Annual Review 2001/2002 WWF, the Global Environment Network, Works to Conserve Endangered Species

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Annual Review 2001/2002 WWF, the Global Environment Network, Works to Conserve Endangered Species Making a difference WWF-UK Annual Review 2001/2002 WWF, the global environment network, works to conserve endangered species, Tanzania’s Great Ruaha river has frequently run dry protect endangered spaces, and for periods of up to 111 days since the early 1990s. The wildlife of three national parks and four game reserves depend on the waters of the Ruaha, address global threats to the planet by FRONT COVER: EDWARD PARKER, WWF-UK which also provides some 70 per cent of Tanzania’s hydro-electric power. WWF is developing a programme to ensure seeking sustainable solutions for the year-round flow of the Great Ruaha river system by 2012, for the benefit of people and nature. benefit of people and nature. WWF-UK Trustees and Principal Officers WWF believes that it is not possible to as at 1 December 2002 President protect the environment without tackling HRH Princess Alexandra the Hon Lady Ogilvy GCVO poverty, and it is impossible to tackle Board of Trustees Principal Officers Professional Services Trustees Emeriti Chief Executive Auditors Sir Martin Laing CBE Robert Napier Deloitte & Touche poverty, in the long term, without The Hon Sara Morrison Deputy Chief Executive and Director Bankers Sir Arthur Norman KBE DFC of Finance and Services Co-operative Bank Vice-Presidents Leslie Jones OBE protecting the environment. The two Solicitors Rt Hon The Lord Buxton MC DL Director of Communications Eversheds Guy Mountfort OBE Perdita Hunt Barlows E Max Nicholson CB CVO LLD Director of Fundraising Investment Managers issues are interlinked – which is why Trustees Nicky Bishop Lazard Asset Management Limited Christopher Ward Chairman Newton Investment Management Ms Fabiola Arredondo Director of Human Resources Limited Marc Citron Duncan Parkes WWF’s worldwide programmes work Colin Day Director of Programmes Richard Freeman Francis Sullivan Dr Rita Gardner with people as well as for nature. Michael Grade CBE Director of Policy Anders Johansson Andrew Lee John Lawton Director of WWF Scotland Ray Perman Simon Pepper OBE Professor Adrian Phillips CBE Jonathon Porritt CBE Adair Turner WWF. Taking action for a living planet Professor Lynda Warren Sir James Weatherall KCVO, KBE MAKING A DIFFERENCE 1 “In many respects our journey has only just begun” WWF-CANON / MARTIN HARVEY Letter from the Chairman This year is notable because it governments, and our conser- become such a shameful global is immense – but the complexity tireless support and enthusiasm. marks WWF’s 40th anniversary – vation programmes around the growth industry. of the issues we face means that I know that their understanding a milestone of which we can world, are testament to 40 years Most of this work is long-term, we must continue to focus our and patience were sorely tried be proud. of what I believe to be unrivalled requiring sustained effort and work for maximum impact on on occasions, which makes my In WWF’s first annual review, determination and experience – investment of expertise and money. the natural world. gratitude for their forbearance our founding chairman, Sir Peter but in many respects our journey On behalf of the WWF Trustees and I should like to pay special and encouragement all the greater. Scott, wrote about mankind’s has only just begun. staff, I express my gratitude to all tribute to the staff of WWF. Heartfelt good wishes to my “greed and improvidence, Tough and demanding issues members, donors and supporters Their professionalism, dedication successor and all colleagues. carelessness and apathy”. Human lie ahead, all requiring urgent whose generous endorsement and hard work is inspiring indeed, Personal and sincere thanks to WWF-CANON / LENGUI IRÉNE ignorance, he said, was the basic attention: climate change, of makes our work possible. and gives me cause to say with all at WWF for the privilege of cause of threats to wildlife and wild course, but also the future of We all hope for their continued confidence that, 40 years on, the their comradeship. I have enjoyed places. agriculture in the United Kingdom, invaluable assistance. organisation founded by Sir Peter being a small part of such great WWF-UK, as part of the WWF which is closely allied to reform In November I hand over Scott and his far-sighted and essential work. international network, has come a of the creaking EU Common the Chairmanship of WWF-UK colleagues will continue to strive long way since 1961. The journey Agricultural Policy. The unhappy to Christopher Ward, a Trustee to find even better ways to meet has been both challenging and state of the world’s oceans of great experience. As my term the complex threats facing our fruitful. Our programmes to protect continues to be high on our of office draws to a close, fragile planet. endangered wildlife, our brokering agenda, and we are also my admiration for WWF’s work, Finally, all the Trustees with The Hon Sara Morrison of international treaties, our campaigning for a crackdown underpinned by its disciplined whom I have had the pleasure of Chairman, WWF-UK collaboration with business, our on the illegal trade in wildlife and culture of deploying science-based working during these past six years behind the scenes work with endangered species that has facts to influence human behaviour, deserve enormous thanks for their 2 MAKING A DIFFERENCE MAKING A DIFFERENCE 3 All WWF’s work has a global impact. Although we Education are best known for our work to protect endangered The Education programme’s goal is to ensure that all parts of society species, this is merely a part of what we do. WWF’s contribute to the achievement of sustainable development through international priorities are reflected in our long-term decisions and action taken in the home, the community, the workplace and programmes of up to 20 years. through the democratic process. WWF strives for this by working with the business community, local and regional government and, via the formal education system, by developing consensus for sustainable development throughout society. Our work JOHN DANIELS, WWF-UK DIGITAL VISION DIGITAL VISION DAVID LAWSON, WWF-UK DIGITAL VISION MIKE LANE, WWF-UK DIGITAL VISION Endangered species Living seas Forests Freshwater Toxic chemicals Climate change WWF’s Species programme WWF’s Living Seas programme WWF’s Forest programme Without healthy and functioning Because wildlife, people and Urgent action is needed if we are conserves endangered species and influences the protection and protects forests, promotes their freshwater ecosystems, river basins ecosystems are threatened by to avert the threat posed by climate habitats of global concern, and sustainable management of oceans management to the highest are unable to provide sufficient pervasive and global chemical change to many species and strives to eliminate the illegal trade and coasts within nine important standards, and restores once- good-quality water which helps contamination, WWF is working habitats, as well as to people’s in wildlife. Important in their own marine ecoregions from the South forested land to its authentic state. to minimise floods and droughts. to reduce and eliminate the world’s livelihoods. We are aiming to right, many of these flagship Pacific to our own shores of the Our work takes place in more than WWF’s Living Waters programme most dangerous industrial increase awareness about the species also provide unique oppor- north-east Atlantic. Because 20 countries as diverse as Mexico, provides policies and practical chemicals and pesticides. At the impacts of climate change and tunities for WWF to communicate protection of marine wildlife cannot Nepal, Tanzania and the Ukraine. management programmes around same time we are promoting we are working with governments, other vital conservation and succeed in isolation, it is essential We operate in partnership with the world to enable the wise increased understanding, businesses and consumers to environmental issues. the seas are managed holistically. other organisations such as the stewardship of water for both regulation of, and alternatives achieve a transformation to a low- Working with people whose Forest Stewardship Council and people and nature. to toxic chemicals. carbon energy system in the UK. livelihoods depend on the seas, the WWF 95+ Group of companies the UK marine programme’s goal that are committed to producing is to improve nature conservation, and trading in certified timber resource management and products to combat threats such pollution prevention. as illegal logging. 4 MAKING A DIFFERENCE MAKING A DIFFERENCE 5 WWF is renowned for taking action for the benefit of people and nature, whenever and wherever Highlights 2001/2002 it matters. Here are just a few of our successes of the year during the year… M & C DENIS HUOT, STILL PICTURES Living seas WWF achieved a historic success when the world’s shipping nations adopted a new global convention on highly toxic anti-fouling paints used on ships’ hulls. Use of these paints will be phased out by 2003 and their presence on hulls com- pletely removed by 2008. EDWARD PARKER, WWF-UK WWF / FRITZ PÖLKING NEIL BROMHALL, SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY Endangered species Toxic chemicals Forests WWF and the Shaanxi forestry The European Union’s White Paper, The WWF 95+ Group of companies, department of China agreed to establish A Strategy for Future Chemicals dedicated to using timber products 13 new giant panda reserves, and to Policy, contained some of the positive that come only from well-managed create the first panda corridors in the and progressive elements of forests, celebrated its 10th anniversary. Qinling mountains. These corridors The Copenhagen Charter, a policy Today, the group’s membership of more are a matter of life and death to pandas paper co-drafted by WWF in 2000. than 100 companies in the UK manu- when their staple diet of bamboo They include a presumption against facture some 10,000 product lines is scarce or dies.
Recommended publications
  • The Main Feature This Month Describes a Very FRONT COVER Exciting Place - One of the Most Exciting European Otter (Lutra Lutra)
    THE INTERNATIONAL WILDLIFE MAGAZINE Vol. 17 No. 4 April 1975 The main feature this month describes a very FRONT COVER exciting place - one of the most exciting European otter (Lutra lutra). places in the world, in fact. The Gunung Photo by Hans Reinhard/Bruce Colernan Leuser must represent one of the front rank of vital areas that conservationists must save, for all sorts of reasons. It is also a place that appeals because it is 150 The Great Wildlife still unexplored and unknown. Markus Borner Photographic Adventure told me when I was there last summer that 153 Birdwatcher at Large there were - and are - no adequate maps of the Gunung Leuser region. The most recent 154 Longnecks and Humpbacks was one prepared from American satellite Harry Frauca photographs. But it turned out to be 157 Into the Unknown inaccurate. So little known was the area that he even discovered a great rift valley in the Markus Bomer centre of the reserve, whose existence had been 166 Search for India's Grey Wolf unsuspected. S. P. Shahi Markus was involved specifically in the fate of the Sumatran rhino, but he was also 170 The Rooftop Gun concerned - through his project investigations Patricia M ol1aghan - with the wildlife of Sumatra generally. Working side by side with him were two other 173 A Brighter Future for the Polar Bear? Swiss zoologists; their project was to Colin Wyatt rehabilitate confiscated orang-utans. This makes a warm and fascinating story in itself, and we 176 The Latin Skin Trade are planning to publish a feature on it in a Fe/ipe Benavides future issue.
    [Show full text]
  • Science, Observation and Entertainment: Competing Visions of Postwar British Natural History Television, 1946-1967
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by UCL Discovery Science, Observation and Entertainment: Competing Visions of Post-war British Natural History Television 1946 – 1967 Dr. Gail Davies G. Davies (2000) 'Science, observation and entertainment: competing visions of post- war British natural history television, 1946-1967' Ecumene, 7 (4): 432-459 1 Abstract Popular culture is not the endpoint for the communication of fully developed scientific discourses; rather it constitutes a set of narratives, values and practices with which scientists have to engage in the heterogeneous processes of scientific work. In this paper I explore how one group of actors, involved in the development of both post-war natural history television and the professionalisation of animal behaviour studies, manage this process. I draw inspiration from sociologists and historians of science, examining the boundary work involved in the definition and legitimation of scientific fields. Specifically, I chart the institution of animal ethology and natural history filmmaking in Britain through developing a relational account of the co-construction of this new science and its public form within the media. Substantively, the paper discusses the relationship between three genres of early natural history television, tracing their different associations with forms of public science, the spaces of the scientific field and the role of the camera as a tool of scientific observation. Through this analysis I account for the patterns of co-operation and divergence in the broadcasting and scientific visions of nature embedded in the first formations of the Natural History Unit of the British Broadcasting Corporation.
    [Show full text]
  • Palgrave Studies in Environmental Policy and Regulation
    Palgrave Studies in Environmental Policy and Regulation Series Editor Justin Taberham London, UK The global environment sector is growing rapidly, as is the scale of the issues that face the environment itself. The global population is estimated to exceed 9 billion by 2050. New patterns of consumption threaten natu- ral resources, food and energy security and cause pollution and climate change. Policy makers and investors are responding to this in terms of support- ing green technology as well as developing diverse regulatory and policy measures which move society in a more ‘sustainable’ direction. More recently, there have been moves to integrate environmental policy into general policy areas rather than having separate environmental policy. This approach is called Environmental Policy Integration (EPI). The series will focus primarily on summarising present and emerging policy and regulation in an integrated way with a focus on interdisciplinary approaches, where it will fill a current gap in the literature. More information about this series at http://www.palgrave.com/gp/series/15053 Brian Joseph McFarland Conservation of Tropical Rainforests A Review of Financial and Strategic Solutions Brian Joseph McFarland Windham, NH, USA Palgrave Studies in Environmental Policy and Regulation ISBN 978-3-319-63235-3 ISBN 978-3-319-63236-0 (eBook) https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-63236-0 Library of Congress Control Number: 2017955811 © The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2018 This work is subject to copyright. All rights are solely and exclusively licensed by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and trans- mission or information storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology now known or hereafter developed.
    [Show full text]
  • Conservacionismos Y Relaciones Internacionales
    ARBOR Ciencia, Pensamiento y Cultura Vol. 192-781, septiembre-octubre 2016, a344 | ISSN-L: 0210-1963 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/arbor.2016.781n5002 LA INVENCIÓN DEL PATRIMONIO NATURAL EN ESPAÑA. POLÍTICA, ACADEMIA, ACTIVISMO Y COMUNICACIÓN / THE INVENTION OF NATURAL HERITAGE IN SPAIN. POLITICS, ACADEMY, ACTIVISM AND COMMUNICATION LA NATURALEZA NO EXISTE: NATURE DOES NOT EXIST: conSERVacIONISMOS Y CONSERVATIONISMS AND RElacIONES INTErnacIONALES INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS EN DOÑANA IN DOÑANA Lino Camprubí Max Planck Institute for the History of Science [email protected] Cómo citar este artículo/Citation: Camprubí, L. (2016). Copyright: © 2016 CSIC. Este es un artículo de acceso abierto La Naturaleza no existe: conservacionismos y relaciones distribuido bajo los términos de la licencia Creative Commons internacionales en Doñana. Arbor, 192 (781): a344. doi: http:// Attribution (CC BY) España 3.0. dx.doi.org/10.3989/arbor.2016.781n5002 Recibido: 25 febrero 2015. Aceptado: 09 octubre 2015. RESUMEN: Tras descartar el acercamiento metodológico a la ABSTRACT: The paper starts by discarding the methodological historia de Doñana como un paso hacia la “conservación de la approach to the history of Natural Parks that sees them as steps Naturaleza” con mayúscula, este artículo sitúa la historia del towards the “conservation of Nature” - with a capital N. Rather, Parque en los contextos políticos, personales y científicos que it situates the history of Doñana within its political, personal and lo hicieron posible. Estos contextos nos colocan en la escala in- scientific contexts. These contexts bring us to an international ternacional del desmantelamiento del imperio británico y de la scale marked by the decolonization of the British Empire and transformación de la ornitología y la ecología como disciplinas.
    [Show full text]
  • The Green Web a Union for World Conservation
    The Green Web A Union for World Conservation Martin Holdgate First published in the UK by Earthscan Publications Ltd in 1999 This edition published 2013 by Earthscan For a full list of publications please contact: Earthscan 2 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon 0X14 4RN Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Earthscan 711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 Earthscan is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business Copyright © 1999 International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN: 978-1-85383-595-7(pbk) Typesetting by PCS Mapping & DTP, Newcastle upon Tyne Cover design by Andrew Corbett Contents Figures and Plates iv Preface: The Conservation Worlds Best-kept Secret ν Acknowledgments χ 1 The Springs of Conservation 1 2 The Path to Union 17 3 The Union Established 39 4 A Time for Science 61 5 The New Ark Puts to Sea 79 6 The Environmental Explosion 101 7 A Strategy for World Conservation 130 8 After the Strategy 156 9 Conservation for Development 174 10 The Web Extends 196 11 Power to the Members 225 12 The Balance Sheet 242 Appendix 1 Presidents, Secretary-Generals and Director-Generals oflUPNandlUCN
    [Show full text]
  • Publisher Keywords Keywords Catalog Number the Encyclopedia of Monsters 1991 Cohen, Daniel A
    Year of Title Publication Author(s) Publisher Keywords Keywords Catalog Number unexplained The Encyclopedia of Monsters 1991 Cohen, Daniel Avon Books, New York, NY mythical creatures phenomena 1.9 Beachcomber Books, Courteney, North America's Great Ape: The Sasquatch 1998 Bindernagel, John A. BC Bigfoot 1.944 The Loch Ness Monster: The Evidence 1997 Campbell, Steuart Prometheus Books, Amherst, NY Loch Ness Monster 1.944 Tracking the Chupacabra : the vampire beast in fact, fiction, Albuquerque : University of New and folklore 2011 Radford, Benjamin Mexico Press Chupacabras. Monsters. 1.944 Energy: Bibliography of GAO Documents January 1986- U. S. General Accounting Office, December 1989 1990 Anonymous Washington, D. C. Bibliography Energy 16 Environmental Protection/Bibliography of GAO Documents, U. S. General Accounting Office, Environmental Aguust 1988-April 1990 1990 Anonymous Washington, D. C. Bibliography Protection 16 Annotated Bibliography of Pennsylvania Geology -- Pennsylvania Geological Survey, Bibliography Supplement to 1979 1986 Blust, Sandra Harrisburg, Pa. Geology (Pa.) 16 Annotated Bibliography of Pennsylvania Geology -- Pennsylvania Geological Survey, Bibliography Supplement to 1959 1965 Cramer, Howard Ross Harrisburg, Pa. Geology (Pa.) 16 Annotated Bibliography of Pennsylvania Geology -- Pennsylvania Geological Survey, Bibliography Supplement to 1969 1972 Cramer, Howard Ross Harrisburg, Pa. Geology (Pa.) 16 Pennsylvania Geological Survey, Bibliography Annotated Bibliography of Pennsylvania Geology to 1949 1961 Cramer, Howard Ross Harrisburg, Pa. Geology (Pa.) 16 Environmental Protection: Bibliography of GAO Documents, United States General Accounting Environmental August 1988 - April 1990. GAO/RCED-90-228. 1990 Hembra, Richard L. office, Washington, D. C. Bibliography Protection 16 Contaminated Sediment (on Effects of Contaminated Sediment on Fish and Wildlife: Review U.
    [Show full text]
  • Stories of Natural History Film-Making from the BBC
    Networks of Nature: Stories of Natural History Film-Making from the BBC Gail Davies Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Submitted 1997 Awarded 1998 University College London Gail Davies Phd: Networks of nature Abstract In May 1953 the first natural history television programme was broadcast from Bristol by naturalist Peter Scott and radio producer Desmond Hawkins. By 1997 the BBC's Natural History Unit has established a global reputation for wildlife films, providing a keystone of the BBC's public service broadcasting charter, playing an important strategic role in television scheduling and occupying a prominent position in a competitive world film market. The BBC's blue-chip natural history programmes regularly bring images of wildlife from all over the globe to British audiences of over 10 million. This thesis traces the changing aesthetics, ethics and economics of natural history film-making at the BBC over this period. It uses archive material, interviews and participant observation to look at how shifting relationships between broadcasting values, scientific and film-making practices are negotiated by individuals within the Unit. Engaging with vocabularies from geography, media studies and science studies, the research contextualises these popular representations of nature within a history of post-war British attitudes to nature and explores the importance of technology, animals and conceptions of the public sphere as additional actors influencing the relationships between nature and culture. This history charts the construction of the actor networks of the Natural History Unit by film- makers and broadcasters as they seek to incorporate and exclude certain practices, technologies and discourses of nature.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Titles
    Petersen Ornithological Collection Holdings Western Illinois University Libraries Call Number Author Title Item Enum Copy # Publisher Date of Publication HE6183.B53 N564 1982 fifty state birds and flowers mint set / 1 U.S. Postal Service, c1982. 1982 United States Postal Service. QL681 .A53 1986 A.B.A. checklist : birds of continental United 1 The Association, 1986. States and Canada / prepared by the Checklist Committee of the American Birding Association ; Frank B. Gill, chairman ; Laurence C. Binford ... [et al.]. QL681 .A53 1996 ABA checklist : birds of the continental United 1 The Association, 1996. States and Canada / prepared by the Checklist Committee of the American Birding Association ; Paul A. DeBenedictis, chairman ; Jon L. Dunn ... [et al.]. QL681 .A53 1990 ABA checklist : birds of the continental United 1 The Association, 1990. States and Canada / prepared by the Checklist Committee of the American Birding Association. QL696.G285 A33 Adaptive strategies and population ecology of 1 University of c1988. 1988 northern grouse / Arthur T. Bergerud and Minnesota Press, Michael W. Gratson, editors. F3425 .A45 1988 Amazon "jungles of Peru" / prepared by the 1 International 1988. staff of International Expeditions, Inc. Expeditions ; QL88 .A55 1985 Animal extinctions : what everyone should 1 Smithsonian 1985. know / edited by R.J. Hoage. Institution Press, QL698.9 .A88 1995 Atlas of bird migration : tracing the great 1 Random House, c1995. journeys of the world's birds / general editor Jonathan Elphick. QL684.P4 A85 1992 Atlas of breeding birds in Pennsylvania / 1 University of c1992. Daniel W. Brauning, editor. Pittsburgh Press, Friday, February 03, 2012 Page 1 of 180 Call Number Author Title Item Enum Copy # Publisher Date of Publication QL690.G7 A83 1977 Atlas of breeding birds of the London area / 1 Batsford, 1977.
    [Show full text]
  • WWF's Global Conservation Programme
    WWF’s Global Conservation Programme 2001/2002 WWF’s Global Conservation Programme 2001/2002 Compiled, edited and designed by: Tim Davis DJEnvironmental Berrynarbor Devon EX34 9TB UK Picture research: Tim Davis and the WWF-Canon Photolibrary Printed by: Toptown Printers Ltd, Barnstaple, Devon, UK Cover photos: Main photo: Wing feathers of a Cuban parrot, Los Indios Ecological Reserve, Cuba (WWF-Canon/Michel Roggo) Top: Atlantic rainforest in Itatiaia National Park, Brazil (WWF-Canon/Michel Gunther) Bottom: Coral reef (WWF/UNEP/TOPHAM/Ezequiel Bece) Back: A freshwater pool at the heart of the Chihuahua Desert, Mexico (WWF-Canon/Edward Parker) Inset: Bayel tribes-people pole mokoros along the channels in the Okavango Delta, Botswana (WWF-Canon/Martin Harvey) Published in October 2001 by WWF–World Wide Fund For Nature (formerly World Wildlife Fund), Gland, Switzerland. Any reproduction in full or in part of this publication must mention the title and credit the above-mentioned publisher as the copyright holder. No photographs from this publication may be reproduced on the World Wide Web without prior authorization from WWF. The material and the geographical designations in this report do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of WWF concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. © text 2001 WWF contents Introduction . ii WWF’s Global Conservation Priorities . 1 Forests . 7 Freshwater . 19 The view from here — birdwatchers atop a dune in the Chihuahua Desert, Mexico, a Oceans and Coasts. 29 WWF Global 200 Ecoregion. WWF-Canon/Edward Parker Species.
    [Show full text]
  • Obituary James Maxwell Mcconnell Fisher, MA (1912-1970) James Fisher Lost His Life in a Motor Accident at Hendon on 25 Th September 1970
    Obituary James Maxwell McConnell Fisher, MA (1912-1970) James Fisher lost his life in a motor accident at Hendon on 25 th September 1970. Born on 3rd September 1912, he had just passed his 5 8th birthday and, if a man can reasonably look forward to the traditional three score and ten, he was denied at least a do2en active years and the world at least a dozen good books. Only a year earlier, as if in premonition, he had confided that his one fear of dying was that certain books would not be written, books that he felt he was better qualified to write than anyone else. This was not egotism, but accurate assessment. The news of James's death had an extraordinary impact on both sides of the Atlantic. He had been a driving force not only in bis own country, but also in North America where many people wrote or tele­ phoned me to express their sympathy, as though I had lost a brother. As recently as 1968 he was only the second recipient of the Arthur A. Allen Medal of the Laboratory of Ornithology at Cornell University for his outstanding contributions to the popularisation of ornithology. James took the view that scholarship is barren unless the fruits of its labours are communicated to the public. This he accomplished through many books with a total distribution of more than two million. In addition, over a period of 25 years, he made over 1,000 broadcasts (800 radio and 200 television). In Britain his influence in bringing authorita­ tive natural history to the millions over the air was second only to that of Peter Scott.
    [Show full text]
  • 66 WERELD NATUUR FONDS Wanneer We Ons Realiseren Dat Er
    66 WERELD NATUUR FONDS het World Wildlife Fund zich ten doel stelt. Hoewel het WWF veel van zich laat horen, is er nog vaak Wanneer we ons realiseren dat er rond de eeuw- de vraag: Wat doet het en hoe functioneert het? wisseling, dus nagenoeg 75 jaren geleden, nog - bij schatting - 100.000 tijgers ronddoolden in de jungle, Toen in december 1960 de Engelse bioloog en wijs- steppe of taiga van Zuid-Oost en Oost-Azië en dit geer, Sir Julian Huxley, zich afvroeg of het niet de aantal momenteel nog nauwelijks 5.000 stuks be- hoogste tijd was om op internationaal niveau fond- draagt, tengevolge van het opdringen van de men- sen voor natuurbehoud bijeen te gaan brengen, vorm- sen en de bandeloze jacht die op dit dier is gemaakt, de zich in Engeland een werkgroep, waarvan o.m. dan huiveren we en voelen de bedreiging. Sir Julian Huxley, Guy Mountfort en Peter Scott deel uitmaakten. Dit was de directe aanleiding tot De bescherming van de natuur in het algemeen en het stichten van het •World Wildlife Fund" met de van onderdelen van die natuur in het bijzonder is doelstelling gelden bij elkaar te brengen die mon- niet alleen een zaak van goede wil en inzet, maar diaal nodig zijn om bescherming van bedreigde flora het is duidelijk dat er voor het realiseren van die en fauna te realiseren. Z.K.H. Prins Bernhard werd bescherming geld nodig is. Beperken we dit tot de bereid gevonden het Presidentschap van de inter- tijger dan mag het niet verbazen dat meer dan een nationale organisatie op zich te nemen, en van dat een miljoen dollar dringend nodig is om natuurreser- moment af werd snel voortgang gemaakt.
    [Show full text]
  • Bird Illustration in the Twentieth Century, with Particular Reference to Publications on the British Scene Alan Harris
    Bird illustration in the twentieth century, with particular reference to publications on the British scene Alan Harris An angled telescope allows the artist to see the subject and the sketchbook simultaneously when sketching in the field. Note that the telescope is reversed on the tripod head, to prevent the pan handle from interfering with comfortable drawing. Alan Harris ABSTRACT This article traces the enormous developments in bird art for illustration during the past 100 years, with particular reference to books, magazines and other publications available to British birdwatchers. Emphasis is placed on those individuals who have broken new ground in the field of illustration.The search for the ‘perfect’ field guide is one of the key themes during the latter half of the century under review. This article is supported by The BIRDscapes Gallery Glandford, Cley-next-the-Sea, Norfolk NR25 7JP; tel. 01263 741742 266 © British Birds 100 • May 2007 • 266–279 Bird illustration in the twentieth century hen British Birds first appeared, in Keulemans finishing Lilford’s commission and 1907, it helped to meet the needs of a Archibald Thorburn (1860–1935), then Wgrowing body of people interested in working independently of patronage, was con- Britain’s birdlife. Although there were full-time tracted to complete the work. He produced 268 bird illustrators at work at the end of the nine- of the 421 plates, mostly the non-passerines. teenth century, they were few in number as These illustrations reappeared in several books there was only a limited and specialised market on British birds, for example as a single volume for their talents.
    [Show full text]