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Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nature. Show all posts

Monday, May 12, 2008

Fish, Fish Prices and Fish Stocks!

Qatar is known for its bountiful fish catches - but with an increasing population the Government is acting to preserve fish stocks


A selection of fish at Doha's wholesale fish market
In Qatar's poorer days, fish was what sustained the local population. Fish was so plentiful that people were embarrassed to give guests fish - it was seen as being mean, or a sign of poverty. In fact, fish was so plentiful that it was exported to be used as fertilizer.

If you are a fish lover in Qatar, nothing quite beats buying the fish fresh off the boats on the Corniche. There you can buy the long silver king fish, small sharks or bucket loads of crabs - and of course the ugly but very delicious hamour.

For a more complete choice you should visit the wholesale fish market, where you can buy squid, tuna, octopus and a whole range of other fish I couldn't even name. For two riyals a kilo - the price is set by the authorities - a man will clean the fish for you. Just make sure you visit the fish market in the morning, especially in the hot season, or you may find you the stench overpowering.

However, the price of fish has been increasing over recent years. When I first came here I could still buy a whole tuna for 5 riyals at the wholesale market, which would feed the whole family, but those days are past.

Perhaps the reason for increasing prices is due to the increasing population which Qatar's fish stocks are feeding. Three years ago Qatar's population was estimated at 800,000 - many times the few hundred families that lived here at the turn of the century, and just over half the latest estimate of one and a half million.

Now both fans of sea food and fishermen will be complaining after the government has imposed restrictions on the movements of fishing boats.

Fishing traps dry in the sun with the Doha skyline in the distanceThere already no-go areas in Qatar, but now boats are only allowed to make three trips a month, with each trip lasting no longer than five days.

Fish prices have already increased. According to the Gulf Times on Friday, King fish had increased from QR22/kilo to QR40 a kilo, while the price of Hamour had increased by about 75%.

While fishermen and consumers in these countries may be complaining, those in other countries should be wishing that their countries had taken the same steps years ago. According to the United Nations Environment Programme, commercial fish populations in the North Atlantic of cod, hake, haddock and flounder have fallen by as much as 95%.

I have also seen it personally. Catches of mackerel on trips home have fallen every year, while on a return trip to a town in Spain I was sad to see the once proud fleet of fishing boats reduced to just three solitary ships.

I was surprised to see that the market and the shops were still well stocked with fish - until I was told that they were now all imported. It seems that the answer of those countries who have destroyed their own fish stocks is now to destroy other country's.

Nitin Desai, Secretary General of the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development, has warned that:

Overfishing cannot continue. The depletion of fisheries poses a major threat to the food supply of millions of people.”

fish dishActing strongly to preserve fish stocks now might mean that, unlike much of the rest of the world, the population of Qatar can continue to eat fish for years to come.


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Monday, March 03, 2008

Common Plants of Qatar : Qatar Natural History Group

Qatar plants
The Qatar Natural History Group will be holding its monthly talk on Wednesday this week with an introduction to the plants of Qatar. Dr Renee Richer, a biologist at Cornell University, will be giving the talk, and will be bringing along samples, as well as explaining how these plants survive in a harsh desert climate.


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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Dangerous Wildlife in Abrouq Reserve

The oasis in the Abrouq nature reserve where the attack took place
In the Gulf Times today Gillespie writes about the recent attack on a Qatar Natural History Group member by an irate ostrich at the Abrouq Reserve. (See Ostrich Attack Survivor Says “Lucky to be Alive”.)

Simon Flynn, the British resident who was researching a route for one of the QNHG’s rambles, was lucky to be alive, as the tiny brained birds have been known to kill not just people but also large and dangerous predators such as lions.

With a speed of up to 70 kph, if you do get in trouble with an ostrich running away is not an option. Instead, you should sit down on the ground, cover your heads with your arms and wait until the bird either moves away or help comes.

Fortunately, help did come for Simon Flynn in the form of the keeper at the film set in Abrouq. The keeper drove off the bird with a stick, although not before Simon had been repeatedly kicked and pecked.

Following the attack, it is now recommended that residents keep away from the Ras Abrouq Nature Reserve. If you do visit, try to do so outside the current breeding season.

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Friday, December 21, 2007

The Al Wabra Reserve

A sand cat in the Al Wabra preserve

In one place in the Qatar desert it is possible to walk among trees and over a flowing stream, watch brightly coloured birds of paradise flit about and listen to bright yellow Golden Conules chattering away to you.

It’s not a mirage brought on by thirst but the superb wildlife reserve of Al Wabra.

Founded as a hobby farm, under its present owner, Sheikh Al Saud, and his team of European vets, the reserve has been transformed into a world renowned centre for the conservation of endangered animals.

With a collection of over a thousand animals and seven hundreds birds, all of them with different dietary requirements which are provided as far as possible by the farm itself, the reserve is a huge undertaking, requiring a staff of nearly two hundred.

Despite this, the reserve goes far beyond just keeping animals. The reserve has had success breeding animals which have never before reproduced before in captivity, and is without a doubt the only thing preventing several species from going extinct.

In our latest article, the Al Wabra Reserve, we look at the reserve and its activities before focussing on several of the species which the reserve is trying so hard to save.

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Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Qatar Seas

The beautiful but dangerous StonefishImage by Robert Baldwin

In the latest article on the Qatar Visitor website, Qatar Seas, Francis Gillespie looks at Qatar's marine life, including the fish, mammals and reptiles that inhabit the seas around Qatar. The article is accompanied by superb underwater photography by Robert Baldwin.


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Saturday, November 24, 2007

Qatar Natural History Group: Meeting
The Qatar Natural History Group
will be holding their next meeting on December 5th at 7.30 at the Doha English Speaking College. The meeting will not feature, as originally planned, Peter Harrigan, whose talk on Saudi Arabian rock art has been postponed to after the New year.

Instead Richard Switzer, the curator at Al Wabb preserve, will give a Introduction to the Birds of Al Wabra, which will link up to the QNHG trip to Al Wabra later in the month.

You can find more information about the reserve on the Al Wabra Wildlife Preserve Website.

Shark Teeth Field Trip

The shark teeth field trip will be taking place on the 30th November and will meet in the parking lot in front of Carrefour in Villagio Mall on Al Waab Street. The departure time is at 10 a.m., however you should aim to arrive 10-15 minutes before.


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Thursday, November 22, 2007

The Horned Viper: A Close Encounter

The horned viper responsible for scaring the familyPhotograph by Paula Hoeppner
Post by Frances Gillespie

Members of the Qatar Natural History Group on a tour of the north-western forts one Friday in late October encountered a small Horned Viper which emerged from beneath the wall of Al Rakiyat fort.

One British family had just sat down beside the wall to have a picnic when the snake was spotted adopting an aggressive stance, i.e. coiled up ready to strike, within a couple of feet of their eight-year-old son.

He quickly scrambled to his feet and no harm was done, but it was a timely reminder that although the chances of being bitten by a snake or stung by a scorpion in Qatar are very rare, nevertheless it is a possibility.

The Horned Viper

The Horned Viper [cerastes cerastes gasperetti] is also known as a Sand Viper. It does not always have horns above the eyes -- the specimen mentioned above had none.

It may well be the only truly poisonous snake in Qatar, and is far less dangerous than its relative the Saw-scaled Viper which is found in the UAE and Oman. It is not an aggressive animal, but any creature will defend itself if it feels threatened.

Although quite common and widely distributed it is rarely seen; people exploring the desert are far more likely to come across its curious side-winding tracks, a series of shallow S-shaped lines on loose sand or on the surface of dunes.

Update: This post has now been picked up by the Peninsula newspaper in their story Horned Viper spotted in Qatari desert - it is worth noting, though, that the Horned Viper, though rarely seen, is not rare.

Many thanks to Frances Gillespie for this post

Also see:

An Introduction to Qatar's Natural History by the same writer

A video of a captive horned viper:






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Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Qatar Dugongs to be tracked by helicopter

-Dugongs swimming
Qatar has the second largest population of dugongs in the world, but little is known of these secretive creatures that often avoid the ocean’s shallows.

Dugongs feed on sea grass at the bottom of the sea. The creatures are slow moving, and a recent study in California found that they avoid their natural predators, sharks, by staying in deep water.

Now these rare creatures, which may be in danger of extinction, are to be tracked by military cameras mounted on helicopters in part of a initiative by SCENR, Dolphin Energy and the Qatar Air force, according to the Gulf Times.

If you want to know more about Qatar’s marine life, watch out for the second of Francis Gillespie’s article on Qatar Nature, which will be published next month and will include pictures of dugong. The first article, An Introduction to Qatar’s Natural History, can be seen on the Natural History section of our website.

Note - image taken from Wikipedia's page on Dugongs.

Also see: Dugong on Verge of Extinction in Qatar by the International Animal Rescue site








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Sunday, November 11, 2007

Qatar Beaches: News

Relxing on the beachThe Qatar Government has plans to set up exclusive family beaches in Qatar, the Gulf Times announced today.

Even better, SCENR, the Supreme Council for Environment and Natural Reserves, has plans to curtail the use of plastic bags in the country.

The statements were made on the sidelines of a beach clean-up in Al Khor. Hopefully, SCENR will extend this clean-up to other beaches in Qatar: a trip to any popular public beach will see bare-footed children playing in sand littered with glass.

Unfortunately, SCENR didn't protect the mangrove swamps in Al Wakra. I was shocked during a recent visit to see that the mangroves swamps had been uprooted and replaced by a pool of water.

Al Wakra Mangroves - now sadly removedThe mangroves weren't just a picturesque addition to an otherwise fairly unremarkable town. Just a small area of mangroves can produce thousands of tonnes of biomass. These feed into the food chain, and the loss of these mangroves is likely to lead to a decrease in fish stocks.

It will also prove a disaster for local bird life - both herons and egrets are among the birds that frequent Qatar's mangrove forests.


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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Rubbish in Qatar

Rubbish in Qatar continues to spoil its fascinating natural environment. The worst places are Qatar's beaches, where visitor's habituarily dispose of their waste by throwing it on the beach where they have been picknicking. However, Qatar's wildlife can also be affected, as this superb picture of a lizard, taken by Renee Hughes (chairperson of the Qatar Natural History Group) shows.


Lizard with teabag.


Read a review of Discovering Qatar, by France Gillespie

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Saturday, September 29, 2007

Qatar's Natural History

In the latest article on our website, Frances Gillespie, author of Discovering Qatar and Natural History journalist, writes about Qatar's natural history. In it she covers Qatar's terrain, its animal, plant, bird and marine life and the impact - both positive and negative -that people have had on Qatar's environment. The article is accompanied throughout by superb photography.

Sand Skink

Copyright © Drew Gardner

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Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Dust Storm: Satellite Images

Nasa's Earth Observatory has provided this image of the of the huge plume of dust that covered Bahrain and Qatar on the 12th September. The image shows the dust storm appearing to rotate in a clockwise direction. Although the edges of the plume are thin, Bahrain and Qatar are almost completely obscured by it.





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Monday, September 17, 2007

Qatar Sea Slugs


A New Species?


Below is an image of what is almost certainly a new species of sea slug, though it has yet to be named. The sea slug was discovered by Gabriele Patterson during a Qatar Natural History Group trip, and photographed by Iain Macdonald.

Expert Dr Bill Rudman, who runs The Sea Slug Forum, believes that the tiny scarlet and white creature is likely to be a new species. It bears most resemblance to a sea slug last seen in Pakistan more than a century ago.

A new species of sea slug discovered in a Qatar mangrove swamp.Appearance

As can be seen from both the new species and the images of sea slugs below, these creatures can be far more beautiful than their name suggests. These soft-bodied creatures are more properly known as Nudibranch - which can be translated as either naked gills or as bare lungs.

Their bright colours and patterns are not without purpose. They serve as a warning to hungry fish to leave these slow moving creatures well alone - not without reason, as they contain unpleasant chemicals making their flesh unpalatable to even the most undiscriminating of predators.

Chromodoris Cazae: a white sea slug rimmed with brown and yellow.
Some Strange Habits

Sea slugs are hermaphrodites, containing both male and female sex organs. They still need a partner, as they are unable to reproduce by themselves. Not content with their adventurous sexual habits, these brightly coloured carnivores are also given to cannibalism.


Two colourful sea slugs, Flabellina Rubrolineata, face off on the seabed.
Sea Slugs in the Arabian Gulf

There are more than twenty species of sea slug found in the Arabian Gulf, with one species, Chromodoris Cazae, only being found in the waters of Qatar and the UAE.

A white sea (Chromodoris annulata) slugs lies on coral.

Many thanks to Iain Macdonald for permission to use the images, and to Frances Gillespie for information about sea slugs.

National Geographic Video on Sea Slugs






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What are Nudibranches?

Swimming in the Sea in Qatar: Is it safe?

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Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Comorant

Soctra cormorant
A socotra comorant bobs up and down on the startling green blue water at Al Ruwais Harbour. While this was on its own, as many as 20,000 have been known to fly together in search of fish. In October some 50,000 of these birds gather on the nearby Hawar islands. See this page on Arabian Wildlife for more details.

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