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"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world;
indeed, it's the only thing that ever has." 
Margaret Mead, American anthropologist, 1901-1978
 


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  1. Seahorses get safety from boats

    Posted on

    Boat owners are going to have anchoring restrictions to protect rare seahorses and marine life.



    There are plans for 41 new marine conservation zones around the coast.   One of those that will receive protection is Studland Bay in Dorset.   It will be protected from yachts and motorboats that moor there.  In Kent, Goodwin Sands (a 10 mile sandbank) will receive similar protection. The Camel Estuary (Cornwall) and the Orford Inshore (off Suffolk) will be protected too.

    In 2008, the Seahorse Trust found 40 seahorses in Studland Bay. 

    In 2018, (last month in fact), the Seahorse Trust found 0 seahorses in Studland Bay.  That’s zero.

    Heavy anchors and their metal chains destroy seagrass, the normal habitat for seahorses.  And the Seahorse Trust says that seahorses should recolonise the area after the seagrass had recovered. 

    The charity says that while serious yachts people don’t anchor on the sea grass, plenty of boat users do.

    Boating enthusiasts protested but the government fortunately over-ruled them. 

    Needless to say, the Royal Yachting Association has said it will impose restrictions, believing that seahorses and recreational boating activities can "reasonably co-exist".

    "Reasonably exist" isn’t good enough.   

    If, over 10 years, the number of seahorses in Studland Bay has plummeted from a find of 40 to 0, there must be a very good reason.

    It’s high time government stepped in, did the right thing and protected wildlife habitat. 

    A good move by the British Government.   Now, more protection for wildlife, please!

    Give wildlife the space and right habitat to thrive, they will. 

     

    Visit the Seahorse Trust and find out how you can help here

      

     

    Seahorses get safety from boats

     

    Boat owners are going to have anchoring restrictions to protect rare seahorses and marine life.

     

    There are plans for 41 new marine conservation zones around the coast.   One of those that will receive protection is Studland Bay in Dorset.   It will be protected from yachts and motorboats that moor there.  In Kent, Goodwin Sands (a 10 mile sandbank) will receive similar protection. The Camel Estuary (Cornwall) and the Orford Inshore (off Suffolk) will be protected too.

     

    In 2008, the Seahorse Trust found 40 seahorses in Sutland Bay. 

     

    In 2018, (last month in fact), the Seahorse Trust found 0 seahorses in Studland Bay.  That’s zero.

     

    Heavy anchors and their metal chains destroy seagrass, the normal habitat for seahorses.  And the Seahorse Trust says that seahorses should recolonise the area after the seagrass had recovered. 

     

    The charity says that while serious yachts people don’t anchor on the sea grass, plenty of boat users do.

     

    Boating enthusiasts protested but the government came to their senses and took no notice of them 

     

    Needless to say, the Royal Yachting Association has said it will impose restrictions, believing that seahorses and recreational boating activities can "reasonably co-exist".

     

    "Reasonably exist" isn’t good enough.   This is yet another example of wildlife suffering from the human race and our activities.  

     

    It isn’t as if leisure boating was an essential activity.  (I should know, because we are boat owners.)  Surviving is.  

     

    If, over 10 years, the number of seahorses in Studland Bay has plummeted from a find of 40 to 0, there must be a very good reason.

     

    And with so many people just not caring at all about nature (and it’s not just boat owners, of course) or even thinking about what they are doing and the impact they are having, it’s high time government stepped in, did the right thing and protected wildlife habitat.

     

    A good move by the British Government.   Now, more protection, please!

     

    Give wildlife the space and right habitat to thrive, they will. 

     

     

     

     

  2. 2,500 acres of tropical rainforest saved in Guatemala

    Posted on

    World Land Trust supporters raised a staggering £625,000 for the Treasure Chest Appeal.

    The appeal was raising the money to save 2500 acres of tropical rainforest in the mountains of Sierra Santa Cruz in Guatemala.

    The appeal got off to an amazing start in the first week of the World Land Trust’s Big Match Fortnight.  In fact, £100,000 was raised during this time.   And after that, support flew in from all over the world.


    One eight year old girl tripled her £100 target to help save rainforest by completing  a mini-triathlon.

    Artists dedicated their work of Guatemala’s wildlife, including a specially commissioned Chinamococh Stream Frog ornament by Jess Smith.  The frog is a critically endangered species that can only be found in the mountains of Sierra Santa Cruz.   There was also an oil painting of Scarlet Macaws by Glyn Macey and a watercolour of a Blackburnian Warbler by Dan Bradbury who works for the World Land Trust.

    The appeal also received tremendous contributions from The Body Shop and Humble Bundle.

    The money goes now to the World Land Trust’s local partner in Guatemala – the Foundation for Ecodevelopment and Conservation (FUNDAECO) and they work through the process of buying the land and protecting it to safeguard it for the wildlife living in the mountains.

    Inspired?  You can support the World Land Trust's new appeal to save 400 acres in the Amazonian Andes.   

     

  3. 5,000 trees planted and doing well in the Atlantic Forest, Brazil

    Posted on

    In Brazil, 5,000 trees have been planted the Atlantic Forest

    Trees planted in the Matumbo Gap of the Atlantic Forest in 2017 are doing well!

    5,000 trees were planted, thanks to funding from the World Land Trust’s Plant a Tree programme.  The programme plants a tree for a £5 donation.   

    The trees are all grown from seeds collected from the indigenous tree species of the neighbouring Atlantic Forest.  They are cultivated in the nursery of the Reserva Ecológica e Guapiaçu (REGUA) and then planted in the slopes of the cleared area known as the Matumbo Gap.

    The Matumbo Gap has been a priority for reforestation.   It would create a wildlife corridor between two areas of forest which are under the protection of the Reserva Ecológica e Guapiaçu.  The area is funded by the World Land Trust.

    The forest is maturing; some pioneer plant species are bearing seeds and fruit, which fees the native fauna, particularly bats and birds. 



    The Reserva Ecológica e Guapiaçu’s mission is to protect the remaining areas of Altantic Forest and connect fragmented habitats.   These areas have been cut off from each other because of clearance for agriculture. 

    Thriving wildlife can be seen in the state of Rio de Janeiro, thanks to successes from REGUA’s work.

    You can be a part of the World Land Trust’s work to support reforestation in Brazil, Ecuador and Kenya through their Plant a Tree Programme.  

    Native tree species are planted to restore degraded habitats for £5 each.  Donate £25 or more, and you’ll receive a donation pack detailing the impact of your support. 

    BE A PART OF THIS SUCCESS STORY - PLANT A TREE HERE FOR JUST £5

    You can also make a donation to REGUA here

     

  4. El Pantonoso Reserve is 100% fully funded

    Posted on

    There’s good conservation news from the World Land Trust today.

    They’ve announced that the El Pantanoso Reserve is now 100% fully funded, which means that 10,900 acres is permanently protected through their partner Fundación Biodiversidad Argentina. 

    The reserve is a wildlife corridor of Yungas Forest.  It sits between the Calilegua National Park and the Estancia Urundel, and it’s Argentina’s biggest area of Jaguar habitat.

    The protected area is vital jaguar habitat

    This project has also been supported by a legacy which was left by a supporter of the World Land Trust, so it just shows how legacies can make a difference to causes one cares about.  

    Arcadia, a charitable fund of Lisbet Rausing and Peter Baldwin, also supported the project.  And it was secured by supporters of the Buy an Acre Argentina programme.

    At the moment, the World Land Trust’s Buy an Acre programme is focusing on Mexico at the moment, where a £100 donation can buy an acre of land.  In Ecuador, land prices are going up, and it’s not possible to buy an acre for £100, hence the focus on Mexico where the World Land Trust’s partner Grupo Ecological Sierra Gorda can save habitats about £100 an acre.  

     

  5. China to create a massive panda park

    Posted on

    The Sichaun province government has secured %1.58 billion in funding during the next 5 years for a planned Giant Panda National Park.

    The park will be three times the size of the US Yellowstone National Park, so it will be enormous – 10,476 square miles in all.

    The park will protect wild pandas living across the Sichuan, Shaanxi and Gansu provinces.  The environment ministry said it had agreed to plans by 15 provinces and regions to draw up red lines to keep large areas of land off limits to economic development.   These large areas include wetlands, forests, national parks and protected nature zones. 

    Over 80% of wild pandas live in Sichuan, and the rest in Shaanxi and Gansu.  The park plans will link up the pandas who are isolated in these areas and encourage them to breed.  Pandas are terribly slow at reproducing and there are several breeding centres in China to help with panda conservation.


    Although the number of wild pandas have increased in recent years, the continued increase in numbers depends on having the right habitat available to pandas to breed so the announcement of the Giant Panda National Park is a step in the right direction to ensuring they have the right environment in which to thrive. 

    Pandas International is a US based charity working to help with panda conservation.  Visit Pandas International here.