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GUATEMALA: Different Hooks
to Save Sea Turtles
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GUATEMALA CITY - The Guatemalan
Ministry of Agriculture launched a campaign to convince
dorado and shark fishing operations to change the
type of hooks they use as a means to prevent accidental
capture of sea turtles, which are in danger of extinction.
''The goal is for around 3,000 fisherfolk to use a
new kind of hook,'' Fraterno Díaz, coordinator of
the ministry's fishing management and aquaculture
division, told Tierramérica.
''This will help to strengthen and preserve the populations
of the seven turtle species that have been found in
the Pacific and Atlantic,'' said Díaz.
Martín Hall, a Mexican expert with the International
Tuna Commission, explained in a Tierramérica interview
that if current trends continue, and if the conventional
fishhooks remain in use, at least two sea turtle species
could be extinct in 30 years.
There are 38 sea turtle refuges in Guatemala, which
has released 100,185 hatchlings.
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ARGENTINA: Bacteria Produce
Biodegradable Plastic
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BUENOS AIRES - Argentine researchers
announced on Aug. 20 that a new industrial process
is available to produce a plastic that quickly degrades
after being buried. The key in production is the Azotobacter
chroococcum bacterium.
The discoverers, scientists from the agro-food division
at the agronomy school of the University of Buenos
Aires, for ten years have been searching for a plastic
that would disintegrate once it is discarded, thereby
reducing pollution.
They found that the Azotobacter chroococcum accumulates
polyester as a reserve -- up to 80 percent of their
weight in just four days -- as a reaction to lack
of oxygen or nitrogen, for example, when it is buried
in the soil.
Silvia Miyazaki, head of the research team, explained
to Tierramérica that the material extracted from the
bacteria is purified through heat to turn it into
plastic. It is inert in the air, but becomes biodegradable
after one month in the ground.
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COLOMBIA: Water and Sanitation
for Indians
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BOGOTA - The Colombian government
will begin the second phase of the project ''Environmental
Improvement in Indigenous Communities,'' which is
to benefit some 100 Ticuna Indian families in the
Amazon region.
The project, supported by Germany's GTZ cooperation
agency, the Pan-American Health Organization and the
World Health Organization, has a budget of 90,000
dollars.
Colombia's deputy environment minister, Carmen Arévalo,
told Tierramérica that the goals of the second phase,
to last through mid-2005, are to manage household
sewage and wastewater, build two hand-pump wells for
the community, and implement a pilot model for education
on improving sanitation conditions in the home.
The first phase, from 1999 to 2003, benefited 250
families in three communities of the Wayuú and Waunaan
Indians.
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PERU: Microbes for Clean
Mining
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LIMA - The contamination of rivers
from mining waste, one of Peru's most pressing environmental
problems, can be fought using microorganisms, according
to the Peruvian Institute of Nuclear Energy (IPEN).
''We will train biological engineers, chemists and
miners so that the mining companies implement bio-mining
and bio-remediation programs,'' IPEN chief Modesto
Montoya, told Tierramérica.
Bio-mining consists of using bacteria to absorb the
materials mixed with the ore, while releasing copper
and improving the recovery of gold.
Bio-remediation involves purifying the water of the
rivers adjacent to the mines by using bacteria, algae
and fungus.
The project was presented to the mining companies
in Peru during an international science meeting organized
by IPEN, which drew more than 500 experts to Lima
in August.
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