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MCC Updates

Ben Fogel, New Lives in the Wild MCC

We had the Pleasure of Hosting Ben on the Island for 1 week, here is the Trailer for the show, see the link below to see the whole show. It was a great week, and we send out a big big thank you to the whole crew for a wonderful time.

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View the Full Episode here

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Volunteer and Intern Blog Posts

A Cambodian Memory

Written by Sorina, who was shocked at the changes in the Ocean that she saw returning to Kep after being away for 42 years. The Ocean was no longer blue, clean and or full of life.

Categories
Volunteer and Intern Blog Posts

Just the Beginning

And that’s Just the Beginning

“Wake up, it’s time to go hurry up or you’ll be late come on”, you wake up and check the time: 5:48AM, the alarm on your phone has attempted to signal you 3 times already (you forgot to switch off silent mode), luckily you’ve got little sisters.

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About Marine Conservation Cambodia

Ocean Plastics

Ocean Plastics

 

What is Plastic Pollution?
 

Plastic Pollution is the contamination of the environment by plastics. Plastics are synthetic organic materials produced by polymerisation. Worldwide plastic production has increased from 1.5 million tonnes a year in 1950 to 322 million tonnes a year in 2015. Due to rapid urbanisation and economic development in a market driven by consumerism and convenience, along with the relatively low price of plastic materials, there has been a rapid increase in the generation of waste plastics all over the world. This is a major environmental concern for three main reasons: dependence on fossil fuels, solid waste clogging up ecosystems and microplastics.

 

What are plastics?
 

One of the main characteristics of plastics is the fact that they come in many different shapes, colours, sizes and, most importantly, chemical compositions. This is a major problem when it comes to recycling, as the wrong type of plastic can contaminate recycling streams and not all types are recyclable.

Thanks to legislation, most plastics products are now labelled with symbols representing their chemical composition.  This can help sort them in to different categories, applications and properties.

 

Ocean Plastics are bad news

 

Why Plastics are a problem ?
 

At the moment, over 95% of plastics are produced from fossil fuels. Around 4 percent of oil consumed worldwide is used to make plastic, with another 4 percent being used in the manufacturing process. One of the leading contributors to climate change and habitat destruction around the world is the dependence on fossil fuels.

Plastics do not biodegrade: they do not decompose naturally in the environment. Plastic waste is either put in landfill where it can contaminate groundwater by leaching harmful chemicals, incinerated which releases toxic chemicals into the atmosphere (Dioxins, Furans, Mercury and Polychlorinated Biphenyls), or littered. Because of plastic’s lightweight and durable nature, it is very likely to be swept into waterways, making its way from cities to the sea. Plastics reduce the productivity of natural systems such as the ocean.

Some scary stats:

•       The equivalent of one garbage truck of plastic waste is dumped into the ocean every minute

•       If no action is taken, this is expected to increase to two per minute by 2030 and four per minute by 2050

•       In a business-as-usual scenario, the ocean is expected to contain 1 tonne of plastic for every 3 tonnes of fish by 2025, and by 2050, more plastics than fish (by weight)

•       100,000 marine mammals die each year from plastic pollution

 

Ocean Plastics just the tip of the iceberg.

 

Microplastics
 

In marine environments, the combined effects of UV radiation, chemical degradation, wave mechanics and grazing by marine life weakens plastics, causing them to fragment into increasingly smaller pieces known as microplastics. Microplastics can be found everywhere: from sea surface to the sea-floor, in deep-sea sediments and even in Arctic sea ice. They create a smog of debris in seawater and are mistaken for food by plankton, birds, fish and other marine animals. They have even been found in table salt, and the average shellfish consumer ingests 11,0000 microplastic particles a year. Microplastics soak up chemical additives and endocrine disruptors, and act as vectors for pathogenic bacteria. The complexity of estimating toxicity means potential risks to human health not yet known. Given the presence of heavy metals and other concerning chemicals, it is however wise to limit the entry of plastic into the food chain.

The fact that microplastics absorb endorcine disruptors means that when ingested, they can affect correct hormone function. Hormones in the human body regulate digestion, metabolism, respiration, tissue function, sensory perception, sleep, excretion, lactation, stress, growth and development, movement, reproduction, and mood.

Microfibres

 

Microfibre pollution is an example of how little we know about the extent of the plastic problem. Microfibres are microscopic fibres released into waste water systems by washing machines when we wash our clothes. They originate from a wide variety of synthetic textiles (such as nylon, polyester, rayon, acrylic or spandex)—everything from running shorts to yoga pants to fleece jackets and more—which shows the need for engagement on this issue by the entire apparel industry and through all steps in the product life cycle.

Garments of a higher quality shed less in the wash than low-quality synthetic products, illustrating the importance for manufacturers and consumers alike to invest in gear built to last.

 

Where do plastics come from?
 

Plastics have many necessary and positive applications, such as food preservation, medical uses, and infrastructure. Most plastic waste does however not fall into this category. Almost 50% of all plastic waste is made up of ‘disposable’ single use-packaging. This is completely unnecessary: how can you call it disposable if it never goes away? 

 What are plastics used for

 

Some of the usual suspects include: cosmetics bottles and microbeads in exfoliant soap, bags, straws, bottles, cutlery, cups, wrappers, and take-away containers.

Food PackagingSoap and Shampoo containersPlastic bagsDrinking StrawsWater and soft drink BottlesPlastic Cutlery Plastic CupsOne use packaging

 

Although all this plastic is not designed or produced in Asia, 82% of leakage into the ocean occurs in Asia. This could be because of lack of infrastructure, waste management and recycling plants. Another reason for this is the extensive coastlines in this part of the world. Let’s not forget either that 87% of Europe’s ‘recycling’ gets sent to China. This increases the risk of spillage during transportation, and there is insufficient understanding of what happens to the waste plastics once they arrive in China, which raises concerns about the implications on local and global health and environment.

Plastic use

The Mekong river has been identified as one of the main rivers worldwide contributing to ocean plastics. This highlights the importance of implementing change in this part of the world. Changing behaviours through education, improving waste collection infrasctructures and introducing new legislation in Asia will prevent vast amounts of plastic waste from reaching the ocean. 

What can we do?
 

•       Demand stricter regulations

If enough of us make our governmental representatives realise how much we care about this issue, policy makers can influence producers and instigate widespread, far-reaching positive change. Signing petitions and staying informed is important. 

•       Spread awareness

Talking about the issue to friends and family, at work or at school, can help spread awareness.

•       Change behaviours

It is important for every individual to adopt new habits such as always carrying a reusable bottle, bag, and straw. 

•       Avoid single-use plastics

We can all help by avoiding single-use plastic in our day to day life. At the supermarket, choose products not wrapped in plastic.

•       Organise clean-ups

Leading by example and cleaning up your own local neighbourhood, beach or riverside can have a ripple effect on the community. By normalising the beahaviour of caring for the place we live in, others will start to do the same. 

What’s stopping personal change?

Psychological barriers to sustainable consumption
 

•       ‘Choices’ in consumption are in fact habitual behaviours

•       Consequences of consumption choices hard to see

•       Sustainable consumption may not seem personally relevant

•       Behaviour strongly influenced by social groups

•       Hard to follow through on sustainable choices

 

What is MCC doing?
 

MCC 

Non-profit organisations and grassroots campaigns can engage communities and influence policy makers.

Mass communication should not be limited to major high technology and professionalism. An example of alternative mass communication is street art. Street art here incorporates murals, posters, graffiti, placards, banners and stickers employed by collectives as a communication device for persuading and informing. Human emotions and political views can be shaped and moved by street art, which has a long political social history.

Therefore, MCC is working on a mural project in Kep, which will be accompanied by the dissemination of informative posters and at events relevant to the sea.

On the island of Koh Seh, arts and crafts with plastic from beach cleans are a creative and functional alternative to the incineration of them. we run daily clean ups around our island and organise large joint clean ups on Kep Mainland beaches.

Ocean Murals

 

Categories
Volunteer and Intern Blog Posts

Just Found a Funny Article I wrote a few years back.

This article is adapted from our first end of year summary written after our first full year of operation in 2008, it was a crazy time, No tourism, No Support, No Finances.

Just us the village, poverty and crazy fishermen with guns and dynamite.

Marine Conservation Cambodia in its first 12 months went from strength to strength, mainly down to the dedication and commitment of the Marine Conservation Cambodia team and the volunteers that had given their time, energy and passion to help protect Cambodia’s marine environment and the crazy driven passion of its founder Paul Ferber. With times of no food, no water and being reduced to eating the same fish bones soup after three days of boiling for breakfast lunch and dinner, just give me some jungle leaves anything to make it taste like food.

Our achievements over that first year started to change the tide of destruction that was rapidly destroying some of the most unique habitats in SE Asia areas we loved areas we dived daily and could see the destruction first hand. The protection of the Corral a dive site we named in 2007 and one of the main Seahorse breeding grounds we had discovered, the creation of the largest community managed marine area in Cambodia which took almost two years to see happen allowed us an opportunity for hope that some of the diverse marine habitats we had discovered would be able to begin recovery.

The surveys we conducted, which lets be honest were not the most scientific but hey we were learning and it was a little to crazy out there and we were a little to new to be able to find anyone with real skills, but as passionate divers we identified many new areas to be legislated for protection and increased the overall knowledge and documentation on Cambodian marine species, including the discovery of one new unknown species of Nudibranch not to mention putting Cambodia firmly on the map as a seahorse paradise. During that first year we argued a lot with so called knowledgeable foreigners who being to scared to actually do anything cried research, research, research, yet did nothing constructive except trying to find funding for themselves to stay in Cambodia and live the NGO lifestyle  (we can come back to this in a later summary :).

Our Seahorse project brought national and international attention to Cambodia’s diverse but declining Seahorse populations, leading to the creation of governmental sub decrees that now make it illegal by Cambodian law to catch or trade in Seahorses. This was a time to celebrate, as this became law we celebrated the protection of the seahorses, but in our naivety we forgot to take into account that you need enforcement or laws mean nothing, did not take us long for our short lived celebrations to return to the oh shit we just lost another area to the trawlers and back to that creeping feeling of uselessness, again hitting home that this fight was not about paper and money, it was about true grit, determination and a general disregard for our own personal safety not to mention a lot of drowning our sorrows with rice wine and old school Khmer dancing.

The close working relationship we developed with the Cambodian Ministry of Fisheries still continues today and has also turned into many lasting friendships, this at the time lead to the creation of a 4km buffer zone around the islands of Koh Rong and Koh Rong Samloem. This zone was created to protect the diverse inshore areas around both islands from the sand extraction vessels, which were operating in Cambodian waters. One small boat, 5 or 6 crazy people. Night time special opps or oops as your head hit the bottom of the large steal hull in the dark, filming the boat at night that used the excuse oh sorry our anchors broken we had to use our large pipe to anchor the boat, over this very large hole that was not there before, uuuummmm! But hey the video was great and well received on delivery to the right people, job well done.

The changes were not only at national level but also provincial level and within the local community level, with volunteers running daily lessons at the Koh Rong Samloem school, the creation of a referral clinic for the Koh Rong Samloem community and the extra income generated through true eco-tourism helped the local island economy creating jobs and small community run businesses that catered for the volunteers.

All together it was an amazingly successful year, didn’t know what we were doing, but did it anyway, risked life and limb to save the little horses, why? Just because they were peaceful. Became very accustomed to rice in all its forms including liquid, never thought rice could give you such a headache in the morning.

There was a big thank you to all those who were involved and a warm welcome to those that would come to join us in the future. We learnt a lot about bureaucracy, angry men with guns, crazy kids with machine guns, and how to function in a village that was never sober and often did not allow you to be either.

If you are interested in getting involved or supporting the project now its more organized, not so dangerous and definitely more scientific please contact us for more details

Categories
Marine Conservation Cambodia Volunteering

The Cambodian Marine Mammal Conservation Project

 

           

Background 

In September 2017, MCC introduced The Cambodian Marine Mammal Conservation Project, in collaboration with the Royal Government of Cambodia’s Fisheries Administration. The project’s primary aim is to collect data on abundance, distribution and residency to delineate and protect critical habitats for the endangered Irrawaddy dolphin in Cambodia’s Kep Archipelago.

Total Land Surveys 298
Total Boat Surveys 162
Total Number of Individuals Identified 32
Total Number of Species Identified 2

      

Project activities:

●        observational land surveys using a Theodolite and Pythagoras software,

●        observational boat surveys

●        photo-identification techniques using Discovery software,

●        acoustic monitoring using a real-time hydrophone and a passive acoustic monitoring device- C-POD and                  CPOD.exe software,

●        social science techniques,

●        data entry, processing and analysis,

●        education and outreach, 

●       responding to marine mammal strandings,

●       sharing findings with government groups, the scientific community and local people through producing peer-           reviewed scientific articles, technical reports, meetings, conferences, workshops and social media

Do you want to be an intern?

Basic internship training schedule

Session 1: Introduction to MCC and The Cambodian Marine Mammal Conservation Project.

Session 2: Research method training on observational land and boat surveying techniques.

Session 3: Marine mammal identification and behaviour training.

Session 4: Marine vessel identification training.

Session 5: Data sheet and data entry training.

Session 6: Drone footage analysis training.

Session 7: Research techniques theory test, followed by feedback and debrief. 

Session 8: Theodolite and Pythagoras introduction and training.

 

You will also become involved in other project related activities, depending on your interest, skill set and length of stay.

Internship requirements

We are looking for dedicated, motivated and hard-working interns, able to commit for a minimum internship period of one month. We are looking for those who will commit to early mornings and late nights, with a keen interest in marine mammals and their conservation. Ideally, we are looking for university students or recent graduates. 

If you are interested in this internship and would like to know more, please email Amy Jones at: cambodiadolphinproject@gmail.com

                             

Project Publications

Tubbs et al. (2020)

Tubbs et al. (2019)

The Cambodian Journal of Natural History News Item introducing The Cambodian Marine Mammal Conservation Project

www.researchgate.net/project/The-Cambodian-Marine-Mammal-Conservation-Project

Social Media

Facebook: The Cambodian Marine Mammal Conservation Project

Instagram: @TheCMMCP

Twitter: @TheCMMCP                                                                                                                                                             

 If you would like to know any further information about our marine mammal research project, please send an email to cambodiadolphinproject@gmail.com

 

If you are interested in donating to our marine mammal conservation efforts, please visit  The Cambodian Marine Mammal Conservation Project Donation Page

 

                          

 

Literature cited

Beasley, I. and Davidson, P. (2007). Conservation status of marine mammals in Cambodian waters, including seven new cetacean records of occurrence. Aquatic Mammals, 33(3), pp 368-379.

Hines, E., Adulyanukosol, K., Somany, P., Ath, L., Cox, N., Boonyanate, P. and Hoa, N. (2008). Conservation needs of the dugong Dugong dugon in Cambodia and Phu Quoc Island, Vietnam. Oryx, 42(01).

IUCN (2017). Orcaella brevirostris (Irrawaddy Dolphin). [online] Available at: http://www.iucnredlist.org/details/15419/0 [Accessed 18 Dec. 2017].

Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries; Fisheries Administration, Kingdom of Cambodia (2007). Law on Fisheries.

Tubbs, S.E., Akkaya, A., Cote, G., Jones, A.L. and Notman, G.M. (2019). Sighting and stranding reports of Irrawaddy dolphins (Orcaella brevirostris) and Dugong (Dugong dugon) in Kep and Kampot, Cambodia. Aquatic Mammals, 45.5, pp.563-568.

Tubbs, S.E., Keen, E., Jones, A.L. and Thap, R. (2020). On the distribution, behaviour and seasonal variation of Irrawaddy dolphins (Orcaella brevirostris) in the Kep Archipelago, Cambodia. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 68, pp.137-149.

 

Categories
MCC Updates

The New Kep MFMA

After three years of work, including the creation of marine survey baseline reports, a continued monitoring program, mapping of essential habits such as Seagrass, coral reef and the benthic areas of connectivity between, and a full year of provincial and community consultations, a final map is now in the process of agreement, awaiting the final signatures to put in place Cambodia’s Second MFMA.

We are proud to present Kep archipelago’s MFMA encompassing around 10,000 hectares and creating two very much needed conservation areas.

Kep MFMA

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MCC Updates

MCC Trailer For TV5 France Documentary

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Watch The Full Documentary Here

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News Flash

The Cambodian Marine Mammal Conservation Project

Marine Conservation Cambodia has teamed up with The Marine Mammals Research Association to create ‘The Cambodian Dolphin Project’ which will commence in September 2017. Our two non-profit NGOs will work together to protect cetacean species in Cambodia’s Kep Archipelago, namely the Irrawaddy dolphin, Indo-Pacific humpbacked dolphin and Indo-Pacific finless porpoise. These three species have declining populations and are currently classified as ‘Vulnerable’ or ‘Near threateded’ by the IUCN. Due to their coastal distibution, they face serious anthropogenic threats including bycatch, habitat degredation (illeage bottom trawling) and direct catch for aquaria.

The project aims to combine natural and social science methods to implement the first year round cetacean study in the target habitat, to form the first step in effective cetacean conservation, and thus to support conservation of the marine ecosystem as a whole.
It is imperative to collect data in these fields if the species are to continue to play their their role within a balanced, healthy and productive ecostsem.

Data will be collected on cetacean distribution, abundance and residency patterns in order to delineate critical habitats (feeding, breeding and resting grounds). Additionally, a community education programme will be initiated to raise local cetacean awareness and educate locals in cetacean survey techniques.

Contact us now for more details!!

 

Categories
News Flash

Help Us At No Cost to You

Help MCC

This is the symbol of our partnership with a revolutionary foundation that we’re going to present you now !

This amazing innovation is called HelpFreely. Thanks to this partnership, you can easily help us with our projects when you shop online, get that special someone a birthday gift, or even book your next holiday (to Cambodia for example). All you have to do is download the HelpfreelyApp™ for your Chrome or Firefox browser and a part of each online purchase you make at any participating shop will automatically go to Marine Conservation Cambodia. It’s 100% free and you can choose from the thousands of shops that have teamed up with the foundation (such as Ebay, Booking.com, Emirates…) to help out worthy causes all over the world.

The HelpfreelyApp™ is simple to download and easy to use. Best of all, it will help us continue our work in offering our services to the community. Moreover, if you use the link below to register on the website, it will allow us to raise 3% more on every future transaction of our supporter.

To be part of this initiative and learn more about this, click on this link:

Help Freely!!

Thank you for your continued support!