Helicopter to drop poison to rid Gwaii Haanas islands of rats

An airborne assault will begin this fall in the ongoing war to rid important bird-nesting islands of non-native rats in Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve.

As part of a five-year, $2.2-million program, officials will employ a helicopter to drop rat poison over two sites in Juan Perez Sound: 400-hectare Murchison Island and 316-hectare Faraday Island.

At-risk species such as ancient murrelets have vanished from their nesting sites there over the years due to the rats.

Thats the problem, theyre so voracious, Parks Canada project manager Laurie Wein said in an interview Wednesday. Theyll eat the eggs, the young chicks. They can have a dramatic impact on ground-nesting seabirds.

When the rats run out of birds, they turn to intertidal areas to forage on marine life. Theyll eat anything. Theyre not picky.

In the first phase of the program, in 2011, officials launched a ground-based program, placing poison bait boxes on two other islands 95-hectare Bischof and 10-hectare Arichika to eradicate the rats.

The results of that program are still being monitored.

We dont declare success until we know weve had two years where we cant detect rats ... but so far things are looking good, Wein said.

Due to the size of Murchison and Faraday, officials decided to opt for a more practical helicopter-based application. Its similar to agricultural seeding operations, a bucket suspended below a helicopter that dispenses a pelleted bait.

Wein does expect some accidental poisoning of other species including scavenging birds such as ravens. Monitoring shows that a native mouse and shrew are virtually gone from the islands, again due to the rats impact.

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Helicopter to drop poison to rid Gwaii Haanas islands of rats

Poison program aims to eradicate rats from Gwaii Haanas islands, save birds

An airborne assault will begin this fall in the ongoing war to rid important bird-nesting islands of non-native rats in Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site .

As part of a five-year, $2.2-million program, officials will employ a helicopter to drop rat poison over two sites in Juan Perez Sound: 400-hectare Murchison Island and 316-hectare Faraday Island.

At-risk species such as ancient murrelets have vanished from their nesting sites over the years due to the rats.

"That's the problem, they're so voracious," Parks Canada project manager Laurie Wein said in an interview Wednesday. "They'll eat the eggs, the young chicks. They can have a dramatic impact on ground-nesting seabirds."

When the rats run out of birds, they turn to intertidal areas to forage on marine life. "They'll eat anything. They're not picky."

In the first phase of the program, in 2011, officials launched a ground-based program, placing poison bait boxes on two other islands - 95-hectare Bischof and 10-hectare Ari-chika - to eradicate the rats.

The results of that program are still being monitored.

"We don't declare success until we know we've had two years where we can't detect rats ... but so far things are looking good," Wein said.

Due to the size of Murchison and Faraday, officials decided to opt for a more practical helicopter-based application.

"It's similar to agricultural seeding operations, a bucket suspended below a helicopter that dispenses a pelleted bait."

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Poison program aims to eradicate rats from Gwaii Haanas islands, save birds

More Needed To Prepare Pacific Small Islands for Droughts

More Must Be Done To Prepare Pacific Small Islands for Droughts, UN Official Warns

New York, Jun 19 2013 - With thousands of people in the Marshall Islands without access to safe drinking water, the head of the United Nations office for disaster risk reduction today warned that Pacific small islands are threatened by drought and need to incorporate mitigation measures into their national planning and risk assessments.

The worsening situation in the Republic of the Marshall Islands is a strong warning for the whole of the Pacific of the potential suffering that drought brings, particularly as many [of the regions] islands have limited water supplies, said the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reductions (UNISDR) Asia-Pacific head, Jerry Velazquez.

We mainly think about sea level rise and cyclone risks when we talk about small island developing states (SIDS) but drought is also threatening thousands of communities, he added, urging better use of weather forecasts and improve rain water harvesting.

The recommendation is in line with the UN 2013 Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction focusing on how climate change will magnify the disaster risk in SIDS around the world.

Some 6,700 people in the Marshall Islands are without safe water leading authorities to declare a state of drought disaster. Major rain water supplies have been exhausted, according to UNISDR. Well water has become so salty that it is unusable and crops have started dying off.

The drought will be among the issues discussed by delegates gathering for the Joint Pacific Platform for Disaster Risk Management and Pacific Climate Change Roundtable in Nadi, Fiji, 8-11 July.

Around 250 delegates, including representatives from various Pacific Islands, are scheduled to attend the Joint Meeting in Fiji to pave the way for a successor to the Hyogo Framework for Action (HFA). It is the first plan to explain, describe and detail the work that is required from all different sectors and actors to reduce disaster losses.

The HFA outlines five priorities for action, and offers guiding principles and practical means for achieving disaster resilience. Its goal is to substantially reduce disaster losses by 2015 by building the resilience of nations and communities to disasters.

Since 2005, 121 countries have enacted legislation to establish policy and legal frameworks for disaster risk reduction.

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More Needed To Prepare Pacific Small Islands for Droughts

CERF Approves Grant For the Marshall Islands

CERF Approves Grant For the Marshall Islands

(Suva:19 June 2013):

In response to the drought disaster in the Republic of the Marshall Islands, the United Nations Emergency Relief Coordinator, Valerie Amos, approved a rapid response grant of US$1 million yesterday. This grant, implemented by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) will assist the Government in its response efforts as outlined in the Governments $4.7 million Immediate- and Near-term Drought Response Plan.

Managed by IOM, the grant is to be implemented within six months with a strong focus on logistical support, water, sanitation and hygiene needs in accordance with the RMI Drought Response Plan. Mr. Ostby announced, In addition to other valuable contributions, the CERF grant will help fund immediate and critical needs outlined by the Government, however, let this drought serve as a reminder to us all that we must continue to work toward more resilient Pacific community in the recovery phase to follow.

The Response Plan calls for large scale deployment of air and sea assets with immediate relief supplies, such as water and food, to the affected northern atolls in order to meet minimum humanitarian standards. Other activities include increasing rain water catchment capacity, deployment and servicing of desalination units, re-planting crops, improved health surveillance and outreach, and repair of water supply systems.

Following persistently low rainfall during the dry season, the Marshall Islands Government declared a state of emergency for the northern atolls of the Republic on 19 April. On 7 May, the Marshall Islands Government declared an elevated state of drought disaster, as the situation worsened. A UN Disaster Assessment and Coordination (UNDAC) team with members flown in from Fiji, Japan, Sweden, and Thailand was deployed for over three weeks to support the national Emergency Operations Center in Majuro. Early support was provided by USAID and IOM followed by contributions from ADB, AusAID, JICA, NZAID, Red Cross movement, OCHA, UNICEF and WHO.

The humanitarian needs for the 6,384 people living on the affected islands and atolls remain urgent. The most pressing needs are for access to safe water and the growing need for food. The drought conditions have depleted water tanks and made groundwater unsuitable for human consumption due to high salinity. In addition, the drought has damaged or destroyed local food crops, including breadfruit and banana, and populations are relying on fish, crabs, and other coastal food resources.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), dry weather will continue for the next few weeks. A few brief trade-wind showers will develop at times.

CERF is a stand-by fund established by the United Nations to enable more timely and reliable humanitarian assistance to victims of disasters and complex emergencies. CERF was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly to achieve the following objectives: Promote early action and response to reduce loss of life; Enhance response to time-critical requirements; Strengthen core elements of humanitarian response in underfunded crises.

ENDS

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CERF Approves Grant For the Marshall Islands

Whidbey and Camano Islands Attract Visitors Using Syndical’s Interconnected Events Calendar

COUPEVILLE, Wash., June 20, 2013 /PRNewswire/ --Partnering with Syndical, the Whidbey and Camano Island Tourism Board has created an interconnected event calendar linking its six chambers of commerce with one centralized event calendar which automatically publishes those events to local and regional calendars including Seattle TV and radio stations.

"Seeing our events on a local Seattle calendar reminds people that Whidbey and Camano Islands are a great getaway location that's very close," said Sherrye Wyatt, public relations and marketing director for Whidbey and Camano Islands Tourism. "Syndical has simplified the process of getting all of the islands' events onto one central calendar and then sharing that calendar with regional event calendars to make more folks aware of fun things to do on the islands. We also appreciate that calendars on our tourism and Chamber of Commerce Facebook pages are also kept fresh with new events."

Syndical's patent-pending, cloud-based technology solves the event marketing problem of how to share event information quickly and easily with the world. Using the Syndical event calendar, local chambers on the islands post events to their own website calendar and with one click those events are automatically published to the main WhidbeyCamanoIslands.com calendar, and across the web. Events flow automatically to regional event calendars such as Seattle stations KOMO-TV (ABC) and KIRO-TV (CBS), as well as regional radio stations.

The Syndical event widget can be easily and fully customized to match the customer's website and supports rich text format and embedded links, so as the event is shared out across the syndication network, there is always a link back to the original event page allowing customers to find the original source. The calendar also supports multiple event views and a public and private mode.

About Syndical

The Syndical event marketing platform helps organizations simplify their event marketing efforts with customizable on-line events calendars that automatically update and publish event information across the internet.

Media Contacts: Ryerson Schwark Email (503) 799-8279

This press release was issued through eReleases Press Release Distribution. For more information, visit http://www.ereleases.com.

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Whidbey and Camano Islands Attract Visitors Using Syndical's Interconnected Events Calendar

One minute in La Palma… Los Cancajos beach… Canary Islands… Spain – Video


One minute in La Palma... Los Cancajos beach... Canary Islands... Spain
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One minute in La Palma... Los Cancajos beach... Canary Islands... Spain - Video

LP MineCraft (Survival Islands #1) – Video


LP MineCraft (Survival Islands #1)
#1052; #1072; #1081; #1085; #1082; #1088; #1072; #1092; #1090; LP #1 #1057; #1072; #1081; #1090; #1086; #1090; #1082; #1091; #1076; #1072; #1089; #1082; #1072; #1095; #1072; #1083; #1082; #1072; #1088; #1090; #1091;: http://minecraft-cube.ru/survival-island-vyzhivanie-na-ostrove/ #1050; #1089; #1090; #1072; #1090; #1080; #1074; #1082; #1086; #1084; #1084; #1077; #1085; #1090; #1072; #1088; #1080; #1103; #1093; #1087; #1088; #1077; #1076; #1083; #1072; #1075; #1072; #1081; #1090; #1077; #1072; #1095; #1080; #1074; #1082; #1080; =)

By: MultiTheGameShow

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LP MineCraft (Survival Islands #1) - Video

East Rennell Region in Solomon Islands – World Heritage List

East Rennell Region in Solomon Islands Placed On UN List of World Heritage in Danger

New York, Jun 18 2013 - The East Rennell area in the Solomon Islands was inscribed today on the United Nations Scientific, Cultural, and Educational Organizations (UNESCO) list of endangered sites due to logging that is affecting the islands ecosystem.

The UNESCO World Heritage Committee determined that logging is threatening the outstanding universal value of East Rennell, and asked the national authorities to provide an impact assessment study of this activity, which is taking place outside the sites core area, UNESCO said in a news release.

East Rennell is the largest raised coral atoll in the world and its dense forest has a canopy averaging 20 metres in height. The forests, which cover most of the land area of the 37,000-hectare site, are an essential component of the atoll, which is considered to be a natural laboratory for scientific study.

Inscribed on the World Heritage List in 1998, the site makes up the southern third of Rennell Island, the southernmost island in the Solomon Island group in the western Pacific.

The List of World Heritage in Danger is designed to inform the international community of threats to the outstanding universal values for which a property has been inscribed, and to encourage corrective action.

In other news, the Committee yesterday removed the Iranian World Heritage site of Bam and its cultural landscape from the list of sites in danger citing improvements in the management and conservation of the site.

Bam was inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2004, shortly after it was struck by a major earthquake. Damage caused by the quake warranted the sites simultaneous inscription on the List of Heritage in Danger.

The Committee, which is currently holding its 37th session in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, noted that remains of the desert citadel had been sufficiently stabilized and its management was sound enough for the site to be declared safe.

For more details go to UN News Centre at http://www.un.org/news

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East Rennell Region in Solomon Islands - World Heritage List