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Conservation and environmental news & publications: New Zealand

King penguins on South Georgia Island, Antarctica

Polar bears and penguins 'just tip of climate change iceberg'

New evidence from the North and South Poles indicates that time is running out for the world’s leaders to respond to climate change.

Posted on 06 April 2009 | 1 comments | Read more

Spiny dogfish.

Battered sharks get critical listing

Four of the most commercially valuable sharks - one a staple of fish and chips - have just been listed as being of conservation concern by the International Convention on Migratory Species.  WWF has actively lobbied for this recognition

Posted on 05 December 2008 | 1 comments | Read more

Bigeye Tuna for sale at the fish market in Hawaii.

Pacific tuna face risky fisheries meeting

Yellowfin tuna and bigeye tuna fisheries in the western and central Pacific also face collapse if a forthcoming management meeting doesn't dramatically change the way they are harvested, WWF warned today.

Posted on 27 November 2008 | 1 comments | Read more

Long flight to photo award for Albatross

Like many fishers, Cameron Long is a man of few words. But luckily, his photos speak for him. His stunning winning shot of a solitary Salvin's albatross, navigating its flight a few well-judged inches from the ocean's surface, tip of one wing breaking the water, expresses the perfection of the albatross in a way words fail to.

Posted on 05 August 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

A Salvin's albatross(<i>Thalassarche salvini</i>), taken between Dunedin & Timaru, on the east-coast of New Zealand's Southern Island

Winning photo of Selvin Albatross profiles threats to seabirds

A fisherman's photo of a Salvin's Albatross skimming the waters off New Zealand's South Island has won a photographic competition intended to highlight efforts to protect seabirds being harmed by fishing gear and activities.

Posted on 05 August 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

Hector's dolphin entangled

Net gain for endangered dolphins

The rarest marine dolphin in the world – down to 111 individuals following decades of entanglement in fishing nets – is to receive protection over more of its range from the New Zealand government following several years of sustained WWF campaigning.

Posted on 03 July 2008 | 2 comments | Read more

Fisheries, not whales, to blame for shortage of fish

The argument that increasing whale populations are behind declining fish stocks is completely without scientific foundation, leading researchers and conservation organizations said today as the International Whaling Commission opened its 60th meeting in Santiago, Chile.

Posted on 23 June 2008 | 3 comments | Read more

Poverty and lack of integrated management have led to deforestation and erosion, and degraded freshwater habitats around Lake Malawi.

Human well-being better in a better protected environment

Bonn, May 22, 2008 – Well planned and managed protected areas can play a key role in reducing poverty, with the relationship strengthened when well-being is measured as more than just income, according to a new analysis by WWF  “But it is vital that those involved in establishing and managing protected areas remember that people are also part of the landscape,” said WWF's Liza Higgins-Zogib.

Posted on 24 May 2008 | 0 comments | Read more

The  Mediterranean's tuna fleet needs to shed a third of its vessels to fish within the law, and even more to save bluefin stocks according to scientific advice - but 25 new boats are currently under construction

Bloated Mediterranean tuna fleet in race for the last bluefin

Rome, Italy – The most comprehensive analysis yet of the Mediterranean bluefin tuna fleet shows it conservatively having twice the fishing capacity of current quotas and more than three and a half times the catch levels recommended by scientists to avoid stock collapse.

Posted on 12 March 2008 | 2 comments | Read more

Severely degraded mangroves due to rising sea levels and clearing for commercial shrimp and salt farms, Thailand. These factors have contributed greatly to the destruction of large tracts of coastal mangroves in the country.

This time, world should heed OECD call to action on environment

Paris: The OECD’s Environment Outlook to 2030, issued today, was welcomed by WWF as yet another compelling argument that the costs of inaction on the environment will far exceed the costs of action. 

The OECD Outlook is the latest - and at 520 pages one of the weightiest - in a run of reports from prominent economic institutions and commissions calling on governments and international institutions to face up to the seriousness and immediacy of global environmental problems.

Posted on 05 March 2008 | 2 comments | Read more

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