The Mekong: River of the Nine Dragons. An Enormously Variable Natural Cycle WEEK TWO: HOW DOES WATER SUPPORT LIFE? ESSAY ONE.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "The Mekong: River of the Nine Dragons. An Enormously Variable Natural Cycle WEEK TWO: HOW DOES WATER SUPPORT LIFE? ESSAY ONE."

Transcription

1 Print WEEK TWO: HOW DOES WATER SUPPORT LIFE? ESSAY ONE The Mekong: River of the Nine Dragons The Nine Dragons This satellite photo shows the nine distinct outlets of the Mekong River Delta. NASA Flowing 4,880 kilometers (3,030 miles) through six countries before discharging in the South China Sea, the Mekong River is Southeast Asia's longest river. Its drainage basin is divided into the Upper Mekong (which flows from the Tibetan Himalayas through China's Yunnan Province and Myanmar [Burma]) and the Lower Mekong (Cambodia, Lao People's Democratic Republic, or Lao PDR, Thailand, and Vietnam). Its source in the Tibetan plateau was only discovered in The Mekong Delta drains into the sea through nine outlets, giving the river its Vietnamese name, Song Cuu Long, or River of Nine Dragons. An Enormously Variable Natural Cycle The region's typical monsoon climate, with distinct wet (May to November) and dry (December to March) seasons, causes the Mekong River's flow to vary greatly. In the rainy season, the river floods many areas up to three meters (10 feet) deep for up to five months, while flows drop by 90 percent in the dry season. The river's ecosystem depends on these seasonal variations. Flood pulses fertilize riverbanks with nutrients and sediments, and allow fish to swim into tributaries and floodplains to spawn and hide from predators. A huge wetland (65,000 square kilometers/25,000 square miles), the Mekong Delta is crisscrossed by canals and rivers; it continues to grow though sediment deposition. When river flow is low, saltwater from the South China Sea can intrude upstream, flooding a third of the entire delta. This saline intrusion, like rainfall and flooding patterns, is an important natural component of the delta ecosystem. Seasons of Change The variation of the Mekong is obvious on the shoreline at Nakon Phanom, Thailand: rainy season (left) and dry season (right). Michael Lanty 1/5

2 9/26/2016 An Immensely Productive River The Mekong is the world's third-most-biodiverse inland waterway, after the Amazon and Congo rivers. More than a thousand new vertebrate species have been discovered in the river basin in just the last decade: 519 plants, 279 fish, 88 frogs, 88 spiders, 46 lizards, 22 snakes, 15 mammals, 4 birds, 4 turtles, 2 salamanders and a toad, not to mention thousands of new invertebrate species. The river is home to at least 1,200 species of fish, notably a number of very large ones. The river's seasonal rise and fall ensures a nutrient-rich environment, and Mekong fisheries are extraordinarily productive. Millions of Livelihoods Revolve Around the Mekong The Mekong River basin is home to 73 million people, a third of whom survive on a few dollars a day. They belong to over 100 different ethnic groups, making the Lower Mekong River Basin one of the most culturally diverse areas in the world. Most are self-sufficient farmers and fishermen who depend on the river's rich sediment and fish-filled waters for subsistence and commercial fishing, rice production, and agriculture. The vast, swampy delta is one of Asia's greatest rice-growing regions. During the dry winters, most rice-growing areas require irrigation. Many fish species can be harvested from rice fields; some enter from adjacent bodies of water, while others are deliberately stocked. Conservative estimates indicate that basin dwellers eat more than 1.5 million tons of fish per year. The fishery provides a livelihood not just for fishers and their families but for thousands more who are employed full- or part-time making and selling food products and fishing gear, repairing boats, and providing hundreds of related services. Aquaculture in the basin relies heavily on introduced species such as the common carp and Nile tilapia. Newly Discovered Species These are among the species recently discovered in the Mekong River Basin: (clockwise from left) litter frog (Leptobrachiun gunungense), green pit viper (Trimeresurus gumprechti), Kachin woolly bat (Keriboula kachinensis), and shocking pink dragon millipede (Desmoxytes purpurosea). Greater Mekong Programme / WWF International 2/5

3 Crop Irrigation This is a traditional method of irrigating a rice field in rural Vietnam. QT Luong Environmental Degradation and Economic Development Many factors have contributed to degraded water quality and declining fisheries in parts of the Mekong Basin, including the intensive application of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, urban waste discharge, widespread logging, and the use of explosives and other nontraditional fishing methods. The basinõs native flora and fauna are threatened by invasive species that have escaped or been released into the Mekong Basin, in particular water hyacinth (Eichornia crassipes) and giant mimosa (Mimosa pigra). First spotted in the Mekong River Delta in 1979, the mimosa is a spiny shrub native to the Americas that spreads in floodwaters and construction sand, quickly forms dense stands, and out-competes native plants. The mimosa has taken over several irreplaceable wetlands on which endangered water birds depend for food and shelter. The basin lacks control, management, and eradication programs for these and other invasive species. The basin's human population, which has doubled over the last 30 years, continues to increase. As with environmental degradation, the threat from too much water (e.g. flooding in Cambodia) or too little (water scarcity in Thailand) will become more problematic as the population and development increase. Lastly, regional economic development is spurring a demand for energy through hydropower. Invasive Aquatic Weed Villages relying on fishing and water travel are paralyzed each year when water hyacinth takes over, as seen from a boat in Cambodia's Siem Reap River. Gillian Perrett Dam Development A number of dams have already been built on the Mekong's three major tributaries in Lao PDR, Thailand, and Vietnam, and more than 100 new ones have been proposed in the last decade. China is building a series of dams on the Mekong itself, two of which rival the scale of the immense Three Gorges Dam. Support for these dams comes from basin countries that need power for development, from basin countries with hydropower potential and limited national income, and from the countries and companies that build the dams. Proponents point out that dams could reduce salinity issues by ensuring greater flow during the dry season and reduce flood damage by stabilizing water levels. All of Cambodia's major cities, for example, are vulnerable to flooding. Although the potential ecological impacts of these proposed dams are not well understood, existing dams are already blamed for a decline in fishery yields and habitats for endangered species. All of the river's large fish species are in serious decline. One species of freshwater dolphin, the Irrawaddy dolphin (Orcaella brevirostris), was once common in the whole of the Lower Mekong but is now very rare. Dams impede fish migration routes, inundate spawning grounds, and eliminate the seasonal flooding that provides nutrients for agriculture, especially rice farming. Existing dams are estimated to have displaced tens of thousands of rural people, and new construction would displace many tens of thousands more. 3/5

4 A significant concern is the possibility that dams upstream will disrupt the annual flood pulse throughout the Delta and into Cambodia's Great Lake, or Tonle Sap, which was designated a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in When monsoon rains arrive, a tributary of the Mekong River reverses directions, flowing backward and causing this lake to swell to around 10,360 square kilometers (4,000 square miles) from 2,700 square kilometers (1,050 square miles). The depth increases to 9 to 14 meters (30 to 45 feet) from 1 to 3 meters (3 to 10 feet). The millions of fish that surge in with the floodwaters are key to the livelihood of the 80,000 people who live around the lake. When the dry season returns, the flow reverses. This entire process is believed to provide nutrients and habitat necessary for these fisheries and nurseries to survive. The least developed of the basin nations, Cambodia, is completely dependent on the river, and Tonle Sap in particular, for food and other resources. Endangered Species The Irrawaddy dolphin and giant Mekong catfish are increasingly threatened by alterations to their habitats. CITES At present, environmental and human costs are taking a back seat to development pressures. In addition to dams for hydropower, large irrigation projects are under consideration. Another point of controversy is a Chinese-initiated project to blast rapids, shoals, and rocks in the upper Mekong, allowing passage for bigger ships and opening a trade route to Vietnam. Landlocked Lao PDR hopes that a shipping route will help lift its people out of subsistence farming and poverty. Reefs in the area, some as long as two kilometers, are the breeding ground for many migratory fish. The biggest freshwater fish in the world, the endemic giant Mekong catfish, which can grow to over three meters, hatches its eggs just south of where a first phase of blasting was completed in Managing the Mekong: A Brief History Attempts to promote cooperative river basin planning began in 1957, when the United Nations led one of its first efforts to study a project's social, economic, and organizational aspects in advance of construction. In April 1995, the four lower basin countries (Cambodia, Lao PDR, Thailand, and Vietnam) signed the Agreement on the Cooperation for the Sustainable Development of the Mekong River Basin in Chiang Rai, Thailand, establishing the Mekong River Commission (MRC). They committed to developing, conserving, and using the river in a cooperative and sustainable manner. (Other agreements between the six riparian countries focus primarily on economic development.) The MRC is the governing body for cooperative river basin management. Along with other cooperative organizations, the MRC provides a forum for dialogue. Its achievements include improved understanding of the ecology of the Mekong River system and the development of a flood forecasting system. Dam construction, long forestalled by political instability in the region, is taking environmental and social impacts into consideration. In the spring of 2009, the MRC launched a wide-ranging assessment of the impact of hydropower development along the river in Lao PDR, Cambodia, and on the Lao-Thailand border. 4/5

5 Construction on the Mekong As of 2008, 12 new dams are under construction on the Mekong River and its tributaries, with another 80 dams awaiting approval. Mekong River Commission The Challenges Ahead The MRC clearly recognizes the interconnectedness of upstream and downstream stakeholders. With a clear understanding of threats, a shared action plan, and broad participation, this type of framework can be critical to sharing a resource sustainably. Yet sustainable management of the Mekong River Basin faces serious obstacles, which include poor water-use planning, insufficient data and data-sharing, poor institutional coordination, lack of skilled personnel, poor communication, and weak regulatory frameworks and enforcement mechanisms. The MRC is hampered by its small size and limited resources, and by the region's extreme poverty. Donor funding, which provides 90 percent of the budget, impedes riparian country ownership of the MRC and its governance mechanisms. Some local communities do not bring their concerns to the MRC, and its role as an advisor at the national level is hampered by limited participation and engagement. China and Myanmar do not belong, and China undercut the MRC's authority when it established separate ties with the four lower basin countries in order to blast the navigation channel. Economic development has greatly suppressed environmental concerns. Countries that are developing more quickly, like China and Thailand, have different incentives and disincentives than other basin countries. Participation is seen as a constraint to further development, despite the MRC's limited charter. While the organization does have policy-making authority that binds the participating countries, it does not currently have the ability to set a basin-wide agenda, nor do countries relinquish sovereignty simply by participating in the MRC. Despite these challenges, the organization has made progress in establishing a foundation for integrated management across the four member countries. A strong environmental movement has formed in Thailand, and Cambodia is beginning to develop one. China is also taking a greater interest in regional development, which may translate to greater cooperation. The MRC continues to support dialogue on the most effective way to manage the basin and to encourage participation by all stakeholders at all levels. Related Links Mekong River Commission» Gain insight into current programs and management practices going on within the Mekong River Delta. Mangrove Action Project» This nonprofit is dedicated to reversing the degradation and loss of mangrove forest ecosystems worldwide. Its main goal is to promote the rights of traditional and indigenous coastal peoples, including fishers and farmers, to manage sustainably their coastal environs. Mangroves for the Future» This is a global initiative to promote investment in coastal ecosystem conservation for sustainable development. CBC: Mainland Southeast Asia» Learn about the rare and endemic species that the Museum's Center for Biodiversity and Conservation researches in the greater Mekong region. 5/5

Fish and Fisheries. Ian Cowx Hull international Fisheries Institute

Fish and Fisheries. Ian Cowx Hull international Fisheries Institute BioRA Preparation Meeting PART I Office of the Secretariat in Vientiane 18 19 March 2015 Fish and Fisheries Ian Cowx Hull international Fisheries Institute 1 Outline Characteristics of Mekong fish and

More information

Lessons to be learnt from Mekong River for Asia

Lessons to be learnt from Mekong River for Asia 28 January 2011 Lessons to be learnt from Mekong River for Asia Gary Kleyn FDI Research Manager Global Food and Water Crises Research Programme Summary South East Asia will face increasing problems as

More information

Fish Migrations. 4 September 2002 Catch and Culture Volume 8, No. 1.

Fish Migrations. 4 September 2002 Catch and Culture Volume 8, No. 1. Fish Migrations 4 September 2002 Catch and Culture Volume 8, No. 1. Fish Migrations Catch and Culture Volume 8, No. 1. September 2002 5 Fish Migrations 6 September 2002 Catch and Culture Volume 8 No. 1.

More information

HOW CAN WE HELP TO SUSTAIN AQUATIC BIODIVERSITY?

HOW CAN WE HELP TO SUSTAIN AQUATIC BIODIVERSITY? HOW CAN WE HELP TO SUSTAIN AQUATIC BIODIVERSITY? Marine Biodiversity The most marine biodiversity is found: 1. Coral reefs 2. Estuaries 3. Deep-ocean floor Biodiversity is higher near coasts than in the

More information

Fisheries Research and Development in the Mekong Region ISSN X

Fisheries Research and Development in the Mekong Region ISSN X Fisheries Research and Development in the Mekong Region ISSN 0859-290X C River Ecology 4 October 2003 Catch and Culture Volume 9, No. 2. River Ecology Catch and Culture Volume 9, No. 2. October 2003 5

More information

FISHERIES BASELINE ASSESSMENT

FISHERIES BASELINE ASSESSMENT FISHERIES BASELINE ASSESSMENT Outline 2 1- Past trends and current situation Catch Catch in the Mekong ; comparisons Fisheries and food security Biodiversity Global level Local level Drivers of the fisheries

More information

The Don Sahong Hydropower Project

The Don Sahong Hydropower Project The Don Sahong Hydropower Project The proposed Don Sahong Hydropower Project is located on the Mekong River s mainstream in the Siphandone area of southern Laos, less than two kilometers upstream of the

More information

The Geopolitics of Dam Construction and Operation along the Mekong River: Implications for Food Security in the Region

The Geopolitics of Dam Construction and Operation along the Mekong River: Implications for Food Security in the Region The Geopolitics of Dam Construction and Operation along the Mekong River: Implications for Food Security in the Region Nathaniel P. Candelaria 1, University of the Philippines, The Philippines The Asia-Pacific

More information

FISHERIES IMPACT ASSESSMENT

FISHERIES IMPACT ASSESSMENT FISHERIES IMPACT ASSESSMENT 2 Key strategic question To what extent can mainstream dams alter fish biodiversity, fish migration patterns and fish catches in the Mekong aquatic systems? Outline 1- Baseline

More information

Management advisory for the Bay of Bengal hilsa fishery June 2012

Management advisory for the Bay of Bengal hilsa fishery June 2012 Page1 Management advisory for the Bay of Bengal hilsa fishery June 2012 What is the BOBLME RFMAC The BOBLME Project is supporting countries to implement an ecosystem approach to fisheries management of

More information

The Purchase and Release of Two Endangered Species: Mekong Giant Catfish (Pangasianodon gigas) and Giant Barb (Catlocarpio siamensis)

The Purchase and Release of Two Endangered Species: Mekong Giant Catfish (Pangasianodon gigas) and Giant Barb (Catlocarpio siamensis) The Purchase and Release of Two Endangered Species: Mekong Giant Catfish (Pangasianodon gigas) and Giant Barb (Catlocarpio siamensis) by Zeb Hogan 1, Ngor Pengbun 2, and Nicolaas van Zalinge 3 1. Department

More information

Lower Mekong Basin. John G. Williams. Petrolia, California.

Lower Mekong Basin. John G. Williams. Petrolia, California. Technical Comment on Sabo et al. Designing river flows to improve food security futures in the Lower Mekong Basin John G. Williams Petrolia, California jgwill@frontiernet.net Abstract: Sabo et al. (1)

More information

CONSERVING BIODIVERSITY AND SUSTAINING S LIVELIHOODS ALONG THE MEKONG RIVER IN LUANG PHRABANG, XAYABOURI AND

CONSERVING BIODIVERSITY AND SUSTAINING S LIVELIHOODS ALONG THE MEKONG RIVER IN LUANG PHRABANG, XAYABOURI AND CONSERVING BIODIVERSITY AND SUSTAINING S LIVELIHOODS ALONG THE MEKONG RIVER IN LUANG PHRABANG, XAYABOURI AND VIENTIANE PROVINCES, LAOS Raphael Glemet Water and wetlands programme officer IUCN Lao PDR,

More information

Texas Water Resources Institute

Texas Water Resources Institute Texas Water Resources Institute November/December 1982 Volume 8 No. 6 A Precise Environment By Lou Ellen Ruesink, Editor, Texas Water Resources Aquarium enthusiasts know just how particular fish are about

More information

Key Feature and Challenges from Climate Change for Mekong River Basin

Key Feature and Challenges from Climate Change for Mekong River Basin 1 Key Feature and Challenges from Climate Change for Mekong River Basin By Dr. Thanapon Piman Planning Division Basin Development Plan Pragramme Mekong River Commission Secretariat (MRCS) 2 Outline 1)

More information

METHODS AND BASELINE FOR AQUATIC ECOLOGY AND FISHERIES PETER-JOHN MEYNELL & RICK GREGORY

METHODS AND BASELINE FOR AQUATIC ECOLOGY AND FISHERIES PETER-JOHN MEYNELL & RICK GREGORY METHODS AND BASELINE FOR AQUATIC ECOLOGY AND FISHERIES PETER-JOHN MEYNELL & RICK GREGORY APPROACH FOR AQUATIC ECOLOGY AND FISHERIES 1. Identifying ecologically sensitive areas in Myanmar s rivers Quantifying

More information

AQUACULTURE STATUS OF VIETNAM Han Mai Huong, Cairo, November 2011

AQUACULTURE STATUS OF VIETNAM Han Mai Huong, Cairo, November 2011 AQUACULTURE STATUS OF VIETNAM Han Mai Huong, Cairo, November 2011 VIETNAM Mainland Territory: 331,211.6 sq. km. Lying on the eastern part of the Indochinese peninsula, Vietnam is a strip of land shaped

More information

According to Brian Finlayson, Centre for Environmental Applied Hydrology, University of Melbourne, Australia (February 2002), 2

According to Brian Finlayson, Centre for Environmental Applied Hydrology, University of Melbourne, Australia (February 2002), 2 TERRA Briefing Paper Summary of Analysis of the Report on Environmental Impact Assessment: The Navigation Channel Improvement Project of the Lancang-Mekong River from China- Myanmar Boundary Marker 243

More information

Marine Ecosystems. Aquatic Ecosystems Section 2

Marine Ecosystems. Aquatic Ecosystems Section 2 Marine Ecosystems Marine ecosystems are located mainly in coastal areas and in the open ocean. Organisms that live in coastal areas adapt to changes in water level and salinity. Organisms that live in

More information

Policy Instruments for Fisheries Management and the Concept of Fisheries Refugia

Policy Instruments for Fisheries Management and the Concept of Fisheries Refugia REVERSING ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION TRENDS Policy Instruments for Fisheries Management and the Concept of Fisheries Refugia Christopher Paterson, UNEP/GEF South China Sea Project REVERSING ENVIRONMENTAL

More information

WFC 50 California s Wild Vertebrates Jan. 11, Inland Waters (Lakes and Streams) Lisa Thompson

WFC 50 California s Wild Vertebrates Jan. 11, Inland Waters (Lakes and Streams) Lisa Thompson Inland Waters: Lakes and Streams WFC 50 11 January 2011 Lisa Thompson Fisheries Extension Specialist Wildlife, Fish, & Conservation Biology Department University of California, Davis Take home messages

More information

Coordinating adaptation in the Mekong Region

Coordinating adaptation in the Mekong Region Coordinating adaptation in the Mekong Region Dr Alex Smajgl 18 March 2013 CSIRO ECOSYSTEM SCIENCES/CLIMATE ADAPTATION FLAGSHIP Climate Adaptation Flagship Goal To equip policy makers, industries and communities

More information

The Commons in the Tonle Sap Flood Plain Insights from community fisheries management

The Commons in the Tonle Sap Flood Plain Insights from community fisheries management The Commons in the Tonle Sap Flood Plain Insights from community fisheries management CTFD workshop on the Commons 8th November 2016, Paris Jean Christophe Diepart Researcher Center of Khmer Studies &

More information

Protecting Mekong s Critical Ecosystems & Biodiversity from Hydropower Development

Protecting Mekong s Critical Ecosystems & Biodiversity from Hydropower Development Suthep Kritsanavarin Protecting Mekong s Critical Ecosystems & Biodiversity from Hydropower Development Ame Trandem The Mekong - Lifeblood of the Region The Mekong s Endgame? The Mekong Mainstream Dams

More information

Chan Sokheng Assessment of Mekong Fisheries (AMFC), Cambodia. 1. Abstract

Chan Sokheng Assessment of Mekong Fisheries (AMFC), Cambodia. 1. Abstract Migration Pattern of three Species (Cirrhinus microlepis, Pangasius hypophthalmus and Botia modesta) in the Mekong mainstream and major tributaries of Cambodia. Chan Sokheng Assessment of Mekong Fisheries

More information

Salmon Five Point Approach restoring salmon in England

Salmon Five Point Approach restoring salmon in England Salmon Five Point Approach restoring salmon in England Our Mission To restore the abundance, diversity and resilience of salmon stocks throughout England We will do this by:- a) Maximising the production

More information

CHAPTER 11.1 THE WORLD OCEAN MARINE BIOMES NOTES

CHAPTER 11.1 THE WORLD OCEAN MARINE BIOMES NOTES CHAPTER 11.1 THE WORLD OCEAN MARINE BIOMES NOTES 1. The world ocean can be divided into zones both and. The,, and zones that apply to large lakes also apply to the ocean. 2. In addition to the depth zones,

More information

CENTRO ALTI STUDI PER LA DIFESA ISTITUTO ALTI STUDI PER LA DIFESA

CENTRO ALTI STUDI PER LA DIFESA ISTITUTO ALTI STUDI PER LA DIFESA CENTRO ALTI STUDI PER LA DIFESA ISTITUTO ALTI STUDI PER LA DIFESA 3 rd International Capstone Course Individual Paper Impact of Major dams development on Mekong river on fisheries and environment Col.

More information

For next Thurs: Jackson et al Historical overfishing and the recent collapse of coastal ecosystems. Science 293:

For next Thurs: Jackson et al Historical overfishing and the recent collapse of coastal ecosystems. Science 293: For next Thurs: Jackson et al. 2001. Historical overfishing and the recent collapse of coastal ecosystems. Science 293: 629-637. Resource: means of supplying a want or deficiency, from French resourdre

More information

9-1 What Role Do Humans Play in the Premature Extinction of Species?

9-1 What Role Do Humans Play in the Premature Extinction of Species? 9-1 What Role Do Humans Play in the Premature Extinction of Species? The Natural World is everywhere disappearing before our eyes cut to pieces, mowed down, plowed under, gobbled up, replaced by human

More information

Chagrin River TMDL Appendices. Appendix F

Chagrin River TMDL Appendices. Appendix F Appendix F The following are excerpts from the Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture s Conservation Strategy (Working Draft v.6), Conserving the Eastern Brook Trout: Strategies for Action Found at: http://www.easternbrooktrout.org/constrategy.html

More information

Oceans Humans both depend on it and threaten it with their activities

Oceans Humans both depend on it and threaten it with their activities Oceans Humans both depend on it and threaten it with their activities Oceans Water covers nearly ¾ of the Earth s surface More than 50% of the world s population lives within an hour of the coast Oceans

More information

Preparation of this document

Preparation of this document iii Preparation of this document This document reviews and analyses published literature, grey literature, and personal communications on the social, economic and environmental impacts of tilapias in the

More information

Our foundation introduce Nature and conservation in Lake Izunuma Uchinuma.

Our foundation introduce Nature and conservation in Lake Izunuma Uchinuma. Our foundation introduce Nature and conservation in Lake Izunuma Uchinuma. The photo shows morning flight of greater white fronted geese. The geese leave their roosts for foraging at rice fields in the

More information

Okanagan Sockeye Reintroduction

Okanagan Sockeye Reintroduction Okanagan Sockeye Reintroduction Backgrounder Elders accounts, and other forms of Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK) tell us that many species of salmon once came into the Okanagan Valley and tell us

More information

Section 2: Biodiversity at Risk

Section 2: Biodiversity at Risk Section 2: Biodiversity at Risk Preview Classroom Catalyst Objectives Biodiversity at Risk Current Extinctions Species Prone to Extinction How Do Humans Cause Extinctions? Habitat Destruction and Fragmentation

More information

Reduction in Biological Diversity Section 4.1 p Section 4.3 p

Reduction in Biological Diversity Section 4.1 p Section 4.3 p Reduction in Biological Diversity Section 4.1 p. 57-65 Section 4.3 p. 72-78 Review Ecological Diversity A variety of ecosystems (mountains, forests, deserts) and how they interact together. Community Diversity

More information

Searsville Dam Removal

Searsville Dam Removal Searsville Dam Removal A unique opportunity for all Presented by the Beyond Searsville Dam Coalition San Francisquito Creek flows into the San Francisco Bay near the Palo Alto Airport and Golf Course seen

More information

What is Bushmeat? Bushmeat refers to all wildlife species used for meat, including threatened and endangered species

What is Bushmeat? Bushmeat refers to all wildlife species used for meat, including threatened and endangered species The Bushmeat Crisis What is Bushmeat? Bushmeat refers to all wildlife species used for meat, including threatened and endangered species One million metric tons of wildlife is killed for food each year

More information

First Nations Fish Habitat Program Discussion Workbook

First Nations Fish Habitat Program Discussion Workbook First Nations Fish Habitat Program Discussion Workbook The First Nations Fish Habitat Program is a joint initiative of the Centre for Indigenous Environmental Resources (CIER) and The Southern Chiefs Organization

More information

TRANSITION FROM MEKONG COMMITTEE TO MEKONG RIVER COMMISSION

TRANSITION FROM MEKONG COMMITTEE TO MEKONG RIVER COMMISSION TRANSITION FROM MEKONG COMMITTEE TO MEKONG RIVER COMMISSION MIKIYASU NAKAYAMA United Graduate School of Agricultural Science Tokyo University of Agriculture and Technology 3-5-8 Saiwai-cho, Fuchuu-city,

More information

National Law regarding the illegal wildlife trade and the challenges to implement the law

National Law regarding the illegal wildlife trade and the challenges to implement the law National Law regarding the illegal wildlife trade and the challenges to implement the law Presented by H.E. Mya Thein Judge Supreme Court of the Union Republic of the Union of Myanmar 1 Biophysical and

More information

Warm-up # 7 A day 5/17 - B day 5/18 UPDATE YOUR TABLE OF CONTENTS

Warm-up # 7 A day 5/17 - B day 5/18 UPDATE YOUR TABLE OF CONTENTS Warm-up # 7 A day 5/17 - B day 5/18 UPDATE YOUR TABLE OF CONTENTS Question: List all examples of surface water on Earth. Answer: Rivers and streams, lakes and reservoirs, (ponds) wetlands, estuaries and

More information

Preserving Biodiversity

Preserving Biodiversity Preserving Biodiversity How many species are there? 2.1 million currently described probably 3-50 million species most of those undiscovered are insects, fungi and bacteria 70% of known species are invertebrates

More information

Faster, better, cheaper: Transgenic Salmon. How the Endangered Species Act applies to genetically

Faster, better, cheaper: Transgenic Salmon. How the Endangered Species Act applies to genetically Faster, better, cheaper: Transgenic Salmon How the Endangered Species Act applies to genetically modified salmon History of Genetic Modification Genetic modification involves the insertion or deletion

More information

Restoring the Kootenai: A Tribal Approach to Restoration of a Large River in Idaho

Restoring the Kootenai: A Tribal Approach to Restoration of a Large River in Idaho Restoring the Kootenai: A Tribal Approach to Restoration of a Large River in Idaho Susan Ireland, Kootenai Tribe of Idaho Future of our Salmon Conference Technical Session August 2016 Healthy Floodplains,

More information

What are the threats to the oceans? Consequences. Four examples. Tuna

What are the threats to the oceans? Consequences. Four examples. Tuna Conservation of the marine environment Dr. Katrina Mangin Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology mangin@email.arizona.edu What are the threats to the oceans? Over-fishing & over-harvesting Climate

More information

Severn and Avon Fly Life Conference

Severn and Avon Fly Life Conference Presentation to Severn and Avon Fly Life Conference January 12th 2011 Paul Knight S&TA Chief Executive When I see a salmon, I don t just see a fish, I see an ambassador of the wild, a litmus by which we

More information

INTENSIVE MONOCULTURE OF STRIPED CATFISH, (Pangasianodon

INTENSIVE MONOCULTURE OF STRIPED CATFISH, (Pangasianodon INTENSIVE MONOCULTURE OF STRIPED CATFISH, (Pangasianodon hypophthalmus) IN THE MEKONG DELTA, VIETNAM This project is the outcome of a group efforts to whom credit and technical responsibility goes. The

More information

Case Study 3. Case Study 3: Cebu Island, Philippines MPA Network 10

Case Study 3. Case Study 3: Cebu Island, Philippines MPA Network 10 Case studies of mpa networks Case Study 3: Cebu Island, Philippines MPA Network 10 Location and background Cebu Island in the Philippines lies in the center of the Visayan Islands, known as an area high

More information

INLAND FISHERIES: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE R. Welcomme

INLAND FISHERIES: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE R. Welcomme INLAND FISHERIES: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE. 1950 1953 1956 1959 1962 1965 1968 1971 1974 1977 1980 1983 1986 1989 1992 1995 1998 2001 2004 2007 2010 Catch (tonnes 10 6 ) Inland fish catch by year 1950

More information

Florida s Freshwater Fisheries. Mike S. Allen Mark W. Rogers Galen Kaufman. Chris M. Horton

Florida s Freshwater Fisheries. Mike S. Allen Mark W. Rogers Galen Kaufman. Chris M. Horton Evaluating Effects of Climate Change on Florida s Freshwater Fisheries Mike S. Allen Mark W. Rogers Galen Kaufman Chris M. Horton Methods Two parts: 1. Literature review to evaluate nationwide implications

More information

no-take zone 1 of 5 Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, California

no-take zone 1 of 5 Channel Islands National Marine Sanctuary, California This website would like to remind you: Your browser (Apple Safari 4) is out of date. Update your browser for more security, comfort and the best experience on this site. Encyclopedic Entry no-take zone

More information

Sustaining Wild Species

Sustaining Wild Species Sustaining Wild Species tutorial by Paul Rich Outline 1. Why Preserve Wild Species? economic, medical, scientific, ecological, aesthetic, recreational, ethical reasons 2. Current Crisis of Extinction background

More information

Habitat Fact Sheets. Rocky habitats are dominated by seaweeds and often mussels, which rely on the rocks for attachment.

Habitat Fact Sheets. Rocky habitats are dominated by seaweeds and often mussels, which rely on the rocks for attachment. Habitat Fact Sheets Habitats in the Gulf of Maine serve many important roles for the environment and for humans as well. These include: cycling nutrients, filtering pollution, trapping sediments, storing

More information

Management and Control of Asian Carps in the United States. Greg Conover Asian Carp Working Group, Chair USFWS, Carterville FRO

Management and Control of Asian Carps in the United States. Greg Conover Asian Carp Working Group, Chair USFWS, Carterville FRO Management and Control of Asian Carps in the United States Greg Conover Asian Carp Working Group, Chair USFWS, Carterville FRO Asian Carp 7 carps native to Asia introduced into U.S. Asian carps = bighead,

More information

Preserving New Caledonia s Marine Environment The benefits of a large and highly protected marine reserve

Preserving New Caledonia s Marine Environment The benefits of a large and highly protected marine reserve A fact sheet from the Pew Bertarelli Ocean Legacy Project July 2015 Preserving New Caledonia s Marine Environment The benefits of a large and highly protected marine reserve Overview The ocean plays a

More information

Implementing the New Fisheries Protection Provisions under the Fisheries Act

Implementing the New Fisheries Protection Provisions under the Fisheries Act Implementing the New Fisheries Protection Provisions under the Fisheries Act Discussion Paper Fisheries and Oceans Canada April 2013 Contents 1. Introduction 2. Managing Threats to Canada s Fisheries 3.

More information

5B. Management of invasive species in the Cosumnes and Mokelumne River Basins

5B. Management of invasive species in the Cosumnes and Mokelumne River Basins 5B. Management of invasive species in the Cosumnes and Mokelumne River Basins Cosumnes River The Cosumnes River basin has a number of distinct habitat types that require different management strategies

More information

Productivity per unit area (m 2 ) Total Productivity (global)

Productivity per unit area (m 2 ) Total Productivity (global) Productivity per unit area (m 2 ) Total Productivity (global) 1 Important concepts: Biodiversity and Fishery Stocks. Looked at lot of diversity in class what is happening to it and why? Biodiversity variety

More information

Indian River Lagoon: Lessons, Challenges and Opportunities

Indian River Lagoon: Lessons, Challenges and Opportunities Indian River Lagoon: Lessons, Challenges and Opportunities Upper Chain of Lakes Lake Kissimmee Kissimmee River Indian River Lagoon Caloosahatchee Estuary Lake Okeechobee St. Lucie Estuary Mark Perry, Executive

More information

WHAT IS THE CODE OF CONDUCT FOR RESPONSIBLE FISHERIES?

WHAT IS THE CODE OF CONDUCT FOR RESPONSIBLE FISHERIES? WHAT IS THE CODE OF CONDUCT FOR RESPONSIBLE FISHERIES? Fisheries (which includes the management, catching, processing, marketing of fish stocks) and aquaculture (the farming of fish) provide an important

More information

NASCO Guidelines for the Protection, Restoration and Enhancement of Atlantic Salmon Habitat

NASCO Guidelines for the Protection, Restoration and Enhancement of Atlantic Salmon Habitat NASCO Guidelines for the Protection, Restoration and Enhancement of Atlantic Salmon Habitat 1 NASCO Guidelines for the Protection, Restoration and Enhancement of Atlantic Salmon Habitat Additional copies

More information

Preserving New Caledonia s Marine Environment The benefits of a large and highly protected marine reserve

Preserving New Caledonia s Marine Environment The benefits of a large and highly protected marine reserve A fact sheet from the Pew Bertarelli Ocean Legacy Project July 2015 Preserving New Caledonia s Marine Environment The benefits of a large and highly protected marine reserve Overview The ocean plays a

More information

Threatened Fishes of Queensland

Threatened Fishes of Queensland Australia New Guinea Fishes Association Queensland Inc. Threatened Fishes of Queensland Colouring Book Scaturiginichthys vermeilipinnis (Red finned Blue eye) and Chlamydogobius micropterus (Edgbaston Goby)

More information

BANGLADESH: TRANSBOUNDARY RIVERS PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS

BANGLADESH: TRANSBOUNDARY RIVERS PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS BANGLADESH: TRANSBOUNDARY RIVERS PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS by Md. Jahid Hossain Jahangir Executive Engineer Joint Rivers Commission, Bangladesh Presented at the Expert Scoping Workshop on quantifying the

More information

What the threats to the oceans?

What the threats to the oceans? Conservation of the marine environment Dr. Katrina Mangin Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology mangin@email.arizona.edu Lion steak Eagle Pie What the threats to the oceans? Overfishing Coastal

More information

REGIONAL CHARACTERISTICS AND WATER ISSUES: FROM MEKONG RIVER BASIN PERSPECTIVES

REGIONAL CHARACTERISTICS AND WATER ISSUES: FROM MEKONG RIVER BASIN PERSPECTIVES REGIONAL CHARACTERISTICS AND WATER ISSUES: FROM MEKONG RIVER BASIN PERSPECTIVES SOKHEM PECH Project on Sustainable water policy scenario for population rapidly Increasing Basins in Monsoon Asia, Core Research

More information

How much of the Mekong fish catch is at risk from mainstream dam development?

How much of the Mekong fish catch is at risk from mainstream dam development? How much of the Mekong fish catch is at risk from mainstream dam development? By Chris Barlow, Eric Baran, Ashley S. Halls and Mrigesh Kshatriya* In the absence of reliable data on the species composition

More information

Fisheries. The State of The Ocean Another way for our growing population to get protein is by eating fish. The four most popular fish are

Fisheries. The State of The Ocean Another way for our growing population to get protein is by eating fish. The four most popular fish are The State of The Ocean Another way for our growing population to get protein is by eating fish. The four most popular fish are Fisheries Everything About The Ocean I learned from. Shrimp Tuna Salmon White

More information

Statement of the World Forum of Fisher People To the FAO Conference on Small Scale Fisheries, Bangkok, 2008

Statement of the World Forum of Fisher People To the FAO Conference on Small Scale Fisheries, Bangkok, 2008 Statement of the World Forum of Fisher People To the FAO Conference on Small Scale Fisheries, Bangkok, 2008 INTRODUCTION Around the world, small-scale, artisanal and indigenous fisher people are standing

More information

Invasive Versus Endemic Species

Invasive Versus Endemic Species School and University Partnership for Educational Renewal in Mathematics Invasive Versus Endemic Species Located some 2,400 miles from the nearest continental shore, the Hawaiian Islands are the most isolated

More information

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service International Affairs Program

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service International Affairs Program U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service International Affairs Program Derek Litchfield Division of International Conservation USFWSInternationalAffairs @USFWSInternatl INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS International Affairs

More information

The Spey Catchment Initiative

The Spey Catchment Initiative The Spey Catchment Initiative Introducing the Spey Catchment Initiative The Spey Catchment Initiative is a new project which aims to help deliver the objectives of the River Spey Catchment Management Plan

More information

This is the last of three articles examining China's rising power in the Asia-Pacific region as it extends new economic, diplomatic and cultural ties.

This is the last of three articles examining China's rising power in the Asia-Pacific region as it extends new economic, diplomatic and cultural ties. The New York Times In Life on the Mekong, China's Dams Dominate By JANE PERLEZ Published: March 19, 2005 http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/19/international/asia/19mekong.html?ex=1268888400&en=e0 8719bd9a093b54&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt

More information

CLOSING TIME SHUTTING DOWN THE GREATER MEKONG S ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE MARKETS REPORT GMPO 2016

CLOSING TIME SHUTTING DOWN THE GREATER MEKONG S ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE MARKETS REPORT GMPO 2016 WIL LUIJF / WWF REPORT GMPO 2016 CLOSING TIME SHUTTING DOWN THE GREATER MEKONG S ILLEGAL WILDLIFE TRADE MARKETS The Greater Mekong is a global hubs of wildlife trade a perfect storm of source, transit

More information

THE DEVELOPMENT AND PROSPECT OF THE AQUACULTURE IN ASIA. Chen Sun, Shanghai Fisheries University, Economy and Trade College,

THE DEVELOPMENT AND PROSPECT OF THE AQUACULTURE IN ASIA. Chen Sun, Shanghai Fisheries University, Economy and Trade College, THE DEVELOPMENT AND PROSPECT OF THE AQUACULTURE IN ASIA Chen Sun, Shanghai Fisheries University, Economy and Trade College, chensun@shfu.edu.cn ABSTRACT Asia has made and is making great contribution to

More information

The Salmonid Species. The Salmonid Species. Definitions of Salmonid Clans. The Salmonid Species

The Salmonid Species. The Salmonid Species. Definitions of Salmonid Clans. The Salmonid Species The Salmonid Species The Salmonid Species N. American salmon (2 more Asian species) Chinook ( King ) Coho ( Silver ) Sockeye Chum ( Dog ) Pink ( Humpy ) Sea-run trout Steelhead, Cutthroat, Dolly Varden

More information

Impacts of Dam Construction on the Mekong: The experience of the Mun River

Impacts of Dam Construction on the Mekong: The experience of the Mun River Impacts of Dam Construction on the Mekong: The experience of the Mun River Yuka Kiguchi 1, Mekong Watch 2 Abstract The Mekong River Basin, with its number of fish species ranking the second most numerous

More information

GLOBAL FISHERIES CRISIS

GLOBAL FISHERIES CRISIS NEW DIRECTIONS IN SUSTAINABLE MARICULTURE AND FISHERIES HABITAT RESTORATION UNITED NATIONS COMMISSION ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT PARTNERSHIP IN NEW TECHNOLOGIES FOR SMALL ISLAND DEVELOPING STATES May 13

More information

At Home on the Elbow River. -Ours to share-

At Home on the Elbow River. -Ours to share- At Home on the Elbow River -Ours to share- Living in the shed You are part of the Elbow River Watershed. The Elbow River and its tributaries drain over 1,200 km² of land. The source of the Elbow River

More information

IWRM of Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna Basin

IWRM of Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna Basin 8th NARBO IWRM Training, 27 November 4 December 2013, Sri Lanka. Welcome to Group Presentation IWRM of Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna Basin Presented by : Musa Nurur Rahman Country : Bangladesh 4 December,

More information

Many of the world s most spectacular freshwater fishes are threatened with global extinction by a series of proposed Mekong mainstream dams.

Many of the world s most spectacular freshwater fishes are threatened with global extinction by a series of proposed Mekong mainstream dams. Many of the world s most spectacular freshwater fishes are threatened with global extinction by a series of proposed Mekong mainstream dams. Peter Cunningham, former V.S.O. volunteer. Current email address:

More information

Invasive Species. Grade Levels. Introduction. This activity is intended for grades 9 12.

Invasive Species. Grade Levels. Introduction. This activity is intended for grades 9 12. Invasive Species Grade Levels This activity is intended for grades 9 12 Introduction Located some 2, 400 miles from the nearest continental shore, the Hawaiian Islands are the most isolated group of islands

More information

Invasive Versus Endemic Species

Invasive Versus Endemic Species School and University Partnership for Educational Renewal in Mathematics Invasive Versus Endemic Species Located some 2,400 miles from the nearest continental shore, the Hawaiian Islands are the most isolated

More information

SALINITY. It's the amount of dissolved salts the water contains.

SALINITY. It's the amount of dissolved salts the water contains. AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS SALINITY The types of organisms in an aquatic ecosystem depend upon the water s Salinity. It's the amount of dissolved salts the water contains. Salinity determines the two main aquatic

More information

Case study of fishing lot N o 3 in Siem Reap Province, Cambodia

Case study of fishing lot N o 3 in Siem Reap Province, Cambodia Case study of fishing lot N o 3 in Siem Reap Province, Cambodia by Chheng Vibolrith Vice Chief of Fisheries Office, Data Supervisor of the MRC/DoF/Danida Fishery Project in Cambodia, Siem Reap Province

More information

Appendix Template for Submission of Scientific Information To Describe Ecologically or Biologically Significant Marine Areas

Appendix Template for Submission of Scientific Information To Describe Ecologically or Biologically Significant Marine Areas Appendix Template for Submission of Scientific Information To Describe Ecologically or Biologically Significant Marine Areas Abstract (in less than 150 words) Coastal and marine areas: Africa Somalia has

More information

Outline of the Mekong River From Tibetan Mountains to the Mekong Delta

Outline of the Mekong River From Tibetan Mountains to the Mekong Delta Mekong Delta in Viet Nam - http://cantho.cool.ne.jp Outline of the Mekong River From Tibetan Mountains to the Mekong Delta Contents ---> Go to Mekong Delta in Viet Nam 1. Geographic Review 2. Countries

More information

Fisheries & Aquaculture

Fisheries & Aquaculture Fisheries & Aquaculture 1 Presentation Structure 1: Introduction to Fisheries and climate change in the LMB Capture Fisheries & Aquaculture Sector Fisheries based Livelihoods Macro trends and drivers Probable

More information

AN OVERVIEW OF FISH SEED SUPPLY IN THREE PROVINCES OF THE MEKONG DELTA REGION OF CAMBODIA

AN OVERVIEW OF FISH SEED SUPPLY IN THREE PROVINCES OF THE MEKONG DELTA REGION OF CAMBODIA Page 1 of 7 AN OVERVIEW OF FISH SEED SUPPLY IN THREE PROVINCES OF THE MEKONG DELTA REGION OF CAMBODIA by Sem Viriyak, Thay Somony, Keo Sovannary, Chhoun Von, Setboonsarng and Jeney 1. Abstract Fish and

More information

2000 AP ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE FREE-RESPONSE QUESTIONS

2000 AP ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE FREE-RESPONSE QUESTIONS 2000 AP ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE FREE-RESPONSE QUESTIONS 3. Species such as the dusky seaside sparrow, the passenger pigeon, and the woolly mammoth are extinct. Populations of other species have declined

More information

Geology. Key Factors. Overfishing. Great Lakes Fishes. Historical Fishing. About 10,000 years since last glacial retreat very young ecologically

Geology. Key Factors. Overfishing. Great Lakes Fishes. Historical Fishing. About 10,000 years since last glacial retreat very young ecologically Great Lakes Fishes Geology About 10,000 years since last glacial retreat very young ecologically Largest surface freshwater system on earth 21% of world s supply 84% of North America s supply Five unique

More information

Fish Community. Fish Habitat, Streams and Rivers

Fish Community. Fish Habitat, Streams and Rivers Clear, Ston(e)y and White Lake Plan Fish Community The lakes support a cool/warm water fishery including muskellunge, walleye, largemouth and smallmouth bass, yellow perch, pumpkinseed, rockbass, blue

More information

Re: Consultation on the addition of narwhal and two bowhead whale populations to the SARA List

Re: Consultation on the addition of narwhal and two bowhead whale populations to the SARA List March 31, 2006 Central & Arctic Region SARA Coordinator Freshwater Institute Fisheries & Oceans Canada 501 University Avenue Winnipeg MB R3T 2N6 Re: Consultation on the addition of narwhal and two bowhead

More information

Human Impact in Aquatic Systems: Fish Catching vs. Fish Raising

Human Impact in Aquatic Systems: Fish Catching vs. Fish Raising Human Impact in Aquatic Systems: Fish Catching vs. Fish Raising What are human impacts? Fish and aquatic invertebrates (clams, crabs, squid, etc.) currently supply 16% of world protein, higher in developing

More information

Sustainable Recreational Fishing Student Activity Workbook 6.2. Sustainable Recreational Fishing

Sustainable Recreational Fishing Student Activity Workbook 6.2. Sustainable Recreational Fishing Sustainable Recreational Fishing! Activity zone 1 - Recreational Fishing Panel Fishing is a popular pastime for more millions Australians each year but is not the only way to enjoy our lakes and coastline.

More information

Preliminary estimation of the infrastructure change influence on flooding in 2001 in the lower Mekong river delta

Preliminary estimation of the infrastructure change influence on flooding in 2001 in the lower Mekong river delta River Basin Management III 25 Preliminary estimation of the infrastructure change influence on flooding in 1 in the lower Mekong river delta L. T. V. Hoa 1, H. Shigeko 1, N. H. Nhan 2 & T. T. Cong 2 1

More information

Chapter 12: Food from the Oceans (pg )

Chapter 12: Food from the Oceans (pg ) Chapter 12: Food from the Oceans (pg. 197 213) Introduction: It s estimated 100 million people in developing countries depend on fishing for livelihood. Issue of sustainable development of marine resources

More information

1/2/14. Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity. Chapter What Are the Major Threats to Aquatic Biodiversity?

1/2/14. Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity. Chapter What Are the Major Threats to Aquatic Biodiversity? Sustaining Aquatic Biodiversity Chapter 11 11-1 What Are the Major Threats to Aquatic Biodiversity? Concept 11-1 Aquatic species are threatened by habitat loss, invasive species, pollution, climate change,

More information