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Mar. 10 -- The nature
conservation charity, Environmental Protection in
the Caribbean (EPIC), is launching a poster competition,
Why are Seabirds Important? Open to all
schools from Grenada to Anguilla, EPIC is offering
fantastic prizes to both students and schools. Winning
students will receive the most comprehensive Caribbean
bird book, Birds of the West Indies, a
pair of binoculars, as well as their posters displayed
in government offices and in the press. The winning
students schools will also receive Birds
of the West Indies and $EC 300 to purchase books
on nature conservation.
If you are a student
between 6 and 18 you can enter the competition. Your
poster can be of any size and media (paints, textiles,
mixed media etc.) the more inventive the better. The
poster must be photographed or scanned and the signature
of the Principle of the entrants school attached
and sent via email to: klowrie@epicislands.org. The
address, telephone number, email and contact information
for the school and student should also be included.
The closing date is April 30 2010, with the winner
from each category (6-9, 10-13, 14-18) announced in
June 2010.
Judges are looking
for a design that is eye catching and will raise the
profile of seabirds in the Caribbean. Work should
address why seabirds are important to people and the
environment and why they are important in their own
right. Entrants might consider their links to fishermen,
Caribbean culture and role in the marine food web
etc. For ideas you could look at the EPIC website
www.epicislands.org , SCSCB website www.scscb.org
, Birdlife website www.birdlife.org , RSPB website
www.rspb.org.uk and project partners website,
http://www.listalight.co.uk/webpages/seabirdspecies.htm
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Have you ever looked
up into the sky and seen a Magnificent Frigatebird
spiralling on the thermals or mobbing fishermen as
they bring their catch back to the wharf? Have you
watched a mighty, prehistoric-looking Brown Pelican
catching fish with its huge scooping beak or the clown-like
Brown Booby perched on a buoy? Seabirds are the silent
backdrop to our beautiful Caribbean islands, but what
is their role? Katharine and David Lowrie, from EPIC
are undertaking a two year study to create the first
Seabird Breeding Atlas of the Lesser Antilles. It
will provide a comprehensive database of where seabirds
are nesting and how many there are. To highlight the
importance of seabirds to our islands, they decided
to launch the poster competition.
The Lowries explain,
Seabirds are like the building blocks of marine
ecosystems, if you remove them, the system begins
to fall down. Around the world, declines in their
populations have pre-empted collapses in fisheries.
Seabirds provide the warning signs, if man chooses
to look. Seabirds eat diseased and old fish, improving
fish stocks. They provide the exotic backdrop to the
Caribbean islands that tourists flock to visit. SCSCB
(Society for the Conservation and Study of Caribbean
Birds), Bird Life International and RSPB have all
generously funded the prizes. We hope that through
the competition, people will begin to realize the
value of seabirds and start to conserve them.
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