill, a biologist at Britain's Bristol University--compiled data from more than 270 counts of wildlife in Kenya over a period of 25 years.

NGS photo of giraffe in Amboseli NP by Volkmar K. Wentzel

"Many of the population changes that occur are drought-driven, occurring over a five to ten-year period," Western said. "These data cover a long period of time and overcome that seasonal periodic drought-driven effect on wildlife."

The scientists noted in their paper that many of Kenya's 23 national park and 26 national reserve boundaries do not take into account the seasonal migrations of animals, UC San Diego said. "So when land surrounding the parks is allowed to be developed for agriculture and other uses, migratory routes and important sources of food for wildlife are destroyed."

Parks Ignored Seasonal Migrations

"Parks in Kenya were set aside in areas where people saw large aggregations of animals and typically these were the areas where animals congregated during the dry seasons," Western said. "They ignored seasonal migrations because people didn't know where these animals migrated to, in many cases."

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To protect elephants and other endangered species from poachers, the national parks confined these animals within park boundaries. But the researchers found that this practice over time has changed the ecology of many Kenyan parks, UC San Diego said.

"Elephants need a lot of space," Western said. "They move around. But now that they have been limited to smaller areas, they're taking out the woody vegetation and reducing the overall biodiversity in the national parks. We're seeing throughout our parks in Kenya a change from woody habitats to grassland habitats. As a result, we're losing the species that thrive in woody areas, such as giraffe, lesser kudu and impala."

The researchers said in their paper that wildlife populations throughout Kenya--inside as well as outside the national parks--declined by 40 percent from 1977 to 1997. But the populations underwent ups and downs during those years.

NGS photo of elephant in Samburu National Reserve by Michael Nichols

"The combined wildlife populations show considerable fluctuation in parks and adjoining areas, with numbers rising in the late 1970s, falling through to the mid-1980s, rising again more slowly in the late 1980s and falling steeply in the 1990s," the researchers wrote in their paper.

Tribes View Parks as a Threat

Western said a third contributing reason for declines in some species, such as elephants, has been the antagonism created by the parks within surrounding communities. Forced to settle in land outside the parks, some local tribes view the parks as threats to their survival.

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"What happens is that wildlife now becomes a threat to their agriculture and their pastoral way of life," Western said. "So they willingly invite poachers to get rid of the wildlife."

"The most disturbing finding from our study is that the biggest parks do not provide insulation from wildlife losses," he added. "In fact, the biggest losses are occurring in the big parks, rather than the smaller ones. A very big park is much more difficult to protect from poachers.

"Furthermore, in the biggest parks there isn't an intimate connection between the park and the surrounding community, so there are no benefits going back.

"The small parks, such Nairobi National Park, Amboseli, and Nakuru, are surrounded by people who are more educated and better off financially, so they don't see the parks with the same antagonism as the others and they're more amenable to conservation."

NGS photo of impala in Samburu National Reserve by Michael Nichols

Western said that to protect Kenyan wildlife from further declines, the Kenyan government needs to set policies to share the profits of ecotourism with local communities so that they can reap the economic benefits of protecting the wildlife and ecosystems within and surrounding the national parks.

"We now have streams of visitors into the parks and at the moment the revenues are going to the tour operators, hoteliers and the government and nothing to the customary users of that land. We need to create 'parks beyond parks' in which we encourage communities to become closely aligned with their own wildlife sanctuaries, their own lodges, their own scouts and their own conservation efforts."

"Where we have community-based conservation linked to a national park, the losses of wildlife are much, much less."

Western added that he and his colleagues found in a separate study, soon to be published, that "where we have community-based conservation linked to a national park, the losses of wildlife are much, much less."

He said those lessons apply not only to national parks in Kenya, but to those in other countries, including the United States.

"We're not likely to increase the number of national parks or increase parkland," he added. "But we can create parks beyond parks in local communities that double as grazing land for livestock during droughts and become drought refuges for wildlife. This obviates the need to create new parkland."

"The combination of local involvement with national parks makes a very good fit," he said.

A new monkey discovered in a remote region of the Amazon in Brazil is threatened by proposed dams and other development in region, the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS) said today.

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"The monkey is related to saddleback tamarins, which include several species of monkeys known for their distinctively marked backs. The newly described distinct subspecies was first seen by scientists on a 2007 expedition into the state of Amazonas in northwestern Brazil," WCS said in a statement.

The discovery was published in the June online edition of the International Journal of Primatology. Authors of the study include Fabio Röhe of the Wildlife Conservation Society, José de Sousa e Silva Jr. of Museu Paraense Emílio Goeldi, Ricardo Sampaio of the Instituto Nacional de Parquisas de Amaozônia, and Anthony B. Rylands of Conservation International.

Illustration courtesy Stephen Nash (Conservation International)

"Researchers have dubbed the monkey Mura's saddleback tamarin (saguinus fuscicollis mura) named after the Mura Indians, the ethnic group of Amerindians of the Purus and Madeira river basins where the monkey occurs," WCS added.

"Historically this tribe was spread through the largest territory of any of the Amazonian Indigenous peoples, extending from the Peruvian frontier today (Rio Yavari) east to the Rio Trombetas."

The monkey is mostly gray and dark brown in color, with a distinctly mottled "saddle." It weighs 312 grams (about 11 ounces) and is 240 millimeters (9 inches tall) with a 320 millimeter (12.6 inch) tail.

"The Wildlife Conservation Society is extremely proud to be part of this exciting discovery in the Amazon," said Avecita Chicchon, director of WCS's Latin America Programs. "We hope that the discovery will draw attention to conservation in this very fragile but biodiverse region."

Threatened by Highway, Pipeline, Dams

According to the study's authors, the monkey is threatened by several planned development projects in the region, particularly a major highway cutting through the Amazon that is currently being paved, WCS said.

"Conservationists fear the highway could fuel wider deforestation in the Amazon over the next two decades. Other threats to the region include a proposed gas pipeline and two hydroelectric dams currently in the beginning stages of construction."

"This discovery should serve as a wake-up call that there is still so much to learn from the world's wild places."

"This newly described monkey shows that even today there are still major wildlife discoveries to be made," said the study's lead author, Fabio Röhe of the Wildlife Conservation Society. "This discovery should serve as a wake-up call that there is still so much to learn from the world's wild places, yet humans continue to threaten these areas with destruction."

The Wildlife Conservation Society helped establish the Mamirauá, Amanã, and Piagaçu-Purus Sustainable Development Reserves in Brazil, which represent some of the largest protected blocks of rainforest on the planet.

WCS researchers have discovered several new monkey species in recent years: the Arunachal macaque, discovered in India in late 2004; and the Madidi monkey and Kipunji discovered in Bolivia and Tanzania respectively in 2005. In 2008, Jean Boubli, who now works for WCS, discovered a new species of uakari monkey in the Amazon and named it after noted WCS primatologist José Márcio Ayres.

"WCS's Brazil Program would like to acknowledge the GEOMA project at the Ministry of Science and Technology of Brazil, for its support in the project that led to the discovery of the monkey," the New York-based conservation charity said.

Parks, forests, and historic places require a significant increase in annual funding if they are to be preserved for future generations, a major assessment of U.S. outdoor resources has found.

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A report by the private, bipartisan Outdoor Resources Review Group (ORRG) was presented today at a Capitol Hill briefing to Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar and Senators Jeff Bingaman (D-New Mexico) and Lamar Alexander (R-Tennessee), who served as honorary co-chairs of the project.

In its report, the task force analyzed efforts to conserve and protect the U.S. outdoor heritage--including parks, wildlife refuges, and open space.

"The report draws a strong link between the availability and quality of these resources and the health of Americans, the economy, and communities nationwide," says a statement by ORRG. "It also points to the tremendous hurdle in securing adequate funding for parks, recreation, and related purposes at the state and local levels, which are on the front line in providing these services."

In the foreword to the report, Senators Bingaman and Alexander said, "Americans all across the country, of all backgrounds and of all political views, care deeply about the health of our land and water resources--the wildlife, parks, forests, farms and ranchlands, and historic places that have sustained and enriched us as a people over generations...We are past due for a serious look at where we stand as a country in achieving our goal of safeguarding these resources...Today, with a new President and a new Administration, we have the opportunity to put our conservation efforts on solid footing for generations to follow."

great_outdoors_america_picture.jpgNational Geographic Chairman Gil Grosvenor delivers "Great Outdoors America," a report on the recreational use of the nation's resources, to Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn. (center), Sen. Jeff Bingaman, D-N.M. (second from right) and Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar (right).

NGS photo by Megan Seldon

"Healthy, productive land and water resources, wildlife habitat, parks and open space, culturally and historically significant landscapes, and available and accessible recreation lands are fundamental to the American way of life and our future prosperity," the report notes.

"At stake now and for future generations is the health of our people, our economy, our communities, and the lands and waters on which we depend, in short, the quality of life we enjoy in our cities and towns and rural places."

Independent Conservation Trust Proposed

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A key proposal in the report, which is flagged for further study, is the development of an independent conservation trust within the federal establishment, with dedicated and sustained funding reaching U.S. $5 billion annually, the ORRG statement said.

"One potential funding source, the report suggests, could be a percentage of royalties and revenues collected from development of new renewable and conventional energy resources and transmission capacity on public lands and on the outer continental shelf."

NGS photo of Yellowstone National Park by J. Baylor Roberts

The report anticipates conflicts over specific projects if a substantial push is made to develop energy resources on public lands that are valued as wildlife habitat or for recreation. It also calls for a national climate program to help fund the adaptation of land and water resources in a warming world.

The ORRG report is the first major assessment of outdoor resources since the President's Commission on Americans Outdoors in 1987.

Outdoor Pursuits Have Grown in Popularity

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"In the more than 20 years since that study, a wide range of outdoor pursuits--including such activities as bird watching, water-related sports, rock climbing, mountain biking, and off-road vehicles--have grown in popularity, even as more traditional activities such as hiking, camping, hunting, and fishing retain strong core followings," ORRG says.

The report recommends creating a new nationwide system of "Blueways" and water trails to energize grassroots activity to improve water quality and water-related recreation opportunities.

NGS photo of Everglades National Park by Robert Sisson

The 17-member ORRG task force was organized by Henry Diamond, partner at Beveridge & Diamond, P.C., an environmental law firm headquartered in Washington, and former commissioner of the New York Department of Environmental Conservation; Patrick Noonan, chairman emeritus of The Conservation Fund; and Gilbert Grosvenor, chairman of the board of the National Geographic Society.

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Robots from the University of Stuttgart, Germany, are the winners of this year's RoboCup.

"The cooperative soccer-playing robots of the Universität Stuttgart are world champions in the middle size league of robot soccer," the University said in a news statement.

"After one of the most interesting competitions in the history of RoboCup from 29th June to 5th July, 2009, in Graz, the 1. RFC Stuttgart [team] on the last day of the competition succeeded in winning the world championship 2009 in an exciting game against the team of Tech United from Eindhoven (The Netherlands) with the final result of 4-1."

Stuttgart's robots competed against 13 other teams, from eight countries, among them the current world champion Cambada (Portugal). Besides the teams from Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Portugal, and Austria, teams from China, Japan, and Iran competed against each other.

The 1.RFC Stuttgart team included staff of two of the university's Institutes, the Department of Image Understanding of the Institute of Parallel and Distributed Systems and the Institute of Technical Optics. The team also won the prize for first place in the "scientific challenge" and placed second in the category "technical challenge."

robocup champions picture.pngRobocup champions picture courtesy University of Stuttgart

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"After the final match of the competition, the middle-size league robots of the 1. RFC Stuttgart--the new world champions--had to play against the human officials of the RoboCup Federation. It turned out ... the robots were the inferior team. Clearly the RoboCup community has still to bridge a vast distance to reach their final goal to let a humanoid robot team play against the human world champion by the year 2050," the university said.

Success in the RoboCup competition requires state-of-the-art real-time image processing and architectures, cooperative robotics, and distributed planning, the university added.

"Possible application scenarios of these research activities reach from autonomous vehicles, cooperative manufacturing robotics, service robotics to the point of planetary or deep-sea exploration by autonomous robotic systems.

"In this context autonomous means that no, or only a limited, human intervention is necessary."

Video: Best of RoboCup 2009 Graz (with finals)

Oldest Bible Reunited Online

Posted on July 6, 2009 | 0 Comments

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All 800 surviving pages from Codex Sinaiticus, the earliest surviving Christian bible, are now freely available for viewing on the Internet.

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Bound copy of Codex Sinaiticus picture courtesy British Library

"For the first time, people around the world will be able to explore high resolution digital images of all the extant pages of the fourth-century book, which was written in Greek on parchment leaves by several scribes and had its text revised and corrected over the course of the following centuries," the British Library said in a statement.

Codex Sinaiticus is the world's oldest Bible and regarded as the most important Biblical manuscript. It was written by hand in the mid-fourth century around the time of Constantine the Great. Though it originally contained the whole of the Old and New Testaments and the Apocrypha in Greek, half of the Old Testament has since been lost, according to the British Library.

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The surviving manuscript concludes with two early Christian texts, an epistle ascribed to the Apostle Barnabas and 'The Shepherd' by Hermas.

Codex Sinaiticus is named after the Monastery of St Catherine in Sinai, Egypt, where it was found in the 19th Century.

Built at the foot of Mount Moses, Sinai, on the traditional site of Moses' Burning Bush, it is one of the oldest, continuously active, Christian monastic communities in the world and traces its origins back to the fourth century.

Codex Sinaiticus picture courtesy British Library

The Monastery was as constructed by order of the Emperor Justinian between 527 and 565 to house the bones of the Christian martyr St Catherine. It is a Greek Orthodox holy place connected with the Prophet Moses and the exodus of the Jews from Egypt, the British Library said.

The virtual reunification of Codex Sinaiticus is the culmination of a four-year collaboration between the British Library, Leipzig University Library, the Monastery of St Catherine (Mount Sinai, Egypt), and the National Library of Russia (St Petersburg), each of which hold different parts of the physical manuscript.

 
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The world's oldest surviving Christian Bible was found at St. Catherine's Monastery, at the foot of Mount Sinai on the traditional site of Moses's Burning Bush.

NGS photo of St Catherine's Monastery by Robert Sisson

"By bringing together the digitised pages online, the project will enable scholars worldwide to research in depth the Greek text, which is fully transcribed and cross-referenced, including the transcription of numerous revisions and corrections," the British Library said.

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"It will also allow researchers into the history of the book as a physical object to examine in detail aspects of its fabric and manufacture: pages can be viewed either with standard light or with raking light which, by illuminating each page at an angle, highlights the physical texture and features of the parchment."

NGS photo of St Catherine's Monastery by Robert Sisson

"The Codex Sinaiticus is one of the world's greatest written treasures," said Scot McKendrick, head of Western Manuscripts at the British Library. "This 1600-year-old manuscript offers a window into the development of early Christianity and first-hand evidence of how the text of the bible was transmitted from generation to generation.

"The project has uncovered evidence that a fourth scribe--along with the three already recognised--worked on the text; the availability of the virtual manuscript for study by scholars around the world creates opportunities for collaborative research that would not have been possible just a few years ago."

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Wildlife is under serious threat across the planet, despite the commitment by world leaders to reverse the trend of biodiversity loss by 2010, according to a detailed analysis of the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species.

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Asian Wild Ass (Equus hemionus). Threat category Endangered

Photo © Jean-Christophe Vié

The IUCN assessment, which is published every four years, has been released just before the deadline governments set themselves to evaluate how successful they were in achieving the 2010 target to reduce biodiversity loss.

Deadline will not be met

The IUCN report, "Wildlife in a Changing World," shows the 2010 target will not be met, the organization said in a statement today.

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"When governments take action to reduce biodiversity loss there are some conservation successes, but we are still a long way from reversing the trend," says Jean-Christophe Vié, deputy head of IUCN's Species Program and senior editor of the publication.

"It's time to recognize that nature is the largest company on Earth working for the benefit of 100 percent of humankind--and it's doing it for free.

"Governments should put as much effort, if not more, into saving nature as they do into saving economic and financial sectors."

IUCN is the world's oldest and largest global environmental network. Based in Switzerland, it is a democratic membership union with more than 1,000 government and NGO member organizations, and almost 11,000 volunteer scientists in more than 160 countries.

Its report analyzes 44,838 species on the IUCN Red List and presents results by groups of species, geographical regions, and different habitats, such as marine, freshwater and terrestrial.

The Red List is the most comprehensive information source on the global conservation status of species. It is based on an objective system of assessing the risk of extinction for a species. Species listed as Critically Endangered, Endangered or Vulnerable are collectively described as threatened.     

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"A minimum of 16,928 species are threatened with extinction."

 

The updated list shows 869 species are Extinct or Extinct in the Wild, and this figure rises to 1,159 if the 290 Critically Endangered species tagged as Possibly Extinct are included, IUCN said.

"Overall, a minimum of 16,928 species are threatened with extinction."

Considering that only 2.7 percent of the 1.8 million described species have been analyzed, this number is a gross underestimate, IUCN added. "But it does provide a useful snapshot of what is happening to all forms of life on Earth."

Shoebill-picture.jpgShoebill (Balaeniceps rex). Threat category Vulnerable  (
Photo © Jean-Christophe Vié)

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As the human population continues to grow--some estimates suggest we may be heading for a worldwide total of 11,000,000,000 people, two-thirds more than on Earth today--feeding everyone is going to be a big challenge.

 food-tower-picture.jpg

New forms of sustainable farming are needed desperately. Some people propose that part of the solution might be found in giant skyscraper plantations in the cities, such as this 58-story "Skyfarm" envisaged by Gordon Graff at the University of Waterloo in Ontario.

Read more about Graf's concept and view seven more designs for vertical farms in the National Geographic News feature FUTURE FARMS: High-Rise, Beach Pod, and Pyramid Pictures >>

Image courtesy Gordon Graff, Vertical Farm Project

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