Project Orion - Rovering with Turtles
is the 2nd Scouts of the World Award (SWA) Voluntary Service Project of the SWA Singapore Base.

Led by 9 Rover Scouts from Singapore and Malaysia, the project is set upon

the beautiful wetlands and beaches of Setiu, Terengganu.

Lasting 16 days from 20th June to 5th July, the team will not only be contributing to the

conservation of sea turtles, but will also be involved in mangrove replanting,
repair work for the villagers and WWF info centre, English and conservation awareness education,
assistance in the local women's cottage industry amongst many others.

"Leave the place a little better than you first found it." - Lord Baden Powell
UPDATE: The blog will be updated from time to time with more turtle new issues. However, Project Orion blog will be replaced by the next project when it starts with the new team. So, DO STAY TUNED!

Sunday, June 21, 2009

Day 2: NEW RECORD!!!!!

Day two started out amazingly to the beautiful sunrise of East Malaysia. The sun’s rays shone down on my tenet as we awoke to the sounds of the waves crashing on the shore. Cycling and walking were to be our main mode of transport during this trip and we continued with them as we made our way across the beautiful roads of Setiu to our various destinations.

We were involved in our first community project today as we helped to touch up the WWF Information Centre, aka the Pink House. We had a really fun time painting the patio and touching up the railings of the house. Though it was messy and paint was everywhere on our clothes, but we enjoyed ourselves thoroughly.

What was to happen next really made our day. The team made their way to the turtle hatchery to fix a couple of new nests for new clutches of eggs. To our amazement, one nest of eggs started to hatch and hordes of little turtles started to rush out of the soil. It started with one, then two, then ten and twenty. The little guys were rushing to the fences that surrounded their nest, trying to force their way to the ocean. The interns who were with us, rushed to measure the turtles and transferred them to a container that was to be used for the release. Then out of nowhere, another nest of eggs started to hatch. The same thing happened with the tens of turtles out of the sand. It was an amazing sight and an extraordinary experience, one I would cherish forever.

Later that night, together with the WWF staff and hatchlings, the team cycled to a beach five kilometers away to bring them back to where their eggs were originally found, to be release into the ocean. Eventually we set the little ones free to embark on their arduous life journey to adulthood and perhaps one day to return to their beach of birth. Day two was definitely a day to remember and a great start to the Project.

Oh. and yes! As for the new record, this is the first time that the hatchery in Setiu has ever seen 2 batches of hatchlings emerging in the same day! (The norm is only one batch per day) Lady luck is smiling on Orion!

Sign off,
Oliver
Team Leader

New net timer could save sea turtles from drowning

Jay Lindsay, Associated Press Yahoo News 21 Jun 09;

BOURNE, Mass. – Fishery managers trying to protect rare sea turtles from dying in fishing nets have tapped a Cape Cod company to build a device they think can help balance turtle protection with profitable fishing.

The "tow-time logger" is a 7-inch, silver cylinder that attaches to fishing nets and records how long the net stays underwater.

That time is crucial if a turtle gets snared in the nets dragged behind fishing trawlers. Federal research indicates the vast majority of sea turtles survive entanglement — but only if the net is pulled up in less than 50 minutes.

With the logger, regulators can avoid other, potentially more onerous, restrictions on perpetually struggling fishermen — such as shutting down fishing areas or requiring turtle-saving gear that doesn't work well in all nets. In fisheries where they decide time limits would work best, they wouldn't have to depend on an honor system to make sure nets are pulled up in time.

"Turtles have also been around since the time of the dinosaurs," said Elizabeth Griffin of the environmental group, Oceana. "They're cool animals that I think most people want to see continue to exist."

The logger was built under a $25,000 federal contract with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration by Onset Computer Corp., a Bourne-based supplier of data loggers for energy and environmental monitoring. It starts recording water depth every 30 seconds once the net drops below two meters. If the net stays under beyond a preset time limit, the logger records it, and the infraction can be discovered when regulators download its data.

The device's early tests at sea have been successful, and work is ongoing to toughen it for the real-life rigors, such as being banged on fishing boat decks. The company expects it to cost between $600 and $800, an expense that would fall to fishermen.

Even when the logger is perfected, regulators know limiting how long the nets stay underwater is no cure-all as they devise rules, which they hope to propose for public comment by 2010, to meet a new federal requirement to protect sea turtles from trawler fishing nets.

Some environmentalists say turtles shouldn't be kept underwater at all because even relatively short times of being trapped underwater without oxygen hurt them.

Griffin says there's also not enough data on how trapped turtles fare in colder waters, so no one really knows how long they can be kept under and survive.

The data logger at least makes briefer tow times a feasible way to protect turtles, if researchers can sort out what's safe, she said.

Fishermen are skeptical. They say short tows aren't practical in most fisheries, such as those in deeper waters, where a worthwhile catch is impossible if the nets must constantly be pulled up.

"It's a bad idea," said James Fletcher, a veteran fisherman and now head of the North Carolina-based United National Fisherman's Association.

"Nobody's going to love the idea," acknowledged Henry Milliken, a biologist with the National Marine Fisheries Service, which is part of NOAA. But he added fishermen might prefer limits on how long the net can be underwater to harsher alternatives, such as closing fishing areas.

"The idea is that we're looking at providing options to the managers in the future," Milliken said.

As the NMFS tries to determine which steps will or won't work, it's held public meetings this spring from New York to Georgia.

The turtle most frequently caught in trawl nets in the Atlantic is the loggerhead, the threatened 250-pound giants named for their relatively large heads. In U.S. waters, every sea turtle is listed as either endangered or threatened, so any turtle deaths in fishing nets hit the populations hard.

The most common way to protect turtles right now is the Turtle Excluder Device, often a circular, barred frame attached near the front of fishing nets. The bars are big enough for fish and other sea life to slip through, but too narrow for turtles, which bounce out of the net before they get caught.

The excluder devices have had success in some fisheries, including the Southeast's shrimp trawl fishery, but bigger species, such as horseshoe crab, monkfish and flounder, can bounce out along with the turtles and make the nets far too inefficient.

Greg DiDomenico of the Garden State Seafood Association, a New Jersey trade group, said since the new rules will apply to fisheries from Cape Cod to Florida — where the turtles swim — whatever shakes out is bound to be felt industry-wide. That includes "huge negative impacts on some fisheries," he said.

But with regulations coming, DiDomenico said his best hope is that regulators don't broadly force a turtle-protecting solution, including the time logger being developed, on a diverse fleet.

"It's not one-size-fits-all," he said.

Ebay

Taken from Aford T. Turtle

Awareness of sea turtles through God

New Straits Times 19 Jun 09;

Reaching out to the people through God is such a winning formula in Terengganu that WWF is planning to introduce it in Kelantan.

THE sea of faithful Muslims from Ma'Daerah listened keenly as a small wiry ulama with wispy grey beard preached about saving turtles.
Across the South China Sea, an Anglican pastor in Kota Kinabalu urged followers to be more respectful of nature and its resources.

These two men are just some of the holy leaders who are spreading environmental awareness through God's words.

While celebrities have always fronted environment campaigns, lately, it seems religion has found its role in the green movement worldwide.

For British scientist Dr Bernard d'Abrera, "faith is the evidence for things unseen".
"As custodians of the Earth, we have the moral obligation to take care of it in its original form for as long as possible.

"God didn't create Earth as a trap, but a home for us."

Even English environmentalist Sir David Attenborough declared recently that "there should be a morality about living".

Environmentalism has always relied on science, but d'Abrera stressed that "science must be subjected to morality".

"Spirituality is a force for moral good to rule good behaviour."

Langkawi-based conservationist Irshad Mobarak agreed, saying all religions taught respect for nature.

"All religions have many good things to say about man's relationship with his Creator and His creations ... and our position as stewards of nature.

"We must treat Earth with deference."

Irshad described Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF) Malaysia's move to highlight the endangered turtles' plight through sermons in Terengganu as a "good approach" to make people understand that everything was finite.

"You tell them 'hey listen. You're accountable for how you treat the planet. You can escape men's law but not God's punishment'."

Editor of the Herald, a Roman Catholic publication, Father Lawrence Andrew, said that every life needed to be protected.

"The Christian principle of loving thy neighbour also includes animals and plants."

Roman Catholic Churches in Malaysia, he said, include green topics from time to time in the sermons, especially when the occasion calls for it, such as Earth Hour.

"And now with the haze, we encourage people not to conduct open burning," he said.

Reaching out to the people through the new medium is such a winning formula in Terengganu that WWF is planning to introduce it in Kelantan.

"We have tried other ways from education to holding public talks.

"The religion approach is new but it seems to be working," WWF Species Conservation Programme (Peninsular Malaysia) communications officer Sara Sukor said.

The NGO is currently working with the Islamic Understanding Institute of Malaysia to publish a book on spirituality and environmental stewardship.

The compilation of Quranic verses, hadith (collections of sayings and acts of Muhammad and the first Muslims) and sirah (stories of prophets) is expected to be out by December.