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Long march against Rampal project

Dolphins are evolving in the Bay of Bengal

http://www.dhakatribune.com/science/2016/12/19/dolphins-evolving-bay-bengal/

  • Tribune Online Report
  • Published at 09:04 PM December 19, 2016
  • Last updated at 09:17 PM December 19, 2016


A bottlenose dolphin gracefully displays its acrobatic skills Rubaiyat Mowgli Mansur/WCS-Bangladesh

The revelation comes from a recent study jointly conducted by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), American Museum of Natural History (AMNH), and Centre for Ecology, Evolution Environmental Changes (cE3c).

The study titled “Oceanic drivers of population differentiation in Indo-Pacific bottlenose (Tursiops aduncus) and humpback (Sousa spp.) dolphins of the northern Bay of Bengal” was published in Conservation Genetics very recently.

The research team was headed by Dr Ana R Amaral of cE3c and AMNH’s Sackler Institute of Comparative Genomics with Brian D Smith, Rubaiyat M Mansur and Dr Howard C Rosenbaum of WCS.

The Bay of Bengal is enriched with nutrients flown in with the silt from a number of major rivers. As the river confluence encapsulates the Sundarbans – the world’s largest mangrove forest – it creates for a unique ecosystem. Furthermore, there is an undersea canyon called the Swatch-of-No-Ground (SoNG) which is renowned for recycling nutrients via a process known as upwelling.


The study took place in the Swatch-of-No-Ground WCS

As the region comprises of these diverse and unique natural factors, it creates for unparallel conditions for growth of species which can be found in different parts of the ocean.

The research team took the skin samples from 32 coastal Indo-Pacific and humpback dolphins. They extracted genetic sequences to compare with previously published sequences for both species. The findings showed both subspecies to be genetically discrete (individually different and distinct) from nearby populations.

The findings have the researchers saying the phenomenon merits further investigation.

Rubaiyat Mansur, principal researcher for WCS’s Bangladesh programme, said: “This is great news for Bangladesh.

Also Read- Desperately seeking dolphins

“Despite the challenges of wildlife conservation in our country, we take great pride in protecting our wildlife as evidenced by the recent declaration of Bangladesh’s first marine protected area in the Swatch-of-No-Ground submarine canyon and adjacent estuarine waters.”


Humpback dolphins are more popularly known because of their bright pink skins Rubaiyat Mowgli Mansur/WCS-Bangladesh

Dr Rosenbaum, director of WCS’s Ocean Giants programme, said: “The discovery of genetically distinct dolphin populations helps us to expand the body of knowledge of how these dolphin species have changed over time.

“These results have significant implications for identifying unique marine mammal populations, which in turn have important conservation implications for safeguarding the long-term biodiversity in this region.”


Also Read- Country’s southerner fishermen to turn dolphin saviours

The two dolphin species are threatened by entanglement and death in fishing nets. Many of the individual dolphins photographed by researchers bear the scars of being entangled in fishing nets while the photographed ones are the lucky few who escaped.


Dolphins, being an intelligent species, often interact with humans, even when they pose danger in the form of fishing trawlers Rubaiyat Mowgli Mansur/WCS-Bangladesh

“The results of this study raise important questions about the exact conservation status of these small cetaceans of the Bay of Bengal,” said Brian Smith, a co-author on the study and Director of WCS’s Asian Freshwater and Coastal Cetacean Programme.

“Our findings highlight areas for further inquiry as well as the importance of protecting these marine mammals from the threat of fishing entanglement.”

Source: https://defence.pk/threads/amazing-bangladesh.467748/#ixzz4TMJXxo00
 



সুন্দরবন ধ্বংস করে রামপাল বিদ্যুৎকেন্দ্র চাই না shared their video to the event: সুন্দরবন বাঁচাতে- চলো চলো ঢাকা চলো.
11 hrs ·
সুন্দরবন বাঁচানোর লড়াইয়ে রাজপথে হাটা জনতা দালাল সাংবাদিক বেষ্টিত হয়ে লিখে দেয়া প্রশ্নের মিথ্যা-ভ্রান্ত তথ্য নির্ভর উত্তরে ভয় পায় না। ইতিহাসে এমন অনেক দৃষ্টান্ত আছে যেমন দেশ বেচা মীর-জাফর কিংবা প্রভুর পা-চাটতে থাকা রাজাকার চরিত্র যাদের দিয়ে শোষকেরা ক্ষমতায় টিকে থেকেছে, ধরাকে সরা জ্ঞান করেছে, কিন্তু কোনবারেই শেষ রক্ষা হয়নি।

কোটি টাকার বিজ্ঞাপন চলছে টিভিতে, এগোচ্ছে তথাকথিত মিডিয়া ষ্টারদের দিয়ে রামপাল প্রকল্পের গুণগান করা ভিডিও তৈরীর কাজ। অন্যদিকে সুন্দরবন লড়ছে যুক্তি-তথ্য-গবেষণা আর সাধারণ মানুষের ভালবাসার শক্তির উপর ভর করে। ষোল কোটি মানুষের টিকে থাকতে এ লড়াই জেতা ছাড়া আর কোন উপায় নাই।

সুন্দরমন প্রযোজনাকে ধন্যবাদ। সত্য জেনেও মুখে ছিপি এঁটে বসে থাকার দলে না থেকে সত্য প্রচারে উদ্যোগী হওয়ার জন্য।


#no_to_rampal #বাঁচাওসুন্দরবন #savesundarbans #savesundarban#stoprampal #antifa #NoToRampal
#সুন্দরবনকে_ভালবাসি_পারলে_ঠেকাও #thinkgreen #notgrey
 
BD cannot depend upon India for its source of electricity. So, it must keep on building this 1320 mW Rampal power plant. More than 1500 industries can be run with 1320 mW of power. These industries can employ more than 60,000 people. Why the rich people of BD should stop the process of development on the ground of fictitious ecological disaster in the Sunderban at the south when wind blows from south to north during 9.5 months of the year?
 
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BD cannot depend upon India for its source of electricity. So, it must keep on building this 1320 mW Rampal power plant. More than 1500 industries can be run with 1320 mW of power. These industries can employ more than 60,000 people. Why the rich people of BD should stop the process of development on the ground of fictitious ecological disaster in the Sunderban at the south when wind blows to south - north during 9.5 months of the year?
Yesterday I read somewhere that around 2000 mills are shut down because of energy shortage.
 
Yesterday I read somewhere that around 2000 mills are shut down because of energy shortage.
Yes, many more factories will shut their doors unless power is supplied. Thank you very much for your continuous positive input instead of an emotionally charged ones. You are correct to assess the BD necessity as 50,000 mW. In comparison, BD's installed capacity is less than 10,000 mW and the actual output may be less than 7,000 mW. This difference of 3,000 mW makes the factories to close temporarily, this is what I think.
 
Yes, many more factories will shut their doors unless power is supplied. Thank you very much for your continuous positive input instead of an emotionally charged ones. You are correct to assess the BD necessity as 50,000 mW. In comparison, BD's installed capacity is less than 10,000 mW and the actual output may be less than 7,000 mW. This difference of 3,000 mW makes the factories to close temporarily, this is what I think.

Can't the powerplants be shifted toward the northern part of Bangladesh.If powerplants are built near either sundarban or CHT we will obviously see people protesting.
 
My personal opinion is we certainly need power plants and I have nothing against it. The only issue is with the location and the people protesting probably also have the same sentiment. We have other places empty where such a project could have been developed but the chosen location in sunderbans is very intriguing. Pardon my ignorance but does the current proposed location provide any added value that might be absent in other locations?

@Philia - Noticed you live in Sweden. Förstår du svenska eller..?
 
My personal opinion is we certainly need power plants and I have nothing against it. The only issue is with the location and the people protesting probably also have the same sentiment. We have other places empty where such a project could have been developed but the chosen location in sunderbans is very intriguing. Pardon my ignorance but does the current proposed location provide any added value that might be absent in other locations?
Bangladesh is a densely populated small country. It is very difficult to acquire land here. The locals would come out with weapons to protect their land and the BD environmentalist will come with their ecology crap, anyway, wherever may be the proposed location.
- This happened when BD govt wanted to mine the coal in Dinajpur.
- This happened when BD built a 250 mW power plant in the vicinity of the coal mine.
On the contrary,
- Rampal is almost a marsh land. Almost no cereals are produced there because of very bad soil condition which is made worse by the incursion of salt water during high tide (Joar) two times a day.
- Sundarban is at least 14 km. south of Rampal, and wind blows south to north almost throughout the year except the winter of 2.5 months. How it is possible to assume that Sundarban ecology will be destroyed in such a case?
 
Can't the powerplants be shifted toward the northern part of Bangladesh.If powerplants are built near either sundarban or CHT we will obviously see people protesting.

Yes that can be done. We can build power plant in Fulbari with our own coal (as we cant use imported coal in that case). Now the big question, will you be able to shut this Anu Mohammed up for that too?
 
Yes that can be done. We can build power plant in Fulbari with our own coal (as we cant use imported coal in that case). Now the big question, will you be able to shut this Anu Mohammed up for that too?
If the country's installed capacity has to reach a 50,000 mW level from today's less than 10,000 mW, then it will have to open the coal mining in Phulbari 400 km north of Rampal and build a few power plants in its vicinity that can produce a total of 4,000 mW, which is the limit for Phulbari. So, even after Phulbari and Rampal, the country will have to build many other power stations during the next 20 years with a capacity to produce another 35,000 mW.

Now, Phulbari (400 km in the north) and Rampal- both are opposed by those fancy ecologists led by that Anu Mohammed and Shahidullah. This is how they are supporting Indian govt conspiracy to depend upon Indian source for BD power. These people just want BD to fail in its bid for a quick industrial development by cutting off its domestic source of power.

The govt faces a dilema in Phulbari coal mining as well, being unable to extract coal there by the street movements led by Anu Mohammed and Gong, and now the same Doctor of Ecology group are fighting in Rampal, again also in the name of saving Sundarban ecology, an unsubstantiated claim by them.
 
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If the country's installed capacity has to reach a 50,000 mW level from today's less than 10,000 mW, then it will have to open the coal mining in Phulbari 400 km north of Rampal and build a few power plants in its vicinity that can produce a total of 4,000 mW, which is the limit for Phulbari. So, even after Phulbari and Rampal, the country will have to build many other power stations during the next 20 years with a capacity to produce another 35,000 mW.

Now, Phulbari (400 km in the north) and Rampal- both are opposed by those fancy ecologists led by that Anu Mohammed and Shahidullah. This is how they are supporting Indian govt conspiracy to depend upon Indian source for BD power. These people just want BD to fail in its bid for a quick industrial development by cutting off its domestic source of power.

The govt faces a dilema in Phulbari coal mining as well, being unable to extract coal there by the street movements led by Anu Mohammed and Gong, and now the same Doctor of Ecology group are fighting in Rampal, again also in the name of saving Sundarban ecology, an unsubstantiated claim by them.
Rampal, Ruppur, Matarbary and Pyra, where would our capacity stand upon completing these power plants?
 
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