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Small Islands with Big Problems need Creative Solutions

March 28th, 2012 No comments

By Dr. Nirmal Jivan Shah

The Republic of Seychelles is a sprawling archipelago of 155 granitic and coralline islands and islets in the Western Indian Ocean. Known for its fabulous natural beauty, multiracial harmony and excellent conservation record, it is a tiny nation of only  about 87,000 people. The Seychelles is blessed or cursed, depending on ones point of view, with a very large ocean territory inside an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) covering 1.2 million sq kilometers .

The Seychelles has an enviable conservation record. More than 50% of its land territory is protected within reserves.  Its Marine National Parks date back to the 1970’s.  The Seychelles’ per capita spending  on  environmental management is probably  the  highest in the world. But as a small island developing state it faces monumental environmental issues. Climate change is of course the elephant in the room. However, the ability of the  Seychelles to adapt and mitigate is limited by its very  small population and economy compared to its large territory.

According to the Central Bank of Seychelles , fisheries’ may be stated to be the only significant natural resource of the Seychelles. Over the past 30 years, the sector has metamorphosed from a mostly subsistence activity to a major processing and export industry, based on the exploitation of tuna in the South-West Indian Ocean. Today, the fisheries sector has become an integral and fundamental part of the social and economic structure of the country. Alongside tourism, it constitutes a pillar of the economy.

Read the full article from: http://www.oceanfdn.org/blog/?p=275

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Scholarship Opportunity: SIDA PhD in climate and environmental economics, University of Gothenburg, Sweden

March 28th, 2012 No comments

The CGIAR Gender & Diversity Program is assisting the University of Gothenburg in mobilizing applications from women for the following opportunity supported by the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA):

What: Five scholarships available for full scholarship on a four/five-year PhD program in climate and environmental economics

Where: University of Gothenburg, Sweden

When: Studies will begin in September 2012

Deadline for applications: 01 April 2012
More information: http://www.economics.handels.gu.se/english/Units+and+Centra/environmental-economics/education/information_for_applicants_to_the_phd_program/

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The Agulhas System and its Role in Changing Ocean Circulation, Climate, and Marine Ecosystems

March 25th, 2012 No comments

Spier Hotel, Stellenbosch, Western Cape, South Africa
8–12 October 2012

Conference Objectives and General Description

The Agulhas System plays a significant role in the global ocean circulation and climate. Warm, saline waters from the Indian Ocean flow into the Atlantic as part of the interocean exchange around the southern tip of Africa. Ongoing increases in this so-called Agulhas Leakage, presently under anthropogenic forcing, could strengthen the global overturning circulation in the Atlantic at a time when warming and accelerated meltwater input in the North Atlantic are predicted to weaken it. However compared to processes in the North Atlantic, the Agulhas system has been largely ignored as a potential trigger or stabilizer of climate variability.

At regional scales the Agulhas influences extreme weather events while interannual rainfall variations in southern Africa are correlated with warm and cold anomalies in the Agulhas system, associated with the Indian Ocean climate modes. Large Marine Ecosystems in the region and the distribution of large pelagic species and their fisheries are also influenced by variations in the physical Agulhas system in an as yet poorly known manner.

The purpose of this Chapman conference is to identify the most pressing questions and to design modeling experiments in combination with paleoceanographic and (sustained) modern observations to establish the role of the Agulhas system from regional to global scales.

Fields of Interest

Oceanography, climate science, paleoceanography, paleo-climatology, ocean and climate modeling, marine ecology (including fisheries, bio-physical interactions), satellite remote sensing, non-linear dynamics.

Participants and guests will be drawn from the general oceanography and climate communities, the African region and from scientists and Ph.D. students associated with the SCOR WG 136 and ongoing and future programs: ASCLME, GATEWAYS, INATEX, GOOD HOPE, ACT, SAMOC, CLIMATCH, MASMA, CLIVAR IO and ATLANTIC, WIO-RISE: Western Indian Ocean Regional Initiative. We also expect participation from high resolution modeling groups from around the world that are becoming aware of the global impact of the processes in the Agulhas region. Invited will also be representatives from NOAA, IOC, ONR, NSF, NWO.

Travel Support

The conference organizers are seeking travel support for participation, including students and early-career professionals. To apply for travel grant support, you must submit your application by 1 June 2012.

Further Information

If you would like to receive future updates about this conference, e-mail chapman-agulhassystem@agu.org, or call the AGU Meetings Department at +1-202-777-7330.

For more information: http://www.agu.org/meetings/chapman/2012/ecall/index.php

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Sea levels force Kiribati to ask Fijians for new home

March 24th, 2012 No comments

The Pacific nation of Kiribati is negotiating to buy land in Fiji so it can  move islanders under threat from rising sea levels, in what could be the first  climate-induced relocation of a country.

Anote Tong, the Kiribati President, said he was in talks with Fiji’s military  government to buy up to 2000 hectares of freehold land on which his 113,000  countrymen could resettle.

Some of Kiribati’s 32 flat coral atolls, which straddle the equator over 3.5  million square kilometres of ocean, are already disappearing. The total land  area is 811 square kilometres and  the average elevation is less than two metres  above sea level.

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Villagers with seawater lapping at their feet have been forced to abandon  settlements. Freshwater supplies and crops have been ruined by salt water, while  storms are causing shoreline erosion.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/environment/climate-change/sea-levels-force-kiribati-to-ask-fijians-for-new-home-20120308-1unan.html#ixzz1q48wzdqq

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One Solution to Global Overfishing Found

March 24th, 2012 No comments

Largest study of tropical coral reef fisheries ever conducted shows how government, local fishers, and organizations can protect livelihoods and fish

A study by the Wildlife Conservation Society, ARC Centre for Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, and other groups on more than 40 coral reefs in the Indian and Pacific Oceans indicates that “co-management”—a collaborative arrangement between local communities, conservation groups, and governments—provides one solution to a vexing global problem: overfishing.

The finding is the outcome of the largest field investigation of co-managed tropical coral reef fisheries ever conducted, an effort in which researchers studied 42 managed reef systems in five countries. The team of 17 scientists from eight nations concluded that co-management partnerships were having considerable success in both meeting the livelihood needs of local communities and protecting fish stocks.

The paper appears today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). The authors include: Joshua E. Cinner, Nicholas A.J. Graham, Andrew H. Baird, and Fraser A. Januchowski-Hartley of the ARC Centre for Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Australia; Tim R. McClanahan, Ahmad Mukminin, Stuart J. Campbell, Rachel Lahari, Tau Morove, and John Kuange of the Wildlife Conservation Society; M. Aaron MacNeil of the Australian Institute of Marine Science; Tim M. Daw of the University of East Anglia and Stockholm University; David A. Feary of the School of the Environment, University of Technology, Sydney; Ando L. Rabearisoa of Conservation International; Andrew Wamukota of the Coral Reef Conservation Program, Kenya; and Narriman Jiddawi and Salum Hamed of the University of Dar Es Salaam.

“In an age when fisheries around the world are collapsing, fisheries experts have struggled to find the magic balance between livelihoods and conservation,” said Dr. Tim McClanahan, a co-author on the study and head of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s coral reef research and conservation program. “What we’ve found is that effective solutions require both top-down and bottom-up approaches with a foundation of community-based management.”

Team leader Dr. Josh Cinner of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University, Australia explained: “We found clear evidence of people’s ability to overcome the ‘tragedy of the commons’ by making and enforcing their own rules for managing fisheries. This is particularly encouraging because of the perceived failure of many open-access and top-down government-controlled attempts to manage fisheries around the world. More importantly, we have identified the conditions that allow people to make co-management successful, providing vital guidance for conservation groups, donors, and governments as to what arrangements are most likely to work.”

The team studied local fisheries arrangements on coral reefs in Kenya, Tanzania, Madagascar, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea, using a combination of interviews with local fishers and community leaders, and underwater fish counts.

The study’s main finding is that co-management has been largely successful in sustaining fisheries and improving people’s livelihoods. More than half the fishers surveyed felt co-management was positive for their livelihoods, whereas only 9 percent felt it was negative. A comparison of co-managed reefs with other reefs showed that co-managed reefs were half as likely to be heavily overfished, which can lead to damaged ecosystems.

“However we also found that where fisheries are closest to big, hungry markets, they tend to be in worse shape,” said Dr. Nick Graham of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University. “This strongly suggests globalized food chains can undermine local, democratic efforts to manage fisheries better. People often assume that local population size is the main driver of overfishing – but our research shows that access to global markets and seafood dependence are more important, and provide possible levers for action.”

One of the unexpected results of the study revealed that co-management benefits the wealthier people in the local community, although it is not detrimental to the poor. “In other words, the main benefits tend to trickle up to the wealthy, rather than trickle down to the poor,” Dr Cinner added. “Nevertheless, most people felt that they benefitted.”

The team found that the institutional design of the fishery management arrangement was vital in determining whether or not people felt they benefited from co-management and were willing to work together to protect fish stocks by complying with the rules. “It is really important to get the structure of the co-management arrangements right, if you want people to co-operate to protect their marine resources,” Dr Cinner said. Managers and donors can help build the legitimacy, social capital, and trust that foster cooperation by making targeted investments that lead toward transparent and deliberative co-management systems, where all participants feel their voice is being heard.”

According to the authors, the new study fills an important gap by providing fisheries managers with an example of how governments and local communities can work together effectively to protect local environments and food resources.

“Finding and implementing solutions to over-fishing that work for impoverished coastal communities is critical for the long-term viability of our oceans and the people that depend on them,” said Dr. Caleb McClennen, Director for WCS’s Marine Conservation. “This study demonstrates that long-term investment in co-management regimes is essential for the sustained health and economy of coastal populations and their supporting marine ecosystems.”

Marine Stewardship Council Study Scholarship

March 20th, 2012 No comments

The MSC is inviting applications for a new annual study scholarship.  Undergraduate and postgraduate students of environmental and fisheries science will be able to further their studies with the assistance of a new scholarship research program, launched on the 9th March 2012. 

The Marine Stewardship Council (MSC) will award one travel and study scholarship annually, up to the value of £4000. The scholarship program is open to undergraduate and postgraduate students worldwide.

To qualify for consideration, projects will have as their objective the study of some aspect of environmental improvement, performance or best practice in fisheries management, or fish product supply chain management. This may be direct study of one particular fishery or a comparative study of fisheries problems or management. Direct linkage to a fishery certified or wishing to become certified by the MSC is not a requirement, although this is an additional point of interest for the MSC.  The project must be completed within 12 months of the start date stated on the application form, and the final project report must be submitted within 15 months of the start date. 

MSC standards director, David Agnew said: “The new MSC scholarship will complement our existing program of extensive scientific research. We already fund a number of research projects each year to inform our policy development, monitor our performance and measure the environmental impacts of MSC certified fisheries. This scholarship program will fund research of direct interest to the MSC and research that goes beyond the immediate requirements for policy development. We hope to encourage research on a wide range of fisheries topics in both developing and developed countries. Thus its aim is to not only provide recipients with an excellent career opportunity, but to contribute to the wider global research effort on fisheries. ”

The closing date for applications is Monday 23rd April 2012. 

Further information, frequently asked questions and the application form can be found at http://www.msc.org/business-support/msc-scholarship-program  

For more information about the MSC and to read this press release online go to http://www.msc.org/newsroom/news/marine-stewardship-council-launches-student-scholarship-research-program

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POGO-AMT fellowship announcement

March 20th, 2012 No comments

POGO is pleased to announce that it will once again offer a special POGO Visiting Fellowship for training on-board an Atlantic Meridional Transect (AMT) cruise in 2012. This initiative is now in its fifth year and has proved to be a very successful training programme providing hands-on, sea-going experience to young scientists from developing countries, and the opportunity to be involved in an internationally renowned scientific programme.

The selected candidate will have the opportunity to visit Plymouth Marine Laboratory (PML) in the UK, for one month prior to the start of the cruise to participate in cruise preparation and planning; to go on the cruise (10 October – 24 November 2012 from UK to Chile) and help make hydrological, bio-optical and ecological observations; and after the cruise to spend one additional month at PML, learning to analyse the results statistically and interpret them. The fellowship will provide a round-trip ticket to the UK and a stipend for living expenses for up to two months stay in the UK; flights and accommodation associated with joining the ship; ship messing fee; seafaring medical and sea survival course.

The programme is open to scientists, technicians, graduate students (PhD/MSc) and post-doctoral fellows involved in oceanographic work at centres in developing countries and countries with economies in transition.

The application deadline is 4th May 2012. See flyer and application guidelines for further details, or visit http://ocean-partners.org/training-and-education/pogo-amt-fellowships.

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A sea of riches: Coastal waters could feed many more Africans, but need better protection

March 20th, 2012 No comments

MELITA SAMOILYS is a leading marine biologist. Since 2010 she has visited 72 coral reefs in east Africa. On only one did she see a shark. That is because so many black-tipped, white-tipped and grey sharks have been served up as shark fin soup, a delicacy in China.

Two-thirds of African countries have access to the sea. Some are making good use of it through fishing and tourism. But the productivity of African waters is plummeting. Kenyan fishermen now catch an average of 3kg of lobster on each trip, compared with 28kg in the 1980s. Grouper fish appear to have become extinct in the Comoros in the 1970s. South Africa’s fishy haul is lower today than in the 1950s.

Read the full article from http://www.economist.com/node/21547867

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SCEAM Indian Ocean Workshop: FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT

March 15th, 2012 No comments

SEA CUCUMBER FISHERIES: AN ECOSYSTEM APPROACH TO MANAGEMENT IN THE INDIAN OCEAN (SCEAM Indian Ocean)

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the Western Indian Ocean Marine Science Association (WIOMSA) are co-organizing a sea cucumber fishery manager’s workshop in Zanzibar, Tanzania, 16–‐20 November 2012.  It follows from a landmark workshop in Fiji in 2011 involving 13 Pacific island nations – SCEAM Pacific and extends a recently completed regional sea cucumber fisheries project in the Western Indian Ocean. The workshop aims to be a platform for sharing management strategies striving towards ecologically sustainable and socially accepted harvest levels.

At the workshop, management tools and governance aspects of this unique and high–‐valued resource will be discussed. The workshop will rely on experiences from both the Indian Ocean and the Pacific, and consist of theoretical and mentoring components to support sea cucumber fisheries management improvements where they are needed. International experts in sea cucumber fisheries management will present seminars and facilitate workgroups and plenary sessions.

 Read the full announcement from: www.wiomsa.net/images/stories/SCEAM%20IO%20-%20First%20Announcement.pdf

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Blue Ventures Conservation receives world renowned grant to conserve mangrove forests in Madagascar

March 8th, 2012 No comments

Leveraging markets to conserve mangrove biodiversity and alleviate poverty in Madagascar 

The UK Government’s environment department, DEFRA, today announced a generous grant for the conservation of critical mangrove forests Madagascar, as part of its Darwin Initiative for overseas biodiversity conservation.

This new project will expand Blue Ventures’ work with coastal communities in western Madagascar to develop innovative new approaches to mangrove conservation and coastal poverty alleviation.

As a result of the project, it is hoped that coastal communities in this impoverished region will be able to earn new income from the sale of carbon credits, enhanced productivity of crab and shrimp fisheries, and the sustainable supply of charcoal and timber.

Blue Ventures will work with the region’s fishing communities to implement effective community-based management of mangroves so that they are able to supply these ecosystems services.  Blue Ventures will also broker the equitable sale of the ecosystem services, guaranteeing that local people are able to improve their livelihoods.

Madagascar’s mangrove forests are extremely valuable ecosystems, not only for the exceptional biodiversity that they support, but also for the host of ecosystem services and goods that they provide, many of which are critical to the well-being of coastal people. Over half of Madagascar’s population lives on the coast and mangroves play an important role in the well-being of many of these people, be they urban or rural. Yet, for the very reason that they provide so many valuable products, these mangroves are increasingly deforested and degraded.

Diversifying cash income away from just fishing and forest exploitation will help to eradicate deep poverty in these communities.  In addition the project will help communities to gain legal land and user rights to their mangroves – at present, these mangroves are open access. If coastal fishing communities are to be able to cope with climate change, there is an urgent need to sustainably manage the mangrove forest resources on an ecologically meaningful scale in the region. This project will make an important step towards achieving this goal.
Lalao Aigrette, Blue Ventures’ Coastal Research Manager 
A key objective of the three-year project is to develop a simple model that can be easily implemented by other communities throughout Madagascar.  A key innovation of the project is the way it combines different mangrove ecosystem services to develop several income streams for community participants.  Dr. Garth Cripps, senior conservation scientist with Blue Ventures in Antananarivo, says: ”this approach enables the project to overcome the significant policy uncertainty for REDD+, as well as the delay of several years before eventual carbon incomes flow, to bring communities more immediate benefits derived from local, internal markets.”

Until now, Madagascar’s extensive mangroves have received very little conservation attention, despite being amongst the largest in the Indian Ocean, and critical to coastal livelihoods and biodiversity”, says Dr. Al Harris, Research Director of Blue Ventures.  To date most forest conservation efforts have focused on the humid eastern forests of Madagascar.  “Thanks to the generous support of the Darwin Initiative, we can now begin to give these exceptionally productive habitats the attention they deserve.”

The extensive mangroves of the western coast support several critically endangered species, including the Madagascar Fish Eagle, the Madagascar Teal and possibly the last populations of two species of sawfish in the Western Indian Ocean. These mangroves are also fundamental to the health of the extensive coral reefs that occur along the west coast. By contributing to the preservation of this significant biodiversity, the project will help Madagascar to fulfil the principal objectives of the convention on biological diversity .

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