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The Seahorse Trust News

Seahorse breeding project at MCC in Cambodia

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Please have a look at the piece of video (link below) that is on our Facebook page, it is of seahorse fry that have been bred by Marine Conservation Cambodia (MCC). This is a joint project between MCC, Save Our Seahorses (SOS) in Dublin and The Seahorse Trust (TST).

Paul and Zac at MCC have worked very hard to produce these fry and it is a superb effort on their part to get these very healthy looking fry, to this stage. Looking very carefullly at the video it can be seen that the fry have a good body weight, are swimming well and you can even see some of the fry eating. Looking very closely there is a slight orange tinge to the front of the gut which is the food the fry are feeding on.

http://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=10200698187716690

Cambodia like so many countries in the Far East have had their seahorse stocks decimated due to illegal fishing, even though seahorses are fully protected in law in Cambodia. These fry are vitally important to the future of Seahorses in Cambodia and we wish Paul and Zac well in their amazing efforts to the conservation of seahorses.

Kind donation by GAC Logistics

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Dear all,

just wanted to say a massive thank you to GAC logoistics who have kindly made a donation towards our work, this money was generated over Christmas by not sending out bottles of wine to their customers. Instead they kindly made a donation to us for each bottle they would have sent out. GAC have been great supporters of us in the past and once again a massive thank you to them.

http://www.gacworld.com/uklogistics

GAC Logo

Marine Conservation Zone Petition

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Please let the government know how you feel about the  Marine Conservation Zone process by siging our petition. So far we have 7016 signatures and at the end of February or mid March we will send the petition to DEFRA and the Government so that they know the strength of feeling for this vitally important process.

The government have watered the process down from 120 proposed sites to 30 and not even included Studland Bay in the first tranche which is the most important site for Spinys Seahorses here in the UK, if not Europe.

Please sign on http://38degrees.uservoice.com/forums/189307-campaign-ideas-2013/suggestions/3524483-for-marine-conservation-zones-just-as-important

Happy New Year 05-01-2013

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Dear all,

Happy New Year to you all and thank you for your amazing support in 2012, without you we could not have done so much.

2013 is set to be a very busy year and we all need to push hard to help protect not just the Seahorses but our Oceans as well.

Sadly, in 2012 the government announced it’s watered down version of the Marine Protected Zones (MPZ’s), which means we now have to go through a long consultation  process to get one of the most important sites for Spiny Seahorses in Europe put forward for protection in 2013.

Studland Bay is a proposed Marine Protected Zones (pMPZ’s); it is set to be made an MPZ in the future but Studland Bay in Dorset does not have the time as has been shown by a recent report by Dr’s Jackson and Collins in their MAIA Report. The seagrass at Studland is fragmenting and as our own research has shown the number of seahorses has dropped from 59 in the second half of 2008 down to 7 identified individuals in 2012; time is not on the seahorses side. Please lobby your MP and the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) urgently. Go onto the website below and look at the details and make your voice heard.

http://www.defra.gov.uk/consult/2012/12/13/marine-conservation-zones-1212/

Push to have Studland Bay put on the first tranche of MPZ’s for 2013 before we lose the Spiny Seahorses on the site forever.

Many thanks to one and all

Neil

Neil Garrick-Maidment Executive Director, The Seahorse Trust

HAPPY CHRISTMAS TO ONE AND ALL

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Dear all,

We would like to wish you all a Happy and Merry Christmas and a fantastic 2013 from everyone here at the trust.

2012 has been a great year with so much work done here at the trust but 2013 is going to be even busier with a lot more things to do and so many more projects to work on; none of this would have been possible without your support and help, so thank you to you all.

The Seahorse Trust is quite a small trust in the world but we achieve so much because we have great supporters and volunteers, all of whom have so much enthusiasm and drive and keep us going.

Being a small charity we are totally reliant on the kindness of others to keep going so adoptions and memberships are vital to allow us to generate funds and importantly to let people know what we are doing. They make great presents and please don’t forget to Gift aid them.

If you are planning any events for 2013 in aid of the trust you can do this securely through one of the donation sites listed on our website.

The supporters of the trust act as ambassadors for the work and without you going out there spreading the word, the problems facing seahorses would not be known about, so thank you for this.

However we do need funds to do our work so if you have any fund raising drives, events, donations or schemes to help us plan our future work, then please let us know.

HAPPY CHRISTMAS TO ONE AND ALL AND HAVE A PEACEFUL 2013

A very very sad day for marine conservation in the UK

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The government have just released their proposal for the first release of Marine Conservation Zones for 2013 and to their shame they have left of, one of the most important and threatened areas for Spiny Seahorses in the UK and possibly Europe, Studland Bay. The bay has been put forward as a proposed MPZ at some later stage but not in the first tranché, which means it could be years before it gets protected; meanwhile the seagrass bed has been proven (without doubt) to be fragmenting as has been shown by the recent report by MAIA and by Dr Ken Collins paper released a couple of years ago. yet the authorities sit back and let this vital site for Spiny Seahorses be destroyed.  Without the seagrass at Studland there will be no spiny Seahorses there, they rely on this vitally important habitat.

In 2008 we found over 50 seahorses and each year since the number has been dropping rapidly to this year where we only found 11.

We need your help please, go onto the website below and lobby them to include studland into the first tranché of MPZ’s for 2013 before it is too late. Meanwhile we will be resubmitting our data (for the third time) to try and get them to change their minds.If there is a site in the UK that should qualify first and foremost for protection it is Studland Bay. Not only does it have the seahorses (both species), it also has the fragile seagrass, English Oysters, Undulate Rays, truncated anenomes and a host of other threatened and endangered species.

http://www.defra.gov.uk/consult/2012/12/13/marine-conservation-zones-1212/

Make you voice heard and let them know how you feel, before the seahorses are gone from Studland forever; it is not too late, we have until march 2013 to get them to change their minds.

Seahorse Talk at Falmpouth Aquarium

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The Seahorse Trust talk was a huge success at Falmouth Aquarium ( http://www.facebook.com/falmouthaquarium ) on the 26th November, despite the awful weather and flooded roads, over 40 people attended! Lots of Exexter University, Falmouth Marine School students and members of the public attended, it was a great turn out. The aim was to educate the public on the importance of preserving habitats that seahorses are found in, the prime example being seagrass beds, protection of their home means protecting them as a species. The Seahorse Tagging project was also discussed and how the findings have been insightful in their ecology and reproduction. There were many questions and donations given to this important charity – hopefully a talk that will be repeated in the future! – Lauren Timson

Many thanks to Lauren for her hard work

The 4th Studland Bay Conservation and Recreational Activity Working Group Meeting

By | Studland Bay, The Seahorse Trust News | No Comments

The Seahorse Trust attended the 4th Studland Bay Conservation and Recreational Activity Working Group Meeting on Monday in Poole, Dorset, to discuss the Draft MAIA Seagrass report. [MAIA means Marine Protected Areas in the Atlantic Arc) which was put together by Dr Emma Jackson and Dr Ken Collins. It is a 261 page comprehensive report on seagrass habitats and the effects on them and highlights Studland bay as an example.

On the whole it was a very successful meeting despite the disruptive, rude attitude of a few boat owners and it lays the way forward for Studland to become a Marine Protected Zone and for Environmentally Friendly Moorings (EFM’s) to be trialled in the bay. The report highlighted the problems facing the seagrass, especially at Studland which they showed categorically is fragmenting as the trust has observed and been reporting for years now. We have finally been vindicated in our observations and this report has shown the degradation and fragmentation of the seagrass meadow, especially since 2008.

Next year we should know for sure if Studland is to become a Marine Protected Zone (MPZ); it has all the attributes to make it one, and at that stage the hard work of coordinating a diverse group of stakeholders will come into place, all of whom have varying needs and wants.

Here at the trust we feel it is possible to address everyone’s needs and still allow the bay to be used by many boats with the installation of EFM’s. There is to be a public consultation period about making Studland an MPZ, so please let the authorities know your views when this starts. We will report where and when this happens as soon as we know.

We would like to thank everyone for their amazing support over Studland and this proves that people power can and will make a difference in the protection of our natural world.