GLOBAL WARMING PUTS RUSSIA UNDER PRESSURE ‘HERE AND NOW’


Environmental Panorama
International
July of 2008


10 Jul 2008 - Global warming is set to wreak havoc in Russia and other ex-Soviet Union states unless drastic action is taken, according to a new report compiled by WWF-Russia and the British charity Oxfam.

The 52-page report was timed to coincide with the recent G8 summit in Japan, where leaders of the world's richest countries were criticized for the targets they set on the reduction of harmful emissions.

“We must understand that damage caused by climate change is here and now rather than a problem in the distant future, in distant lands. There’s a lot at stake, including our health and even our lives,” said Igor Chestin, WWF-Russia CEO.

The report – ‘Russia and neighbouring countries: environmental, economic and social impacts of climate change’ – highlights key evidence linking climate change to failing health.

According to the report, climate change is considered to be one of the most serious environmental threats to people’s health, along with other risk factors such as air and water pollution, smoking and drug abuse.

Persistently higher temperatures caused by global warming is leading to a sharp increase in several serious and potentially lethal illnesses such as heart disease, intestinal diseases, tick encephalitis, tick borelliosis (Lyme disease) and malaria.

The report also focuses on the economic consequences of climate change for Russia, Central Asia, Mongolia and northern China.

According to the report, global energy problems are mainly affecting the poorest groups of population.

“Climate change has the capacity to generate a whole new category of refugees, poor people forced to flee their homes, regions and even countries as a result of climate stress,” said Nicholas Colloff, Country Director of Oxfam GB.

“Urgent action needs to be taken to reduce the very real risk of this potential crisis from arising.”

The report also recommends solutions to the problems presented by climate change – both measures to mitigate human-induced climate change in the future, and ways to adapt to irreversible changes.

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Giant clams 'secure for another generation' after Philippine re-seeding

07 Jul 2008 - Re-seeding programmes on over 50 reefs are securing the survival of the giant clam for at least another generation, according to WWF-Philippines.

The clams, the world’s largest bivalve mollusks and the star of lurid but mostly imaginary literary and cinematic depictions of trapped divers, can live for over a century. They have been known to exceed 1.4 metres in length and weigh in at over 260 kilograms.

Once common throughout Philippine reefs, excessive hunting for the food, pet and curio trade all but depleted the wild giant clam population by the mid-1980s, prompting the IUCN to classify them as vulnerable.

An attempt to restore natural clam populations is now being spearheaded by Dr. Suzanne Mingoa-Licuanan of the University of the Philippines Marine Science Institute in partnership with WWF-Philippines.

“Several species of laboratory-raised giant clams have been re-seeded in over 50 reefs nationwide, significantly bolstering wild stocks and ensuring their survival for at least another generation,” said WWF Project Manager Paolo Pagaduan.

By way of example, a fresh batch of 40 true giant clams (Tridacna gigas) wrapped in watertight plastic bags made the journey last month from rearing laboratories in the west of the country down the coast to their new homes in Batangas province on Santelmo Reef, a prized snorkeling site being restored with the help of WWF and a nearby ecotourism development.

With an average length of 36 centimetres and weighing almost 10 kilograms, each of the 40 clams was painstakingly but successfully laid to rest – alive of course – in
pre-designated nooks and crannies. Some 102 clams were planted in the same area last November and another 35 are being grown for transplanting in coming months.

“When we planted the first batch last November, all clam mantles were pale ochre. Now, each clam shows off electric hues of blue and violet – an indicator that the area is conducive to clam growth,” said Pagaduan.

“It is hoped that baby clam recruits will eventually appear to seed outlying areas in Batangas.”

Giant clams are an integral part of the reef, serving as nurseries for a host of fish and invertebrate species including damsels, gobies and tiny commensal crustaceans such as shrimp.

Sedentary organisms like sponges, tunicates, corals and algae find giant clam shells perfect substrates for attachment. Giant clams also act as filter feeders, sifting planktonic debris from the water for food thereby improving overall water quality.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
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