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October 25, 2009

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Another Prominent Voice for the Leatherbacks

Dr. Richard LaVal received an email from Alvaro Ugalde with the Voice of the Leatherback Turtles attached. He read the magazine and immediately sent a letter to the Legiislative Assembly on behalf of Las Baulas National Park and the Leatherbacks. In addition, he forwarded the magazine to colleagues and friends and provided his own introduction. We will share both his letter and his introduction with you.

To download a copy of Voice of the Leatherback Turtles click here.

Bats de Costa RicaFirst, it is important for you to know a little about Richard because it adds credibility to his sincerity. Dr. Richard LaVal first visited Costa Rica in 1967 as a graduate student in the Organization for Tropical Studies tropical biology course. He moved to Costa Rica in early 1980 and lives in Monteverde. He is a member of the Tropical Science Center in San Jose, owner of the Monteverde Cloud Forest Preserve  and a leader in conservation efforts within the country. He has been doing extensive research and giving lectures and field experiences on bats. He has found time to write a book (Murciélagos/Bats de Costa Rica) and many articles in scientific journals. More recently he opened a state-of-the-art live bat exhibit in Monteverde, the Bat Jungle, that is unique in the world and one of the leading natural history exhibits in Costa Rica.

In the introductory note to his friends, he encourages them to send their own letters protesting the legislation to downgrade this national park to a wildlife refuge, which effectively opens it up to commercial development.

He writes,“ I have seen these magnificant turtles many times laying eggs on this beach. It is an unforgettable sight! I also saw, on an adjacent beach, one of the results of development, which always has brilliant lighting – a street light was actually on the edge of the beach, and confused hatchling leatherback turtles were walking in endless circles under the light trying to get to the ocean. No doubt they were picked off by predators before they ever reached the sea. Turtle biologists tell us female turtles will turn back if they encounter lights on a beach, so development anywhere near Playa Grande beach is simply out of the question.”

His letter to key members of the Legislative Assembly, which are provided in the magazine, is very compelling and it follows:

I strongly recommend that you reject the bill now pending before the Environment Commission of the Legislative Assembly (Expediente No. 17.383 “Rectificación de Límites del Parque Nacional Marino Las Baulas y Creación del Refugio de Vida Silvestre Las Baulas de Propiedad Mixta.”) This proposed legislation is not necessary and has been rejected by legal, political, and environmental experts in Costa Rica and around the world.

Leatherback turtles return each year to make nests and lay their eggs on the beach where they have hatched. Costa Rica’s Las Baulas National Marine Park is their home and has been for thousands of years. The Leatherback turtles in the Pacific Ocean are at extreme risk of extinction. There are today probably fewer than 1,000 individuals remaining in the entire eastern Pacific. The downgrading of the Park’s protection of the turtles puts them at imminent risk.

The Leatherbacks are magnificent animals completely deserving of all the respect humans can give them. If these turtles become even more threatened and disappear as a result of this careless and unnecessary legislation, all humans will be the worse for it. Ethically and morally, it is unconscionable; economically it is unwise, because Costa Rica’s green image will be forever sullied; and politically it is monumentally absurd since the reputation of Costa Rica as a country that pretends to lead the world with Peace with Nature will be shown to be a charade.

Reject this bill. Save the habitat of the Leatherback turtles, and save Costa Rica the shame and embarrassment of shoddy, anti-environmental legislation

Richard LaVal

 

 

 

 

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September 25, 2009

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“For All Time” The Fight for the Leatherback Sea Turtle

For All Time is a twenty year old, award-winning documentary, addressing the urgency for creating the Las Baulas Marine Park. This video is timeless, primarily because absolutely nothing seems to have changed in the two decades since. Inaction is a co-conspirator with time, and both are mortal enemies to the preservation of the natural environment.  [...]

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October 30, 2008

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Nectandra’s Environmental Investment in Resource Conservation

One of the greatest flaws in programs developed by large conservation minded organizations in dealing with resource rich emerging nations like Costa Rica is their exclusive focus on the land, often at the expense of the local citizens. There is no more important resource to protect than the well being of the people, and without [...]

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October 21, 2008

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Tortuguero Environmental and Ecological Paradise

Tortuguero National Park is the entrance way to one of the most ecological diverse displays of flora and fauna in Costa Rica boasting a waterway of famed beauty. It is also the most important area in the western Caribbean for turtle preservation, as it is here where the Green Turtle and others come to lay their [...]

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September 23, 2008

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Video on Golfito Environmental Damage

The story behind the destruction on Playa Platanares to make way for a highway cutting right through the beach continues to unfold. Very often, the forces behind commercial growth and development are large and well funded, frequently supported by government institutions. Just as often, the opposition voice for nature and the environment is a small [...]

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July 28, 2008

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Costa Rica’s Environmental Tribunal

There is a story in the Miami Herald  with the headline, “Tribunal is on Coastal Crusade in Costa Rica. The Environmental Tribunal is the country’s highest environmental court, and it is an autonomous institution on the Environment Ministry. They have just completed a four month study  of Costa Rica’s Pacific frontier, ordering the investigation of [...]

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