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Monday, 28 May 2012
Sunday, 20 May 2012
Introduction
Conservation
Conservation refers to the manner of use given to resources, this manner of use in technical terms id described as rational or sustainable use. Natural resources are grouped into two categories, renewable and nonrenewable.
A renewable resource is one that may be replaced over time by natural processes, such as fish populations or natural vegetation, or is inexhaustible, such as solar energy. The goal of renewable resource conservation is to ensure that such resources are not consumed faster than they are replaced.
Nonrenewable resources are those in limited supply that cannot be replaced or can be replaced only over extremely long periods of time. Nonrenewable resources include fossil fuels and mineral deposits, such as iron ore and gold ore. Conservation activities for nonrenewable resources focus on maintaining an adequate supply of these resources well into the future.
Natural resources are conserved for their biological, economic, and recreational values, as well as their natural beauty and importance to local cultures. For example, tropical rain forests are protected for their important role in both global ecology and the economic livelihood of the local culture; a coral reef may be protected for its recreational value for scuba divers; and a scenic river may be protected for its natural beauty.
Conservation conflicts arise when natural-resource shortages develop in the face of steadily increasing demands from a growing human population. Controversy frequently surrounds how a resource should be used, or allocated, and for whom. For example, a river may supply water for agricultural irrigation, habitat for fish, and water-generated electricity for a factory. Farmers, fishers, and industry leaders vie for unrestricted access to this river, but such freedom could destroy the resource, and conservation methods are necessary to protect the river for future use.
Conflicts worsen when a natural resource crosses political boundaries. For example, the headwaters, or source, of a major river may be located in a different country than the country through which the river flows. There is no guarantee that the river source will be protected to accommodate resource needs downstream. In addition, the way in which one natural resource is managed has a direct effect upon other natural resources. Cutting down a forest near a river, for instance, increases erosion, the wearing away of topsoil, and can lead to flooding. Eroded soil and silt cloud the river and adversely affect many organisms such as fish and important aquatic plants that require clean, clear freshwater for survival.
Tuesday, 15 May 2012
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COMMENTS
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WHAT CAN I DO TO GET INVOLVED?
what can i do to
get involved?
To get involved in conservation and environmental activities, what
you’ve got to do is simple. Right where you are, tell yourself that you are READY, this is very important because
when you win the battle of the mind, every other thing follows.
You could plant a tree. The cost of a tree seedling is quite affordable and is
nothing comparable to its environmental values.
You should ensure not to drop dirt in any other place but a refuse bin
either someone is watching you or not. You would be doing yourself a lot good.
Join campaigns for the environmental sustainability as well as
seminars and talks on the value of ensuring a green world.
Make donations to conserving wildlife that are going extinct already
such as the Chimpanzee, the Elephant, Panda etc.
LINKS
links
This section of the website contains information and
links with organizations involved in conservation and environmental management.
It also provides those interested in academic programs in the field of conservation
with choice information.
- United Nations Environmental Protection (UNEP)\
- World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF)
- The World Conservation Union (IUCN)
- Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF)
- Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS)
- Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
- Birdlife International
- Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)
Also
some nations of the world have gone as far as forming treaties that bind the
conservation of resources such as:
- · Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES)
- · African Convention on the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (Maputo Convention)
- · Convention on Migratory Species (CMS)
- · World Heritage Convention (WHC)
- · Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (Flora and Fauna) CITES
- · International Tropical Timber Agreement (ITTA)
- · Lusaka Agreement on Cooperative Enforcement Operations Directed at Illegal Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora
- · The Agreement on the Conservation of Albatrosses and Petrels
- · Convention on Biological Diversity
- · International Plant Protection Convention
- · Agreement Concerning Co-operation in the Quarantine of Plants and Their Protection Against Pests and Diseases
- · Convention for the Establishment Of the European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization
- · Convention on Conservation of Nature in the South Pacific
- · International Convention for the Protection of Birds
- · Ramsar Convention (on Wetlands)
- · Convention of the African Locust Organization
- · United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
- · United Nations Convention on the law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
- · Rotterdam Convention on the prior informed consent procedure for the certain hazardous chemicals and pesticides in International Trade
- · Montreal Protocol on Substances that deplete the ozone layer
- · Basel convention on the Control of Transboundary Movement of Hazardous wastes and their Diposal
- · Constitution of the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United nations (FAO)
- · Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (Bonn Convention)
IMAGES
Images
The following are images of natural sceneries that will cause you to
appreciate nature. Might be a heart-warming exercise for you to find out for
yourself the names of the different species. To access them just click
ARTICLES
Articles
managing
biodiversity
natural rersources
and conservation
animal and
conservation
plant and
conservation
conservation and
development
organisations that
are into conservation
environmental
policies and conservation
good practices in
wildlife conservation
managing
biodiversity
The term “biodiversity” describes the
entirety of varying genes, species and organisms that can be found in a
particular region. Africa is one of the continents of the world with the
largest biodiversity. The efforts being given to managing the world’s
biodiversity is of growing concern as the issue of consumerism rises due to the
geometric increase the world’s population especially in the regions of the world
that are described as having the greatest biodiversity. These same regions are
compassed with the problem of poverty and hunger as well as the worst of
economic situations.
Current
biodiversity loss is evidenced by extinction rates that are 50 to 100 times
higher than those in fossil records (Eric, 2008). The world’s population is
growing and is estimated to increase to 9.1 billion people in the next 50
years. The resulting forest fragmentation and rural development bring
ecological changes that alter the relationships of pathogens to host organisms.
Managing biodiversity really demands the
concerted efforts of governments and non-governments alike. In fact individuals
are needed to really act although the greatest problem in this case is actually
that of paucity of information. We hope to try to bridge this knowledge gap
through this medium and other practical means.
natural rersources
and conservation
Natural resources is the collective word
usually used to denote all natural endowments that are present in any given
environment from which the inhabitants of such a place can obtain their means
of livelihood.
The following write-up is by Theodore
Roosevelt, 1907: The conservation of our natural resources and their proper use
constitute the fundamental problem which underlies almost every other problem
of our national life. We must maintain for our civilization the adequate
material basis without which that civilization cannot exist. We must show
foresight, we must look ahead. As a nation we not only enjoy a wonderful
measure of present prosperity but if this prosperity is used aright it is an
earnest of future success such as no other nation will have. The reward of
foresight for this nation is great and easily foretold. But there must be the
look ahead, there must be a realization of the fact that to waste, to destroy,
our natural resources, to skin and exhaust the land instead of using it so as
to increase its usefulness, will result in undermining in the days of our
children the very prosperity which we ought by right to hand down to them
amplified and developed. For the last few years, through several agencies, the
government has been endeavoring to get our people to look ahead and to substitute
a planned and orderly development of our resources in place of a haphazard
striving for immediate profit. Our great river systems should be developed as
national water highways, the Mississippi, with its tributaries, standing first
in importance, and the Columbia second, although there are many others of
importance on the Pacific, the Atlantic, and the Gulf slopes.
Optimism is a good characteristic, but if
carried to an excess it becomes foolishness. We are prone to speak of the
resources of this country as inexhaustible; this is not so. The mineral wealth
of the country, the coal, iron, oil, gas, and the like, does not reproduce
itself, and therefore is certain to be exhausted ultimately; and wastefulness
in dealing with it today means that our descendants will feel the exhaustion a
generation or two before they otherwise would. But there are certain other
forms of waste which could be entirely stopped—the waste of soil by washing,
for instance, which is among the most dangerous of all wastes now in progress
in the United States, is easily preventable, and so that this present enormous
loss of fertility is entirely unnecessary. The preservation or replacement of
the forests is one of the most important means of preventing this loss. We have
made a beginning in forest preservation, but ... so rapid has been the rate of
exhaustion of timber in the United States in the past, and so rapidly is the
remainder being exhausted, that the country is unquestionably on the verge of a
timber famine which will be felt in every household in the land ... The present
annual consumption of lumber is certainly three times as great as the annual
growth; and if the consumption and growth continue unchanged, practically all
our lumber will be exhausted in another generation, while long before the limit
to complete exhaustion is reached the growing scarcity will make itself felt in
many blighting ways upon our national welfare. About twenty per cent of our
forested territory is now reserved in national forests; but these do not
include the most valuable timberlands, and in any event the proportion is too
small to expect that the reserves can accomplish more than a mitigation of the
trouble which is ahead for the nation. We should acquire in the Appalachian and
White Mountain regions all the forest-lands that it is possible to acquire for
the use of the nation. These lands, because they form a national asset, are as
emphatically national as the rivers which they feed, and which flow through so
many States before they reach the ocean.
Theodore
Roosevelt was a strong advocate of conservation during his presidency. Here he
discusses the value of conservation and the problems that will result from
excessive consumption of natural resources.
Source: Library of Congress.
animal and
conservation
An
increase in human population in many parts of the developing world has both
intensified the demand for food and made accessible, through the construction
of roads as part of mining and logging operations, forested areas that were
previously unreachable. These conditions have contributed to a rise in the
hunting and eating of bushmeat. The level of impoverishment of rural dwellers
that live close to protected areas and forests in general has also made hunting
one of the readily available means of livelihood.
The rate at which people are exploiting wildlife
is alarming especially in those parts of the world where their means of
livelihood is largely dependent on the environmental resources. In fact, in
some parts of the world such as the remote African nations, large population of
the people rely on wildlife for their body protein requirement as such leading
to the over-exploitation of the resources in the wild. Conservation of wildlife
is divided into in-situ and ex-situ conservation.
Ex-situ
conservation involves
the conservation of plants or animals in a situation removed from the normal
habitat. It refers to special interventions in terms of protection given to
these wild species outside their natural habitat for the sake of preserving
gene pool and biodiversity.
In-situ
conservation is
the maintenance of live populations of animals in their adaptive environment or
as close to it as practically possible. It refers to the protection given to
wild species in their natural habitat i.e. their real home.
plant and
conservation
Plants
that are within their natural habitat are also described as wildlife (for the
sake of those who think that wildlife only refers to animals). There are
several uncommon but useful plants both to the animals in the wild as well as
humans in terms of medicinal usage and economic advantages.
Endangered
Species, plant and animal species are in danger of extinction (dying out). Over
8,300 plant species around the globe are threatened with extinction, and many
thousands more become extinct each year before biologists can identify them.
The primary causes of species extinction or endangerment are habitat destruction,
commercial exploitation such as plant collecting, damage caused by nonnative
plants and animals introduced into an area, and pollution. Of these causes,
direct habitat destruction threatens the greatest number of species.
conservation and
development
The rate at which technological advancement is taking place in the world
is quite high and partly commendable when the goods are considered. The various
eras of development such as the agricultural, industrial, technological revolution
marked great changes in the settings that are obtainable in the natural world
as so much natural resources have been exploited in order to achieve these
so-called development. I say so-called because any development that does not
take the natural ecosystem into proper perspective is doomed for serious
environmental and societal catastrophe. Sad enough, however so many
construction works are being undertaken without proper environmental survey for
compatibility checks.
organisations that
are into conservation
Several organizations
both Governmental and Non-governmental organizations are working to conserve
the world’s biodiversity the world over. As a matter of fact opportunities
abound to individuals who are interested in volunteer or internship jobs with
these organizations. The Section of the website provides a list of such
organization and links. The links can however be accessed by clicking on the
link tab.
environmental
policies and conservation
The environmental impact
statement was first introduced in 1969 in the United States as a requirement
for the National Environmental Policy Act. Since then, an increasing number of
countries have adopted the process, introducing legislation and establishing
agencies with responsibility for its implementation. Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS), formal process used to predict how a development project of
proposed legislation will affect such natural resources as water, air, land,
and wildlife. Environmental impact statements have mostly been applied to
individual projects and have led to various offshoot techniques, such as health
impact assessments, social impact assessments, cumulative effects assessments,
and strategic environmental assessments (environmental assessments of proposed
policies, programs, and plans). In some cases, social and economic impacts are
assessed as part of the environmental impact statements. In other cases, they
are considered separately.
An EIS usually involves
a sequence of steps:
1. Screening to decide if a project requires assessment and to
what level of detail;
2. Preliminary assessment to identify key impacts, their
magnitude, significance, and importance
3. Scoping to ensure the EIS focuses on key issues and to
determine where more detailed information is needed;
4. Implementing the main EIS study, which involves detailed
investigations to predict impacts, assess their consequences, or both. After a
project is completed a post audit is sometimes done to determine how
close the EIS's predictions were to the actual impacts.
A growing number of
businesses commission independent audits that help set environmental
performance targets, particularly regarding waste disposal and energy use.
However, the term environmental audit is applied to the voluntary
regulation of an organization's practices in relation to its environmental
impact.
good practices in
wildlife conservation
Do not kill
Do not throw food to animals in the zoo
Report any animal abuse case that you see
Do not throw stones or sharp objects against wild animals
Do
not buy endangered wildlife meats by the roadside, rather report such cases
Do not retrain animals unnecessarily
Do not litter Animals parks with dirt or any form of unwanted substances
etc.
Wednesday, 9 May 2012
Introduction
Conservation
Conservation refers to the manner of use given to resources, this manner of use in technical terms id described as rational or sustainable use. Natural resources are grouped into two categories, renewable and nonrenewable.
A
renewable resource is one that may be replaced over time by natural
processes, such as fish populations or natural vegetation, or is inexhaustible,
such as solar energy. The goal of renewable resource conservation is to ensure
that such resources are not consumed faster than they are replaced.
Nonrenewable resources are those in limited supply that cannot be
replaced or can be replaced only over extremely long periods of time.
Nonrenewable resources include fossil fuels and mineral deposits, such as iron
ore and gold ore. Conservation activities for nonrenewable resources focus on
maintaining an adequate supply of these resources well into the future.
Natural resources are conserved for their
biological, economic, and recreational values, as well as their natural beauty
and importance to local cultures. For example, tropical rain forests are
protected for their important role in both global ecology and the economic
livelihood of the local culture; a coral reef may be protected for its
recreational value for scuba divers; and a scenic river may be protected for its
natural beauty.
Conservation conflicts arise when
natural-resource shortages develop in the face of steadily increasing demands
from a growing human population. Controversy frequently surrounds how a resource
should be used, or allocated, and for whom. For example, a river may supply
water for agricultural irrigation, habitat for fish, and water-generated
electricity for a factory. Farmers, fishers, and industry leaders vie for
unrestricted access to this river, but such freedom could destroy the resource,
and conservation methods are necessary to protect the river for future use.
Conflicts worsen when a natural resource
crosses political boundaries. For example, the headwaters, or source, of a major
river may be located in a different country than the country through which the
river flows. There is no guarantee that the river source will be protected to
accommodate resource needs downstream. In addition, the way in which one natural
resource is managed has a direct effect upon other natural resources. Cutting
down a forest near a river, for instance, increases erosion, the wearing away of
topsoil, and can lead to flooding. Eroded soil and silt cloud the river and
adversely affect many organisms such as fish and important aquatic plants that
require clean, clear freshwater for survival.
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