Many of us Ecolog folks might get the Mongabay weekly newsletter already
but I'd like to highlight one story from below, the new podcast episode
features Australian researcher Leah Barclay talking about the ways she uses
sound artistry and acoustic ecology to get everyday people excited about
marine conservation issues:

https://news.mongabay.com/2017/05/audio-a-deep-dive-into-the-study-of-marine-wildlife-through-bioacoustics/

...for your listening pleasure.

Erik

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Mongabay Newsletter <[email protected]>


* FEATURED* ================================

Over the bridge: The battle for the future of the Kinabatangan
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=b0fc1e6b3c&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *John C. Cannon* [05/03/2017]
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=7096c49dd1&e=e26e3b91f2>-
Proponents of the project contend that a bridge and associated paved road
to Sukau would have helped the town grow and improve the standard of living
for its residents.
- Environmental groups argue that the region’s unrealized potential for
high-end nature tourism could bring similar economic benefits without
disturbing local populations of elephants, orangutans and other struggling
wildlife.
- The mid-April cancellation of the bridge was heralded as a success for
rainforest conservation, but bigger questions loom about the future of
local communities, the sanctuary and its wildlife.


Preserving orangutan culture an ingredient for successful conservation
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=c96c575d0b&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Linda Lombardi* [05/02/2017]
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=f7d530ff15&e=e26e3b91f2>-
Scientists once thought that all animal behavior was instinctual, but now
know that many animals — particularly social animals — are able to think
and to learn, and to display culturally learned behaviors.
- Orangutans are one animal in which occurrences of culture have been
fairly well proven, with orangutan groups at different study sites
displaying variant behaviors that have neither environmental nor genetic
origins, meaning they can only be cultural in nature.
- Among these cultural behaviors are basic tool making and use for food
harvesting, purposeful vocalizations, and variations in nest building
materials and methods. Scientists fear habitat loss and crashing
populations could cause this cultural heritage to vanish.
- The loss of varied cultural behaviors could potentially make orangutans
less adaptable to changes in their environment at a time when, under
extreme pressure from human development, these great apes need all the
resources they can muster.


Conservation lessons from the bonobos
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=e4935dfd34&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Kim Harrisberg* [05/01/2017]
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=98fccc5370&e=e26e3b91f2>-
Lola ya Bonobo, the world’s first bonobo sanctuary, was founded in 1994 by
Claudine Andre, who came to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) at a
young age, and who, after a chance meeting with a bonobo at the Kinshasa
zoo, dedicated her life to the species. Today, Lola has been recognized
worldwide as a model for primate rehabilitation.
- The sanctuary primarily credits “inclusive conservation” for its success,
a process by which Lola not only cares for rescued DRC bonobos, but also
for nearby human communities — supporting farms, schools and medical
facilities. The communities in turn support Lola.
- The bonobos at the sanctuary — often traumatized after being rescued from
the great ape trade — spend years in rehabilitation, being served by human
foster mothers and other caring Lola staff. When deemed ready, bonobo
troupes are returned to the wild Congo.


Despite numerous challenges, rhinos are thriving in India’s Jaldapara
National Park
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=208364851e&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Moushumi Basu* [05/01/2017]
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=a3b71e4b04&e=e26e3b91f2>-
Jaldapara National Park in the northern fringe of West Bengal hosts more
than 200 one-horned rhinos.
- Growing demand for rhino horn means poaching is a rising threat,
especially when anti-poaching measures in neighboring Assam State prompt
poaching networks to seek new targets.
- In addition to extensive anti-poaching patrols, the park's management is
relying on cooperation with residents of nearby villages to protect the
park's wildlife.
- The park now shares 40 percent of ecotourism revenue with community-based
Joint Forest Management Committees, trains former offenders as wildlife
protectors and is developing other projects to integrate the welfare of
communities and wildlife.


Delicate Solomon Island ecosystem in danger of heavy logging
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=ff184800c3&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Elliot Dawea & John C. Cannon* [05/01/2017]
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=2f0fccc864&e=e26e3b91f2>-
Foreign and domestic companies are making a push – at times using allegedly
unethical means – for the timber found on the island of Nende in the Santa
Cruz chain of the Solomon Islands.
- The island’s old-growth forests are home to animals like the Santa Cruz
shrikebill, which is found nowhere else on Earth.
- Concerns have been voiced that logging could wreak havoc on the
ecosystem, from the watersheds in the mountains down to the coral reefs
ringing the island, if large-scale logging is allowed to proceed.


Corruption drives dealings with logging companies in the Solomon Islands
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=1877b7907e&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Elliot DaweaJohn C. Cannon* [05/01/2017]
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=928f6702b4&e=e26e3b91f2>-
The old-growth forests on the island of Nende anchor a unique ecosystem
that hold creatures found nowhere else and that have supported communities
for centuries.
- Logging companies are eager to harvest the island’s timber, which could
be worth as much as SI$10 million ($1.26 million).
- Scientists worry that logging would destroy everything from the mountain
sources of the island’s fresh water to the reefs where sedimentation as a
result of logging could kill coral.
- Conservation groups and sources from within the provincial government
have charged that the companies are using coercion and bribes to convince
landowners and development organizations to back their plans to log Nende’s
forests.


Amazon’s fate hangs on outcome of war between opposing worldviews
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=818e4e8b24&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Sue Branford and Maurício Torres* [04/27/2017]
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=f993ad6bf5&e=e26e3b91f2>-
The battle for the Amazon is being fought over two opposing viewpoints: the
first, mostly held by indigenous and traditional people and their
conservationist allies, sees forests and rivers as valuable for their own
sake, and for the livelihoods, biodiversity, ecological services and
climate change mitigation they provide. For them the forests need
protection.
- The second worldview holds that Amazon forests are natural resources to
be harvested and turned into dollars, an outlook largely held by wealthy
landowners, land thieves, loggers, cattle ranchers and farmers. For them
the forests are there to be cut down, and the land is there to be used for
economic benefit.
- The bancada ruralista agribusiness lobby now has overwhelming political
power in the Brazilian Congress and the Temer administration, which are
pushing a raft of bills and administrative actions to take away indigenous
land rights, dismember conservation units, gut environmental licensing laws
and defund environmental protection agencies.
- The great fear is that the collision of the two worldviews in the wilds
of the Amazon will result in escalating lawlessness and bloodshed against
indigenous and traditional people, along with significant environmental
destruction. The loss of Amazon ecosystems could be catastrophic for
humanity, as the region’s forests are crucial for global carbon storage.



* NEWS* ================================

A fight to control chainsaws in Myanmar could turn the tide on illegal
logging
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=5f24695fb2&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Ann WangGenevieve Belmaker* [05/04/2017]
- In remote areas where illegal logging is most rampant, officials struggle
with outreach to poor villagers about recently implemented laws that make
most chainsaws illegal.
- Many times faster and more efficient than traditional handsaws and axes,
chainsaws are also dangerous tools that can cause serious injury or death.
- Unregulated chainsaw use is nearly impossible for forestry officials to
track or regulate, as most illegal logging is taking place in remote areas
that are extremely difficult to reach.


Vandals ravage Mother Nature (commentary)
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=f4af695a7f&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Fred Bercovitch* [05/04/2017]
- Given the popularity of National Parks, Forests, and Monuments, the
number of vandals is quite low, but they have an everlasting impact that
scars our natural heritage.
- Penalties for vandalism in protected areas can be increased by an act of
Congress, but that would only be an effective tactic if it either dissuades
people from destroying our heritage or if the culprits are caught and
properly penalized.
- This post is a commentary. The views expressed are those of the author,
not necessarily Mongabay.


Human-wildlife conflict is decimating leopard numbers in one of their last
African strongholds
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=b65b01de0c&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Mike Gaworecki* [05/03/2017]
- A research team led by Dr. Samual Williams of the Department of
Anthropology at Durham University in the UK conducted a long-term trap
survey from 2012 to 2016 in order to study the leopard population in South
Africa’s Soutpansberg Mountains, one of the leopard’s last strongholds in
Africa.
- They found that the cats’ population density decreased by 44 percent
between 2012 and 2016. That means that, based on a previous estimate of
their abundance, the leopard population in the Soutpansberg Mountains has
decreased by two-thirds since 2008, Williams and his co-authors note in the
study.
- While the researchers argue that, based on their findings, a current ban
on leopard hunting in South Africa should not be lifted in areas where the
species is facing sharp declines in numbers, they add that efforts to
reduce often-lethal conflicts between leopards and humans might have an
even bigger impact.


Mexican ecologist José Sarukhán wins 2017 Tyler Prize
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=c7eab30cca&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Erik Hoffner* [05/03/2017]
- Sarukhán co-founded Mexico's biodiversity agency, CONABIO, in 1992
- CONABIO is the largest national biodiversity database in the world, with
over 11.2 million specimens
- He accepts the award at a ceremony in Washington, DC, May 4, 2017


Audio: A deep dive into the study of marine wildlife through bioacoustics
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=1e8d7b6fef&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Mike Gaworecki* [05/03/2017]
- Here at the Mongabay Newscast, we’re very interested in acoustic ecology,
perhaps for obvious reasons: Acoustic ecology, sometimes known as
ecoacoustics or soundscape studies, is the study of the relationship
between human beings and the natural environment as mediated through
bioacoustics, or the sounds that are produced by and affect living
organisms.
- In order to highlight the findings of this exciting line of research,
we’ve created our ongoing Field Notes segment. And in this particular Field
Note, which takes up the entire episode, Leah Barclay plays for us several
of the underwater recordings she’s made of humpback whales, the Great
Barrier Reef, water insects, and more.
- Find all that plus the top news in this episode of the Mongabay Newscast!


Rwanda welcomes 20 black rhinos to Akagera National Park
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=bdeec2e520&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Mongabay.com* [05/03/2017]
- The 20 black rhinos are of the eastern subspecies (Diceros bicornis
michaeli).
- African Parks, the NGO that manages Akagera National Park in cooperation
with the government of Rwanda, says that it has rhino trackers, canine
patrols and a helicopter to protect the rhinos from poaching.
- Fewer than 5,000 black rhinos exist in Africa. Their numbers have been
decimated by poaching for their horns, which fetch high prices for use in
traditional Chinese medicine.
- Officials hope that the new rhino population will boost Akagera National
Park's visibility as a ecotourism destination.


A return to mixed roots in a Sumatran forest
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=a062b8b208&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Dedek Hendry* [05/02/2017]
- The indigenous Rejang are rediscovering multicropping after years spent
focusing on coffee monoculture.
- The Rejang generally abandoned polyculture after the national government
established a national park on their lands.
- Multicropping helps them make money year-round instead of just when it's
time for the coffee harvest.


Saving the most endangered plants in the world
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=37faa5a9a4&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Shreya Dasgupta* [05/02/2017]
- Most of Nagalingum's recent research focuses on cycads, palm-like plants
with stout trunks and a crown of stiff, hard leaves.
- Cycads are believed to be as old (or even older) than dinosaurs.
- Of the 300-odd recognized species of cycads today, about two-thirds are
seriously threatened by extinction.


Effective climate change action needs technology and policy
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=69c23198a1&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Sue Palminteri* [05/01/2017]
- Tens of thousands of people participated in the People’s Climate March on
April 29th to demand policies that help reduce greenhouse gas emissions,
respect science, and apply technology to limit the damage caused by climate
change.
- Major technological breakthroughs—such as better city designs, more
efficient storage batteries, and power plants that capture CO2 already in
the atmosphere—as well as expansion of existing technologies, are needed to
reduce the negative impacts of climate change.
- Experts add: Political and societal will that promotes expanded use of
climate-friendly technology at a massive scale are critical to achieving
climate change reduction goals.


To help stop illegal fishing, ban practice of transshipment on high seas,
researchers say
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=57cecc48ea&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Mike Gaworecki* [05/01/2017]
- As detailed in a report released last month, Oceana found that close to
40 percent of suspected instances of transshipping occur on the high seas —
areas outside of any national jurisdiction, which make up about two-thirds
of Earth’s oceans.
- In a paper published in the journal Marine Policy last month, a team of
researchers make the case that a global ban on the practice of
transshipment on the high seas is necessary in order to curb illegal
fishing and human rights abuses in the global fishing industry.
- Coastal waters are becoming increasingly overexploited, the researchers
note in the paper, causing fishing vessels to travel further from shore in
search of fish. Traveling to distant waters on the high seas is more
expensive, of course, driving the fishing industry to seek
government-sponsored subsidies, especially fuel subsidies, as well as
cost-cutting measures like the use of forced labor and transshipments,
which the industry defends on economic grounds.


Saving Congo’s sea turtles: progress made but dangers ahead
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=8d92eb803b&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *William Clowes* [05/01/2017]
- Among the myriad threats facing turtles globally, coastal development has
deprived females of the isolated, dry, sandy beaches they need to build
nests for their eggs.
- Until recently, homecoming was a death-trap for turtles as poor local
communities took advantage of an immobile source of food appearing annually
on their beaches and in their coastal waters.
- The Congo’s 23-mile stretch of beach is home to a turtle conservation
project that aims to give turtles born into the wild a fighting chance.


Brazil’s deforestation “sheriff” has been fired
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=12b5b4ed96&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Mike Gaworecki* [04/28/2017]
- A little more than a year after being named Brazil’s deforestation
“sheriff,” Thelma Krug has reportedly been fired after a dispute over how
trends in forest destruction are monitored in the country.
- Climate Home’s Claudio Angelo reports from Brasilia that government
officials told members of the press that Krug had “expressed her interest
in leaving” in order to “dedicate more time to her attributions at IPCC” —
but that sources say Krug's dismissal was actually the result of a dispute
with vice-minister Marcelo Cruz, who questioned the deforestation data
produced by the National Institute for Space Research (INPE), where Krug is
a senior scientist.
- Brazil has already named Krug’s replacement: Jair Schmitt, a biologist
with the Brazilian Institute of the Environment and Renewable Natural
Resources (IBAMA), Brazil’s equivalent of the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, where he oversees the agency’s environmental inspections.


An interactive map connects landowners and forest change in one of the
world’s most biodiverse places
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=98f11cd97b&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Sue Palminteri* [04/28/2017]
- The Atlas of Deforestation and Industrial Plantations in Borneo documents
the loss of rainforest over 40 years from oil palm and pulpwood plantations
in one of Earth’s most biodiverse places.
- By connecting landowners and deforestation patterns publicly available,
the atlas adds transparency to wood and oil palm supply chains.
- Allowing users to see how human impacts have reshaped Borneo is essential
amid competing demands for cheap oil and conserved forest.


Cross River superhighway changes course in Nigeria
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=0245050e37&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *John C. Cannon* [04/28/2017]
- The 260-kilometer (162-mile) highway is slated to have six lanes and
would have run through the center of Cross River National Park as
originally designed.
- The region is a biodiversity hotspot and home to forest elephants,
drills, Nigeria-Cameroon chimpanzees and Cross River gorillas.
- The proposal shifts the route to the west, out of the center of the
national park, which garnered praise from the Wildlife Conservation Society.
- The route still appears to cut through forested areas and protected lands.


Philippines bans new open-pit metal mines
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=8a45f3db5a&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Keith Schneider* [04/28/2017]
- The Philippines has banned new open-pit gold, copper and silver mines,
Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources Regina Lopez announced April
27.
- Lopez cited the need to protect biodiversity, evidence of injuries to
communities and water supplies, and violations of environmental law by the
mining industry.
- Since taking office in July, Lopez has lauched an aggressive campaign to
force the mining industry to improve its practices.
- The ban could be one of Lopez's last acts in office; on May 3, she faces
review from a legislative committee that includes people linked to the
mining industry.


As forests disappear, human-elephant conflict escalates in Nepal
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=ca17740107&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Lillie Howell* [04/28/2017]
- Asian elephants are responsible for destroying crops, buildings, and even
injuring or killing local people in Nepal.
- A new study argues that Nepal’s government has not done enough to help
villages in elephant areas.
- Researchers measured the willingness-to-pay of villagers in offsetting
elephant damage.


Overestimated range maps for endemic birds in India’s Western Ghats lead to
underestimated threats, study finds
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=9a6879c02e&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Mike Gaworecki* [04/27/2017]
- In a paper published earlier this week in the journal Biological
Conservation, researchers detail their findings that suggest the IUCN has
“vastly” overestimated the geographic range sizes for 17 of 18 endemic
birds studied in the Western Ghats.
- In some cases, the researchers write in the study, the range maps
supplied by BirdLife International (BLI) and used by the IUCN for its
threat assessments of birds in the Western Ghats included “large areas of
unsuitable habitat” and were so off that the threat status should be
changed “for at least 10 of the 18 species based on area metrics used by
the IUCN for threat assessment.”
- The head of the IUCN Red List says that the study's authors made a
"fundamental error" in applying threat assessment criteria to their
datasets, however, adding that just two of the 10 birds identified in the
study need to be examined more closely.
- The key to the updated range maps created by the researchers behind the
Biological Conservation study is citizen science. In particular, the
researchers used data from eBird, an online checklist program created by
the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. And on the point of the usefulness of
citizen science, the researchers and the IUCN are in full agreement.


Indigenous communities resisting dams in Indonesia claim they face
repression, rights abuses
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=9f806a920f&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Eko Rusdianto* [04/27/2017]
- Developers plan to build a hydropower dam in Seko, a remote sub-district
in North Luwu, Sulawesi that is home to several indigenous communities.
- Some residents support the project, but many others have resisted since
developers arrived in 2014, launching road blockades and protests.
- Thirteen residents have been imprisoned for involvement in an August 2016
demonstration in which protestors dismantled tents used by company workers
and took drilling samples.
- Villagers allege people opposed to the dam have been arrested with force,
have had to flee their homes, and that even school children have been
beaten.



* ANNOUNCEMENTS* ================================

- Ocean Exchange
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=f19c48c3b5&e=e26e3b91f2>
is seeking innovative solutions to ocean problems and offering two $100,000
awards.
- ESPD50 EVENT: Ethnopharmacologic Search for Psychoactive Drugs II: 50
Years of Research
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=0066367970&e=e26e3b91f2>
will be held June 6 – 8, 2017



* RECENT FEATURES* ================================

Conserving Congo’s wild places on a shoestring
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=54c69fe539&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *William Clowes* [04/25/2017]
Namibia’s low cost, sustainable solution to seabird bycatch
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=314c6dbef6&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *William H. Funk* [04/25/2017]
The land is forever: Rodrigo Tot wins Goldman Prize for land-title quest
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=fd206053ba&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Sandra Cuffe* [04/24/2017]
The March for Science makes its stand: “There is no Planet B”
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=484cb9f59c&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Sharon Guynup story and photos* [04/24/2017]
Women could be a key to great ape conservation in the Congo
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=0536705f0e&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Tina Deines* [04/21/2017]
No safe forest left: 250 captive orphan chimps stuck in sanctuaries
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage2.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=2222572d4f&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Eugene N. Nforngwa* [04/20/2017]
Is a property boom in Malaysia causing a fisheries bust in Penang?
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=c771c90ead&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Rod Harbinson* [04/19/2017]
Deforestation has become big business in the Brazilian Amazon
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=271f0809bf&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Sue Branford and Maurício Torres* [04/18/2017]
Documenting the fight to save Borneo’s animals
<http://Mongabay.us14.list-manage.com/track/click?u=80161fe385606408293ae0e51&id=771972540f&e=e26e3b91f2>
by *Mongabay.com* [04/18/2017]




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