Author Archive

Bringing Back the Big Fish to Jurassic Park

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

Pride Campaign Manager Adam Murray recently visited Jason Jack who is leading a Pride campaign in the Pacific on the island of Kosrae. Jason is focusing on fish and trying to get other islanders to do so too.

I have just returned from an interesting trip in the Pacific where I spent a week on the beautiful island of Kosrae. Kosrae is one of the states in The Federated States of Micronesia. It’s seemingly a magical place – when you take a step into the surrounding mangroves or coral flats you really feel like you are talking a step into Jurassic Park.

Jason Jack from the Kosrae Conservation and Safety Organisation (KCSO) took us on a tour of some of the achievements of the Pride campaign in Kosrae. 

On the first day we went to the Tafunsak harbour. This is one of the sites where the commercial fish stocks are recorded and monitored by KCSO staff and the government. This is important for KCSO’s work and specifcally to Jason’s campaign. Many people in Kosrae have talked about how there used to be more big fish in the area and now it is rare to see big fish like the bump-head parrotfish — the campaign’s mascot. With good monitoring it will be easy to see increases in fish stocks as a result of the conservation work carried out in Kosrae.


Examples of caught bump-head parrotfish.

Luckily Jason has a lot of support on the island. He is working closely with the other NGO called YELA Organization and also government departments like KIRMA. There are a lot of untapped skills on the island that Jason is beginning to use. For example we met with a very proud local artist who won an art competion that Jason held. This competition was held to build support and get some artwork for the campaign logo. Using “Kosrae Pride” Jason will be able to get even more people engaged.


Jason (right) with a very proud local artist who won the campaign logo design competition 

Even though life in the Pacific Isles are notoriously laid back, I was really encouraged to see what Jason had already achieved – building partnerships and establishing monitoring techniques. Kosrae is the perfect environment for a Pride Campaign and every good news story spreads fast across the island. One such good news story is that within a few weeks after our trip to Kosrae, Jason’s boss contacted me to say that “We saw four bump-head parrotfish, the first time in my life to physically see this kind of fish in Kosrae’s coral reef ecosystem.”  This can only be a good sign — showing that hopefully the conservation efforts on Kosrae are making a difference.
 

Clam Jam

Friday, September 26th, 2008

What’s to be done about a protected area that the community has forgotten about? Rare Pride Program Manager Adam Murray blogs about how Campaign Manager Tublai Ililau in Palau is answering that very question.

There are nine speices of clams in the world and seven of them are found in the waters of Palau, an island in Micronesia that dots the Pacific Ocean. Knowing this, it makes sense that Tublai Ililau (our Pride Campaign Manager from Palau) chose the Giant clam to be the face of her conservation campaign.

Over the last few months Tublai has gathered the community together, promoting the clam and giving presentations on this species and the dangers of over-harvesting. As she visited more and more community members in the State of Melekeok, she found them remembering an area that they had nearly forgotten.

Almost a decade ago the community in Melekeok set aside some land to form a protected area — an area that encompassed an entire reef flat. Organizers hoped to re-establish the clam populations in the area, but since its formation the protected area has been completely neglected.


Tublai (center, bottom row) and members of the community with clams for planting

Since the start of Tublai’s campaign the protected area has aroused the community’s interest. Tublai and her organization, The Palau Conservation Society, organized a clam seedlings planting event with the Melekeok community, planting 700 clam seedlings. Over 40 members of the community attended the event, all becoming more familiar with the protected area and ways they can conserve the area as well as better protect this species.

“Our message is very simple,” Tublai told a local newspaper at the event  “…protect conservation areas, practice wise land use and planning, respect conservation laws, reduce unsustainable harvesting/fishing/hunting and reduce the buying and selling of Palau’s protected species.”

As this campaign continues we expect the people of Palau to be shouting in their native Palauan “Kim Er Palau: De Keremeli,” or “The clam of Palau, Let’s Protect it”.

Spreading Rare Pride in Africa

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Adam Murray, assistant course manager for the Rare Pride training program at the University of Kent, shares several  insights from a recent visit to two Pride campaigns gearing up in Cameroon and Gabon.

Recently I returned from project support visits in Cameroon and Gabon. There are many similarities between the two Pride campaigns. Both are run through WCS, both are looking at the main threat of illegal bush meat hunting and both will probably use a soccer tournament as one of the many social marketing tools. Both Bosco and Martin, the campaign managers who were trained here in Kent, found that their countries are fanatical about soccer.

 
Adam Murray in Gabon with the Nature Club of Medenou. (Rare)

During my visits we looked at some possible activities that they could use that could be linked into their key messages, goals and SMART objectives. We could be seeing two campaign mascots (a giant pangolin and a black and white colobus monkey) at respective soccer tournaments between the different villages in each campaign target population. This is a real example of the imagination and transferable nature of the Rare Pride methodology.
 

Big Turtle, Little Turtle

Monday, March 26th, 2007

Adam Murray, Rare’s assistant course manager in Kent, England, reports on a trip to a Pride campaign in St. Croix.

Before I get on to the reasoning behind the title of this tale of adventure, let me tell you a little of the background for the trip. I have recently returned from one of my first project support visits. These visits are for course managers, like me, to visit Pride campaign managers. It is an opportunity to learn more about the campaign site, help the campaign managers, and monitor the progress of the campaign on site.

This visit involved my going to the U.S. Virgin Islands, commonly known as “America’s Paradise.” These are a small group of islands in the beautiful Caribbean. A campaign is currently being run on St. Croix, the largest of the U.S. Virgin Islands, in partnership with The Nature Conservancy. The local partner agency is the St. Croix Environmental Association, and one of their staff members, Karisma Elien, is running the Pride campaign here. I had come along with Rosemary Godfrey, senior course manager from Kent, for nine days in St Croix. I was really looking forward to the Saturday before we left – it was to be the grand finale of our visit.

Karisma distributes reusable grocery bags at the AgFair. 

Each year, St. Croix hosts an agricultural fair known as the AgriFest or AgFair. The fair runs over three days and has visitors from all over the island and neighboring islands as well. It is a very popular event for all ages. Karisma’s Pride campaign was going to make a spectacular entrance to AgriFest 2007.

One of the problems around St. Croix is the issue of litter. It is known that plastic grocery bags find their way into the sea after people have discarded them. Unfortunately for turtles, they mistake these plastic bags for tasty (well for the turtles anyway) jellyfish. A diet of plastic grocery bags is obviously not conducive to a healthy way of living. It has been reported that “a total of 177 marine species have been reported to ingest litter items. Ingestion of litter such as plastic bags can cause physical damage to oesophagus, mechanical blockage of the digestive system, and a false sensation of feeling full. This can lead to infections, starvation and death.”

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