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--Today for you 33 new articles about earth's trees! (399th edition)

--Audio and Video from the creator of Earth's Tree News:

http://forestpolicyresearch.org

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In this issue:

 

Asia-Pacific-Australia

 

Index:

 

--Russia: 1) Log export tax info

--Hong Kong: 2) Rare trees uprooted from plazas & public parks & sold

across border

--Nepal: 3) Minister says end forest encroachment, especially in Treai

region, 4) Rampages by wild elephants, 5) 3,000 trees mysteriously

fall in ten minutes?

--India: 6) Tiger attacks in Sundurbans, 7) Hunting is harming

tropical forests of NE India, 8) Border Security Force caught stealing

forests, 9) Compensatory Afforestation Fund Bill - 2008, 10) Save

Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve from Neutrino researchers, 11) 1,523 trees

to fall for Delhi Government's expansion plan, 12) Tragic zoo of

captured forest dwellers who had there homes logged,

--Myanmar: 13) Data on Myanmar's tiger population and other carnivores

--Singapore: 14) Forests around Singapore's rush hour

--Philippines: 15) 7,000 more board feet of " hot logs " confiscated,

16) Lost forest cover at a rate of 2.1 per year, 17) Already beyond

the point of no return, 18) Enviros in Carage demand removal of forest

product monitoring stations,

--Papua New Guinea: 19) More oil Palm plantations get green light, 20)

Mother knows impacts from Turama Forest Industries' rainforest

logging, 21) Log ship protestor speaks,

--Malaysia: 22) Gov attempting to quell indigenous opposition to logging

--Sarawak: 23) Wanting to stop them from plundering his ancestral

land, 24) Corridor of Renewable Energy to create 110,000 jobs?

--Indonesia: 24) Pressures mounting to save endangered orangutans

--New Zealand: 25) Forest owners can fell forests and plant them somewhere else

--Australia: 26) Frog extinction disproven & may lead to more forest

protection, 27) Showdown planned between anti-logging activists and

police, 28) Mass letter campaign asks gov. to save native forests, 29)

Climate change taking its toll on native flora, 30) Land clearing is

leading to more cases of Ross River virus, 31) Consult protesters

before crews move in, 32) Forest clearing in Queensland wiping out

tens of millions of animals, 33) Koalas are dying by the thousands as

a result of land clearing,

 

Articles:

 

Russia:

 

1) As of April 2008, Russian log export taxes for softwood species and

large-diameter birch logs increased from 20% to 25% of the log value

(minimum €15/m3 of about US$23/m3). Smaller-diameter birch logs will

not be taxed in 2008. Although the tax increase of €5/m3 is a small

share of the total log cost for foreign sawmills, it has still had an

impact on the sourcing strategies for many forest companies in both

Europe and Asia. Despite continued negotiations amongst the

governments of the Nordic countries, EU representatives and Russian

ministers, there has, so far, been no willingness by Russian

representatives to reconsider the announced increase of log taxes to

80% of the log value (minimum €50/m3 or about US$78/m3) for softwood

species in January 2009. If Finland is not successful in reversing the

Russian export barrier, and if the Finnish Government does not find a

way of compensating the Finnish forest industry, it is likely that the

last shipment of softwood logs to Finland may leave Russia in late

December of 2008. In the latest issue of the Wood Resource Quarterly

it was reported that as a result of the implemented and planned log

export taxes, shipments of softwood logs from Russia have declined

both to Europe and Asia in 2007 and 2008. In the first quarter of

2008, Russia shipped 44% less to Europe and 15% less to Asia. During

the 1Q/08, Russia exported less to all of its major trading partners

except China, which increased purchases by 14%. Softwood log exports

are now at their lowest level in four years. Hardwood log exports,

which typically consist of smaller logs for pulp manufacturing, have

not been affected by the higher taxes on large birch logs and were

actually up by as much as 28% in the first quarter of 2008, as

compared to 2007. In 2007, Sweden and Finland alone imported 89% of

Russia's total shipments to Europe. Other importers were sawmills in

Estonia and Latvia, which increasingly have become dependent on Russia

for sawlogs.

http://bricstrategist.blogspot.com/2008/09/global-timber-markets-impacted-by.htm\

l

 

Hong Kong:

 

2) The dark blue van pulls up to Cheung Sung Lam's office in a wealthy

Hong Kong neighborhood, and four men with a rope jump out in the dark.

They swarm around their 80-year-old target on the sidewalk and try to

lasso it into the van. Yet the intended victim -- a 6- ton ``good

luck'' tree worth about HK$1 million ($128,203) -- won't budge. ``I've

had that tree for more than 10 years, it brings me serenity and

luck,'' says Cheung, 61, who watched the failed caper on his security

cameras. ``All my sorrows are gone whenever I see my pine. I never

thought I might lose it this way.'' Buddhist Pine trees are considered

harbingers of fortune in feng shui, an ancient Chinese practice

exploring the relationship between nature and people. The rare trees

are uprooted from plazas, gardens and public parks in Hong Kong and

sold across the border in southern China for up to HK$600,000 each,

police say. At least 1,000 mature pines -- or about a quarter of the

territory's total -- were stolen in the past five years, Marine Police

Superintendent Wong Chun-chin says. The crime spree is spurred by

China's rising wealth. The number of U.S.-dollar millionaires

increased 20 percent to 415,000 last year from 2006, said a June 24

report by Merrill Lynch & Co. and Paris-based Cap Gemini SA. China's

economy has grown by at least 10 percent annually since 2002. ``Some

mainland Chinese are just so rich that they have to find ways to spend

their money,'' says Wong, who's been intercepting drug smugglers,

illegal immigrants and tree thieves for 15 years.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601080 & sid=a9vIAP9EQfCE & refer=asia

 

Nepal:

 

3) Newly appointed Minister for Forest and Soil Conservation (MoFSC)

Kiran Gurung has pledged to end forest encroachment especially in the

Treai region and corruption under his ministry. At a time when the

forest activists and community forest consumers have been pointing

their fingers towards the ministry and political parties saying that

they were protecting the corrupt employees instead of forest, Minister

Gurung spoke in line with the past ministers Sunday. " I will do my

best to give a new message to the people by preventing the past

mistakes like safeguarding corruption and delaying the act of handing

over community forests to the consumers against peoples' aspirations, "

Gurung said addressing an interaction programme organised by the

Federation of Community Forest Users Nepal (FECOFUN). He, however, did

not clearly state whether the Ministry would hand over the community

forests in the Terai to the consumers. He said the task necessitated

extensive discussions among stakeholders. " I will try to forge a

consensus among the consumers about handing over the community forests

in the Terai region, " he added. The forest activists have been raising

their voice against the government saying the officials were

hesitating to hand over the community forests to the consumers.

FECOFUN general secretary Bhola Bhattarai said that the hand over of

more than 5,000 community forests was pending while forest

encroachment in Dhading, Nawalparasi, Palpa, Banke, Bardiya, Kailali,

Kanchanpur, Udayapur and Rautahat districts was widespread as the

mainstream political parties were protecting the forest land

encroachers. RSS adds from Udayapur, three employees at the District

Forestry Office, Udayapur, including the Assistant District Forest

Officer Ramakanta Yadav, have been suspended for misappropriating the

timber belonging to a local forest users' group. A patrolling team of

the Armed Police Force last week seized the timber being taken towards

Janakpur. The timber was seized in Lahan. The police then handed over

the timber to the District Forestry Office, Siraha.

http://www.gorkhapatra.org.np/detail.php?article_id=6789 & cat_id=4

 

4) At least six people have been killed in southern Nepal in rampages

by wild elephants in the last two days, police said Saturday. " Five

people were trampled to death overnight while one was killed on Friday

morning in the villages of Saptari and neighbouring Siraha districts, "

police officer Bhoj Narayan Shrestha told AFP. Police said three wild

elephants entered the villages from the jungles bordering India and

attacked people as they slept. " We believe the elephants come inside

Nepal from (neighbouring) India. They disappear inside the jungle

during the day and come to attack villagers at night, " Shrestha

said.The officer said a team of police had been mobilised to chase

away the elephants, which are protected as an endangered species under

Nepali law. Shrinking forests and encroachment on elephant territory

has forced the animals to stray into human settlements looking for

food, often resulting in attacks, experts say.

http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Wild_elephants_kill_six_people_in_Nepal_police\

_999.html

 

5) In what locals believe to be the handiwork of some supernatural

power, nearly 3,000 trees at a local community forest in Banke

district in mid-western Nepal collapsed in a matter of 10 minutes,

eKantipur.com reported on Thursday. According to the website, locals

have been completely baffled as the trees at the Shrikrishna Community

Forest, some 360 km westof Kathmandu, fell in quick succession last

Monday. According to the locals, the land in the area has deep cracks.

" There was neither a gale nor a storm during that day, " said Tilak

Bahadur Chand, a local. Unable to explain the incident, people have

resorted to supernatural theories. The open-mouthed locals have begun

saying that the incident is ominous and they are now fearful something

bad might happen soon. " It is a bad omen, " said another local. News

about the incident spread quickly and every day people from the

surrounding areas in huge numbers are visiting the site of the

mystery. And they are offering different explanations -- many see in

it the hand of some supernatural power. Locals said they immediately

apprised the District Forest Office (DFO) about the incident. They

allege that the DFO has become a mere spectator, taking no initiative

to find out the truth. However, Hemlal Aryal, a forest official, said

that they would soon visit the site to find out what is behind the

incident. http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-09/11/content_9919856.htm

 

India:

 

6) Kumaresh Mondal managed to run a few steps before the 450-pound

beast knocked him down with a leap, tore into his throat, and dragged

his limp body into the dense mangrove forest. " I tried to chase the

tiger, but I couldn't find any path, " said Monoranjan Mondal, another

of the four men fishing that day in March. " There were no tracks, no

broken branches. ... He just took him away. " The Sundarbans, a tangle

of unforgiving islands at the mouth of the Ganges River, are home to

perhaps the world's largest population of wild tigers _ as well as

millions of the poorest people in India and Bangladesh. Despite

decades of attempts to keep the tigers at bay, they still kill about

two dozen people every year. Now, experts fear environmental changes

and shrinking land could lead to more tiger-human conflicts, with

disastrous results for both. Villagers who can no longer grow enough

crops are venturing into the tigers' domain in search of fish, crabs

and honey to sell. And tigers are creeping ever closer to villagers in

search of fresh water and food, according to scientists who track

their movement. " There should be no people living here, " said Pranabes

Sanyal, former field director of the Sundarbans Tiger Reserve. " It's

too dangerous. " In the Sundarbans, whose 3,700-square-mile mangrove

forest is the world's largest, families scrape by as stubborn rice

farmers, overmatched fishermen and barefoot honey collectors. Nearly

everyone has a friend or a relative who was attacked by a tiger. There

are believed to be close to 250 tigers on the Indian side of the

Sundarbans, and another 250 on the Bangladesh side.

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=235 & sid=4258967

 

7) Logging, agricultural expansion, and hunting of large birds and

mammals in the tropical forests of northeastern India may be reducing

the capacity of the biologically-rich ecosystem to regenerate itself,

report researchers writing in the open-access journal Tropical

Conservation Science. Analyzing the dispersal modes and spatial

patterns of 128 tree species in the tropical semi-evergreen forest of

Arunachal Pradesh in the eastern Himalayas, Aparajita Datta and G.S.

Rawat found that 78 percent of trees are dispersed by animals and that

tree species distributions are to an extent limited by dispersal. The

results suggest that declines of hornbills, ungulates, bears, and

primates — major dispersers for many tree species — as a result of

human activity, are " likely to have consequences for the dispersal and

recruitment of many tree species in these forests, especially several

rare large-seeded tree species. " Population growth in the global

biodiversity hotspot is a particular challenge, note the researchers.

While the region has the lowest population density in India, a

population growth rate of three percent per year has put pressure on

community-owned forest reserves for food, timber, and non-timber

forest products. However it is this dependence — combined with

improved relations between the Forest department and the Nishi, a

local tribe — that may help facilitate more effective conservation

action in Pakke Wildlife Sanctuary and the surrounding area, say Datta

and Rawat. http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0915-aparajita__tcs.html

 

8) Forest officials caught [indian] troopers of Border Security Force

(BSF) red-handed ferrying illicit timber to their camp in North

Kashmir's Bandipora district on Saturday. Sources said that ferrying

illicit timber under the shade of gun has been a routine for troopers

deployed in villages near forests here. Caught-red handed on Saturday

when they were ferrying four illicit logs measuring around 200 cft to

the near by camp located in the premises of Tehsil Office Bandipora.

Sources said that Forest officials after spotting the BSF vehicle with

illicit timber couldn't stop it as the vehicle was running along with

long Army convoy. However, they followed it until it reached the camp

and raided the vehicle and seized the illicit timber once the vehicle

entered the camp. When contacted Range Officer Khuihama Abdul Rashid

Lone, said, " During curfew hours BSF troopers are chopping off green

trees from the nearby forest taking advantage of our absence during

the curfew time. " He confirmed that on Saturday morning BSF troopers

of 51 Battalion 'A' Coy ferried four illicit logs to their camp which

were later seized by the Forest officials. " Our men had spotted the

BSF vehicle carrying illicit timber but they couldn't stop it because

it was running as part of an Army convoy, Lone said, adding that " we

sent a team to the BSF camp and seized the logs there. " He, however,

also informed that when Forest officials reached the BSF camp, the

troops misbehaved with them and tried to harass them. Independent

sources informed that fearing reprisals from the BSF, the Forest

officials confiscated only one log of timber instead of seizing all

the four. BSF troopers also directed their ire at the media people who

had reached the spot to capture photographs of the illicit timber.

Pleading anonymity, sources in the Forest department said that Army

and BSF men said that are chopping up green trees for making furniture

which they (troopers) then smuggle out of the state to decorate the

homes of their officers. " Assisted by Forests officers the top

officers in defense forces compel their subordinates to get the timber

for manufacture of furniture which has high demand in states of

India, " sources told 'Kashmir Images'.

http://www.kashmirwatch.com/showheadlines.php?subaction=showfull & id=1221411446 & a\

rchive= & start_from= & ucat=1 & var0news=value0news

 

9) By using a purely economic or quantitative lens to scrutinise

industrial activities which destroy nature, the forests bill ends up

legitimising them. The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Science and

Technology, Environment and Forests is presently scrutinising a Bill

which was introduced in parliament in May 2008. This Bill, titled, The

Compensatory Afforestation Fund Bill, 2008, seeks to institutionalise

a mechanism to collect and manage the money collected as payments made

by project authorities whose projects — steel plants, highways,

hydro-electric projects, ports and so on — necessitated diverting

forest land for non-forest use. The genesis of this Bill and what it

proposes can be traced back to an ongoing case in the Supreme Court,

also famous as the Godavarman (forest) case. Since 1996, several

orders and judgments have been passed as part of this case which have

a bearing on forest management in the country. An order passed on

September 26, 2005, in the Godavarman case raised a critical question.

It asked whether a user agency (private company, PSU, government)

should compensate for the diversion of forests and loss of benefits

accruing from such a change of land use. Further, should not the user

agency make a payment in the form of Net Present Value (NPV) of such

diverted land which can be utilised in the long run to 'get back the

benefits'? The next step after the court's deliberations was the

setting up of a Compensatory Afforestation Management and Planning

Authority (CAMPA) in May 2006 which was to manage the funds received.

Now, two years later, the new Bill seeks to institutionalise this

system to manage the huge amounts of money collected for the tasks of

compensatory afforestation, additional compensatory afforestation,

penal compensatory afforestation, NPV and all other amounts recovered

under FCA. While there may be different opinions on this, isn't it at

least necessary to review if the purpose of conservation, as is

implicit by the title Forest (Conservation) Act, is being achieved at

all? Is the forest clearance process or compensatory afforestation

schemes, NPV etc resulting in a conservation-oriented decision making?

Is monetary compensation a deterrent against large-scale destruction

caused by the change of land use of a forest into a mine, an industry

or a power-generation hub? Can the loss of an ecosystem and the

severing of the cultural and spiritual association attached to it, and

the myriad livelihoods supported by it, be valuated and compensated

for? These questions may appear simple, but there are no direct

answers. http://www.business-standard.com/india/storypage.php?autono=334325

 

 

10) In early 2000, a team of scientists gathered at the Saha Institute

of Nuclear Physics in Kolkata and decided to revive research on

neutrinos, tiny elemental particles that can pass through almost all

matter unhindered. A flurry of meetings followed culminating in a

project called India-based Neutrino Observatory (INO), touted as the

biggest and most ambitious experiment on particle physics in India.

This has generated much enthusiasm among physicists, for though

neutrinos are one of the fundamental particles that make up the

universe, they are least understood. There are only a handful of

observatories in the world carrying out experiments on neutrinos.

Environmental activists and conservationists, however, are

apprehensive about the multi-crore-rupees project because it is

proposed to come up in the middle of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve

(NBR), a 5,520 sq km of contiguous protected forest at a tri-junction

of Kerala, Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. They fear constructing the

observatory will disrupt elephant corridors and add more population to

the area, leading to its ecological degradation. A joint committee of

the Department of Atomic Energy and the Department of Science and

Technology handling the INO project, however, claims adequate measures

will be taken to protect the environment.

http://www.downtoearth.org.in/full6.asp?foldername=20080915 & filename=news & sec_id\

=50 & sid=50

 

11) Yet another lot of trees, 1,523 to be precise, are proposed to be

axed as part of the Delhi Government's expansion plan for ensuring

smooth traffic for Commonwealth Games 2010 in the national capital. Of

total 1,523 trees, 1,000 are on the neighbouring Uttar Pradesh land

which is yet to be acquired for widening of Uttar Pradesh Link Road

from NH-24 (Noida mor) to Chilla Regulator towards Sahadara side in

East Delhi. " We will have to cut down 523 trees on land located on our

side and 1,000 on land in Uttar Pradesh to execute the Rs 334-crore

project estimated to be completed before the mega sports event, " a

senior official told media. He said tenders for widening the eastern

side on the land belonging to the Delhi government has already been

floated. The work of widening on western side (on the land to be

procured from UP government) will be subsequently taken after transfer

of land, an issue which has remained unresolved despite several

meetings between the two states. The project involves construction of

UP link road corridor and widening of this road from six lanes to

eight lanes with grade separators to bridge the five T-junction, one

four-armed junction and also construction of an additional four-lane

bridge at Hindon Cut on Chilla Regulator. Since work has to be started

soon, we have requested the Department of Forest and Wildlife to

permit felling of 530 trees on Delhi soil, the official said. " We will

soon be writing to the UP government as well seeking permission to cut

1,000 trees on 25.5 acres of land which are yet to be acquired, " the

official added. The extent of the UP land is 3,680 metres along the

corridor on the Yamuna river. The project would be executed within 27

months after the award of work, the official said. Since 2007, forest

department has granted permission to fell 17,995 trees -- most of them

for big infrastructure projects.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/PoliticsNation/Delhi_to_axe_1523_trees_\

to_give_way_to_traffic_/articleshow/3454768.cms

 

Bangladesh:

 

12) With systematic destruction of forests, they have now been pushed

to the verge of extinction. These animals were captured from different

parts of Sri Mongol and Sylhet as they foraged into locality. Slow

Loris locally known as lazzabati banor (Pic No 3) lived in the mixed

evergreen forest of Sylhet. This nocturnal animal lived in the upper

tier of the jungle in recluse during the day, and would look for food

at night. As the tall trees vanished because of illegal logging, they

got exposed and could not escape humans because of their slow

mobility. Sitesh Ranjan Dev of Sri Mongol, who runs a private zoo

there and is a controversial character for his alleged trade in

wildlife, although there is no proof of it, claims he got these slow

loris from an indigenous Khasia person who had caught them in

Lawachhera forest. Badger (Pic No 4), is a very rare animal in

Bangladesh, as Dr Reza Khan, a zoologist and environmentalist, said.

It is also a nocturnal animal dwelling on the ground level in mixed

evergreen forests, and would feed on underground worms and roots of

plants. Badgers need wide areas for foraging. But as the lower tier of

forests got thin, they also got exposed. The one in the picture was

caught as a result of forest depletion and no one knows what happened

to its cubs or mate. Leopard cats (Pic No 2) also used to live in

mixed evergreen and Sal forests. Today they are deemed extinct in

Bangladesh. Sitesh claims somebody caught them and handed them to him.

But Dr Khan suspects they were brought in from India. Jungle cats (Pic

No 1) are also rarely seen in the wild because of their rarity and

also because of their ability to hide. These two cubs were captured in

Sri Mongol. Civets (Pic No 5 & 6) live in the middle tier of forests

which is also in a sorry state in Bangladesh. They feed on geckos,

worms and eggs. Today they are endangered due to forest depletion.

Hornbills (Pic No 8) need tall trees for nesting. As such trees became

a rarity, their number also dropped. And they can be easily located

today and caught, as the few remaining tall trees, their only refuge,

can now be easily identified. Green pigeons (Pic No 7) are also a lost

case in Bangladesh because of vanishing fig trees and hunting. These

beautiful birds can hardly be seen in the wild today in this country.

http://www.thedailystar.net/pf_story.php?nid=53677

 

Myanmar:

 

13) Wildlife Conservation Society researchers have built up a bank of

valuable data on Myanmar's tiger population and other smaller, lesser

known carnivores. These findings will help in the formulation of

conservation strategies for the country's wildlife. The data were

gathered between December 2002 and May 2004. Using camera traps survey

techniques, researchers from the Soceity's Myanmar Programme combed

the 3,250-square-km core area of the Hukaung tiger reserve for

evidence of the big cats. Researchers photographed six individual

tigers some 21 times in the reserve, and this has allowed the first

ever scientific estimate of abundance for these big cats in northern

Myanmar. " We know there are tigers here, but previously we were not

able to put some numbers to the population, " said Wildlife

Conservation Society (WCS) researcher, U Than Myint, co-author of the

study that was published in the journal Population Ecology. " We have

collected the first real data needed to determine how many tigers are

here. From the analyses of this data, it is estimated that there are

at least seven and potentially up to 70 tigers living in the core

area. " Estimating numbers of prey animals such as gaur and sambar may

give an indication of how many tigers can be supported over this vast

habitat, but any further ecological monitoring will likely need to be

done at the same time as efforts are increased to protect tigers and

their key prey species from illegal hunting and trade, " Myint said.

Researchers have also confirmed the continued existence of 18 smaller

carnivores in a variety of habitats across Myanmar, according to

another study by WCS's Myanmar Programme.

http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/Flora__Fauna/Researchers_map_Myanmar_forests\

_for_wildlife/articleshow/3467235.cms

 

Singapore:

 

14) We had walked for only a few minutes before the noise of

Singapore's rush-hour traffic was muffled by the dense canopy of

strangling figs with their dangling aerial roots, tapioca trees,

banana trees and nascent ginger and cinnamon plants. The spidery

tendrils of vanilla orchids hung in the air too, their anchor in the

surrounding trees impossible to trace, while the forest floor echoed

with cicadas. We can all be forgiven for overlooking the wildlife

merits of this city-state; after all, the tourist industry has

historically pointed visitors towards Orchard Road rather than wild

orchids. The scorpion scuttled onwards on its epic journey across the

250-yard-long bridge that is the highlight of the 1.2-mile MacRitchie

Tree Top Walk at the heart of Singapore's Central Nature Reserve.

Inevitably, perhaps, for such a corporate-driven city, the walk is

sponsored by a major international banking group but, in environmental

terms, Singapore is part of a tropical forest that once stretched from

Thailand; through Malaysia and south to Indonesia. While development

and logging has accounted for 97 per cent of the country's original

jungle, Singapore is thought to be one of just two cities (the other

is Rio de Janeiro) that still boast primary rainforest - that is,

rainforest undisturbed by man. For the past 150 years or so, the

jungle has served as a water catchment buffer for four major

reservoirs and covers 2,000 hectares. Another joy is that you will

almost certainly have much of the catchment area to yourself, perhaps

encountering the occasional expat sent jogging on doctor's orders.

Your companions tend to be of the avian kind; the most charismatic is

the racket-tailed drongo, named for its long, forked tail " wires " that

expand into circular shapes, and which you have an excellent chance of

spotting, feasting on insects on tree trunks. Other birds include the

beautiful, whistling bulbul, the black-naped oriole, the banded

woodpecker whose call disconcertingly resembles that of a cat whose

tail has been stepped on, and, more familiar to European eyes,

kingfishers and bitterns.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/asia/singapore/2711991/Singapore-\

Its-a-jungle-out-there.html

 

Philippines:

 

15) ILAGAN, Isabela – With at least 7,000 more board feet of " hot

logs " confiscated here on Wednesday, the provincial government's

anti-illegal logging task force will have to do more in its campaign

to curb illegal logging operations here. The illegally cut lumber

worth more than P600,000 was intercepted by members of the

multi-sectoral task force while passing through one of the checkpoints

here. At least 150,000 board feet of illegally cut timbers have been

confiscated coming from the towns of San Mariano and Benito Soliven

and other parts of the province since Gov. Grace Padaca reactivated

the anti-illegal logging task force last July. Reacting to reports of

rampant illegal logging operations in the province's forest areas, the

governor has waged a war against illegal loggers to stop the

denudation of Sierra Madre biodiversity corridor's forest cover.

Padaca who recently flew with a team over the Sierra Madre Mountains

for an aerial inspection said: " I saw thousand of illegally sawn

lumber hidden under the forest cover of the mountain. There must be

several millions of board feet down there waiting to be transported, "

she said. " But the loggers cannot bring them down because they know we

will confiscate it, and we will even be the ones to go up to seize

these contrabands if we need to, " she added. -

http://www.gmanews.tv/story/120207/Padacas-war-against-illegal-logging-far-from-\

over

 

16) The Philippines lost forest cover at a rate of 2.1 percent every

year from 2000 to 2005, the fastest in southeast Asia and the seventh

in the world, said Juan Echanove, a project officer of the Delegation

of the European Commission to the Philippines. " The Philippines' total

forest area, including degraded forest, is now just 24 percent of the

land area, the second smallest to urban Singapore in southeast Asia,

and one of the smallest of all tropical countries in the world, and

even well below dry Mediterranean countries like Greece or Italy, " he

said. In his report, Echanove also said the forest to population ratio

in the Philippines is only 0.1 hectares of forest per head, " one of

the worst in the world -- at the level of Saharan countries. " He said

that in Southeast Asia, there has been a net 2 percent decrease of

forest area a year, equivalent to 2.8 million hectares per year, much

of it in Indonesia. Myanmar had the second fastest rate of forest

decline after the Philippines, he said. Echanove said that for Asia,

overall efforts to conserve biodiversity through a system of protected

areas has been " positive " as there has been a net increase of forest

area during the same period. " Despite various efforts to conserve

forest in Asia through logging bans, acceleration and reforestation

programs, the pressure on natural resources will remain severe, " he

said. Echanove said balancing demand for diverse array of products and

services from different segments of society in poverty alleviation,

population control, and equitable trade will continue to be the most

important challenge facing Asia.

http://globalnation.inquirer.net/news/breakingnews/view/20080910-159813/RP-lost-\

forest-fastest-in-Southeast-Asia--EU-official

 

17) John Terborgh, in his book, Requiem for Nature, opines that the

" overpopulated Philippines " is " already beyond the point of no

return. " The United Nations demographers projected in 2002 that the

Philippine population would reach between 75 and 85 million. But the

population overshot the high projection and now stands at 89 million.

Most of the forests were situated in the uplands, of which more than

60 percent of the country's total land area are considered as such.

" The uplands are fragile areas, and when they get overloaded with

population, they just can't take it, " explained Jeff Palmer, former

director of the Davao-based Mindanao Baptist Rural Life Center

(MBRLC). Between 1990 and 2005, the Philippines lost one-third of its

forest cover. Although the current deforestation rate is around 2

percent per year, a 20 percent drop from the rate of the 1990s,

deforestation continues unabated. " A few hundred years ago, at least

95 percent of the Philippines was covered by rain forest; only a few

patches of open woodland and seasonal forest, mostly on Luzon, broke

the expanse of moist, verdant land, " noted Dr. Lawrence R. Heaney, an

American curator who holds honorary appointments at Silliman

University, the University of the Philippines, and the Philippine

National Museum. By the time the Spanish arrived in the Philippines in

the 16th century, scattered coastal areas had been cleared for

agriculture and villages. Three hundred years later, rainforest still

covered about 70 percent of the country. But in recent years, the

country was devoid of its forest cover. " Primary forests in the

Philippines are being destroyed due to both logging and agricultural

expansion, significantly decreasing the Philippine's natural

resources, " commented one environmentalist. Despite government bans on

timber harvesting following severe flooding in the late 1980s and

early 1990s, illegal logging continues. Illicit wood cut from

secondary and primary forests is routinely smuggled to other Asian

countries. " In 1992, the date of the most recent forest survey,

old-growth rain forest had declined to a shocking 8.6 percent, " Dr.

Heaney reported. " In late 1997, that percentage has probably dropped

to seven percent, and perhaps further still. "

http://www.iloiloriver.com/philippines-fast-losing-its-forests.html

 

18) For the nth time, different environmentalist groups in Caraga

Region have renewed their call for President Arroyo and DENR Secretary

Lito Atienza to dismantle many forest product monitoring stations or

checkpoints estimated to reach 90 installed by private or government

institutions that are supposedly meant to curb illegal logging and log

poaching activities in the region. " The sprouting of checkpoints along

Agusan River and national highways in the region monitoring forest

products will put checkpoints installed in conflict areas like Lanao

and Cotabato provinces to shame " says Valentino Javier' executive

director of federated environment watch group , Caraga Watch. Earlier

local government unit officials like Butuan City Mayor Democrito Plaza

, II had vowed to dismantle the checkpoints after local DENR officials

headed by DENR Regional Executive Director Edilberto Buyser told

reporters dismantling of illegally installed structures or checkpoints

are law enforcement jobs not theirs. " Dismantling of checkpoints is

law enforcement job and requires local government unit support because

as far as DENR is concerned we only have three accredited checkpoints "

Buyser and some DENR officials told this writer in an earlier

interview. Earlier, tree farmers and wood traders have raised

complaints that personnel manning checkpoints were allegedly demanding

money or in form of goods or foods from them ranging the smallest P500

to highest P10,000 depending on the volume of transported woods or

logs passing either the Agusan River or the national highways. Over

the decades, Agusan River have been used as easiest means in

transporting forest products ranging from hard wood to planted wood

species to rattan poles from the two provinces of Agusan.

http://www.mindanao.com/blog/?p=4899

 

Papua New Guinea:

 

19) In a new move to boost Papua New Guinea's contribution to global

warming and climate change, the country's Morobe provincial government

has given Malaysian investors the green light for a major oil palm

plantation development. Morobe governor Luther Wenge and the country's

minister for health, Sasa Zibe, said on Thursday that they had agreed

terms for a " massive deal " with Malaysian investors, but declined to

specify either the name of the investor or the amount of money

involved. In a statement received by Green Assembly International, the

minister said they " had joined hands to work together to bring

economic prosperity and development to the people of Morobe, through

the development of oil palm plantations in the province on a joint

venture basis with foreign interests. " The statement said the two

Morobe leaders had clinched the deal after taking a delegation to

Malaysia, where they had held " fruitful " discussions with directors of

a leading oil palm company. The company, which industry experts

suggest might be the well-known Rimbunan Hijau Group, had indicated a

strong interest in expanding its oil palm stake in Morobe province.

Under a US$ multi-million deal, the new plantations will be on

forested sites in the Huon Gulf district where there is no need to

invest in infrastructure because it is already there. Introducing the

oil-palm crop will bring " enormous financial benefits " for everyone

concerned, including the people and the Government, said the

statement.

http://www.greenassembly.net/http:/greenassembly.net/2008/09/15/deforestation/ma\

laysians-to-fund-massive-deforestation-in-png/

 

20) Kila Oumabe, Beseremen Clan, (pictured at left with hands raised)

is a mother of three daughters and three adopted children. She is at

the frontline of impacts from Turama Forest Industries' rainforest

logging in Papua New Guinea. Kila has visited the Esperanza in PNG, as

a representative of all the women living in the 1.7 million hectares

of the Turama Extension*. Her experiences are typical of women across

the extension: " I have to walk six to eight kilometres to find food

for my family. It takes all day. Before it used to take two to three

hours or half a day. I used to walk out my back door to find the

plants and animals to feed my family. Sometimes a woman can't find

anything and comes home at 9 o'clock or midnight and cooks sago only

and goes to sleep. " " The children sometimes complain and cry. So we

explain to them what has happened. " " At this stage the animals and the

fish – which are eaten for the strength of the family - are hard to

find. Now they are some kilometres away because the machinery is too

noisy and the trees have been cut down. " The people in the Turama

Extension area are forest people. The tulip tree is significant in

this part of Papua New Guinea. Explains Kila, " Everybody is taught how

to use this tree. The tree is very important for rope, string and

food. We eat the leaves like cabbage everyday. From the bark of the

tree we make string bags called bilums. Our great-grandmothers taught

us. And will in the future too. They are the most special tree for

us. " " When the logging operation comes, they go to a place to get the

logs. When the tulip tree is in the way, they are knocked down. " The

women of Turama Extension know what they want for their future. " The

logging workers are from other parts of PNG and from overseas. When we

want to talk to them, they ignore us when we need help, (like going

into) labour and sickness, very big accidents. They do not accept us,

they ignore us. But this is our land, our resources " . " Right now,

there are woman at all the (forestry) camps. At the protests the women

are going to lead. They are there with their bags packed. The woman

have gathered. " I told them, 'Don't fear, let's move'. "

http://www.greenpeace.org.au/blog/energy/?p=253

 

21) My name is Daniel Holland, I'm a freelance artist. My Dad is from

Abau, Central Province and Mum from Popondetta, Northern Province,

Papua New Guinea. I live in Port Moresby and am a volunteer activist

with Greenpeace. My first action was in the Pacific Ocean a few months

ago, campaigning on the overfishing of tuna in the international

waters between Pacific Island countries. Now in my own country, Papua

New Guinea, the Esperanza is here doing forest campaigning and I'm

proud to be part of it. I'm in the climb team that climbed the crane

of the ship and hung the big banner that said " Protect Forests Save

Our Climate'. It's a new experience and I like it. I know exactly how

these people feel, it's painful. I had an experience a bit similar to

these people. At my place, because of the money some people don't find

out who the real landowners are and they bring companies in. Me and my

brother got rid of the logging out of our area and saved our forest a

few years ago. I learned about this area when a report came out by

CELCOR (Centre for Environmental Law and Community Rights) and I knew

these people around here were in trouble. This was a good opportunity

to help be a voice for them out here. I'm a landowner myself in my

village and to help another countryman be the voice on the crane with

the banner was really good. I want the country and the world to know

what is happening in this area with the illegal logging of our forests

and to its people. http://www.greenpeace.org.au/blog/energy/?p=258

 

Malaysia:

 

22) The Malaysian government is attempting to quell indigenous

opposition to logging in the rainforests of Borneo by deposing

community leaders and replacing them with timber company stakeholders,

reports an environmental group. The Bruno Manser Fund, a Swiss NGO

that works on behalf of the forest people of Sarawak, Malaysia, says

that the headmen of at least three Penan communities that have opposed

logging have lost official recognition from Malaysian authorities over

the past year. The government is working to install representatives

who support logging. " The non-recognition of the elected community

headmen by the Sarawak State Government is a clear violation of the UN

Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, " stated the Bruno

Manser Fund in an emailed release. " The Declaration, which has been

adopted by Malaysia, upholds in its article 18 the right of indigenous

communities 'to participate in decision-making in matters which would

affect their rights, through representatives chosen by themselves in

accordance with their own procedures'. " The Penan communities of

Sarawak have waged a long battle against the logging of their

ancestral homeland in the rainforests of Sarawak, on the island of

Borneo. The opposition reached a crescendo in the 1980s when the Penan

blocked logging roads and sabotaged equipment. The Malaysian

government responded by closing down media access to the area and

sending in armed forces to violently supress the unrest. While the

attacks on the Penan brought international attention to the rapacious

logging of Borneo's forests, they had relatively little long-term

impact. http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0909-penan.html

 

Sarawak:

 

23) He stood alone, armed with two parang, against what he considered

a greedy oil palm company that wanted to plunder his ancestral land.

For three months, Iban farmer Segan anak Degon left the comfort of his

village in Kampung Lebor, 70km from Kuching in Sarawak, to endure

mosquitoes, snakes and pests in protecting his land, which is as big

as 14 football fields, some 45 minute- walk away. Out of the 101 pintu

or households living in the 11,000ha village, Segan was the only one

who successfully defended his 7ha land against takeover by local oil

palm company Nirwana Muhibbah Sdn Bhd. His land is now an " island "

surrounded by a sea of oil palm trees. When he is protecting his land,

he lives on rice supplied by his wife. It was nine years ago that

Nirwana Muhibbah appeared with bulldozers and other heavy machinery to

clear land at the village. The Sarawak state government had granted a

provisional lease to Nirwana Muhibbah to develop the sprawling

11,000ha Native Customary Rights (NCR) land — the size of Kuala Lumpur

International Airport — into an oil palm plantation. Under the Sarawak

Land Code, NCR land was created, whether communal or otherwise, prior

to January 1, 1958, including any area of state land declared as

Native Communal Reserve by the chief minister. It also includes

Interior Area Land, upon which NCR has been lawfully created by

obtaining a permit. The villagers were caught off-guard and

defenceless. " There were no meetings, discussions, agreements or

consultations. But they brought in their machines. Overnight, they

destroyed all our crops. We lost our livelihood, " said Segan. Nirwana

Muhibbah had forcefully cleared and grew oil palm on 3,500ha of the

NCR land belonging to 100 families. Determined not to be trampled

upon, Segan and his fellow villagers consulted lawyers and took the

company to court. A year on after the trial, the case is still not

settled. Kampung Lebor's suit is among one of the 180 backlog cases of

encroachment of NCR land in the state.

http://sarawakheadhunter.blogspot.com/2008/09/taib-mahmud-doesnt-consider-that-t\

hese.html

 

23) The Sarawak Corridor of Renewable Energy (Score) is poised to

create 110,000 new jobs in the wood-based sector, one of the 10

priority industries identified to be developed by 2030. According to

the latest issue of Perkasa, the Sarawak Timber Industry Corporation's

bi-monthly newsletter, wood-based industries within the corridor

employed 41,521 or 83 percent of the 50,000 workforce in the sector at

present. Last year, the 70,000 sq km corridor in the state's central

region, contributed RM1.7 billion or 92.2 percent of the sector's

total export earnings besides exporting 2.6 million cubic metres of

logs. It said the pulp and paper industry, with the support of the

forest plantation establishments being carried out actively by both

the government and the private sector, would continue to be developed

and promoted intensively. Apart from supplying raw materials for the

industry, the forest plantation will also cater for the production of

mechanical wood products such as sawn timber, plywood and

medium-density fibreboard, which will be further utilised to produce

value-added products like furniture. The publication said development

of wood-based industries and its associated downstream value-added

activities would be the driving force behind the growth of Score's

industrial development. The corridor stretches along the coast from

Similajau in Bintulu division to Tanjung Manis in Mukah division and

extends into the surrounding areas and the hinterland of the central

region.

http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/Monday/NewsBreak/20080915124835/Article/i\

ndex_html

 

Indonesia:

 

24) Pressures are mounting to save endangered orangutans in Central

Kalimantan, where most of the world's only great ape lives under

increasingly bleak conditions due to declining forests -- their

habitat. Aldrianto Priadjati of the Borneo Orangutan Survival (BOS)

Foundation said the number of displaced orangutans due to forest

conversion for timber estates and agriculture, including palm oil

plantations, has increased. " Currently, there are about 1,000

orangutans being rehabilitated in our orangutan rehabilitation center.

Most of them were saved from palm oil plantations, " he said. BOS'

Nyaru Menteng, the world's largest orangutan rehabilitation center, is

about 30 kilometers south of Palangka Raya, the capital city of

Central Kalimantan. Many of the rehabilitated orangutans have been

ready to be released to primary forests. " But it is very difficult for

us to find the primary forests for the orangutan to live securely, " he

said. He was one of the speakers at an August workshop on the

implementation of the strategic and action plans for orangutan

conservation. The workshop was jointly organized by the Forestry

Ministry's Natural Resources Conservation Center (BKSDA), BOS, World

Wildlife Fund, oil palm company Agro Group, Orangutan Foundation

International (OFI), Orangutan Conservation Services Program and the

U.S. Agency for International Development. The event aimed to

implement orangutan conservation action plans that were launched by

the ministry of forestry in Jakarta late last year.

http://old.thejakartapost.com/detailfeatures.asp?fileid=20080909.U01 & irec=0

 

New Zealand:

 

25) The National Party says it would allow forest owners to fell

forests and plant them somewhere else without penalty. The

Government's proposed Emission Trading Scheme bill, which is expected

to be passed by Parliament this week, would allow only for offsets of

carbon emissions from forests if they are made part of the Kyoto

Protocol in future. Forest owners currently face deforestation taxes

unless they replant on the same spot. National says it would change

the scheme so a pre-1990 owner planting an alternative area with the

same carbon absorbing capacity would not face any costs. It says it

would make the change within nine months of taking office.

http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/stories/2008/09/08/124373645c75

 

Australia:

 

26) A species of frog thought to be extinct has been found thriving in

far north Queensland. The armoured mist frog was last seen in 1991 and

was thought to have be wiped out by a fungal disease. But James Cook

University frog expert, Professor Ross Alford, says the frog has been

found thriving in rainforests to the north and west of Cairns. " It

turns out that these frogs are living in an area that we wouldn't have

expected them to be living at, " he said. " Out past the western edge of

the rainforest, particularly if the climate changes the edges may

become the centres, so we need to conserve not just the best possible

habitat, but a whole sample of the places species might live. "

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/09/12/2362564.htm?section=justin

 

27) The scene is set for a showdown between anti-logging activists and

police on the South Coast, following a meeting in Bermagui on Monday.

At the meeting, local activists were told there will be zero tolerance

for people breaking the law while protesting logging operations in

State Forests. " Legal action will be taken for any offences

committed, " officer Peter Volf told a meeting between police and

representatives from anti-logging groups. Although the meeting was

arranged by NSW Forestry, there were no forestry officers present.

When asked why they were not there, police officer Peter Volf said

they had double booked, a response met by jeers from the crowd.

Activist Lisa Stone labelled the Bermagui logging operation illegal,

saying NSW Forestry has not issued a harvest plan or consulted with

the community on the matter. One group opposed to the logging, Friends

of the Five Forests (FOFF), say logging will also result in the

siltation of the Bermagui River and damage oyster leases. A request

was made for police to address all those gathered, but the officers

declined saying they wished to discuss the matter with a small group

in a rational manner. FOFF representative Suzanne Foulkes questioned

police about the need to exclude the wider group from the meeting.

" The group would like to hear it first hand from you not second hand

from us, " Ms Foulkes said. " All of these people are committed just as

much to stopping this operation as the people you have invited are, so

I think it's only fair and decent that you should address everybody

who has attended. " In response officer Peter Volf said " I've invited

five people not fifty I appreciate your strength in numbers but I have

invited five people so we can sit down and talk about it rationally. "

In a closed meeting police said they understood the democratic rights

in relation to protests but they would not support illegal activities.

He said illegal activities include trespassing into areas marked by

Forestry for logging. The group was informed that public land would be

sectioned off and made inaccessible by force of law. Dr Helen

Caldicott responded by saying the property belonged to the public. " We

own those forests, they are our forests that's our land, " Dr Caldicott

said.

http://narooma.yourguide.com.au/news/local/news/general/zero-tolerance-for-loggi\

ng-protest/1268642.aspx#

 

28) More than 10,000 people have joined a mass letter campaign calling

on Prime Minister Kevin Rudd to save native forests. The Wilderness

Society has submitted the letters, which included giant signed tree

banners, to the GPO in Brisbane's CBD. Wilderness Society spokesperson

Vica Bayley said the government needed to act on climate change by

protecting native forests. " Any credible policy to deal with climate

change must have forest protection as its top priority, " Mr Bayley

said. Mr Bayley said the government's climate change adviser Professor

Ross Garnaut had failed to address the benefits of forests in his

report released this week. Prof Garnaut recommended a 10 per cent cut

in emissions by 2020. " Prime Minister Rudd should listen to his most

important advisers - the Australian public - the majority of whom want

to see native forests such as those in northern Australia, Tasmania

and Victoria protected, " Mr Bayley said. Mr Bayley said protecting the

forests would send a signal to the world that Australia was serious

about combating climate change. " Australia has some of the most

carbon-dense forests in the world and protecting them is one of the

quickest and cheapest ways to tackle climate change, " Mr Bayley said.

" By protecting the carbon in native forests, Australia can lead the

world in credible climate change policy. "

http://news.theage.com.au/national/mass-mailout-to-calls-for-forest-action-20080\

909-4cjo.html

 

29) The Royal Tasmanian Botanical Gardens says . It is established a

seed bank which now has 12 million seeds covering 600 plant species

struggling to survive. The project co-ordinator, James Wood, says

Tasmania is rapidly drying out, meaning more plants will end up on the

threatened species register. " Things are changing very quickly in this

state particularly wet habitats are declining very quickly many

species which were very common only 10, 20 years ago are not seen that

often and those species are probably going to need to be listed at

some point. " Mr Wood says they want to gather 800 plant types

struggling to survive. " If we can collect from large healthy

populations now we can get those seeds into long term storage and

store them for hundreds, possibly thousands of years and if there's

populations die out we have the option of being able to regenerate

them and put them back out into the wild again. "

http://forests.org/shared/reader/welcome.aspx?linkid=106105

 

30) A team of Western Australian researchers say land clearing is

leading to more cases of Ross River virus. The University of WA study

has found that deforestation and land clearing for agriculture and

development is providing new breeding grounds for mosquitoes. The

researchers have found land clearing is forcing the watertable to

rise, which is producing more stagnant salty pools of water in

typically forestry and agricultural areas. Professor Philip Weinstein

says the watertable needs to be kept down. " Anything we can do to

conserve the amount of native vegetation at this stage is good, " he

said. " Developers are an integral part of that, especially as urban

development impinges more and more on what used to be used as farm

land or forest. "

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/09/08/2358331.htm

 

31) Police have confirmed they will be taking a tough stand with

anti-logging protests at a forest on the New South Wales far south

coast where controversial harvesting work is about to begin.

Yesterday, police held a meeting with representatives of conservation

groups in the Bermagui area to advise them of their proposed " no

tolerance " attitude to protests in and around the Bermagui forest.

Logging has not yet started in the area, north of Bermagui on the

Cobargo Road, but Inspector Peter Volf says he is urging the Forests

New South Wales to consult protesters before crews move in. He says

that once the works begins he hopes the environmentalists act on his

message. Forests NSW will not comment, at this stage, on planned

operations, but a spokesman says it is aware of the sensitivities

involved.

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2008/09/09/2359649.htm?site=southeastnsw

 

32) The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) says forest clearing in Queensland

is wiping out tens of millions of animals and driving threatened

wildlife to the brink of extinction. WWF said the annual Statewide

Landcover and Trees Study (SLATS) reveals 375,000 hectares of bush

were cleared in 2005-06, killing two million mammals, about 9,000

koalas and millions of birds and reptiles. The group is calling for a

clearing moratorium to protect the state's unique wildlife from

habitat loss and further destruction and to help combat climate

change. " This amount of clearing is unacceptable to the Australian

public, " said WWF Queensland program leader Nick Heath. " It's a huge

blow for our wildlife, our climate, our rivers and reefs. " The animals

that are wiped out suffer horribly as they are burnt or starved to

death. " In order to function properly, our ecosystems depend greatly

on all the plants and animals that are lost. " Forest clearing also

opens up the Murray-Darling to further degradation and leads to

millions of tonnes of eroded soil flowing through rivers, polluting

our waterways and marine environments. " Land clearing accounted for

41.4 million tonnes - or 24 per cent - of the state's greenhouse gas

emissions in 2005-06, the second highest contributor after the energy

sector. " Queensland will fail to reduce emissions if it continues to

allow this level of land clearing, " Mr Heath said. " Halting the

practice is a cheap and easy way of reducing greenhouse gas

emissions. " WWF says the Queensland government should act immediately

to stop all clearing of endangered, vulnerable or threatened regional

ecosystems. Clearing should also be prevented on land subject to

erosion, salinity or other forms of degradation, as well as

riverbanks, wetlands and wildlife corridors. Permanent protection of

vegetation should be encouraged through the use of carbon-priced

incentives, the group says. " The minister has the power to regulate

land clearing under the Vegetation Management Act, " Mr Heath said. " It

just takes the political will to intervene. "

http://news.smh.com.au/national/qld-treeclearing-wiping-out-animals-20080908-4bk\

s.html

 

33) Australian koalas are dying by the thousands as a result of land

clearing in the country's northeast, while millions of birds and

reptiles are also perishing, conservation group WWF said Sunday. The

environmental body warned that unless urgent action was taken to stop

trees being felled, some species would be pushed to the brink of

extinction. In an annual statement, Queensland state last week

revealed that 375,000 hectares of bush were cleared in 2005-06 -- a

figure WWF said would have resulted in the deaths of two million

mammals. Among those that perished as a result of loss of habitat

would have been 9,000 tree-hugging koalas, WWF Australia spokesman

Nick Heath said. " It's a horrifying figure, " Heath told AFP. " Two

million mammals and that's all sorts of kangaroos, wallabies. We

couldn't come to an exact figure on the birds, but I would say it

would be over five million. " Heath said WWF's figures were based on

earlier scientific assessments of animal density in each area of the

state combined with the amount of land cleared over the 2005-2006

period. He said the animals that died in the largest numbers were

reptiles, including lizards and turtles. Of particular concern was the

impact on the koala, an iconic marsupial found only in Australia and

which is most populous in Queensland state. " There is scientific

debate about whether koalas are on the verge of extinction or not... I

don't want to enter into that debate, " Heath said. " All I say is,

whether they are endangered or not, killing 9,000 koalas is

unacceptable.

http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Thousands_of_Australias_koalas_felled_by_land-\

clearing_WWF_999.html

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