tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:/xml/grasslands1grasslands news from mongabay.com2012-05-09T14:19:21Ztag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/94752012-05-03T17:19:00Z2012-05-09T14:19:21ZExploring Asia's lost world<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/mccann.waterdragon.P1070954.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Abandoned by NGOs and the World Bank, carved out for rubber plantations and mining by the Cambodian government, spiraling into a chaos of poaching and illegal logging, and full of endangered species and never-explored places, Virachey National Park may be the world's greatest park that has been written off by the international community. But a new book by explorer and PhD student, Greg McCann, hopes to change that. Entitled Called Away by a Mountain Spirit: Journey to the Green Corridor, the book highlights expeditions by McCann into parts of Virachey that have rarely been seen by outsiders and have never been explored scientifically, including rare grasslands that once housed herds of Asian elephants, guar, and Sambar deer, before poachers drove them into hiding, and faraway mountains with rumors of tigers and mainland Javan rhinos. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/93852012-04-11T05:33:00Z2012-04-11T05:54:13ZScientists unlock indigenous secret to sustainable agriculture in the Amazon's savannasIndigenous populations in the Amazon successfully farmed without the use of fire before the arrival of Europeans, demonstrating a potentially sustainable approach to land management in a region that is increasingly vulnerable to man-made fires.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/89632012-01-17T18:42:00Z2012-01-17T19:22:06ZConserving Ecuador's Paramos, the alpine tundra ecosystem of the Andes<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/12/0118paramo150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Grupo de Trabajo en Páramos del Ecuador (GTP) is a remarkable self-organized group of páramo experts that have met over the past 13 years in Quito, Ecuador. Páramo is an alpine tundra ecosystem which is located in the northern Andes of South America and adjacent southern Central America. Recently, the Grupo de Trabajo en Páramos del Ecuador published an excellent summary of their analysis from the past 13 years. Robert Hofstede, one of the editors of Páramo: Paisaje estudiado, habitado, manejado e institucionalizado, recently sat down with Mongabay.com and discussed the situation of páramo conservation in Ecuador.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/87972011-12-05T02:54:00Z2011-12-05T02:55:34ZVolcano and cloud forests conserved in Ecuador<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/800px-Theristicus_melanopis_1_Frank_Vassen.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Conservation organizations and the Ecuadorian government have succeeded in securing over 250,000 acres (106,000 hectares) of cloud forest and grasslands surrounding the Antisana Volcano for protection. The area, long-used for cattle ranching, is home to Andean condors (Vultur gryphus), cougars (Puma concolor), Andean fox (Lycalopex culpaeus), silvery grebes (Podiceps occipitalis), black-faced ibis (Theristicus melanopis), spectacled bear (Tremarctos ornatus), and three species of endangered frogs. The protected area stretches from 3,900 feet (1,188 meters) to 18,700 feet (5,699 meters) above sea level. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/78132011-05-01T17:50:00Z2011-05-01T18:14:50ZNew eco-tour to help save bizarre antelope in 'forgotten' region<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Saiga-calf-copyright-Nils-Bunnefeld.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Imagine visiting a region that is largely void of tourists, yet has world-class bird watching, a unique Buddhist population, and one of the world's most bizarre-looking and imperilled mammals: the saiga. A new tour to Southern Russia hopes to aid a Critically Endangered species while giving tourists an inside look at a region "largely forgotten by the rest of the world," says Anthony Dancer. Few species have fallen so far and so fast in the past 15 years as Central Asia's antelope, the saiga. Its precipitous decline is reminiscent of the bison or the passenger pigeon in 19th Century America, but conservationists hopes it avoids the fate of the latter.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/77432011-04-14T19:13:00Z2011-04-19T21:37:53ZFrom the Serengeti to Lake Natron: is the Tanzanian government aiming to destroy its wildlife and lands? <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/lesserflamingoes.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>What's happening in Tanzania? This is a question making the rounds in conservation and environmental circles. Why is a nation that has so much invested in its wild lands and wild animals willing to pursue projects that appear destined not only to wreak havoc on the East African nation's world-famous wildlife and ecosystems, but to cripple its economically-important tourism industry? The most well known example is the proposed road bisecting Serengeti National Park, which scientists, conservationists, the UN, and foreign governments alike have condemned. But there are other concerns among conservationists, including the fast-tracking of soda ash mining in East Africa's most important breeding ground for millions of lesser flamingo, and the recent announcement to nullify an application for UNESCO Heritage Status for a portion of Tanzania's Eastern Arc Mountains, a threatened forest rich in species found no-where else. According to President Jakaya Kikwete, Tanzania is simply trying to provide for its poorest citizens (such as communities near the Serengeti and the Eastern Arc Mountains) while pursuing western-style industrial development. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/77152011-04-08T15:04:00Z2011-04-08T15:07:54ZConversion of Brazil's cerrado slowsDestruction of Brazil's cerrado, a woody savanna that covers 20 percent of the country, slowed during the 2008-2009, reports Brazil's Ministry of Environment.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/75972011-03-16T22:57:00Z2011-03-16T23:00:22ZSerengeti road project opposed by 'powerful' tour company lobbyGovernment plans to build a road through Serengeti National Park came up against more opposition this week as the Tanzanian Association of Tour Operators (Tato) came out against the project, reports <i>The Citizen</i>. Tato, described as powerful local lobby group by the Tanzanian media, stated that the road would hurt tourism and urged the government to select a proposed alternative route that would by-pass the park. Tato's opposition may signal a shift to more local criticism of the road as opposition against the project has come mostly from international environmentalists, scientists, and governments. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/75362011-03-07T19:44:00Z2011-03-07T19:53:11ZForeign big agriculture threatens world's second largest wildlife migrationAs the world's largest migration in the Serengeti plains—including two million wildebeest, zebra, and Thomson's gazelles—has come under unprecedented threat due to plans for a road that would sever the migration route, a far lesser famous, but nearly as large migration, is being silently eroded just 1,370 miles (2,200 kilometers) north in Ethiopia's Gambela National Park. The migration of over one million white-eared kob, tiang, and Mongalla gazelle starts in the southern Sudan but crosses the border into Ethiopia and Gambela where Fred Pearce at Yale360 reports it is running into the rapid expansion of big agribusiness. While providing habitat for the millions of migrants, Gambela National Park's land is also incredibly fertile enticing foreign investment. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/74782011-02-23T22:11:00Z2011-02-24T15:08:54ZFirst International Serengeti Day hopes to halt road project <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/serengeti.sun.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>On March 19th the conservation organization, Serengeti Watch, is planning the world's first International Serengeti Day to celebrate one of the world's most treasured wildlife ecosystems. But the day also has another goal: bring attention to a Tanzanian government plan to build a road that would essentially cut the ecosystem, threatening the world's largest mammal migration. "The proposed road will be a major commercial route that cuts across a narrow stretch of the Park near the border with Kenya. It goes through a wilderness zone critical to the annual migration of 1.3 million wildebeest and 0.7 million zebras, antelope, and other wildlife. This will involve extracting a strip of land from the Park itself, resulting in both the fragmentation of the ecosystem and the removal of the Serengeti National Park from the list of UN World Heritage Sites," said David Blanton, co-founder of Serengeti Watch, in an interview with mongabay.com. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/74632011-02-20T18:58:00Z2011-02-20T19:42:44ZComplaint lodged at FSC for plantations killing baboonsThe African environmental group, GeaSphere, has lodged a complaint with the Forest Stewardship Council's (FSC) for certifying tree plantations as sustainable that are culling baboons in South Africa, as first reported by FSC-Watch. The primates are trapped with bait and then shot. According to the complaint, "unofficial numbers from reliable sources state that more than 1000 baboons have been shot over the past 2 years" in Mpumalanga Province. Documents record permits given to cull 1,914 baboons in 13 separate plantations, however Philip Owen of GeaSphere says that plantations have refused to release official data on how many baboons have been killed. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/72272010-12-28T14:00:00Z2010-12-28T21:29:48ZNew plan underway to save South America's migratory grassland birdsA meeting between government representatives, scientists, and conservationists in Asuncion, Paraguay this month resulted in the adoption of an action plan to provide urgently needed conservation framework for the migratory birds of South America's disappearing grasslands.Morgan Erickson-Davistag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/67662010-09-15T23:49:00Z2010-09-15T23:57:48ZBrazil's cerrado wins protection, but will it be enough to save the wildlife-rich grassland?Brazil announced a plan to protect the cerrado, the vast woody savanna that covers 20 percent of the country but has become the nation's biggest single source of carbon emissions due to conversion for agriculture and cattle pasture, reports Brazil's Ministry of the Environment.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/66092010-08-13T15:37:00Z2010-08-13T16:02:00ZU.S. signs debt-for-nature swap with Brazil to protect forestsThe United States will cut Brazil's debt payments by $21 million under a debt-for-nature that will protect the Latin American country's endangered Atlantic Rainforest (Mata Atlantica), Caatinga and Cerrado ecosystems.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/60102010-04-28T03:47:00Z2010-04-28T03:52:52ZPhoto: monster worm is less than a monsterSome places have Loch Ness and Bigfoot, but the Palouse prairie of the western United States has the giant Palouse earthworm. Reported to stretch 3 feet long, spit, and—even more strangely—smell like lilies, the earthworm has become apart of the region's folklore and has only been seen a few times since the 1980s leading to concerns that it was gravely endangered and maybe even extinct. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/49752009-09-15T19:12:00Z2009-09-15T19:41:28ZVlad the Impaler of the bird world now at Bronx Zoo: skewers prey on thorns and barbed wire<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://i54.photobucket.com/albums/g94/troufs/_Julie_Larsen_Maher_2337_loggerh-2.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The loggerhead shrike, also known as the 'butcher bird', employs a feeding strategy that would have been right at home in 15th Century Transylvania. Like the infamous Vlad the Impaler (the brutal prince which Bram Stoker based Dracula off), the loggerhead shrike is truly skilled at impaling. Using its hooked beak to break the spines of insects, lizards, rodents, and even other birds it then impales them on thorns or barbed wire to hold them while it disembodies them. Now, the Wildlife Conservation Society's (WCS) Bronx Zoo has brought the loggerhead shrike into its collection, but the shrike is there to illustrate more than its unique feeding practices. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/49742009-09-15T16:12:00Z2009-09-15T16:16:22ZEmissions from cerrado destruction in Brazil equal to emissions from Amazon deforestationDamage to Brazil's vast cerrado grassland results in greenhouse gas emissions equivalent to those produced by destruction of the Amazon rainforest, said Carlos Minc, the country's Environment Minister.
Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/49672009-09-11T14:46:00Z2009-09-11T14:51:05ZBrazil to step up efforts to save the cerrado grasslandBrazil will try to reduce deforestation of the cerrado, a wooded grassland ecosystem in Brazil that is being destroyed twice as fast as the Amazon rainforest, according to the country's Environment Minister Carlos Minc. Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/382008-12-03T14:30:39Z2008-12-16T10:06:15ZDegraded grasslands better option for palm oil production relative to rainforests, finds studyProducing biofuels from oil palm plantations established on degraded grasslands rather than tropical rainforests and peat lands would result in a net removal of carbon from the atmosphere rather than greenhouse gas emissions, report researchers writing in <i>Conservation Biology</i>. The results confirm that benefits to climate from biofuel production depend greatly on the type of land used for feedstocks.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/31212008-07-22T14:30:39Z2008-12-16T10:14:35ZBiofuels can reduce emissions, but not when grown in place of rainforestsBiofuels meant to help alleviate greenhouse gas emissions may be in fact contributing to climate change when grown on converted tropical forest lands, warns a comprehensive study published earlier this month in the journal <i>Environmental Research Letters</i>. Analyzing the carbon debt for biofuel crops grown in ecosystems around the world, Holly Gibbs and colleagues report that "while expansion of biofuels into productive tropical ecosystems will always lead to net carbon emissions for decades to centuries... [expansion] into degraded or already cultivated land will provide almost immediate carbon savings." The results suggest that under the right conditions, biofuels could be part of the effort to reduce humanity's carbon footprint.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/31652008-07-07T14:30:39Z2008-12-16T10:14:44ZSome grasslands resilient against climate change, according to 13 year studyIn Buxton, England--a spa town lying in the county of Derbyshire--scientists have spent 13 years subjecting grasslands to temperature increases and precipitation shifts consistent with climate change predictions. Considered one of the longest studies of climate change on natural ecosystems, the grasslands of Buxton proved surprisingly resilient to most of the effects of climate change.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/22002007-08-27T14:30:39Z2008-12-29T06:46:18ZU.S. grazing lands at risk due to rising CO2 levelsRising carbon dioxide levels could cause significant changes to open grazing lands and rangelands around the world, reports a study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).Rhett Butler