Аналитическое исследование: Основные экологические проблемы Восточной Европы

Регион Восточной Европы включает в себя следующие страны: Белоруссия, Болгария, Венгрия, Молдавия, Польша, Румыния, Россия, Украина, Чехия, Словакия.

Аналитическая работа представляет собой обобщённое заключение на основе изучения мониторинга СМИ, докладов и исследований Европейского агентства по вопросам окружающей среде (ЕЕА), а также экспертных мнений экологов.

Следует отметить, что для оценки экологических проблем требуется комплексный подход с привлечением средств массовой информации, давления общества и деятельности человека. В данной аналитической работе освещаются 13 проблем, представляющих особый интерес для Восточной Европы, уделяется особое внимание причинам их возникновения, а также целям и стратегиям, которые используются для решения этих проблем.

Read more

Dahl’s toad-headed turtle threatened by fragmented habitat, shrinking populations

A recent study published in Conservation Genetics by researchers from the Universidad de los Andes, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society), and the Turtle Survival Alliance (TSA) shows that the Dahl’s Toad-headed Turtle (Mesoclemmys dahli), a rare reptile found only in Colombia, is threatened with extinction due to alarmingly small and fragmented populations and high levels of inbreeding.

Read more

Australian dogs trained to sniff out endangered species

Australian dogs are being trained to sniff out the droppings of endangered animals in a scheme that offers greater understanding of threatened species through the less-intrusive method of canine tracking.

Emma Bennett, a PhD candidate at Monash University in Melbourne, is working with environmentally-conscious dog owners who have volunteered their pets in a rainforest region of Victoria state to track the scats, or droppings, of the endangered tiger quoll, a small marsupial.

Read more

Fish exposed to treated wastewater have altered behavior

A team of researchers from Environment Canada and Climate Change Canada and McMaster University have found that fish living downstream from a wastewater treatment plant showed changes to their normal behaviour — ones that made them vulnerable to predators — when exposed to elevated levels of antidepressant drugs in the water.

The findings, published as a series of three papers in the journal Scientific Reports, point to the ongoing problem of prescription medications, personal care products and other drugs that end up in the watershed and the impact they have on the natural environment.

Read more

The patterns of climate change

Plant Ecology researchers at the University of Tübingen have developed a technique to monitor and predict how plant species will respond to climate change. Dr. Mark Bilton and Professor Katja Tielbörger, from the Institute of Evolution and Ecology, re-analysed data with Spanish collaborators from their unprecedented 16-year experiment. The experiment was conducted in an area the size of two football pitches within the Garraf National park south west of Barcelona. The landscape is mostly a Mediterranean scrubland, featuring thickets of low rise shrubs and herbs such as rosemary and thyme, and home to many protected species.

Read more

High animal product prices part of a ‘vicious cycle towards extinction’

Skyrocketing prices for rare animal products can push species to extinction even when their populations are abundant, researchers say.

The University of Queensland’s Dr Matthew Holden and Dr Eve McDonald-Madden undertook a study for the ARC Centre of Excellence for Environmental Decisions, examining the fate of animals when prices for their products change with animal scarcity.

Read more

Big data helps researchers in battle to control plant invaders

Researchers at The University of Western Australia are part of an international team that has discovered why some plant species are more successful than others at successfully invading new regions.

In a research paper published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), co-author Professor Laco Mucina, from UWA’s School of Biological Sciences, said the findings were of economic and environmental significance because invasive species caused extensive damage around the world.

Read more

How UK’s birds are being affected by a changing climate

Migratory birds are arriving in the UK earlier each spring and leaving later each autumn, a report has confirmed.

Some visitors are now appearing more than 20 days earlier than they did in the 1960s, according to the state of the UK’s birds 2017 report.

Read more

IUCN Red List: Wild crops listed as threatened

Wild relatives of modern crops deemed crucial for food security are being pushed to the brink of extinction, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature. More than 20 rice, wheat and yam plants have been listed as threatened on the latest version of the IUCN’s Red list. The wild plants are being squeezed out by intensive farming, deforestation and urban sprawl, say scientists.

Modern crops can be crossbred with their wild cousins to safeguard foods. ”To lose them would be a disaster,” said Dr Nigel Maxted of the University of Birmingham, who is co-chair of the IUCN’s specialist group on crop wild relatives. ”It would be much more difficult to maintain food security without them.”

Insurance policy

Commercial crops have lost genetic diversity. They are vulnerable to the effects of climate change, which may bring drought, diseases and new pests. Work is under way to breed new varieties of grains, cereals and vegetables by crossing them with tough, wild species that can grow in a range of habitats, such as mountains, deserts or salt marshes. These efforts rely on protecting plants related to modern food crops at the sites where they grow in the wild as well as preserving their seeds in gene banks.

The first systematic assessment of wild wheat, rice and yam has led to the listing of three types of rice, two types of wheat (used to make bread) and 17 types of yam. Marie Haga is Executive Director of The Crop Trust, an international organisation that is working to safeguard crop diversity. She welcomed the inclusion of wild crops on the Red List.

”The IUCN has high legitimacy among decision makers and the general population, so it’s extremely interesting that they are putting these wild relatives on their Red List,” she told BBC News. “I hope that will contribute to raising the awareness even further that we’ve got to take action, and we’ve got to take action now. Wild relatives of crops act as ”an insurance policy for the world”, she added.

Most of the wild rice crops that are threatened with extinction grow in South East Asia, while a few are found in Africa. The wild wheat plants that are of concern are found mainly in the Near and Middle East, including war-torn areas that are off-limits to conservationists.

Yams feed around 100 million people in Africa alone. Paul Wilkin of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, said conservation work is being undertaken to make sure that wild yam plants are available to provide food and medicines worldwide, now and in the future.

”They will also be sources of key traits to breed improved, future-proof crop varieties,” he said.

”These assessments enable the most threatened species of yams and other crop wild relatives to be prioritised effectively for conservation actions.”

The economic value of crop wild relatives is put at US$115bn per year to the global economy.

Other Red List entries

In addition to wild crops, the IUCN highlighted other flora and fauna that have been added to the latest update of the Red List:

  • Entanglement with fishing nets and overfishing have caused steep declines in the Irrawaddy dolphin and finless porpoise, with both species moving from Vulnerable to Endangered
  • Three reptiles found only on Australia’s Christmas Island have been declared extinct in the wild
  • Australia’s western ringtail possum is in dramatic decline due to the increasingly hot and dry climate in Western Australia and predation from red foxes and feral cats
  • A third of snakes and lizards native to Japan are listed as Threatened, due to habitat loss, collection for the pet trade and the introduction of predators such as the Japanese weasel.

But there is a success story; kiwis in New Zealand are recovering thanks to conservation efforts.

An effort to wipe out predators such as stoats and ferrets, as well as raising chicks in captivity to release in the wild, has boosted the number of two species of New Zealand’s native bird.

Read more

Hinkley Point’s Cardiff Bay toxic mud claim ‘alarmist’

Claims that 300,000 tonnes of mud due to be dumped off Cardiff Bay is toxic are “wrong, alarmist and go against all internationally-accepted scientific evidence”. Controversial plans to dispose of mud from the Hinkley Point C nuclear project are being scrutinised by members of the Welsh assembly. Campaigners want further testing.

Read more