On a recent visit to Paraguay I was horrified to find out the Florida-based New Tribes Mission -- an extreme evangelist group -- were still active in Paraguay. They have been accused of collusion with the former Dictator Stroessner and there are many reports available on the internet detailing their extreme measures to obtain converts. Paraguay is home to some of the world's last remaining uncontacted tribes, and it is clear from their behaviors that they do not want contact with so-called civilization. Unfortunately evangelists such as the NTM are determined to contact them. Having seen some of the Indians that have been rounded up by the Missionaries and herded into villages all I can say is that it is very depressing to see these people, most of whom seem extremely depressed, with huge numbers of children and lots of health problems. Fortunately there are people trying to help the indigenous peoples of Paraguay, and also help those who want to escape from the Missionaries.
Venezuela is apparently expelling the Missionaries, a move that has been welcomed by the local Roman Catholic church. "Even Cardinal [Rosalio] Castillo Lara supported President Chavez's measure to remove New Tribes".
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/octoberweb-only/53.0a.html
And for more info check out the following
http://www.eco-action.org/mission/ntm.html
http://www.eco-action.org/mission/index.html
http://www.globalconnections.co.uk/joinus/listofmembers/members/NewTribesMissionBibleCollege.htm
Wednesday, 26 March 2008
People in third world countries have too many babies
People in third world countries have too many babies
I was surprised to find this response put on the Oxfam website as a common myth.
And the paragraph below given as their response:
Rubbish! It really is time to get shot of this. First of all, in lots of poor countries, families are getting smaller, not bigger. This is because people have fewer children when they begin to prosper – which is good news, all round. And the bad news? Millions of kids are still born into poverty, and don't even make it past their fifth birthday
The problem with this claim is that it cannot be substantiated, and is actually contradicted by virtually all the published statistics. And not only do people in third world countries definitely have too many babies, so do many people in the developed world. The world population is growing at an alarming rate, and to deny it is on a par with denying climate change. And there is a strong linkage between the two. The fact that families are getting smaller, hides the more significant fact that the birth rate is still outstripping the death rate, and that the human populations of most parts of the world (including Britain) are not sustainable.
Making poverty history in these circumstances may be an admirable objective, but it is fundamentally completely unachievable -- which is probably why no one has ever shown a plan as to how it will be achieved. Apply crude animal population dynamic theories to any human populations and it is immediately obvious that the present rate of increase cannot be sustained. It therefore follows that there will be catastrophic declines from time to time, either from disease, natural disaster or warfare, or all three. I have yet to see any models that can demonstrate an alternative. And certainly none of the Aid agencies have any on their websites; it's an issue they conveniently ignore -- or as shown above are misleading. Interestingly the Charity Commission in the UK has recently revised definitions of poverty. In the developing countries it can mean "lacking basic essentials such as clean water, food and shelter", but in the UK "it could refer to those living on less than 60% of the average income". Now to me this certainly seems like one rule for the rich and another for the poor, helping the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Which definition do aid agencies use?
I was surprised to find this response put on the Oxfam website as a common myth.
And the paragraph below given as their response:
Rubbish! It really is time to get shot of this. First of all, in lots of poor countries, families are getting smaller, not bigger. This is because people have fewer children when they begin to prosper – which is good news, all round. And the bad news? Millions of kids are still born into poverty, and don't even make it past their fifth birthday
The problem with this claim is that it cannot be substantiated, and is actually contradicted by virtually all the published statistics. And not only do people in third world countries definitely have too many babies, so do many people in the developed world. The world population is growing at an alarming rate, and to deny it is on a par with denying climate change. And there is a strong linkage between the two. The fact that families are getting smaller, hides the more significant fact that the birth rate is still outstripping the death rate, and that the human populations of most parts of the world (including Britain) are not sustainable.
Making poverty history in these circumstances may be an admirable objective, but it is fundamentally completely unachievable -- which is probably why no one has ever shown a plan as to how it will be achieved. Apply crude animal population dynamic theories to any human populations and it is immediately obvious that the present rate of increase cannot be sustained. It therefore follows that there will be catastrophic declines from time to time, either from disease, natural disaster or warfare, or all three. I have yet to see any models that can demonstrate an alternative. And certainly none of the Aid agencies have any on their websites; it's an issue they conveniently ignore -- or as shown above are misleading. Interestingly the Charity Commission in the UK has recently revised definitions of poverty. In the developing countries it can mean "lacking basic essentials such as clean water, food and shelter", but in the UK "it could refer to those living on less than 60% of the average income". Now to me this certainly seems like one rule for the rich and another for the poor, helping the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Which definition do aid agencies use?
Friday, 14 March 2008
Community involvement and tourism as conservation aids in Paraguay (and a long list of birds!)
Guest blog by WLT's web manager, Helena Akerlund, who spent some time in Paraguay last year volunteering with Guyra Paraguay.
John will shortly return from a World Land Trust staff and supporter trip to Paraguay and will no doubt report on the journey here in Green Issues, perhaps including an account of having finally seen in the wild that most elusive of animals: The jaguar. I hope so, but if he still hasn't been lucky enough to spot one, let's hope none of the first-time visitors in the group did when John was looking the other way, or there will be no end to his grumbles!
In the meantime I thought I'd squeeze in the last and long overdue account of my visit to Paraguay - now a distant six months ago.
The Eco Club members are children and teenagers from the nearby community Bahía Negra, who, thanks to Guyra's involvement, are learning about reserve management and species identification. The idea is that responsibility for the management of the Chaco-Pantanal Reserve will soon lie completely with the local community, without the need for Guyra staff to travel quite so often between the capital and the reserve. For this to be achieved long-term it's essential to involve the younger generation. (Find out how you can support Guyra's community work in Bahía Negra here.)
Generally speaking not many local children stay in Bahía Negra when they grow up - there's simply not much there for them to do, and being located in a really isolated part of the country, the temptation to move south to the cities is great. The Eco Club provides some of the training needed to equip future reserve staff with key skills for managing the reserve and visitor facilities.
Most of my time in Paraguay was spent in the company of only a few people, so it was great to be able to meet with all the children of the Eco Club (who were very keen to practice their English) and witness their apparently endless enthusiasm for the club and the reserve.
The Pantanal is quite simply a fantastic place to go for a complete wilderness experience. The relatively high chance of seeing jaguars is a clear bonus! It's a heaven for birdwatchers too - as is the rest of the country. As John pointed out in an earlier blog post about visiting Paraguay: "Paraguay is at the cross-roads of several very important biogeographical regions. This makes it a very good place to go and see a huge range of species."
San Rafael, with its combination of forest and grassland, makes a perfect location for watching butterflies and birds - with the added bonus that it's relatively close to cities and airports. With a track running through the reserve it also makes it a tad more accessible to visitors who may not want to walk for miles along narrow forest trails.
Going to Paraguay also makes for a great conversation starter! If I had a penny for every person who asked me "Why Paraguay?"... Well, why not? The wildlife, the people, the cheap cost of getting around - and the fact that there weren't thousands of other tourists, made my trip thoroughly enjoyable.
For conservation projects to be successful in the long run, reducing the need for continuous donations and grants is an important factor. Tourism plays one part in the vision for making the Guyra reserves sustainable. This is a project still in its infancy, but I have no doubt that better facilities and services will be developed in the future, to make the reserves more attractive to the high-end of the market. (People like me, used to camping and bringing my own food to cut costs, just don't bring in that much money!)
In the meantime, adventurous travellers can get the best of two worlds: Intimate contact with nature, whilst sleeping in a comfortable bed!
WLT supporter Bill Markham kindly informed us of a project he has been working on, recording a series about the Pantanal (in Brazil) for Channel Five. Entitled Jaguar Adventure, the series starts 8th April at 7.30pm and from the synopsis it looks like it could be very interesting:
"The Pantanal - the world's biggest wetland, the size of Britain... and home to the planet's largest population of Jaguars. These big cats are notoriously hard to find, let alone film. But when Tigress Productions heard of a location where they were being sighted regularly, Nigel Marven couldn't wait to get there."
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This list is in no way complete. Although my knowledge improved exponentially, thanks to the help from Guyra staff and knowledgeable rangers, I have a notebook full of scribbles and questionmarks that I have am unable to add. Still, I hope it will give some sort of idea of the birds that can be seen in the Pantanal, Chaco and Atlantic Forest. (I will gradually edit the list to include links to the photos I took of some of these birds, so if you are interested in seeing these, check back in a couple of weeks.)
(Many thanks to Pepe, Roberto, Rionaldo, Juan, Arne and Silvia for help with identification. Any errors in this list are entirely my own and most likely due to difficult to interpret handwriting and clumsy typing. Please do let me know if you spot any!)
Finally, a massive thank you to everybody at Guyra for having me, showing me around and making me speak Spanish (mostly), despite not being very good at it!
John will shortly return from a World Land Trust staff and supporter trip to Paraguay and will no doubt report on the journey here in Green Issues, perhaps including an account of having finally seen in the wild that most elusive of animals: The jaguar. I hope so, but if he still hasn't been lucky enough to spot one, let's hope none of the first-time visitors in the group did when John was looking the other way, or there will be no end to his grumbles!
In the meantime I thought I'd squeeze in the last and long overdue account of my visit to Paraguay - now a distant six months ago.
The Eco Club: Ensuring the future of the Pantanal is in safe hands
The Three Giants Lodge, the visitor facility at the Chaco-Pantanal Reserve in the north of Paraguay, was brand new when I was there, so our visit coincided with a dinner celebrating its opening. The local Eco Club and rangers attended and Guyra staff gave thanks to all who had helped realise the vision. (The work on the lodge is now completed and John and the others took part in its official grand opening last week.)The Eco Club members are children and teenagers from the nearby community Bahía Negra, who, thanks to Guyra's involvement, are learning about reserve management and species identification. The idea is that responsibility for the management of the Chaco-Pantanal Reserve will soon lie completely with the local community, without the need for Guyra staff to travel quite so often between the capital and the reserve. For this to be achieved long-term it's essential to involve the younger generation. (Find out how you can support Guyra's community work in Bahía Negra here.)
Generally speaking not many local children stay in Bahía Negra when they grow up - there's simply not much there for them to do, and being located in a really isolated part of the country, the temptation to move south to the cities is great. The Eco Club provides some of the training needed to equip future reserve staff with key skills for managing the reserve and visitor facilities.
Most of my time in Paraguay was spent in the company of only a few people, so it was great to be able to meet with all the children of the Eco Club (who were very keen to practice their English) and witness their apparently endless enthusiasm for the club and the reserve.
Why visit Paraguay?
A few weeks ago I watched a TV programme about the (Brazilian) Pantanal and the giant otters living there. Seeing the floating lily leaves, the otters' heads bobbing up and down in the water and hearing the call of a Great Kiskadee and grunting of herons and jabirus, I was transported right back to the Chaco-Pantanal Reserve. If it wasn't for the distance and cost involved, I would not hesitate to make it my annual holiday destination!The Pantanal is quite simply a fantastic place to go for a complete wilderness experience. The relatively high chance of seeing jaguars is a clear bonus! It's a heaven for birdwatchers too - as is the rest of the country. As John pointed out in an earlier blog post about visiting Paraguay: "Paraguay is at the cross-roads of several very important biogeographical regions. This makes it a very good place to go and see a huge range of species."
San Rafael, with its combination of forest and grassland, makes a perfect location for watching butterflies and birds - with the added bonus that it's relatively close to cities and airports. With a track running through the reserve it also makes it a tad more accessible to visitors who may not want to walk for miles along narrow forest trails.
Going to Paraguay also makes for a great conversation starter! If I had a penny for every person who asked me "Why Paraguay?"... Well, why not? The wildlife, the people, the cheap cost of getting around - and the fact that there weren't thousands of other tourists, made my trip thoroughly enjoyable.
For conservation projects to be successful in the long run, reducing the need for continuous donations and grants is an important factor. Tourism plays one part in the vision for making the Guyra reserves sustainable. This is a project still in its infancy, but I have no doubt that better facilities and services will be developed in the future, to make the reserves more attractive to the high-end of the market. (People like me, used to camping and bringing my own food to cut costs, just don't bring in that much money!)
In the meantime, adventurous travellers can get the best of two worlds: Intimate contact with nature, whilst sleeping in a comfortable bed!
More information about Paraguay and WLT's work there
- Conservation projects updates from Paraguay
- Project information and background
- See the Chaco-Pantanal Reserve on Google Earth (Click on the blue dots to see images from the reserve)
Jaguars in the Pantanl on TV
"The Pantanal - the world's biggest wetland, the size of Britain... and home to the planet's largest population of Jaguars. These big cats are notoriously hard to find, let alone film. But when Tigress Productions heard of a location where they were being sighted regularly, Nigel Marven couldn't wait to get there."
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Becoming a birder... (Birds in Paraguay)
I knew very little about birds before going to Paraguay - not because I wasn't interested, but because I never had anyone to teach me, and always had a slight fear of binoculars (don't ask). Now, on the other hand, I feel as if I know more about birds in South America than I do about European birds, and have also managed to identify some species here in the UK that were previously unknown to me, based on their similarities to their South American cousins.This list is in no way complete. Although my knowledge improved exponentially, thanks to the help from Guyra staff and knowledgeable rangers, I have a notebook full of scribbles and questionmarks that I have am unable to add. Still, I hope it will give some sort of idea of the birds that can be seen in the Pantanal, Chaco and Atlantic Forest. (I will gradually edit the list to include links to the photos I took of some of these birds, so if you are interested in seeing these, check back in a couple of weeks.)
Latin name | English name | |
Tapera naevia | Striped Cuckoo | |
Mita jaryi | Great Kiskadee | |
Colaptes campestris | Field Flicker | |
Milvago chimachima | Yellow-headed Caracara | |
Pseudoleistes guirahuro | Yellow-rumped Marshbird | |
Vanellus chilensis | Southern Lapwing | |
Tyrannus savana | Fork-tailed Flycatcher | |
Coragyps atratus | Black Vulture | |
Progne chalybea | Gray-breasted Martin | |
Falco sparvenius | American kestrel | |
Pardirallus nigricanus | Blackish Rail | |
Buteogallus meridionalis | Savannah Hawk | |
Barypthengus ruficapillus | Roufus-capped Motmot | |
Synallaxis ruficapilla | Roufus-capped Spinetail | |
Chlorostilbon aureoventris | Glittering-bellied Emerald | |
Hylocharis sapphirina | Roufus-throated Sapphire | |
Pionopsitta pileata | Red-capped Parrot | |
Milvago chimango | Chimango Caracara | |
Ceryle torquata | Ringed Kingfisher | |
Trogon surrucura | Surucura Trogon | |
Rhea americana | Greater Rhea | |
Rhynchotus rufescens | Red-winged Tinamou | |
Nothura maculosa | Spotted Nothura | |
Sturnella superciliaris | White-browned Blackbird | |
Xanthopsar flavus | Saffron-cowled Blackbird | |
Buteo albicaudatus | White-tailed Hawk | |
Polystrictus pectoralis | Bearded tachuri | |
Ammodramus humeralis | Grassland Sparrow | |
Glaucidium brasilianum | Ferruginous Pygmy Owl | |
Donacospiza albifons | Long-tailed Reed-finch | |
Coryphaspiza melanolis | Black-masked Finch | |
Elothoeptus anomalus | Sickle-winged Nightjar | |
Athene cunicularia | Burrowing Owl | |
Circus buffoni | Long-winged Harrier | |
Pyrocephalus rubinus | Vermilion Flycatcher | |
Jacana jacana | Wattled jacana | |
Phalacrocorax brasilicus | Neotropical Cormorant | |
Anhinga anhinga | Anhinga | |
Arunolinicola leucocephala | White-headed marsh-tyrant | |
Amblyramphus holosericeus | Scarlet-headed Blackbird | |
Stelgidopteryx ruficollis | Southern Rough-winged Swallow | |
Platalea ajaja | Roseate Spoonbill | |
Himantopus melanurus | South American Stilt | |
Asio clamator | Striped Owl | |
Busarellus nigricollis | Black-collared Hawk | |
Sorophilia collaris | Rushy-collared Seedeater | |
Hydropsalis torquata | Scissor-tailed Nightjar | |
Nyctibius griseus | Common Potoo | |
Otus choliba | Tropical Screech-owl | |
Synalaxis albescens | Pale-breasted Spinetail | |
Gubernetes yetapa | Streamer-tailed Tyrant | |
Geothlypis aequinoctialis | Masked Yellow-throat | |
Agelaius cyanopus | Unicoloured Blackbird | |
Elaenia flavogaster | Yellow-bellied Elaenia | |
Coryphospingus cucullatus | Red-breasted Finch | |
Rynchops niger | Black Skimmer | |
Phaetusa simplex | Large-billed Tern | |
Sterna superciliaris | Yellow-billed Tern | |
Caracara plancus | Southern Crested-caracara | |
Cranioleuca obsoleta | Olive Spinetail | |
Sittasomus griseicapillus | Olivaceous Woodcreeper | |
Cacicus chrysopterus | Golden-winged cacique | |
Synallaxis albescens | Pale-breasted Spinetail | |
Cranioleuca obsoleta | Olive Spinetail | |
Syndactyla rufosuperciliata | Buff-browned Foliage-gleaner | |
Thamnophilus caerulescens | Variable Antshrike | |
Caicus solitaris | Solitary Black Cacique | |
Piaya cayana | Squirrel Cuckoo | |
Dromococcyx phasiarellus | Pheasant Cuckoo | |
Platyrinchus mystaceus | White-throated Spadebill | |
Cyanocompsa brissonii | Cyanocompsa brissonii | |
Tachycineta albiventer | White-winged Swallow | |
Guira guita | Guira Cuckoo | |
Ardea alba | Great Egret | |
Ergetta thula | Snowy Egret | |
Botaurus pinnatus | Pinnated Bittern | |
Ardea cocoi | White-necked Heron | |
Tigresoma lineatum | Rufescent Tiger-heron | |
Nycticorax nycticorax | Black-crowned Night-heron | |
Mycteria americana | American Woodstork | |
Ciconia maguari | Maguari Stork | |
Jabiru mycteria | Jabiru | |
Theristicus caerulescens | Plumbeous Ibis | |
Phimosus infuscatus | Bare-faced Ibis | |
Dendrocygna autumnalis | Black-bellied Whistling-duck | |
Butorides striatus | Striated heron | |
Calindris melanotos | Pectorial Sandpiper | |
Aramus juarauna | Limkin | |
Chloroceyle amazona | Amazon Kingfisher | |
Verniliornis passerinus | Little Woodpecker | |
Lepidocolaptes angustostris | Narrow-billed Woodcreeper | |
Melanerpes candidus | White Woodpecker | |
Paroaria capilata | Yellow-billed Cardinal | |
Fluvicola albiventer | Black-backed Water-tyreant | |
Buteo gallus | Great Black-hawk | |
Picoides mixtus | Checkered Woodpecker | |
Colaptes melanochloros | Green-barred Woodpecker | |
Piculus chrysochloros | Golden-green Woodpecker | |
Ramphastos toco | Toco Toucan | |
Heliomaster furicifer | Blue-tufted Starthroat |
(Many thanks to Pepe, Roberto, Rionaldo, Juan, Arne and Silvia for help with identification. Any errors in this list are entirely my own and most likely due to difficult to interpret handwriting and clumsy typing. Please do let me know if you spot any!)
Finally, a massive thank you to everybody at Guyra for having me, showing me around and making me speak Spanish (mostly), despite not being very good at it!
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