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Doha Events 2011

Doha Events 2011

Quote of the day

I will do everything I can in my position to convince the Greeks to choose to stay in the euro zone and everything to convince Europeans....
French President Francois Hollande

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Sea turtle baby boom in the Philippines Wednesday, 01 February 2012 23:48

 

A female turtle preparing to lay eggs at a remote sanctuary of turtles, in Tawi-Tawi province, in the Philippines’ southern island of Mindanao.

Manila: Globally endangered green turtles are enjoying a baby boom on remote Philippine islands as a three-decade protection programme starts to pay off, environment group Conservation International said yesterday.

The project is a key part of worldwide efforts to rebuild green turtle populations, and could help see the species’ status upgraded from endangered to vulnerable in a few years, CI Philippines’ executive director Romeo Trono said.

“We are seeing very stable increases in their populations around the world and... this is a very important contribution,” Trono said, referring to the Turtle Islands sanctuary that straddles the Philippine-Malaysia sea border.

On Baguan, one of the nine islands that make up the sanctuary, 1.44m turtle eggs were laid last year, the highest number since records started in 1984, according to Conservation International.

With one percent of green turtles generally surviving until adulthood, last year’s baby boom will lead to roughly 13,000 green turtles living a long life as they swim the world’s oceans, the group said. Trono said this population alone could be one of the biggest in the world, alongside groups of green turtles in Australia and Costa Rica where conservation efforts are also underway.

The success on Baguan is so important because green turtles can live up to 100 years, meaning the 2011 boom’s impacts will be felt into the 22nd century.

Trono said that, when he began work on the Philippine project in the early 1980s as an environment department staff member, the eggs and their nests were regularly being “wiped out”. The eggs are considered a delicacy in some parts of Asia, and foreign fishermen as well as locals were poaching them.

The conservation efforts, which involve Philippine and Malaysian authorities as well as Conservation International, have seen to slow down egg poaching.

AFP



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