Archive

Archive for December, 2009

Call for proposals on Implications of Climate Change in the WIO region: REMINDER!

December 22nd, 2009 No comments

The Western Indian Ocean Marine Science Association (WIOMSA) through the Marine Science for Management (MASMA) programme is inviting full proposals for research on the implications of climate change for natural and social systems with some focus on how they may influence human adaptation and future management strategies.

This call is one of the activities being implemented under the Sida-funded project “Climate Change in coastal and marine environment of the Western Indian Ocean region: Assessment of Impacts and Adaptation Options”, whose overarching goal is “to undertake multi-disciplinary research to fill information gaps needed for the improvement of our understanding of impacts and vulnerability to climate change in coastal and marine environments of the Western Indian Ocean region. The information generated will be used to identify adaptation measures and to support strategy development for adaptation.

The deadline for the submission of full proposals is 22 January 2010.

Download the full announcement from: http://www.wiomsa.org/?id=695&cid=3514

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

Climate Witness Tanzania films available online and DVD

December 22nd, 2009 No comments

WWF, DFID, the Vice President’s Office and the Institute of Resources Assessment, UDSM recently collaborated to produce a series of eight short 5-6 minute films documenting the impacts, already being experienced, of climate change on people’s lives  in Tanzania.

The eight sectors covered include agriculture, livestock, water, malaria, fisheries, wildlife, traditional knowledge and Dar es Salaam.

A longer 28 minute film has also been produced integrating the stories into a narrative, fronted by the Minister for Environment. All the films are available in the original Kiswahili or with English sub-titles.

Both long and short films have been extensively aired on Tanzanian TV channels over the past 3 weeks. The films were also shown at Copenhagen on a rolling reel and several hundred DVD copies circulated there through the Tanzania Government delegation. Copies have also gone to each member of the Tanzania Cabinet.

The eight short films can be viewed online or downloaded at http://www.dfid.gov.uk/climatewitness

Higher resolution versions on DVD will be available from the New Year – if you would like to get one please send an advance email to climate.witness@wwftz.org.

Categories: New Publication, News, Uncategorized Tags:

Climate accord offers some grounds for hope, say analysts

December 22nd, 2009 No comments

The UN Climate Change Conference ended on Saturday (19 December) with frustration and verdicts of failure from many delegates because it did not reach a binding agreement on how to tackle climate change — or any agreement at all on targets for carbon emissions.

But some commentators say that important principles behind fighting climate change have been established for the first time, and some action could start immediately even without the existence of a universal agreement.

Read the full article from: http://www.scidev.net/en/news/climate-accord-offers-some-grounds-for-hope-say-analysts.html

Categories: News, Uncategorized Tags:

CLIMATE CHANGE CATASTROPHE THREATENS TOURISM!

December 20th, 2009 No comments

A Board Member of the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF), urged participants at the Caribbean Media Exchange to launch campaigns similar to those waged against HIV/AIDS to warn people of the dangers of climate change and how it could affect tourism and sustainable development in the region.

Noting tourism accounts for about 25 to 35% of the total GDP of the Caribbean and provides about one-fifth of all jobs, Isaac Anthony, CCRIF board member and Permanent Secretary of St. Lucia’s Ministry of Finance, lauded the Caribbean Media Exchange (CMEx) for highlighting how climate change posed a “serious threat to the environment as well as to economies and societies – the impacts of which are likely to adversely affect the tourism sector.”

Anthony, who also serves as the Registrar of Insurance with responsibility for supervising and regulating St. Lucia’s insurance industry, called on CMEx and regional media to help countries better understand “hazard risk, climate change and climate change adaptation strategies,” adding, “You have already played a fundamental and effective role globally in using your powerful tool – communication – in the war against HIV/AIDS: You can do the same for climate change.”

Urging the media to focus more on climate change and its impacts on socio-economic development, Anthony, who also is Chairman of the Caribbean Public Finance Association, identified the changing climate as a “global driver of increasing disaster risk and threatens to undermine the critical development gains made by the most vulnerable countries, including small island developing states such as those in the Caribbean. Hazard impacts resulting from climate variability have exposed the vulnerability of key economic sectors such as tourism, agriculture, fisheries, and water resources.”

For small island countries, he stressed, a single-event catastrophe can have a “devastating effect both on physical infrastructure and the economic fabric of the country. The small economies of the region combined with physical vulnerabilities often results in an amplification effect on the impact of natural hazards.”

Noting the difference between a rich country and a smaller nation, Anthony recalled Hurricane Ivan in 2004, “caused almost 200% of annual GDP impact in each of two Caribbean islands, Grenada and the Cayman Islands, as well as significant damage in Jamaica. By contrast, Hurricane Katrina’s impact in the United States was less than 1% of annual US GDP and only about 30% of Louisiana’s annual GDP.”

In the devastation left in the wake of Hurricane Ivan in 2004, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Heads of Government set up the Caribbean Catastrophe Risk Insurance Facility with three priorities: First, to cover the post-disaster liquidity gap faced by governments between immediate, emergency aid and long-term redevelopment assistance. Second, to enable governments to receive money quickly, and third, to minimize the burden of governments to provide exposure information prior to coverage being initiated and loss of information after a disaster.

Through the pooling of capital into a collective reserve and spreading of risks geographically, the Facility provides cost-efficient coverage options for its participants against extreme natural events, the socio-economic impacts of which are beyond the management capacity of any individual country.

The Caribbean Media Exchange on Sustainable Tourism (CMEx) has hosted 18 conferences and symposia throughout the Caribbean and North America to underscore the value of the region’s largest industry, tourism, in bettering the health, education, culture, environment and wealth of communities in a climate friendly fashion.

Source: Caribbean Media Exchange

FOJO/WIOMSA Journalists Fly the Flag high in Copenhagen

December 19th, 2009 No comments
Three Journalists who attended the FOJO-WIOMSA course on Environmental Journalism are in Copenhagen covering the UN Climate Change Conference.

Lucas Liganga won first place in a Climate Change Journalism Competition organized by the British High Commission in Dar es Salaam and is thus sponsored by the Commision for the trip.

 

The Chairman of Journalists Environmental Association of Tanzania (JET), Mr. Deodatus Mfugale trip, supported by the British High Commission, is also in attendance in Copenhagen.

 

Rosalia Omungo is part of forty journalists from Asia, Asia-Pacific, Africa, the Middle East, the Caribbean and Latin America who are participating in a climate change media partnership fellowship programme designed to improve media coverage of climate change issues in developing countries, including reporting on the 2009 Copenhagen Summit. The Fellowship program is jointly sponsored by Internews, Panos and IIED.
Categories: New Publication, Uncategorized Tags:

Special Issue of the Western Indian Ocean Journal of Marine Science is out!

December 18th, 2009 No comments

Special Issue (Volume 8 Issue 2) of the Western Indian Ocean Journal of Marine Science, which comprised of the selected papers from Fifth WIOMSA Scientific Symposium, which was held in October 2007 in Durban, South Africa, is out. This is the third Special Issue from the Fifth WIOMSA Symposium. The others are: Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Sciences (2009, Volume 84, Issue 3, Pages 299-428) and Aquatic Conservation (Volume 19 Issue S1, Pages S1 – S69).

Papers in the Issue are:

 i) Coastal habitats mapping along the Tanzania/Mozambique transboundary area using Landsat TM5 imagery – M.A. Ferreira, F. Andrade, P. Cardoso, and J. Paula

ii) Climatology of Tropical Cyclones in the South-West Indian Ocean; landfall in Mozambique and Madagascar – Alberto M. Mavume, Lars Rydberg and Johann R.E. Lutjeharms

iii) Cephalopods Species In Mozambican Waters Caught In Survey “Mozambique 0307”: Distribution, Abundance And Assemblages – Luis Silva, Eduardo Balguerías, Paula Santana Afonso, Ignacio Sobrino, Juan Gil and Candelaria Burgos

iv) Distribution patterns and biological characteristic of Aristeus antennatus and Aristeus virilis in Mozambique water – Ignacio Sobrino, Nilza Dias, Isabel Muñoz, Francisca Salmerón and Dionisio Varela

v)  Evaluation of bait usage in the KwaZulu-Natal linefishery, South Africa – Pierre Pradervand and Sean Fennessy

vi)  Trap Fishery With Notes on Reproductive Biology of a White Spotted Rabbitfish, Siganus Sutor (Siganidae) in the Dar Es Salaam Marine Reserves, Tanzania – A.T. Kamukuru

vii)  Effect of Food Quality and Rearing Density on Growth and Survival of Epibenthic Juveniles in the Sea Cucumber Holothuria scabra – T. Lavitra, R. Rasolofonirina, P. Grosjean, M. Jangoux and I. Eeckhaut

viii) Reproductive biology of Actinopyga echinites and other sea cucumbers from La Réunion (Western Indian Ocean): a contribution for a regional management of the fishery – Sophie Kohler, Sylvie Gaudron and Chantal Conand

ix) Filling in the gap in East Africa: the northern Querimbas Archipelago – Nicholas A. O. Hill, Johnston Davidson, Isabel Silva, Santos Mucave, Lara Muaves, Almeida Guissamulo, Alison Shaw, and Julie Garnier

x)  Mud crab (Scylla serrata) cultura: Understanding the technology in a silvofisheries perspective – Mirera H.O. David

Categories: Events, Uncategorized Tags:

WIOMSA Newsbrief December Issue is out!

December 17th, 2009 No comments

The December Issue of the WIOMSA Newsbrief is out. The issue has the following interesting articles written by different authors:

i) Development of low cost, environmentally friendly energy to improve water circulation and provide electricity for mariculture activities

ii) New WIOMSA President and board officials elected

iii) Women jewelry makers and pearl farmers carve their way to success

iv) WIO-COMPAS News

v) Sea cucumbers – a MASMA Project

vi) WIO mariculture at cross roads

vii) Dugong conservation Workshop held in Mozambique

viii) TAFIRI Braces for Key Roles in National Fisheries Policy

Read online the full issue from http://issuu.com/wiomsa/docs/wiomsa_newsletter_vol_14_no_4_december09

Categories: New Publication, Uncategorized Tags:

African ministerial meeting on weather, climate and water in Nairobi

December 16th, 2009 No comments

For the first time ever, African Ministers responsible for meteorology will meet to address ways of strengthening weather, climate and water information for decision-making. This first ministerial Conference, organized by WMO in partnership with the African Union, will be held in Nairobi, hosted by the Government of Kenya, from 12 to 16 April 2010.

African National Meteorological and Hydrological Services have an important role to play in evaluating and monitoring climate change. Their early warnings are essential to help prevent natural disasters. The Conference will be addressing the role and contribution of the National Meteorological and Hydrological Services to efforts by African Governments for developing initiatives to mitigate, and adapt to, the negative impacts of weather and climate.

The African continent is especially vulnerable to climate change. Already, the number and magnitude of natural hazards are increasing in the face of a warming climate. All sectors in Africa are affected, from agriculture, water, health and food security, to forestry, transport, tourism and energy.

In Africa, famine is primarily the result of drought that leads to consistent food shortages. Millions of African people suffer hunger with relentless regularity. Famine and climate change increase drastically the population’s vulnerability to diseases, poverty and other hardships. Likewise, catastrophic floods can devastate agricultural lands: in 2000, Mozambique was hit by the worst floods experienced in 150 years, with the Limpopo River basin submerged in water for up to three months.

In the light of this event, Mozambique is now proactively using meteorological information to manage flood risks. Likewise, other countries, such as Mali and Malawi, are using meteorological information for agricultural management.

The African Union is a partner in the ministerial Conference. The African Union is playing a key role in the implementation of the Climate for Development Project in Africa (Climdev) and the African Monitoring Environment for Sustainable Development Project (AMESD).

Source: http://www.wmo.int/pages/publications/meteoworld/nairobi_en.html

Categories: News, Uncategorized Tags:

Royal Society Pfizer Award 2010 call for nominations

December 16th, 2009 No comments

The Royal Society is pleased to invite nominations for the Royal Society Pfizer Award 2010.

The award, sponsored by Pfizer Inc, will recognise an innovative contribution to biological science, including basic medical science, which has had a positive sustainable impact on Africa. The prize will be open to any research scientist at an early stage of their research career, working in Africa.

The award consists of a grant of up to £5,000 prize for the recipient.

Nominations should be made by senior academics and/or members of National Academies of science. The nominations consist of statements from the nominator outlining the candidate’s scientific record, suitability for the award and impact on Africa, and a proposal by the nominee for the proposed research project.

Please could you pass this information on to colleagues and scientists whom you think would be interested in nominating, or being nominated, for this award? I would be most grateful.

For full details of the award and an on-line nomination form, visit royalsociety.org/pfizer. If you require further information, please do no hesitate to contact the award secretary on +44 (0) 20 7451 2225 or awards@royalsociety.org. The closing date for nominations is 25 January 2010

Categories: Uncategorized Tags:

Lessons about science from ‘Climategate’

December 15th, 2009 No comments

The hacked emails of climate researchers offer an opportunity to show how science is really done — instead of a rearguard defence of scientific ‘objectivity’.

Historians of science have long known that Gregor Mendel, the 19th century Augustinian monk who discovered how genetic traits are inherited, ‘fudged’ some of his data. His experimental methods were not as rigorous as they should have been and he failed to publish results of experiments that did not turn out as expected.

Read the full article from: http://www.scidev.net/en/editorials/lessons-about-science-from-climategate–1.html

Categories: News, Uncategorized Tags: