Artenschutz

30
Jul
2004

U.S. Eases Review of Pesticides for Endangered Species

The EPA will no longer have to consult with agencies on the potential harm of products. Environmentalists say it will weaken the law.

By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
LATimes Staff Writer

July 30, 2004
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-epa30jul30,1,7527746.story
<http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-epa30jul30,1,7527746.story?coll=la-headlines-nation>

WASHINGTON -- The Bush administration made it easier Thursday for the government to approve pesticides used by farmers and homeowners, saying it no longer would require the Environmental Protection Agency to first consult other federal agencies to determine whether a product could harm endangered species.

The change, supported by growers and pesticide manufacturers, affects federal regulations for carrying out the Endangered Species Act, a law that protects about 1,200 threatened animals and plants.

Environmentalists said the streamlined process would strip away protections for those species.

The law has been successfully used by environmental groups in a recent lawsuit seeking to mitigate the effects of pesticides on salmon in the Pacific Northwest. A federal judge found that the EPA had failed to abide by a requirement that it consult with federal wildlife agencies over the potential harm from pesticides.

Under the new process, expected to take effect in a few months, the EPA will conduct its own scientific evaluation. The agency will be required to consult with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other federal agencies only if its internal evaluation deems that a pesticide is likely to have an adverse effect on endangered species.

"The new rule benefits the pesticide industry at the expense of endangered species," said Aaron Colangelo, a lawyer for the Natural Resources Defense Council, a Washington-based environmental advocacy group. "By cutting the government's wildlife experts out of the loop, the rule removes an important safety net to protect endangered species."

Colangelo previously sued the EPA for allowing the pesticide atrazine to affect sea turtles in Chesapeake Bay.

Government officials said that because the consultation process had gotten so complex, it was routinely ignored by the agencies. They said it had become a bureaucratic maze that helped no one.

"With 1,200 endangered species and hundreds of chemicals, it becomes a logistical nightmare," said Hugh Vickery, an Interior Department spokesman. "The thinking was that we had to find a more efficient way."

Vickery said the litigation on the West Coast spurred the government to act.

"This got the fire going on trying to solve the problem," he said.

Environmentalists said the changes would weaken the law. "The law was designed to say, 'Look before you leap,' " said John Kostyack, senior counsel with the National Wildlife Federation. "This is leaping before you look."

But officials at the Fish and Wildlife Service said their agency would continue to monitor the EPA's work under the new rules.

"We are not out of the picture," said Clint Riley, special assistant to the wildlife service's director. "We would be in more of an oversight role. As soon as it looks like there would be any adverse effect, we would still be in the picture."

CropLife America, a pesticide industry association, issued a statement describing the new rules as "a sensible approach that strengthens protections to endangered animal and plant species while maintaining access to tested and approved pesticides that are essential to agricultural production, pest management, public health and the environment."

Colangelo said the revision had been on industry wish lists for years, as pesticide producers sought to overcome environmental lawsuits.

Environmentalists noted that the pesticide DDT was responsible for the decline of the American bald eagle in the late 20th century. Since then, pesticide control laws and the Endangered Species Act have reversed the trend.

"Instead of upholding the law, the president has chosen to let EPA off the hook," said Rodger Schlickeisen, president of Defenders of Wildlife.

Times staff writer Tom Hamburger contributed to this report.

Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times


Informant: Teresa Binstock

25
Jul
2004

What Is Happening to Birds?

From Earthfiles.com
http://www.earthfiles.com/news/news.cfm?ID=750&category=Environment
(click link for full details - headlines below with brief description)

What Is Happening to Birds?

Updated With Viewer Reports
© 2004 by Linda Moulton Howe

July 22, 2004 Stockholm, Sweden - Lloyd Jones reporting for Australia's Herald Sun in Stockholm began a dispatch today:

"Homing pigeons vanish during race. Organisers of a race for homing pigeons were still scratching their heads in wonder today after about 1500 of the birds, famous for their ability to find their way home, went missing during the contest."


29,000 American White Pelicans Disappear

On May 28, 2004, the Bismarck, North Dakota office of the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service began hearing that American White Pelicans were disappearing from the Chase Lake National Wildlife Refuge north of Medina, North Dakota. Two and a half weeks later, 29,000 pelicans were gone without a trace.


Dying Flamingoes and Brown Pelicans

On July 15, 2004, the director general of Tanzania, Afria's National Parks (Tanapa), Gerald Bigurube reported: "The death of more than 10,000 flamingoes in Lake Manyara is a real tragedy and we are still puzzled with the cause and nature of the mysterious disease that has struck these beautiful creatures."


England's Bird Population Declines 33% in 25 Years

The U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Canadian Wildlife Service reported this month that the duck population in the United States and Canada has dropped 11 percent in one year, largely linked to drought that has dried up water in duck breeding grounds.

The declines pinpointed by the report are most alarming in intensive farming countries such as the UK, where, between 1970 and 1999, skylark numbers declined by 52 per cent, the yellowhammer by 53 per cent and the corn bunting by 88 per cent.


Peace - Anna

EMF Exposure - Animal Studies

http://members.aol.com/gotemf/emf/animals.htm
http://www.buergerwelle.de/pdf/micro_waves_effects_on_wildlife_animals.pdf
http://www.buergerwelle.de/pdf/effects_of_emf_on_white_stork.pdf

24
Jul
2004

Kein Wal für Öl

Bedroht Shell Grauwale? Kein Wal für Öl!

Schon wieder ist der Erdölkonzern Shell in Negativschlagzeilen. Der WWF (World Wild Fund of Nature) befürchtet, dass die geplante Ölförderung vor der Insel Sachalin in Ostrussland die letzten 100 westpazifischen Grauwale bedroht. Der WWF meint, dass das Zehn-Milliarden-Euro-Projekt von Shell die Nahrungsgründe der Tiere trifft. Außerdem drohe in dieser "stark von Erdbeben gefährdeten Region eine Ölkatastrophe"...

http://www.sonnenseite.com/fp/archiv/Akt-News/5093.php

23
Jul
2004

Undersea noise 'does harm whales'

by Alex Kirby

BBC News Online environment correspondent in Sorrento, Italy

Evidence that noise from humans sources harm whales and other marine mammals is overwhelming, scientists say.

The International Whaling Commission, holding its annual meeting in Italy, says military sonar and oil and gas exploration are particular threats.

The numbers of beached whales found may seriously underestimate the numbers actually killed by sound.

They believe special protected areas could help to save marine mammals from being harmed in this way.

A report by the IWC's scientific committee says there is "compelling evidence" that entire populations of marine mammals are at potential risk from increasingly intense man-made underwater noise.

'Great concern'

The committee says in its report: "The weight of accumulated evidence now associates mid-frequency military sonar with atypical beaked whale mass strandings.

"The evidence is very convincing and appears overwhelming. Assessments of stranding events do not account for animals that are severely affected or died, but did not strand."

Earlier this month about 200 melon-headed whales stampeded into shallow water off the coast of Hawaii, with one dying, during US and Japanese naval exercises.

One possible cause under investigation is mid-frequency sonar. The report also expressed "great concern" over the impacts of oil and gas exploration on large whales.

It mentioned an incident in 2002 in which humpback whales were stranded off the coast of Brazil in unusual numbers during a submarine oil and gas survey that generated intense sound pulses.

The committee called for "strong, prompt action", especially for endangered whale populations like the western North Pacific gray whales. Only 100 animals, among them 23 females of reproductive age, are known to exist.

Global conservation campaign group, the World Wildlife Fund, has urged the Royal Dutch Shell energy group to suspend its Sakhalin oil project in the Russian Far East after the IWC called it a threat to the survival of the gray whales in the area.

The scientific committee urged investigation into setting up marine protected areas to keep marine mammals safe from underwater noise.

Last October the US Natural Resources Defense Council said the US Navy had agreed to cut its use of a controversial low-frequency sonar system which could be harming marine mammals.

The journal Nature said the sonar signals might cause bubbles in the animals' tissue, in much the same way as divers can suffer decompression sickness known as "the bends".

SEE ALSO:

Greenland warned on whaling toll
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3914127.stm
21 Jul 04 | Science/Nature

US Navy agrees sonar limit
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3191280.stm
14 Oct 03 | Science/Nature

Euro MPs fight for whales
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/3186234.stm
13 Oct 03 | Science/Nature


RELATED BBC LINKS:
Cetaceans http://www.bbc.co.uk/nature/animals/conservation/cetaceans/

RELATED INTERNET LINKS:
IWC http://www.iwcoffice.org/
Natural Resources Defense Council
http://www.nrdc.org/default.asp

The committee has urged for marine protected areas

Gray whale numbers are particularly low

Story from BBC NEWS:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/3916249.stm

Published: 2004/07/22 10:45:46 GMT

© BBC MMIV


Informant: Teresa Binstock

Greenpeace Jaguars

Salta, Northwest Argentina

Right now, the sound of bulldozers is thundering in my ears, and I need your help. I can't say too much yet -- the companies destroying the forest in this far off corner of South America will stop me if they can. All I can tell you now is that we're about to launch something new called "the Greenpeace Jaguars" and I'll be counting on your help to have an impact all over the world. All you'll need is a phone and 3 minutes of your time. Nothing more.

I'll be posting updates to http://www.greenpeace.org, and will send you an email when the action starts.

To give you some idea of what I'm up against, an area of forest the size of Germany is in danger. It is disappearing at an unbelievable speed - 20 football pitches an hour. I see it happening day in, day out. Where once there was a forest with people, trees, parrots, monkeys and jaguars, now there's just a bare field -- cut down so multinational corporations can grow more soya for animal feed. I'm not going to let it be destroyed without resisting. And I know I'm not alone!

The campesinos and the Wichies - the indigenous people of this area - are counting on Greenpeace to ensure their cry for help is heard all over the world. Your three minutes of time could collectively stop this madness.

Watch out for my email over the next few days. Until then, thank you for reading this message. I hope I can count on your support.

Emiliano Ezcurra
Forest Campaign Coordinator
Greenpeace Argentina


PS: Please tell your friends and family that the "the Greenpeace Jaguars" will kick off in just a few days. We'll be doing something direct, powerful, and of course peaceful, in the middle of the forest itself.

But in every corner of the globe we hope to have millions of on-line "jaguars". This will be the voice of those of us who aren't prepared to sit with our arms folded, watching our planet being destroyed. Watch out for my email, or go to http://www.greenpeace.org.

Targhee NF's Plan threatens Yellowstone Grizzly Bears

NEWS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE June 7, 2004

Native Ecosystems Council - Dr. Sara Jane Johnson, 406-285-3611 The Alliance for the Wild Rockies - Michael Garrity, 406-459-5936 The Ecology Center - Jeff Juel 406 728-2320

Targhee National Forest's Revised Forest Plan threatens Yellowstone Grizzly Bears and other wildlife.
Conservation Groups File suit challenging illegal Forest Plan for Targhee National Forest.

MISSOULA - Today, three conservation organizations filed a comprehensive lawsuit in Federal District Court in Missoula against the U.S. Forest Service management plan for the Targhee National Forest in southeastern Idaho. The Targhee National Forest is next to Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks. The Forest is home to a diverse number of wildlife and fish, including threatened and endangered species. The lawsuit challenges the new forest plan's lack of protection for old growth forest and old growth forest dependent species such as grizzly bears, great gray owls, and goshawks.

The Targhee National Forest ("TNF") adopted its first forest plan in 1985, and was the first National Forest in the country to adopt a Revised Forest Plan ("RFP") in 1997.

"The Targhee National Forest eliminated the few rules they had to protect fish and wildlife in its new forest plan," said Sara Jane Johnson Ph.D. Dr. Johnson worked for the U.S. Forest Service, including the Targhee National Forest, for 14 years as a wildlife biologist. Dr. Johnson said, "The Forest Service would like to turn back the clock to the days when logging was king, and species concerns were only entitled to feel-good lip service."

Michael Garrity, Executive Director of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies, said, "Government research has found that grizzly bears are more than 5 times more likely to die in roaded areas than in unroaded areas. This plan is not good for grizzly bears because grizzly bears can't hide in clearcuts. The Targhee National Forest goal is to manage for money losing clearcuts rather than wildlife."

"This Revised Forest Plan exemplifies the Bush administration's approach to managing national forests," stated Jeff Juel of the Ecology Center. "After repeatedly losing in court trying to ignore the original Forest Plan's old-growth protection requirements, the Targhee's Revised Forest Plan was written without any obligation to protect old growth, and with no recognition of the habitat and social values of these ancient forests."

Dr. Johnson believes that, "clearcutting in the Targhee National Forest has reduced old growth dependent species including the grizzly bear, gray wolf, wolverine, fisher, pine marten, lynx, and goshawk to isolated and fragmented populations."

Dr. Johnson said, "The issue of providing for the larger landscape needs of far-ranging forest carnivores reveals the need to utilize the principles of Conservation Biology on a landscape level. If we want the animals in Yellowstone Park to survive in the long run, linkages out of the Park with other core areas need to be established, providing sufficient habitat components so the linkages, or corridors, are functional for genetic interchange purposes."

"The Forest Service could create far more jobs by complying with the law and restoring these forests, rather than continuing to build roads and log in grizzly bear habitat," said Alliance for Wild Rockies executive director and economist Michael Garrity.

The groups are being represented by Forest Defense of Missoula. According to attorney Tom Woodbury, "This revised plan is shocking for its complete lack of scientific credibility. Even the Targhee's own wildlife expert warned them against adopting it, and once adopted, warned them against implementing it." Woodbury expects a hearing this summer on injunctive relief to protect species while the courts determine the plan's legality.

Websites with pictures of clearcuts on the Targhee N.F.

http://www.forwolves.org/ralph/cc-targ.htm
http://www.redtailcanyon.com/items/18921.aspx?imageId=40231
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/9703/hilights_splash003.html#d


Informant: Earth First! Media

22
Jul
2004

Internationale Walfang-Konferenz in Italien

WWF zieht Bilanz: Internationale Walfang-Konferenz in Italien

22.07.04

Mit großer Sorge sieht der WWF die Entwicklung der IWC, deren 56. Tagung am Donnerstag im süditalienischen Sorrent zu Ende geht. "Die IWC-Tagungen sind längst ein Drahtseilakt für den Walschutz.“, erklärt Volker Homes, WWF-Artenschützer. Doch die aggressive Politik Japans könnte schon 2005 auf der IWC in Korea den Ausverkauf des Walschutzes einleiten. Die Zahl der Pro-Walfang-Länder in der Kommission ist seit dem Jahr 2000 von neun auf über 20 gestiegen - und Japan wird weiter mit allen Mitteln Verbündete werben. Angesichts dieser Entwicklung urteilt Homes: "Wenn die internationale Staatengemeinschaft nicht entschlossen handelt, droht in naher Zukunft die feindliche Übernahme der Kommission durch die Walfänger."

Die ganze Nachricht im Internet:

http://www.ngo-online.de/ganze_nachricht.php4?Nr=8967

Gray whale faces extinction over oil development, warns IWC

http://www.terradaily.com/2004/040720121042.pv8hw9qr.html


From Greenpeace News-headlines Digest, Vol 15, Issue 7

Whalers trying to silence IFAW

(excerpt)

If we don't act right now to make sure the International Whaling Commission (IWC) continues to protect whales, oceans will turn red with the blood of these gentle giants.

As I write to you from the front lines of the IWC meeting in Italy, the IFAW team is fighting a fierce battle for the future of whales.

By offering multi-million dollar fisheries grants to economically weak countries in exchange for pro-whaling votes, Japan is attempting to undo more than thirty years of whale conservation. But thanks to you, we've blown the Japanese vote-buying scandal wide open.

Last week you sent more than 8,000 faxes and emails to new IWC member country Tuvalu, letting the Prime Minister know that the living beauty of whales has a much higher value than their meat.

Our efforts are making headlines, but Japan is fighting back. This morning they asked the IWC to remove IFAW from the IWC meeting - instead of apologizing for their behavior, they are trying to silence the truth.

IFAW is pushing for a full and open discussion of the vote buying issue at the IWC, but we need your help . Japan is spending millions and this will be a long fight. We need to continue collecting evidence and keep IFAW staff on the front lines.

Who can ever forget the magnificent sight of a whale bursting through the air, or its soulful underwater glide? Whales symbolize our connection to the mysteries of nature - and each whale we lose is irreplaceable.

As of today .... the IWC vote remains perilously close. And if Japan gains a majority of IWC votes, it means certain disaster for the world's whales. That's why we need your help right now .

So please give what you can TODAY , before more whale songs are silenced.

For the Whales,

Fred O'Regan
President and CEO

P.S. If you think we already saved the whale ... think again. Over 25,000 whales have been killed since the 1986 worldwide moratorium (ban) on whaling. Please help us stop the unnecessary killing of endangered whale:
http://www.ifaw.org/ifaw/general/default.aspx?oid=329
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