Oh to be a woodpecker

by bikerchic 15 Replies latest jw friends

  • bikerchic
    bikerchic

    If only I was one of these I would have it made in the shade. Life would be wonderful, I would be sought after as the last great hope and cared for tenderly by my adoring public.

    Funding for Conservation

    The Nature Conservancy works with conservation supporters and partner organizations to create funding for conservation worldwide using a variety of creative methods. We seek to create market incentives for conservation, such as debt for nature swaps. We also strive to increase funding for public land acquisition and management through appropriations and public finance campaigns.

    Debt-for-Nature Swaps

    Debt-for-nature swaps create a link between a country's external debt and financing for biodiversity conservation. These are voluntary transactions through which an amount of hard-currency debt owed by a developing country government (debtor) is exchanged by the creditor for financial commitments to conservation by the debtor, usually in local currency. The proceeds generated by a debt-for-nature swaps are often administered by local conservation or environmental trust funds, which disburse grants to specific projects and ensure accountable, transparent and decentralized management.

    The Nature Conservancy has been involved in debt swaps for more than a dozen years. In 1998, the Conservancy played an instrumental role in the passage of the U.S. Tropical Forest Conservation Act (TFCA)-a vehicle to scale up support for multiple debt-for-nature conservation transactions each year. The Conservancy works closely with the U.S. Treasury Department, debtor governments and other NGOs on applying this tool in new countries and in new ways. Most recently, debt swaps under the TFCA have been arranged in Peru (cooperation with the World Wildlife Fund and Conservation International) for approximately $11 million, Belize for approximately $10.7 million, and a debt swap of approximately $10 million in Panama is currently under development.

    Previous debt-for-nature swaps:

    For more information about debt-for-nature swaps, email [email protected].

    Conservation Trust Funds

    Conservation trust funds (CTFs) have been set up in many developing countries over the past decade as a way of providing stable, long-term funding for conservation. Most CTFs take the form of a legally independent institution managed by an independent board of directors. Many CTFs have a permanent endowment that has been capitalized by grants from the national government and international donor agencies. The main purpose of creating a CTF is to provide funding for national parks and other protected areas, or small grants to non-governmental organizations and community groups for projects aimed at conserving biodiversity and using natural resources more sustainably.

    The Nature Conservancy has been a pioneer in helping structure and capitalize conservation trust funds. Recent examples of national level funds we've helped establish include:

    • FUNDESNAP (the Bolivia Protected Areas Fund). Design assistance and donor negotiations were provided by TNC for FUNDESNAP, which oversees $46 million in commitments during an initial 5 year phase from 2001 - 2005.
    • Mama Graun Conservation Trust Fund, Papua New Guinea. TNC helped establish and capitalize this $15 million trust fund with a GEF grant, and a $2 million grant from AusAID. It has an overall funding target of $30 million.
    • Ecuador National Environmental Fund (FAN). TNC assisted in the design and launch of FAN which was funded by several bilateral debt swaps and a GEF grant totaling $12 million.
    • The Conservancy has also supported the development of trust fund networks such as RedLAC (the Latin American and Caribbean Environmental Funds Network) with assets of over $150 million for conservation in 27 funds throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.
      For more information about conservation trust funds, e-mail [email protected].
    Payments for Ecosystem Services

    Nature provides a range of critical ecosystem services that yield tangible economic benefits yet the economic value of these services has traditionally gone unrecognized. One of the most important developments in conservation finance in recent years is the idea that key beneficiaries should be paying for these critical ecosystem services, such as the clean water, flood control and carbon storage services provided by intact natural landscapes.

    • Watershed Conservation Payments: There is perhaps no other resource so valuable to humanity and yet so threatened as water. In response to this problem, innovative and cost effective means of providing clean and safe water that rely on the conservation of threatened watersheds are beginning to be tested and developed around the world. At the heart of this approach lies the idea that healthy ecosystems such as intact forests also provide valuable hydrological services (such as slowing rainfall runoff, enabling ground water recharge, and reducing erosion). Convincing key water users that the protection and maintenance of healthy watersheds provides real economic value to them is the essence of a watershed conservation payments. By understanding the benefits of watershed conservation and the potential impacts of watershed degradation water users develop policies, sustainable financing options and conservation practices that will maintain and perhaps even improve water quality. Examples of recent projects can be found in Chiapas, Mexico; Lago de Yojoa, Honduras; Quito, Ecuador, and Sierra de la Minas, Guatemala.
    • Carbon Offset Projects: In terms of the development of markets and payment systems, forest sequestration is by far the most advanced of the ecosystem services. Forests store (sequester) carbon, whereas deforestation releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, making reforestation and forest conservation important elements of a strategy to combat global climate change. As a result of the regulatory framework developed under the Kyoto Protocol, and with the likelihood of national legislation in the U.S. and elsewhere, the energy industry and other green house gas emitting companies will be able to meet their target emission levels in part by investing in reforestation and forest conservation projects as a cost effective means of offsetting their carbon emissions. The Conservancy continues to lead the way in developing prototype forestry projects funded by industries concerned about climate change. Consequently, the Conservancy is playing an increasingly important role in translating the lessons learned from these projects into best practices for adoption by the developing carbon credit market. The Conservancy's Climate Change Initiative has led the way in developing model carbon offset projects in Noel Kempff Mercado National Park in Bolivia, Guaraqueçaba in Brazil, the Midwestern U.S. (Ohio/Indiana) and Rio Bravo in Belize.

    For more information about payment for ecosystem services, e-mail [email protected].

    Resource Extraction Fees

    Extraction of non-renewable natural resources is an important economic activity in many countries. These activities include the mining of ores and fossil fuels like oil, natural gas, and coal. Extracting these resources inevitably causes environmental damage. Resource extraction fees are mandatory levies on extractive industries (or often, voluntary contributions by extractive industries) used to mitigate environmental damages and can be a potential source of complementary funding dedicated to conservation. An example of a resource extraction fee can be found in Ecuador where a $16 million conservation trust fund has been created through resource extraction fees in Ecuador.

    For more information about resources extraction fees, e-mail [email protected].

    Public Finance Campaigns

    For more than ten years, the Conservancy has worked in the U.S. at the state and local level with conservation supporters and partner organizations to create public funding for conservation. These public finance campaigns have generated more than $24 billion dollars for conservation throughout the country. Even in tough economic times, voters have continued to support conservation at the ballot box. Focusing on these collaborative efforts, we can leverage private donations by magnitudes of over 300 to 1.

    Examples:

    For more information about the Conservancy's success in creating public financing for conservation, contact Carol Baudler at [email protected], or Angie Grover at [email protected].

    alt

    Contact Us | Careers | Privacy Statement | Financial Information | Legal Disclosure | Nature Conservancy Profile | Site Map
    Copyright © 2005 The Nature Conservancy

    It's a shame! Shame on the US Government for caring more about a noisey bird than PEOPLE!

    I ask what can a bird do for you? Hey I'm no bird hater, but I am a people lover. People contribute to society in ways that birds can't unless you love picking up bird shit, feathers and being woken up in the wee hours of the morning by some god damn woodpecker!

    Shame, shame, shame! Where is the love for humanity for people in need.

    Oh to be a woodpecker and an ivory billed one at that.

  • Tigerman
    Tigerman

    Where's my own little woodpecker? I'm sooo lonely.

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    I guess there's just no chance that a person or a government could possibly assume stewardship of the environment and still be doing right by people? People and animals are diametrically opposed, are they? We shouldn't spend one red cent on animals, so long as there is a child suffering anywhere?

    But children would suffer in that inane little world. Oh yes they would.

  • Seven
    Seven

    Imagining a world without birds

    Source: Copyright 2004, Japan Times
    Date: March 14, 2004
    Byline: Editorial

    Take a walk in a Tokyo garden -- particularly an undisturbed, crow-haunted one such as the Institute for Nature Study's park in Meguro -- and you might find this hard to believe, but the world's bird population is shrinking. According to a report released to coincide with BirdLife International's quadrennial world conference in South Africa last week, one in eight of the world's bird species are threatened with extinction.

    That is over 1,200 species. And the rate of extinction is accelerating. In the last 500 years, 129 species were declared extinct; today, 179 species are critically endangered and another 344 are at "very high risk" of extinction, the report says. Some pockets of the planet are so inhospitable they actually face a future in which, in the poet John Keats' phrase for a fatally stricken landscape, "no birds sing."

    Anyone who saw last year's documentary "Winged Migration" will have an inkling of what such a loss would represent. For three years, the filmmakers tracked the migratory paths of birds, from pole to pole and numerous destinations in between, accompanying the flocks in gliders, balloons and ultralight, motorized aircraft. The result was a bird's-eye-view of Earth as a place alive with flying, soaring, hopping, darting creatures, extraordinarily various and beautiful. Crisscrossing and encircling the planet, birds weave what the film portrayed as a mysterious, protective web of life around and above us. As long as birds are safe, the movie implied, all the diverse forms of life below are somehow safe as well.

    But we, apparently, are not doing a very good job of protecting birds. According to the new report, titled "State of the World's Birds 2004," 966 species have populations of less than 10,000. And nearly 80 species have populations numbering fewer than 50, meaning they are virtually unsustainable in the wild. There are points of light here and there, including in Japan, where the short-tailed albatross, thought to have been extinct for decades, has re-established a breeding colony on Torishima Island, despite twin threats from ocean fishermen and an active volcano. Another success story is New Zealand's black robin, which is reported to have bounced back from a population of five birds, including just one breeding pair, to about 250 -- inbred, no doubt, but surviving.

    The general picture, however, is one of nearly unrelieved gloom. Take albatrosses: Despite the tenuous recovery of the short-tailed species (which remains endangered), the family Diomedeidae as a whole is on the brink. According to the report, a shocking 95 percent of the world's albatrosses face extinction. Readers of the British Romantic poets may think now, not of Keats, but of S.T. Coleridge, recalling what happened after his Ancient Mariner "shot the albatross," a bird of good omen. He and his ship were cursed:

    Down dropt the breeze, the sails dropt down
    'Twas sad as sad could be;
    And we did speak only to break
    The silence of the sea!

    Unfortunately, humanity appears to be re-enacting the Mariner's transgression on a mass scale. "State of the World's Birds" makes clear that the accelerating loss of avian species is almost entirely a result of human activity, from uncontrolled farming and forestry and the introduction of alien species (a particular problem on islands) to pollution, climate change and illegal commercial trading. Forest fires, also cited by the report as a factor in birds' decline, are sometimes caused by people, sometimes not. But all the other factors illustrate just how incompatible modern human existence is with so-called biodiversity: the variety of organisms coexisting in a given place. And the implications may be as dire for us as they were for the Ancient Mariner and his shipmates.

    The alarm triggered by last week's report is not just about birds, much as one regrets the harm done to such spectacular and beloved bird families as albatrosses, cranes, parrots and pheasants, all among the most endangered. Like the canaries that used to be taken down into mines to test the air for carbon monoxide, birds in general are recognized as "indicator species." What happens to them now will likely happen to other forms of life down the road, conservationists say. In the report's words, their present fate appears to indicate "a fundamental flaw in the way that we treat our environment."

    The upside of the BirdLife report is its focus on what it can do now to halt the trend, from sponsoring local habitat support groups worldwide to promoting bird-watching and wildlife tourism, as well as other forms of conservation. As for the rest of us, at the very least we can remember the birds, and what their predicament augurs for us all, the next time we vote.


    Originally posted at: http://www.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/geted.pl5?ed20040314a1.htm

    It's a shame! Shame on the US Government for caring more about a noisey bird than PEOPLE!

    Kate you can't be serious. Considering what money the government pisses away, for example another $81 billion dollars for a f***ing obscenity of a war. Now that's a shame. How about another half a billion for some bombers? That's what I call a shame Kate. As the birds go, we go. Time is running out.

  • Satanus
    Satanus

    I think i would rather be a seagull. Seagulls can live on anything, a fun life of freedom by the ocean. That beats banging your head against tree trunks and sucking sap.

    S

  • outnfree
    outnfree

    Didn't I just read somewhere that the ivory-billed woodpecker was thought to be extinct, but there have now been several confirmed sightings in Arkansas?

    outnfree

  • Seven
    Seven

    http://www.songbird.org/

    Every time we drink coffee without caring where it came from and how it was grown we play our part in helping to shatter an already fragile economy.

    Birds play a part in the fabric of the ecology that helps to support the life we live.

  • hillary_step
    hillary_step

    Kate,

    Can you give me one good reason to suggest that your life, or the life of any other human is more important than that of a bird? I understand the emotional responses to this question, but the reasoned responses are more sobering.

    Most of us in the Western World seem to have fallen victim to the Augustine theology that teaches that nature is a gift from God to man and that he can behave as he wishes with it. It is this thinking that has bought us to the brink of ecological disaster. We are just a part of nature, no more important than any other creature, though I suspect we will be forced to learn that rather than accept it with grace.

    One thing is sure, this planet will always outlive Homo Sapien, history has taught us that. Maybe one day a woodpecker might delight at seeing a glimpse of the endangered human skulking in the bushes.

    Best regards - HS

  • gumby
    gumby

    If it weren't for redheader woodpeckers, there would only be blonde and brunette woodpeckers, and the red headed loving peckerbirds wouldn't be able to get their peckers up cuz they only get turned on by redheads, and there would be no more redheaded woodpeckers cuz a lack a nookie.

    Gumby

  • LittleToe
    LittleToe

    HS:

    One thing is sure, this planet will always outlive Homo Sapien, history has taught us that.

    I'm scratching my head here, trying to recall a time in history when this planet outlived Homo Sapien...

Share this

Google+
Pinterest
Reddit