21 February 2009

27 Feb (Fri): Free screening of "Remember Chek Jawa"

Eric Lin Youwei's "Remember Chek Jawa" will be screened as part of the 3rd Singapore Indie Doc Fest.

Chek Jawa, discovered only in 2001 on Singapore’s Pulau (island) Ubin, is an inter-tidal area of just 1 square km with amazingly rich marine biodiversity. However, unknown to many, in 1992 the area had been slated for land reclamation, scheduled to begin just months from the discovery date. Most Singaporeans felt powerless to reverse the Government’s decision. However, a band of passionate volunteers refused to give up and believed that something could be done. Find out how they followed their hearts and helped change the course of nature conservation in Singapore forever.

More details about the screening.
Trailer on YouTube.

Time: 7.30pm
Venue: Singapore Art Museum - Glass Hall
Website: http://www.chekjawa.net/
Contact: 6337 7535 admin@substation.org

The Wild Child Campaign

"If children do not get first hand experience of the real world the there will be problems later on with emotional and physical resilience."
Something for everyone
Children in the UK are more sedentary due to the growth of children's television, video games and parents' concerns about "stranger danger" or physical harm while playing what used to be normal childhood games.

The UK National Trust is launching The Wild Child campaign to get children play outside and 'get dirty'. Children will be invited to go pond dipping, help make compost, search for bats at night or just explore woodland. It will include educational tools and activities to teach children about native wildlife. A website will give families advice on events happening around the country and a take home pack will give tips on activities like making a pond or planting vegetables so children remain active throughout the holidays.

National Trust launches campaign to get children outdoors
Children should play outside and 'get dirty', according to the National Trust, which is launching a campaign to get 'couch potato' youngsters off the sofa.
Louise Gray, The Telegraph 20 Feb 09;
The rise of childhood obesity and increasing ignorance about nature caused by spending too much time in front of televisions and computers has led to fears that children are being robbed of a healthy active childhood.

The National Trust is so worried about the problem that it is opening up properties around the country for more than 1,000 different events designed to let children get their hands dirty.

Children will be invited to go pond dipping, help make compost, search for bats at night or just explore woodland.

Sue Palmer, the author of Toxic Childhood, said children are living a more sedentary life for a number of reasons including the growth of children's television, video games and parental concerns about the risk of "stranger danger" or physical harm while playing what used to be normal childhood games.

She also said the reaction to young people playing "wild" outdoors in modern society means parents do not let children play outside for fear of disturbing other adults. The increase in designer clothes for children means they are even being restricted for fear of getting expensive items dirty.

"If children do not get first hand experience of the real world the there will be problems later on with emotional and physical resilience," she said.

Dame Fiona Reynolds, the trust's director general, said the campaign was in reaction to concerns that childhood are not experiencing nature by climbing trees or being stung by nettles, for example.

"It is responding to the fact that a lot of parents say that one of the reasons they bring their children to National Trust properties is because they do not know about danger because they are discouraged from getting their hands dirty or getting involved.

"The National Trust is one of the few places you can come out of your cocoon and get real access to nature, experience it and take part in something, where children are encouraged to run around outdoors."

A recent survey found most children knew what a dalek from the television programme Dr Who looked like but few could identify a barn owl.

The Wild Child campaign, to be launched in time for the summer holidays, will include a range of educational tools and activities to teach children about native wildlife. A website will give families advice on events happening around the country and a take home pack will give tips on activities like making a pond or planting vegetables so children remain active throughout the holidays.

Lost Atlantis found on Google Ocean?

Keen observers spotted outlines of a vast city in the Atlantic Ocean. But the criss-crossing lines were today explained by Google as an artifact of data collection. Details for the ocean maps on Google Earth come from sonar measurements of the sea floor recorded by boats - and the affected area was mapped by boats travelling in a series of straight lines.

The perfect rectangle, which is around the size of Wales, was noticed on the search giant's underwater exploration tool. Photo: GOOGLE EARTH

The underwater image can be found at the co-ordinates 31 15'15.53N 24 15'30.53W

'Atlantis' was blip on Google Earth
Hopes that the lost city of Atlantis had been found on Google Earth have been shattered.
Sarah Knapton, The Telegraph 20 Feb 09;

Keen observers had spotted what appeared to be the outline of a vast city - the size of Wales - on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean.

But the criss-crossing lines, located 600 miles west of the Canary Islands, were explained as an "artifact" of its map making process.

Details for the ocean maps on Google Earth come from sonar measurements of the sea floor recorded by boats - and the area around the Canaries was mapped by boats travelling in a series of straight lines.

A spokeswoman for Google said: "It's true that many amazing discoveries have been made in Google Earth including a pristine forest in Mozambique that is home to previously unknown species and the remains of an Ancient Roman villa.

"In this case, however, what users are seeing is an artefact of the data collection process.

"Sea floor terrain data is often collected from boats using sonar to take measurements of the sea floor.

"The lines reflect the path of the boat as it gathers the data.

"The fact that there are blank spots between each of these lines is a sign of how little we really know about the world's oceans."

The admission was a blow to Atlantis hunters who are convinced the city still lies undiscovered below the waves.
Google Ocean: Atlantis 'found off Africa' turns out to be boat mapping lines
Hopes that a 'grid of streets' of the lost city of Atlantis had been found on Google Ocean have been shattered.
Matthew Moore, The Telegraph 20 Feb 09;

Keen observers had spotted what appeared to be the outline of a vast city on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean.

But the criss-crossing lines, located 600 miles west of the Canary Islands, were today explained by Google as sonar data collected as boats mapped the ocean floor.

A spokeswoman said: "It's true that many amazing discoveries have been made in Google Earth including a pristine forest in Mozambique that is home to previously unknown species and the remains of an Ancient Roman villa.

"In this case, however, what users are seeing is an artefact of the data collection process.

"Bathymetric (or sea floor terrain) data is often collected from boats using sonar to take measurements of the sea floor.

"The lines reflect the path of the boat as it gathers the data.

"The fact that there are blank spots between each of these lines is a sign of how little we really know about the world's oceans."

The network of criss-cross lines had been spotted 620 miles off the coast of north west Africa near the Canary Islands on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean.

The perfect rectangle was noticed on the search giant's underwater exploration tool by an aeronautical engineer who claims it looks like an "aerial map" of a city.

The underwater image can be found at the co-ordinates 31 15'15.53N 24 15'30.53W.

Google Ocean, an extension of Google Earth, allows web users to virtually explore the ocean with thousands of images of underwater landscapes.

Launched earlier this month, it lets users swim around underwater volcanoes, watch videos about exotic marine life, read about nearby shipwrecks, contribute photos and watch unseen footage of historic ocean expeditions.

The legend of Atlantis has excited the public imagination for centuries. In recent years "evidence" of the lost kingdom has been found off the coast of Cyprus and in southern Spain.

Plato described it as an island "larger than Libya and Asia put together" in front of the Pillars of Hercules - the Straits of Gibraltar. He said Atlantis was a land of fabulous wealth, advanced civilisation and natural beauty destroyed by earthquakes and floods 9,000 years earlier.

Giant Borneo Snake?

Or a gianormous hoax?The snake-like monster of Borneo in an allegedly real photograph of the river Baleh. The creature is said to be 100 feet long. Look at the apparent sizes of the trees and make your own geometrical judgment. The photographer is unknown.

The snake-like Borneo monster, though rarely seen or photographed, looks pretty accessible in this scene said to be near a remote village. The photographer is unknown.

Giant snake or big hoax?
New Straits Times 20 Feb 09;
This grainy picture of a large snake, carried by a Malay daily in Sarawak last week, got the 60,000-odd residents in Kapit all abuzz. However, most of them believed it to be a hoax. It was reported that the ‘snake’, said to be ‘over 100 metres long, with the body (circumference) the size of an oil drum’, was swimming in the flooded waters of Rajang river during the floods last month. The fuzzy picture was reportedly taken from a helicopter by a member of a Sibu-based flood surveillance team with a camera phone. One of the town’s respected Iban elders, Edward Manjah, 79, with a hearty laugh, brushed off the report as ‘rubbish’.

100-Foot 'Borneo Monster' Said Photographed
Benjamin Radford, livescience.com Yahoo News 20 Feb 09;
Two recently released photographs of a huge snake-like creature allegedly taken in Borneo are causing locals to wonder if a local legend may have come alive.

But are the pictures real?

One photo, of a serpentine shape in the Baleh river, was said to be taken from a helicopter by a member of a disaster team monitoring flood conditions. Locals suggest that the animal may be a creature of folklore called Nabau, a dragon-like, shape-shifting sea serpent. Others aren't convinced.

Water serpent legends

Linking modern photographs and eyewitness reports to native stories and legends is a common mistake among cryptozoologists - those who look for evidence of mysterious or unknown creatures such as Bigfoot or lake monsters. With so little hard evidence to go on, it's tempting to do, but the problem is that legends and myths may not have any connection to real events. Just because a native culture has a name for a strange monster or creature doesn't mean that the beast ever actually existed.

Fairies, dragons, and leprechauns populate our modern storybooks and legends, but we don't assume they are real.

Stories and legends about "water horses" and kelpies have been told in the Scottish highlands for centuries, often incorrectly assumed to relate to the Loch Ness monster. Native Indian stories in British Columbia, Canada, tell of a fearsome water spirit named Naitaka said to dwell in Lake Okanagan, giving rise to reports of a monster there called Ogopogo. In Tibetan Buddhist beliefs there exist the nagas, snake-like creatures that live in rivers and streams.

Virtually every culture around the world has some version of a water-based spirit, creature, or monster in its folklore. So it's not surprising that some might turn to local myths in Borneo to "identify" the huge snake.

Suspicious photos

One of the first red flags to go up when considering any extraordinary photograph offered as evidence (of UFOs, Bigfoot, or lake monsters, for example) is an image submitted anonymously. The photographs were taken by an unnamed "member of a disaster team," at an unknown location and date.

Two photos were released; one was taken from a helicopter, the second one wasn't, suggesting that the creature was sighted on two separate occasions. That raises the question as to why there are only two photos; one might expect that a person seeing such an extraordinary creature might snap more than one picture each time.There's also the interesting composition of the photos: The snake-like creature seems to be posing full-length for the camera. In the aerial photo, it is nicely centered in the middle of the river, and in the other photo (below) it is just high enough above the rooftops in the foreground to see its full length.Of course it's possible the photographer just got lucky, capturing the giant snake at its most photogenic both times, but that raises another question: If the huge beast spends its time in such high-visibility areas, why is this the first time it's been reported or photographed?

Furthermore, the reported size of the creature cannot be correct. The original estimate given was that the creature was 100 feet long, though the scale of the photos suggest it must be far larger. [Scientists recently found the fossil of a prehistoric snake said to be 43 feet long; it's been extinct for some 60 million years, though.]

Then there's the question of whether the photo was even taken at the Baleh river, since most photographs of its waters show it to be a cloudy river, not the clear, dark blue water seen in the aerial photo. If the photo was actually taken by a disaster team member checking on flooded regions, the flooding runoff would increase the suspended particulates in the water (silt, debris, etc.), creating even cloudier water than usual.

Of course, all these troubling questions vanish if the photographs are simply faked.

More links
Are the photos of Borneo's monster snake real? by Katherine Harmon in 60-Second Science Blog on the Scientific American

20 February 2009

The Youth Habitat Portal

Brandon Chia has highlighted the Youth Habitat Portal, a web resource by the Singapore Environment Council for youths on environmental issues.Primarily focusing on brown issues (such as the 3Rs), it has sections on facts with tips, a calendar of events, partnership and funding, for submitting your environmental project to SEC, Scene 'n' Heard covers news on schools, individuals and global events, green jobs and internships, a green exchange along the lines of FreeCycle, and green blogs which features November's Midnight Monkey Monitor.

Here's what Brandon had to say about the Portal:
The Youth Habitat Portal is a focal point for networking, exchange of information and capacity building amongst youth in Singapore and globally. This online portal also gives voice to Singapore's youth efforts on the environment and spurs them on to become good global citizens and make a difference.

The Youth Portal aims to
  • Allow youths to find out more about our environment and check out on activities happening locally
  • Inspire Youths by showcasing what other youths are doing for our environment
  • Hook up with environmental or youth groups for possible collaboration
  • Assist youths how they can make a difference to our environment
This portal was developed from gathering Youths feedback - from those who love the environment and want to do more, or are just getting started. And it's ever evolving; feedback is always welcome.

Resorts World Sentosa: at what price?

Resorts World at Sentosa yesterday revised the cost for the 49ha resort in its earnings call, bringing it up to $6.59 billion. This is the second time the budget has been revised: It was bumped up from $5.2 billion to $6 billion in November 2007.
Sentosa reclamation begins
Reclamation of Sentosa shores for the Integrated Resort in Jul 07

Resorts World at Sentosa chief executive officer Tan Hee Teck said the extra money was needed for improvements to the design of the casino project, 'we needed more money to bring the attractions up to a superlative level.'

The natural shores of Sentosa have paid a price. What price must the whale sharks and dolphins pay?

Meanwhile on their website, Resorts World Sentosa has put up a Marine Life Park Statement, dated 9 Jan 09

From the Resorts World Sentosa website
Marine Life Park Statement, dated 9 Jan 09
The Marine Life Park team is committed to engaging animal groups as well as individuals, and welcomes dialogue and feedback. In this statement, we will address questions that groups and individuals have raised about the dolphins and whale sharks that will be in our Park when it opens.

We believe there is a place for zoos and aquariums in society. It is not a coincidence that ranking high among Singapore’s most popular attractions are its wildlife parks. We are committed to develop a world-class facility that will set the standard in Asia for animal care, learning and education and the promotion of marine conservation. A world-class team of experienced professionals and animal experts will be set up to deliver this promise.

Not many people, especially Asians, have the privilege to dive, sail and live near the oceans. We believe our Park will play a crucial role in educating visitors on the variety and beauty of marine animals. The Park will be a unique window for visitors to appreciate the ocean and the need for its conservation. We are convinced it will ignite and heighten environmental awareness and action among our guests. The presence of pandas in China’s zoos, for instance, has done much to raise the profile of the animal and create awareness of its endangered status.

Our pledge on conservation has been put into practice even before we open. In May 2008, we launched the Marine Life Fund, which will disburse up to S$3.2 million over five years, to help marine-life related research, education and conservation projects. In December 2008, the Fund made its first disbursement to international conservation organisation WildAid for its work in protecting the Galapagos Marine Reserve. Pictures and details of the project can be found on Marine Life Park section.

The marine animals at the Marine Life Park

Dolphins
The movement of marine animals, such as dolphins, is governed by the United Nations Environment Programme which upholds the internationally agreed upon policies of the Convention of International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES). Bottlenose dolphins are not classified as endangered. They are listed under CITES Appendix II, which lists species that are not necessarily now threatened with extinction but that may become so unless trade is closely controlled. In the same category as them are hippopotamuses in zoos and the Africa Grey Parrots in bird parks. Decades of successful breeding of bottlenose dolphins in parks that span Australia to Hong Kong and the United States have shown these animals to be very adaptable to living in controlled environments. It is estimated that there are at least 600,000 bottlenose dolphins in the wild today.

The actions of exporting and importing countries involved in the relocation of these animals are closely monitored by the CITES Secretariat. The acquisition of animals for the Marine Life Park will be done in full compliance with CITES and local regulations, which cover stringent criteria on husbandry practices, animal welfare and the size of animals’ habitat. For more than 30 years, CITES has been the global body mandated to regulate and protect the conservation of wild animals. For all of the Marine Life Park’s acquisition of animals, CITES will be the standard we adhere to.

Contrary to comments made by some quarters, we have explored acquiring animals from other aquariums. However, surplus dolphins from established aquariums have not been available for acquisition over these few years. We have supported and engaged in regular dialogue with a group that made such comments and in April 2008, requested it to refer us to any aquarium that was known to have available dolphins. We will continue to engage this group but to date, we have not received any referral.

Whale Sharks
Whale sharks are currently listed as “threatened”, a category below “endangered” in the protection list. They are “threatened’’ for a variety of reasons, many of which are a result of human activities that threaten the oceans. The threat these animals face in the wild makes the role of aquariums in their conservation all the more crucial.

We need to conserve and learn about these animals as much as we can before their population becomes critically unsustainable. There have been similar doubts on whether pandas and bottlenose dolphins could breed in captivity, and zoos and aquariums have played a crucial role in breaking ground in that respect to ensure these species continue to exist. It is the Marine Life Park’s goal to contribute to the study and research of whale sharks, and to do its part to help protect the species’ wild population from disappearing.

Committed to be the best
Since its inception in 2006, the Marine Life Park team has worked closely with marine experts and other stakeholders to ensure that the park’s development follows top-notch international practices. We intend to gain accreditation from a reputable international body once the Park is established. It is our mission to provide our animals with top-class care, and to treat them with respect.

The Marine Life Park team recognises the issues raised by groups and individuals, and also appreciates the support and well wishes from supporters who have expressed keen anticipation to work and meet some of its magnificent residents. We welcome views and remain committed to dialogue with special interest groups, supporters and any individual who is keen to learn and act on marine conservation.

We welcome any feedback/comments; please feel free to email us at csr@rwsentosa.com

The Marine Life Park Team

Read more on the Alliance of Marine Mammal Parks and Aquariums website

Sentosa, Marina IRs get pricier
Both are revising costs upwards for 2nd time
Lim Wei Chean, Straits Times 20 Feb 09;
SINGAPORE'S two integrated resorts (IRs) are getting increasingly expensive, with both developers revising their cost estimates upwards for a second time.

An additional $590 million will need to be pumped into the kitty for the Sentosa project, while the price tag for the Marina Bay Sands development has gone up by US$900 million.

Resorts World at Sentosa yesterday revised the cost for the 49ha resort in its earnings call, bringing it up to $6.59 billion. This is the second time the budget has been revised: It was bumped up from $5.2 billion to $6 billion in November 2007.

Marina Bay Sands will cost more as well. At last week's earnings call, Las Vegas Sands Corp announced its Singapore IR is estimated to cost US$5.4 billion, an upward revision from previous estimates of US$3.6 billion and US$4.5 billion.

No explanations were given by Sands for the increase in cost, but it raised US$2.1 billion last November in a rights issue to cover its projects, including the one in Singapore.

Resorts World at Sentosa chief executive officer Tan Hee Teck said yesterday that additional funding would come from operating cash flows when the casino resort opens next year.

The extra money was needed for improvements to the design of the casino project, he said. Areas which were tweaked included pedestrian flow, the monorail stop at the resort and adjustments to the 24 attractions.

He said: 'We want to make sure each and every attraction is up to standard. We found we needed more money to bring the attractions up to a superlative level.' Moreover, construction costs had risen sharply in the last few years, he added. Steel, for example, rose from $800 per tonne in 2007 to $1,800 last year.

CIMB-GK Song Seng Wun said it was simply bad timing that the IR projects were awarded at the peak of the construction boom, which led to costs spiralling upwards.

Construction projects awarded earlier do not benefit from prices softening since the global financial meltdown, as they had locked in materials at a higher rate, Resorts World's Mr Tan said.

Despite the revision in budget and the ongoing global recession, Mr Justin Tan, managing director of parent company Genting International, said he is 'still as confident' in the success of the project.

As travellers trim their budget to take in short-haul travel, visitors from China and India who may have splurged on trips to Las Vegas or Europe would head to Singapore instead, he added.

Resorts World at Sentosa is slated to open on schedule by March next year.

One section of the resort is due for completion next week when its first 11-storey hotel, the Maxims Tower, is topped off. It will be the first development to be completed at either of the IRs.

Marina Bay Sands is expected to open in the fourth quarter of this year. However, it is uncertain which parts of the resort will be ready as Las Vegas Corp said only 'certain features' are targeted to be ready by December.

The resort has applied to the Government for a staggered opening, but has yet to receive official approval.

Resorts World at Sentosa to top out first hotel this month
Channel NewsAsia 19 Feb 09;
SINGAPORE: Resorts World at Sentosa will top out its first hotel, Maxims Tower, by the end of this month.

The structural completion of the 11-storey hotel marks yet another major milestone in the development of the integrated resort, which remains on track for a soft opening in the first quarter of 2010.

Maxims Tower will open with three other hotels - Hotel Michael, Festive Hotel and Hard Rock Hotel - as well as the casino, Le Vie Theatre, a 7,300-seat Grand Ballroom, and Universal Studios Singapore.

Installation of ride equipment for the many attractions at Universal Studios Singapore has also begun, with testing and commissioning of the attractions scheduled to begin in October 2009.- CNA/ir

Singapore petrochemicals "holding its own"

Despite the economic downturn, mega developments continue on Jurong Island including a biodiesel plant, petrochemical cracker and oil storage facilities.
Jurong Island from Cyrene Reef
But ExxonMobil Corp will partially shut its mainland Singapore refinery and some petrochemical units at its Jurong Island facility for a month or more from March for routine maintenance. This includes ExxonMobil's over 900,000 tonnes a year naphtha cracker - the largest such unit in South-east Asia - and aromatics plant, the core facilities in the Jurong Island petrochemical operations.

Petrochemicals sector steady as she goes
Neste Oil to start plant construction, ENOC terminal to officially open
Ronnie Lim, Business Times 20 Feb 09;
THE oil/petrochemicals sector here appears to be holding its own, despite the economic downturn.

Next month will see two mega developments - a foundation-stone ceremony marking the start of construction proper for Neste Oil of Finland's $1.2 billion second-generation biodiesel plant, and the opening of Emirates National Oil Company's (ENOC) $470 million Horizon Terminals.

Just this week, a work contract was also awarded for the final downstream plant at ExxonMobil's US$5 billion-plus second petrochemical cracker here - which is expected to reach construction peak, with 14,000 workers employed, later this year, BT understands.

Neste Oil's coming event on March 6 follows completion late last year of foundation and civil engineering works at the Tuas site of what will be the world's largest renewable diesel plant, when the facility is completed in 2010.

BT reported last month that - in a clear sign that all was well with the project - Neste had started recruiting key managers for the 800,000 tonnes per annum facility.

A week after Neste's ceremony, the ENOC-led consortium's Horizon Terminals, a 1.24 million cubic metre oil storage facility, will officially open on March 12.

This follows completion of its third phase project adding 270,000 cu m of storage last December. This brought its total investment here to $470 million, a spokesman told BT.

'We are unfortunately constrained by land availability on Jurong Island,' he said, when asked if Horizon Terminals had plans for further expansions here.

The Horizon Terminals consortium is, meanwhile, awaiting a decision from JTC Corporation on the operatorship of the Jurong Rock Cavern underground storage facility. It was one of the bidders.

Despite the uncertain period - which saw some of the smaller oil trading firms here dropping out of the game last year - 'we are still optimistic', the Horizon spokesman said of prospects in oil terminalling here, given that the bigger players are all here for the long term.

'Commercial occupancy is 100 per cent right now,' he added, explaining that its tanks are leased to oil traders on long-term, one to two year contracts, with the latter reluctant to give these up, as 'it's difficult to get back'.

The weaker oil market, plus the entry of more terminal operators, is reflected more in 'physical occupancy of oil storage here, as throughput of the tanks has fallen', he said.

'Previously, while turnover of tanks averaged about 15 times a year, it had dropped to 10-12 times, and is now about 8-10 times a year,' he said of the throughput in the oil terminal business here.

A sign that things are also on track at ExxonMobil's petrochemical project, mainboard-listed OKP Holdings said on Wednesday that it had been awarded a $21.7 million civil works contract from a Foster Wheeler/Worley Parsons joint venture - understood to have done front-end engineering for the polypropylene downstream plant there.

The contract apparently marks the start of work on the last of the downstream projects at the oil giant's second petrochemical complex here.

One indirect benefit of the downturn, for investors such as ExxonMobil, has been lower material and labour costs.

BT understands that the project remains on schedule, with 14,000 workers (up from an earlier-indicated 10,000-plus workers) expected to be employed at construction peak later this year.

ExxonMobil's second complex, with a one million tonnes per annum cracker, is scheduled to start up in early-2011, just shortly after Shell's new petrochemical complex in mid-2010.

ExxonMobil to shut refining units for maintenance in March: sources
Business Times 20 Feb 09;
(SINGAPORE) ExxonMobil Corp will partially shut its mainland Singapore refinery and some petrochemical units at its Jurong Island facility for a month or more from March for routine maintenance, six industry sources said yesterday.

The US energy giant will close a number of secondary units in the 309,000 barrels per day (bpd) mainland refinery from early- March to mid-April, the sources told Reuters. They said none of the plant's crude units would be shut.

ExxonMobil's over 900,000 tonnes a year naphtha cracker - the largest such unit in South-east Asia - and aromatics plant, the core facilities in the Jurong Island petrochemical operations, will also be shut during March, they said.

Traders said details of the maintenance plan at the two refineries were not completely clear, although one industry source said the visbreaking units at both the mainland and Jurong Island refineries would be shut in stages during the period.

The Jurong Island plant has a capacity of 296,000- bpd, making Exxon's facilities in Singapore the fifth- biggest refining complex in the world.

The visbreaker processes residual fuels into more valuable middle distillates, and the shutdown would lead to more fuel oil flooding an oversupplied market but could help ease the glut in the region's diesel supplies in the face of slow demand.

'No CDUs will be shut, only the visbreaker. The impact will be more on fuel oil,' said a distillate trader, adding that the overall impact on the diesel market will be limited.

At Jurong Island, two sources said the March turnaround would include the aromatics unit that can produce more than 300,000 tonnes of benzene a year, while a cracking facility will start its month- long turnaround in May.

Asked about the planned maintenance, an ExxonMobil spokesman said: 'It is not our practice to comment on the operational status of our facilities. We are unable to confirm or comment on the information you have received.'

The mainland refinery, which has two crude distillation units (CDUs) - one with a capacity of more than 200,000 bpd and the other with up to 100,000 bpd - was shut for major maintenance in June 2007.

The refinery on Jurong Island, also called the Pulau Ayer Chawan (PAC) facility, operates two CDUs with a capacity of about 115,000 bpd and 185,000 bpd. The smaller one was shut for over two weeks in May 2007 after a fire.

Traders said the shutdown of Exxon's cracking facility may have only a small impact on the region's naphtha market.

'Generally, there shouldn't be any major impact on Exxon's naphtha supply because they are net short. They import naphtha to feed the cracker, which uses about 60 per cent low-sulphur waxy residue and 40 per cent naphtha,' a source said\. \-- Reuters

Shipping slowdown in Singapore

Container traffic through Singapore ports shrank 19.6 per cent in January, following a 14 per cent decline in December, as Singapore's exports tumbled a record 35 per cent last month.Vast seagrass meadows overlooking container terminalsContainer throughput at the dominant operator PSA's Singapore terminals fell 19.6 per cent to 1.92 million TEUs from 2.38 million previously.

Empty cargo ships hit record high
Unused cargo space equivalent to 8.8% of world's capacity
Robin Chan, Straits Times 20 Feb 09;
THE number of empty container ships worldwide has climbed to a record high, according to a new report.

A total of 392 vessels are currently sitting idly in ports, up from 210 at the beginning of last month.

The unused cargo space is equivalent to about 1.1 million standard units (TEU) of empty containers, or 8.8 per cent of the total world capacity.

This figure surpasses the previous high of 5 per cent set in 1986, the year United States Lines went bankrupt.

The report from Lloyd's List in Britain said demand would have to grow at an average of 15 per cent over the next three years 'just to restore equilibrium' by early 2013.

A 10 per cent figure, however, was more realistic, pushing recovery to 2014.

Hobbled by a combination of an oversupply of ships and a dwindling demand for goods, the shipping industry is facing one of its most challenging times.

Shipping lines have responded by sharply cutting capacity to reduce costs and push freight rates back up.

APL, a unit of Neptune Orient Lines (NOL), said yesterday it would raise its rates on the Asia-Europe route by US$250 (S$382) per container from April1. That followed similar moves by other shipping lines,

Mr Detlev Kerber, APL's vice-president for the Asia-Europe trade, said: 'Freight rates in this trade have been falling drastically for more than a year...In many cases, not even variable transportation costs are covered by current freight rates.

'Our intention is to restore freight rates in the Asia-Europe trade to a sustainable level.'

Shipping giant AP Moller-Maersk laid up eight ships in December and issued a profit warning ahead of its results announcement next month.

NOL, meanwhile, has acted to cut US$200 million in costs by laying up 15 ships and chartering another six, a response in part to its fourth-quarter net loss of US$149 million.

NOL chief executive Ron Widdows said the year would be challenging, and 2010 would likely be weak as well. He anticipates that the company will report losses this year.

World trade has taken a beating as the United States and Europe battle major recessions.

The important Asia-Europe trade route has virtually collapsed, and the world's major ports are seeing traffic slow dramatically.

Container traffic through Singapore ports shrank 19.6 per cent in January, following a 14 per cent decline in December, as Singapore's exports tumbled a record 35 per cent last month.

Similarly, container traffic through Hong Kong's port slumped 23 per cent last month.

The World Bank has predicted that world trade will shrink 2.1per cent this year - the first decline since 1982.

Container volume here continues to fall
Transhipment at the port of Singapore plunges 19.6% to 1.97m TEUs
Vincent Lee, Business Times 17 Feb 09;
THE trend that started in the last quarter of 2008 kicked in fully in January as transhipment at the port of Singapore plunged 19.6 per cent to 1.97 million twenty foot-equivalent units (TEUs) from 2.46 million TEUs a year ago.

Container throughput at the dominant operator PSA's Singapore terminals fell 19.6 per cent to 1.92 million TEUs from 2.38 million previously.

Jurong Port, meanwhile, handled 18.3 per cent fewer boxes - 58,000 TEUs compared to 71,000 TEUs previously.

Transhipment volumes have been sliding since they hit a high of 2.73 million TEUs in July. By December, throughput had fallen 21 per cent to 2.16 million TEUs in a clear sign that global trade was rapidly decelerating.

Neptune Orient Lines warned in the third quarter that it would slip into the red for Q4. At its recent Q4 results announcement, it not only revealed the expected loss (US$149 million net) but went on to warn of a full-year loss for 2009 as well.

Sector-wise, the outlook isn't much better. Some 303 container ships with a combined capacity of 800,000 TEUs were laid up on Feb 2, according to container industry database AXS Alphaliner.

This amounts to 6.5 per cent of the global fleet and is the highest proportion of idled ships on record.

In an interesting twist, however, total bunker sales rose to 3.02 million tonnes in January from 2.73 million tonnes in December as a recovery in dry bulk rates saw a revival of some shipping activity.

19 February 2009

Wildfacts updates: Semakau Checklist, nems and more

In preparation for the Semakau Book, Semakau sightings for the wild fact sheets have been consolidated into photo checklists.This is a very preliminary list. And can be much improved with the help of those who know Semakau and our marine life! Many of the photographed sightings on the list have no ID. And some of the ID I've indicated are unconfirmed. I'd be very grateful for any contributions of sightings or ID information that you may have. Thank you!

In preparing the checklist, I've finally gotten around to doing fact sheets for these creatures.

The Pale tailed slug (Chelidonura pallida) is NOT a nudibranch. It belongs to Family Aglajidae (tailed slugs) of the Order Cephalaspidea (headshield slugs) which include the Bubble shell snails.
This slug has a long, cylindrical body with a pair of 'wings' (called parapodia) which fold over the centre of the body as well as a pair of 'tails, one longer than the other.

This rather large sea cucumber is probably Herrmann's sea cucumber (Stichopus herrmanni).
Its body is stiff with a wrinkled texture but no large bumps. It can grow very large, 20-30cm, up to 50cm long!

This white 'furry' little animal with a brown petaloid is probably the Maretia heart urchin (Maretia planulata).
Heart urchins burrow in the ground and are thus seldom seen. They are relatives of sand dollars and sea urchins.

A scary looking sea anemone is the Alicia sea anemone (Alicia sp.) which I came across during a TeamSeagrass trip to Pulau Semakau. Dr Daphne warned that they sting painfully.
And a closer look at the tentacles does show that it seems well armed with batteries of nasty looking stingers!

The Alicia anemone below was spotted by Andy at Cyrene Reef. It didn't look like much when we first saw it.
But when Sijie settled it in a tank it showed its true beauty. See his Nature Scouter blog for a photo of it.

Recently, Andy and Stephen saw this bizarre Haeckel's anemone (Actinostephanus haeckeli) on our trip to Terumbu Raya, just off Pulau Semakau.
The fact sheet now has Stephen's fabulous photo, and Andy's amazing video clip of this sea anemone.

On another trip, Marcus took photos of this Leathery anemone (Heteractis crispa) with all the features that helped in its identification.
This is fantastic! It's rather difficult to tell apart the large long-tentacled sea anemones without a photo of the important bits.

Some of the strange creatures recently seen are still not included here. Such as the pretty pink heart urchin and the large Asteronotus cespitosus nudibranch laying bright orange egg ribbons that Marcus photographed. There's just so much that we see everytime we go to our shores!

I'll be happy to add any of your sightings on our shores to the wild fact sheets! Just email me.

Invasion of the Singing Mudskippers

Thousands of mudskippers were seen flipping and hopping around the 100m-long mudflat along Penang’s famed Gurney Drive.
Fish out of water: Hundreds of mudskippers skipping, flipping or what looks like (inset) singing along the mudflat on Gurney Drive in Penang.

“It used to be quite sandy from Tanjung Tokong all the way to Gurney Drive. However with human activities, construction and land reclamation, the natural coastline has changed and become a mudflat,” said Dr Aileen Kan Shau Hwai, a senior lecturer at Universiti Sains Malaysia’s School of Biological Sciences.

Mudskippers in Gurney Drive
Andrea Filmer, The Star 19 Feb 09;
GEORGE TOWN: Penang’s famed Gurney Drive has a new slippery attraction for locals and tourists – thousands of spotted brown mudskippers can be seen flipping and hopping around the 100m-long mudflat just beyond the embankment wall over the past several months.

The presence of the amphibious fish is believed to be a telling sign of the cleanliness-level in the coastline.

Dr Aileen Kan Shau Hwai, a senior lecturer at Universiti Sains Malaysia’s School of Biological Sciences, said it was unusual for so many mudskippers to be seen at the popular seafront promenade.

“It used to be quite sandy from Tanjung Tokong all the way to Gurney Drive.

“However with human activities, construction and land reclamation, the natural coastline has changed and become a mudflat,” she said yesterday.

Dr Kan said the mudskipper was drawn to muddy ecosystems.

“My guess is that there were few mudskippers living there originally and as they breed quite easily, their numbers multiplied as the mudflat expanded,” she said.

She said the hardy fish were territorial with each other but were quite harmless to people.

“You can probably see them shaking their heads at each other or flipping around but they normally disappear into the mud when people come near,” she said, adding they sometimes looked like they were singing when they breathed through their mouths.

Some of the mudskippers were relatively large and Dr Kan said this was a favourable indication of the cleanliness level in the area.

“In some countries, mudskippers are used as a pollution indicator. Something in the pollutants and heavy metals found in polluted areas stunts the growth of mudskippers.

“So, larger mudskippers are actually a good indication of the cleanliness level,” she said, adding the normal length of the fish depended on the species but was around 15cm.

Engineer Clara Kim, 24, who was in Gurney Drive yesterday observing the agile fish, said there were definitely more mudskippers now compared to the last couple years.

“They’re quite mean-looking creatures, but it’s interesting to see so many of them here,” the Penangite said.

Coral growing near Dubai's The Palm?

Marine scientists said "early data is promising - new coral is growing on the windward outer reaches of breakwaters erected around Nakheel’s Palm Trilogy and The World."This is the only photo provided with recent media reports. Spot any large cnidarians in it?Accepting that such mega projects will become more common, the researchers said “it’s more important that we are able to manage it and mitigate the changes…The fact is we’re not doing a good job of management.”

The study has important political implications for the future of artificial marine structures. If it is proven that productive communities can thrive around such structures, opposition to such projects in other emirates and countries will be weakened.

A UAE-based marine scientist has called for caution. “This is not a straightforward issue,” said the researcher and policymaker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he works for a government department. “Breakwaters will increase the possibility of erosion and bring sediment,” he said. Sediment will impede the growth of corals. “There are two schools of thought on artificial structures. Some scientists think fish come to that area not because the number of fish has increased but because other habitats have been destroyed.”

A marine scientist who is familiar with the area and also spoke on the condition of anonymity said that while some species would fare better, others would be jeopardised. “What about other species such as green turtles that are dying?” he said.

The Palm Jebel Ali is being built in a formerly protected area, the Jebel Ali Marine Sanctuary. The area was given legal protection in 1998 on the grounds that it housed one of the Gulf’s richest marine ecosystems, with 34 coral species and 77 species of reef fish.

Coral growing near Dubai's The Palm, say scientists
Derek Baldwin, Xpress News 17 Feb 09;

The jury is still out on whether Dubai’s offshore reclamation projects are a sound ecological addition to the Gulf, say world experts studying new artificial reefs at the mega-billion dollar developments.

However, in interviews on Tuesday near the trunk of the Jebel Ali Palm, marine scientists said early data is promising - new coral is growing on the windward outer reaches of breakwaters erected around Nakheel’s Palm Trilogy and The World.

The comments from experts with the United Nations University International Network on Water, Environment and Health (UNU-INWEH) came as a two-day coastal monitoring workshop wrapped up in Dubai.

United Nations experts and Nakheel have teamed up in a partnership formed in 2007 to monitor the effects of mega reclamation on the environment.

“I think in 20 years you will have a rocky reef with some very large fish living on it,” said Dr. Peter Sale, Assistant Director of UNU-INWEG, in an interview, “hammour, the very big ones particularly, if protective fishing is put in place.”

Since a Nakheel-supported team of 11 scientists started collecting on-site data from dredged artificial reefs off Dubai shores in mid-2008, Sale said as many as 100 species of fish and 15 to 20 species of coral have been observed on site.

New colonies of phytoplankton, oysters, and invertebrates are also establishing their presence on the stepped-underwater foundations of the Nakheel breakwaters, he said.

The “richness of fish and coral is greater on the breakwaters than it is on the natural reefs,” said Sale, a 40-year Canadian marine ecologist.

The breakwaters protrude above the sandy Gulf bottom providing a solid substrate for new aquatic life, he said.

Studying the new manmade reclamation projects will be important, Sale said, for a world that has been modifying its earthly terrain for 8,000 years and is only relatively of late beginning to create new marine-based environments such as the Palm Jumeirah, Palm Deira and Palm Jebel Ali.

Accepting that such mega projects will become more common, Sale said “it’s more important that we are able to manage it and mitigate the changes…The fact is we’re not doing a good job of management.”

Fellow Canadian and marine biologist Dr. Ken Drouillard said “there is still a cautionary tale how these systems are managed in the future.”

Drouillard is head of the Organic Analytical Laboratory of the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research and Associate Professor of Biological Sciences, University of Windsor, Canada.

He said he was aware of problems arising out of manmade structures that by their sheer size and presence interfere with the natural ebb and flow of the water around them.

European studies, for example, have revealed that manmade structures off Dubai have greatly changed wave patterns and, accordingly, shoreline erosion along the emirate’s 70 kilometres of natural coastline.

The addition of manmade islands has created more than 1,000 kilometres of new coastline for Dubai developers.

Other studies have suggested that calm waters inside the Nakheel breakwaters are not subjected to rigorous natural wave movement and could lead to muddy like beaches and stagnating waters within the frond extensions from the palm design.

“There are several key issues that could arise,” Drouillard said, adding the team is concerned about the “lagoon” effect of calm water.

But Drouillard said that Nakheel has pursued efforts “to maximise water flow” to keep protected waters inside the breakwaters suitable for marine life. Large gaps have been punched in the circular seawalls at strategic points to allow water to flow through but not disturb the tranquility of the Palm settings.

Keeping protected waters safe from anoxia – oxygen depletion – is paramount, he said.

“You can get fish kills. There are a whole host of problems that require proactive monitoring,” he said.

Human residents of the offshore areas, as well, want to live in healthy sea conditions free of odour and stagnation issues, Drouillard said.

In a statement on Tuesday, Nakheel said that it has high hopes for the monitoring team and study results noting the effort could help find “methods for optimising circulation in lagoon areas” and “advice for improved reclamation design”.

The research programme continues to take comparison marine samples in “the southern Gulf and those developing around the Nakheel projects”, Nakheel said, “enabling an accurate assessment of the value of the marine environment that the Nakheel projects represent.”

The partnership

The UNU-INWEH and Nakheel partnership formed in January 2007 has several aims:

* Create a coastal monitoring program of Nakheel’s coastal communities
* Technical seminars to share new developments on coastal management practices
* Work with regional governments, NGOs and universities
* A new marine biological laboratory – EHS-Trakhees, opened in March 2008 -- with Dubai World

Source: Nakheel
Marine life returns to Dubai's the Palm
Vesela Todorova, The National 18 Feb 09;
DUBAI // UN scientists say that although the waters off Dubai’s coast will never again be what they once were, the Palm Jumeirah offshore structure is creating a new complex marine ecosystem despite years of disruptive construction work.

The United Nations University’s International Network on Water, Environment and Health, commissioned by the Palm developer Nakheel, compiled a report on the effects of the project.

They concluded that marine life is slowly returning to the coastline.

“They are developing into very interesting rocky reefs,” said the chief scientist behind the research, Dr Peter Sale, a marine ecologist.

Dr Sale is the assistant director of the United Nations University network, which has worked with Nakheel since early 2007. The goal of the collaboration is for the scientists to pursue a long-term environmental monitoring programme and a sustainable management plan for the waters surrounding Nakheel’s man-made islands.

Nakheel’s decision to build a series of structures along Dubai’s coastline has drawn criticism from conservationists opposed to the environmental cost of the projects, such as large-scale destruction of coral reefs and changes in water flows.

The Palm Jebel Ali, for example, is being built in a formerly protected area, the Jebel Ali Marine Sanctuary. The area was given legal protection in 1998 on the grounds that it housed one of the Gulf’s richest marine ecosystems, with 34 coral species and 77 species of reef fish. To mitigate the damage it has caused, Nakheel financed a scheme under which the Emirates Marine Environment Group, an NGO, transplanted corals elsewhere.

Despite initial positive results, the long-term benefits are still unknown.

Yesterday, the UN scientists acknowledged that the ecosystem that existed off Dubai’s coast has been lost forever.

“There are certainly going to be differences,” said Dr Ken Drouillard, associate professor at the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research and Biological Sciences at the University of Windsor, Canada, who participated in the study.

“Much more complex habitat characteristics were present in the past.”

Dr Sale said about 100 species of fish and 20 coral species have been recorded in the areas around the outward side of the breakwaters of the Palm Jumeirah.

“In 20 years’ time you will have a more interesting marine environment than you had before,” he said.

“There will be many conservationists who will disagree with me.”

But as population growth intensifies the pressure to build, conservationists will have to let go of “the idea that the world is going to be one big protected area that we do not disturb”.

“You will have to get rid of the people,” he said of the alternative.

The United Nations University study has important political implications for the future of artificial marine structures. If it is proven that productive communities can thrive around such structures, opposition to such projects in other emirates and countries will be weakened.

It is precisely because of these far-reaching implications that a UAE-based marine scientist has called for caution.

“This is not a straightforward issue,” said the researcher and policymaker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he works for a government department.

“Breakwaters will increase the possibility of erosion and bring sediment,” he said. Sediment will impede the growth of corals.

“There are two schools of thought on artificial structures. Some scientists think fish come to that area not because the number of fish has increased but because other habitats have been destroyed.”

A marine scientist who is familiar with the area and also spoke on the condition of anonymity said that while some species would fare better, others would be jeopardised. “What about other species such as green turtles that are dying?” he said.

Pollution, development and climate change are threatening the future of many ocean ecosystems. Stemming Decline of the Coastal Ocean (PDF), which Dr Sale compiled, says that by 2050, 91 per cent of the world’s coastlines will have been affected by development, much of it poorly planned.

“Shorelines are hardened, channels and harbours are dredged, spoil is dumped, and submerged and emergent land is moved. Patterns of water flow are modified, and pathways used by organisms in their movements from nursery to adult habitats and spawning sites may also be modified or blocked,” the report says. Businesses and governments can sometimes form “powerful allies in favour of coastal development even when it is environmentally and socially unsustainable”.

Dr Sale said that while it is legitimate for the report to be critical “because there have been lots of bad practices in many places”, the projects Nakheel have built and are building “are not impossible to manage sustainably”.

Dr Drouillard said some of the challenges to the project stem from the lagoon’s environment, with reduced wave action that which can promote algal blooms. The scientists have also identified sites where organic carbon is prone to depositing, causing a lack of oxygen in the water and resulting in fish kills.

Other pressures will appear as more and more people populate the islands. Preventing these problems from occurring will require “proactive monitoring” and a sustainable management plan, Dr Drouillard said.

More links

18 February 2009

New Facebook group: "Bad Idea for Whale Shark in Sentosa IR"

To help create awareness of what Sentosa is planning on doing, this Facebook group was started by Meng Will.A recent comment includes one by Shuying Hu who says "Whalesharks that people attempted to keep in captivity died most of the time. I hope they will never attempt it, it will break my heart. Whalesharks are the gentlest creatures I've ever encountered."

With currently about 50 members, visit the "Bad Idea for Whale Shark in Sentosa IR" Facebook group to find out more.

I did a quick search for other facebook groups about the issue, and here's another one:

Singaporeans for Sharks (lovesharks.sg)
This is a specialised group for Singaporeans who pledge against the cruel and wasteful slaughter of sharks for shark fin around the world. This year we will also be looking at whale sharks in captivity for the Sentosa Resort World oceanarium.
Upcoming campaigns in 2009 will cover:
- Alternatives to shark fin this Chinese New Year
- Shark finning and shark fin consumption
- Whale sharks in captivity at Resorts World Sentosa
Check out the blog at http://www.lovesharks.sg

Information, the environment and citizen contributions

The general public should inform and be informed on environmental issues. Through online applications of real time information, which includes public contributions, for public action and consumer choice, as well as decisions by policy makers.

"We need to engage with citizens and ask how they can inform us, and it will also give us a better indication of what we need to do to be truly sustainable." says Jacqueline McGlade, head of the European Environment Agency (EEA) in a thought-provoking lecture carried in the BBC.

Does Singapore have any such online applications? Hmmm...
I can't think of any, can you?

Among Jacqueline McGlade's other comments, she warned the current approach left the public sidelined as "silent observers".

Political and business leaders were not able to tackle the problem without help from ordinary people. Environmental policies would also benefit from data based on public observations.

"There is just no way that we are going to be able to shift ourselves to tackle the fundamental problems of the crisis without addressing public participation,"

To encourage and benefit from participation we need to present our information in a way everyone can understand.

"It is no longer sufficient to develop passive lists or reports."

"Information is [currently] made available as lists of figures or speadsheets that only experts can interpret. Imagine if all of the statistics that inform our evening weather forecasts were presented in this way; do you think they would continue to be as popular?"

To really engage the public, more co-ordinated and timely gathering of complex data needs to be complemented by "real time" delivery of the information, in language that is accessible to all.

Examples cited of information systems that empower individuals:
Full articles on the wildsingapore news blog.

"Museomics" reveals museum secrets

In museum display cases and dusty drawers worldwide, a burst of new technologies is now unlocking otherwise hidden secrets from fossils, fur, and other relics of a vanished past. The phenomenon, called museomics, gives new life to musty old objects.

Singapore's Natural History is at the Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research which has a small public gallery.

Here's an article about how new ways of studying museum specimens can help identify threats to modern species and possibly prevent extinctions, and provide information that can promote human health.

Museum Secrets Unmasked by "Museomics" Technologies
Brian Handwerk, National Geographic News 17 Feb 09;
In museum display cases and dusty drawers worldwide, a burst of new technologies is now unlocking otherwise hidden secrets from fossils, fur, and other relics of a vanished past.

The phenomenon, called museomics, gives new life to musty old objects.

Stephan Schuster, a molecular biologist and biochemist at Pennsylvania State University, coined the term. With colleague Webb Miller, Schuster last year reconstructed most of the mammoth genome using hair that had been sitting in a Russian museum for 200 years.

"No effort was made to freeze it or dry it. It's just hair in a drawer. And [our attempts to recover DNA] worked. This is what gave us the idea for trying to attempt something like museomics," Schuster said.

"We say, take the effort and look for feathers, horns, hooves, eggshells, you name it. I think what we tried to show is that whatever is in a museum, it's worth taking the effort to go in and look at it systematically."

Warning Signs

Schuster and Miller also studied the Tasmanian tiger, or thylacine, a doglike marsupial extinct since the mid-1930s.

The pair used DNA sequencing technology to search for causes of the animal's demise by analyzing preserved specimens, including a century-old thylacine from the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., and another that died in the London Zoo in 1893.

"One of the striking results was how genetically similar those two individuals were," Schuster said. "They exhibit a lack of genetic diversity, which signals a species on the brink of extinction."

Such genetic warning signs could help scientists identify threats to modern species and possibly prevent extinctions.

Medical researchers are also using new techniques to comb museum collections for information that can promote human health.

The Mütter Museum at the College of Physicians of Philadelphia is renowned for its unique group of pathological and anatomical specimens.

Curator Anna Dhody said a Canadian team is trying to extract a cholera strain's DNA from "wet" specimens—human intestines floating in preservative solutions that are a century and a half old.

"The DNA in those is rendered null and void traditionally about three days after it makes contact with the solution, previously formaldehyde and now alcohol," she explained.

The research might produce a genetic and physical map of cholera epidemics that could become a valuable weapon in the ongoing fight against the disease.

Robert Hicks, director of the museum, noted that the Mütter's collection of extensively documented U.S. Civil War wounds could help doctors save the lives of soldiers in global conflict zones such as Iraq and Afghanistan.

"Civil War injuries were quite traumatic," he said. Minie balls, the huge lead bullets used back then, "took away large areas of tissue and bone—they were horribly disfiguring injuries."

Such injuries are similar to those caused by the homemade weapons used in recent warfare, prompting battlefield surgeons to take a closer look at historic Civil War injuries.

"The documentation of these injuries is now of great relevance, and I'm hoping that we can help make more of those connections," Hicks said.

Use It, Don't Lose It

At New York's American Museum of Natural History, Nancy Simmons, curator of the department of mammalogy, says she gets many more requests for DNA sampling than when she began overseeing the museum's 280,000-odd mammal specimens two decades ago.

"They want to get little clips of skin or drill into bones for DNA analyses or oxygen isotope analyses and things like that," said Simmons, curator of the mammalogy department.

"You can't get samples of all the species and populations in the world, and no one has the time or money to go to all the places where these animals live," she explained.

The museum's humpback whale collection, for example, offers scientists a peek into the past population structures before the great mammals were heavily hunted.

"By looking at baleen from the 1800s, one researcher found that whole maternal lineages have been exterminated," Simmons said.

Simmons noted that her mission is to protect the specimens in her care, and research always carries a risk of slowly degrading irreplaceable objects.

"We walk a fine line," she said. "We don't want to waste material or see things damaged or destroyed, but we want to encourage use of the collection. Otherwise it's like having a library and not letting anyone read the books."

Old fish photos show dramatic decline in U.S. trophy fish size

Archival photographs spanning more than five decades reveal a drastic decline of so-called "trophy fish" caught around coral reefs surrounding Key West, Florida.

Estimates are that large predatory fish have declined in weight by 88 percent from the 1950s, while the average length of sharks declined by more than 50 percent in 50 years.

"Managers mistakenly assume that what they saw in the 1980s was pristine, but most prized fish species had been reduced to a small fraction of their pristine abundance long before."

Trophy fish caught on Key West charter boats: a) 1957, b) early 1980s and c) 2007. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of California - San Diego)

Old Photos Document Dramatic Decline in Trophy Fish Size
livescience.com Yahoo News 18 Feb 09;
Archival photographs spanning more than five decades reveal a drastic decline of so-called "trophy fish" caught around coral reefs surrounding Key West, Florida.

Loren McClenachan, a graduate student at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, estimates that large predatory fish have declined in weight by 88 percent in modern photos compared to black-and-white shots from the 1950s. The average length of sharks declined by more than 50 percent in 50 years, the photographs revealed.

The study mirrors others that reveal stark changes to animal sizes caused by hunting or fishing, in which the largest of a species are often sought as trophy specimens.

McClenachan's findings will be published in the journal Conservation Biology. In a companion paper being published in the Endangered Species Research journal, McClenachan used similar methods to document the decline of the globally endangered goliath grouper fish.

"These results provide evidence of major changes over the last half century and a window into an earlier, less disturbed fish community," McClenachan writes.

While conducting research for her doctoral thesis on coral reef ecosystems of the Florida Keys, McClenachan found what she describes as a gold mine of photographic data at the Monroe County Library in Key West. Hundreds of archived photographs, snapped by professional photographer Charles Anderson and others, depict sport fishing passengers posing next to a hanging board used to determine the largest catches of the day. All of the photographs document sport fishing trips targeting coral reef fishes around the Florida Keys. McClenachan supplemented the study with her own photographs and observations on sport fishing trips in 2007.

In all, she measured and analyzed some 1,275 fish from pictures.

"While the photographs in this study do not provide a direct measurement," McClenachan admits, "they clearly demonstrate that large fish were more abundant in the past."

She said changes due to fishing pressures had likely begun before the 1950s, and she said scientists must be careful when creating baselines for a study.

"Managers mistakenly assume that what they saw in the 1980s was pristine, but most prized fish species had been reduced to a small fraction of their pristine abundance long before. Historical ecology provides the critical missing data to evaluate what we lost before modern scientific surveys began."

"I think the photos in this very original paper will make lots of people change their mind," said Daniel Pauly, a professor at the University of British Columbia Fisheries Center and Zoology Department.


Historical Photographs Expose Decline In Florida's Reef Fish, Study Finds
ScienceDaily 17 Feb 09;
A unique study by a scientist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego has provided fresh evidence of fishing's impact on marine ecosystems. Scripps Oceanography graduate student researcher Loren McClenachan accessed archival photographs spanning more than five decades to analyze and calculate a drastic decline of so-called "trophy fish" caught around coral reefs surrounding Key West, Florida.

In a paper published online in January and printed in an upcoming issue of the journal Conservation Biology, McClenachan describes a stark 88 percent decline in the estimated weight of large predatory fish imaged in black-and-white 1950s sport fishing photos compared to the relatively diminutive catches photographed in modern pictures. In a companion paper being published in the Endangered Species Research journal, McClenachan employs similar methods to document the decline of the globally endangered goliath grouper fish.

"These results provide evidence of major changes over the last half century and a window into an earlier, less disturbed fish community..." McClenachan said in the Conservation Biology paper.

McClenachan's studies are part of an emerging field called historical marine ecology, in which scientists study photographs, archives, news accounts and other records to help understand changes in the ocean ecosystem over time and establish baselines for future ecosystem restoration.

McClenachan believes that historical ecology can not only help describe the structure of ecosystems that existed in the recent past, but can be used to establish goals for restoration of large predators, both on land and in the water.

While conducting research for her doctoral thesis on coral reef ecosystems of the Florida Keys, McClenachan came across what she describes as a gold mine of photographic data at the Monroe County Library in Key West. Hundreds of archived photographs, snapped by professional photographer Charles Anderson and others, depict sport fishing passengers posing next to a hanging board used to determine the largest "trophy fish" catches of the day. All of the photographs document sport fishing trips targeting coral reef fishes around the Florida Keys. McClenachan supplemented the study with her own photographs and observations on sport fishing trips in 2007.

McClenachan calculated the mean size of the prize catches-including sharks, large groupers and other hefty fish in early photographs-and their decline from nearly two meters (6.5 feet) in length in the 1950s to contemporary catches of small fish such as snappers measuring a mere 34 centimeters (approximately one foot) on average. The fishes' average estimated weight dropped from nearly 19.9 kilograms (43.8 pounds) to 2.3 kilograms (5 pounds) from 1956 to 2007. The average length of sharks declined by more than 50 percent in 50 years, the photographs revealed.

"While the photographs in this study do not provide a direct measurement... they clearly demonstrate that large fish were more abundant in the past," said McClenachan.

Yet while McClenachan's study depicts significant changes over the last 50 years, she indicates in the paper that evidence exists showing that even the Florida Keys ecosystems of the 1950s were not pristine. Commercial fishing in the 1930s and 40s reduced populations of sharks, while numbers of large groupers declined through commercial fishing since at least the 1880s.

"The ongoing debate about the status of fisheries in the Florida Keys is a classic problem of the Shifting Baselines syndrome," says Scripps Professor Jeremy Jackson. "Managers mistakenly assume that what they saw in the 1980s was pristine, but most prized fish species had been reduced to a small fraction of their pristine abundance long before. Historical ecology provides the critical missing data to evaluate what we lost before modern scientific surveys began."

"I think the photos in this very original paper will make lots of people change their mind," said Daniel Pauly, a professor at the University of British Columbia Fisheries Centre and Zoology Department.

In separate studies, Scripps researchers recently uncovered fishing damages to coral reefs in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Scientists studying at the Central Pacific Ocean's Line Islands archipelago have shown that coral reef ecosystems experience drastic changes, including evidence of bacteria-infested corals, when large fish are extracted from an island reef through overfishing, as compared with healthy coral ecosystems off islands that are not fished.

As an interesting side note, McClenachan mentions in her paper that the price of sport fishing trips has not declined in conjunction with the size and weight of the caught fish. Although trophy fish dropped more than 88 percent in average fish weight, the trip costs remained steady, ranging from $40 to $48 per person (adjusted for inflation), per day between 1956 and 2007.

"... The continued viability of sport fishing based on increasingly small individuals in a degraded reef environment indicates a decoupling of the health of the marine environment from the value of the marine-based tourism industry," McClenachan noted in the paper.

Funding for the study was provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) Preserve America Initiative, NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries, NOAA Coral Reef Conservation Program, NOAA National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, NOAA National Marine Fisheries Service and NOAA Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research Cooperative Institute; the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency STAR (Science to Achieve Results) Fellowship; and the Census of Marine Life History of Marine Animal Populations.

Adapted from materials provided by University of California - San Diego.

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails