|
NOTE: As many of you may be aware, the SCB websites experienced unusual downtime over the last few weeks. Our websites are now live and available to serve you; however many pages are still offline and will not load correctly (you will see an error that reads "The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect" -- we are aware of these problems. We are dealing with a SQL Injection attack. These types of attacks are known to exploit website vulnerabilities with the intent of distributing viruses and malware. We are working to correct the problems and clean up the data corruption this has caused. Thank you for your patience while we work through this problem. More information is available here.
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
But whale conservationists may be missing the boat. As fisheries decline around the world, the debate is shifting from hunting whales to culling them. "To nations with whalers...whales are no longer natural resources to be managed sustainably but are competitors for fisheries," says Corkeron. In 2003 Japan said that whales eat up to six times more marine fish than people do, and that sustainable fisheries should not be compromised to protect abundant whales. Similarly, Norway is calling for ecosystem-based management of the "vast stocks" of whales and seals to protect fisheries. Norway currently pays a bounty for hunting gray seals and has culled whales in the past. For example, in the late 1970s killer whales were culled off the Norwegian coast after herring stocks crashed due to overfishing. Whale culls may lie in the future too. "The logical extension of this idea is that whales should not be allowed to recover to environmental carrying capacity but rather are in need of culling under the name of ecosystem management," says Corkeron. The latest development suggests that he is right. "Norway's parliament called on Tuesday for a three-fold increase in whale hunting quotas in a move it said would protect stocks of cod and other fish eaten by the giant mammals," according to a May 19 2004 article in the Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten. CONTACT: Peter Corkeron: +47-776-09725 (w), +47-776-38140 (h), peter.corkeron@imr.no WEBSITES: Norwegian Ministry of Fisheries,
Japan's Institute of Cetacean Research
WEEKENDS MAY THREATEN WILDLIFEHeavier traffic drives at-risk eagle from hunting grounds
People's weekend fun may have a down side for the critically endangered Spanish imperial eagle. New research shows that on weekends, traffic doubles and the eagles avoid a roadside that provides some of their best remaining hunting grounds. And matters are likely to get worse because the government plans to build a high-speed road there. "The final death sentence for one of the most endangered species in the world is being quietly executed," say Luis Bautista of the Instituto de Agrobiotechnologia y Recursos Naturale in Navarra, Spain, and Javier Vinuela of Instituto de Investigacion en Recursos Cinegeticos in Cuidad Real, Spain, who present this work with six co-authors in the June Conservation Biology. People in Madrid use the road studied, M-501, for weekend getaways to recreational areas. However, on the way they drive through some of the best remaining habitat for the Spanish imperial eagle. Much of the region is urbanized and farmed, and roadsides in such areas can be important hunting grounds for raptors. For example, the rabbits that the eagles depend on are particularly common along M-501. But even though there are fewer than 400 Spanish imperial eagles left, the Madrid Autonomous Region is planning to enlarge M-501 so it can accommodate high-speed traffic. This plan goes against the recommendation of the government's Environmental Agency. To see how M-501 currently affects the raptors, the researchers monitored traffic and nine raptor species that hunted or foraged along a 19-km long section between Madrid and the recreational areas. The researchers compared the levels of traffic and raptor sightings on weekdays and weekends. The results showed that M-501 is already affecting the Spanish imperial eagle. On weekends, the traffic load nearly doubled from about 5,000 to 10,000 vehicles/day, and sightings of the eagle dropped by four-fifths. The same was true for two other endangered raptors, the European black vulture and the griffon vulture. "Today the eagles take weekend breaks," says Bautista. "What about tomorrow, when there is a high-speed road? Where will the eagles go?" CONTACT: Luis Bautista: 34-914111328 (ask the receptionist for X1224), iarnb300@iarn.csic.es
DUTCH CONSERVATION AGREEMENTS CAN BACKFIREWading birds rarer in "conserved" areasDutch conservation agreements pay farmers for adopting agricultural practices intended to benefit nature, but a new analysis suggests that they are not working. The agreements are not helping and in some cases may even harm their target species: the diversity of plants and meadowbirds failed to increase, and the numbers of wading birds actually decreased in fields with conservation agreements. "It is clear that the scientific basis for the Dutch management agreements is largely missing," say David Kleijn and Ruben Smit of Wageningen University in The Netherlands and five co-authors in the June Conservation Biology. As agriculture has intensified, biodiversity has declined dramatically in Western Europe. Accordingly, European Union countries spent about 24 billion euros on conservation agreements between 1992 and 2003. But no one knows if they really work. The researchers tested the effectiveness of two kinds of Dutch conservation agreements (botanical agreements and meadowbird agreements) that prohibit changes in drainage, and limit fertilizer and herbicide use. Meadowbird agreements also prohibit disturbing fields during the breeding season. The researchers compared plant diversity in 22 pairs of fields with and without botanical management agreements, and compared bird diversity in 23 pairs of fields with and without meadowbird agreements. The results showed that these two kinds of conservation agreements failed to increase biodiversity. For example, fields with botanical agreements did not have more plant species than those without agreements. And fields with meadowbird agreements did not have more of the target species than those without agreements.
Worse, fields with meadowbird agreements had about 40% fewer wading birds than those without agreements. The researchers suspect that waders may avoid fields with conservation agreements because they receive less fertilizer and so have fewer earthworms to eat. "Our results reveal an important weakness of management agreements aimed at promoting waders," say the researchers. This could help explain why threatened wading birds are still declining in The Netherlands. For example, the black-tailed godwit population keeps dropping even though conservation agreements cover much of its best remaining habitat. About half of Europe's black-tailed godwits breed in the Netherlands, which historically had a great diversity of meadowbirds and grassland plants. The problem may be that the conservation agreements are not addressing the underlying reason for biodiversity loss, say the researchers. The meadowbird and grassland diversity depended largely on the country's historically high groundwater levels. However, groundwater levels are now kept low so farmers can use their fields early in the spring. While this gives them a longer growing season, it also makes the soil dry out faster and so decreases the worms and other soil-dwelling prey available to wading birds. "Conservation measures that require little adaptation of the farming system...are not likely to yield positive effects in intensively used agricultural landscapes," say the researchers. CONTACT: David Kleijn: +31-317-483883, david.kleijn@wur.nl
WEBSITE: Evaluating European Agri-environment Schemes
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||