Dear EarthTalk: What is the status of Australia’s koalas? What
organizations are working to help them and what can people like me do to
make a difference? -- Amy Marcus, via e-mail
Seven to 10 million koalas inhabited Australia at the time of white
settlement two centuries ago. Today only about 100,000 remain. Native to the
eucalyptus forests of Australia’s eastern seaboard, koalas were hunted
extensively by the continent’s first European settlers, who shipped as many
as two million of the highly prized pelts abroad each year.
While protection efforts by the Australian government have since eliminated
most koala hunting, today these climbing marsupials face an even more
imposing threat in the form of over-development and sprawl. Koalas are
becoming scarce even in their primary habitats, and are considered
“vulnerable” by the Australian government and “at risk” by the World
Conservation Union, a global consortium of scientists and experts.
According to a recent survey by the Australian Koala Foundation (AKF), the
primary non-government agency working to protect koalas, a third of the
country’s viable habitat no longer supports any of the animals, while the
remaining two-thirds is becoming increasingly fragmented or degraded by
human activity. “I truly believe that in my lifetime the koala will become
extinct unless we do something,” says AKF's executive director Deborah
Tabarat.
Tabarat and other environmentalists are urging the Australian government to
protect the eucalyptus groves upon which koalas depend for food and shelter.
Increasing urbanization has led to the removal of millions of acres of
eucalyptus forest, especially on Australia’s east coast where most of the
continent’s people, as well as koalas, live.
Australian authorities have relocated koalas from islands to repopulate some
parts of the continent, including South Australia, where koalas were hunted
to extinction, and Victoria, where numbers had been reduced to almost
nothing. As a result, populations have bounced back somewhat, but new
problems, such as inbreeding and overcrowding, which leave them more
susceptible to disease, have resulted.
Additionally, more than 4,000 koalas die every year from dog attacks and car
collisions. This “one-two punch,” says Tabarat, could lead to Australia’s
koalas going extinct in the wild within 15 years.
Those interested in the fate of the koala can support AKF’' efforts. The
organization has created a Koala Habitat Atlas to identify and record koala
habitat throughout Australia, and is lobbying the country’s legislature to
pass a National Koala Act which would provide government funding to protect
these lands key to the animal’s survival.
CONTACTS: World Conservation Union,
www.iucn.org; Australian Koala Foundation, G.P.O. Box 2659,
Brisbane QLD 4001 Australia,
www.savethekoala.com.
GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The
Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; or submit your
question at:
www.emagazine.com, or e-mail us at:
earthtalk@emagazine.com.
Dear EarthTalk: What can be done to make office buildings more
energy-efficient? So many leave thousands of lights on at night! --
Deborah, Baltimore, MD
Office buildings are indeed the top energy guzzlers among commercial
buildings in the United States, head and shoulders above retail and service
establishments and even manufacturing facilities.
The U.S. Department of Energy says that office-building owners spend an
average of $1.34 per square foot annually on electricity. Lights, office
equipment and heating/cooling systems account for about 90 percent of this
expenditure. Lighting is clearly the main culprit, comprising 44 percent of
all usage. Office equipment--computers, printers, copiers, fax machines and
telephone systems--accounts for about 23 percent.
Building managers can make a big difference by installing energy-efficient
systems--from heating and cooling to lighting and waste disposal--but
individual business owner and their employees can also have impact by simply
turning off lights and shutting down dormant machinery during non-working
hours.
According to Advanced Energy, a North Carolina-based non-profit organization
that monitors and analyzes energy use in commercial spaces, replacing older
traditional fluorescent tubes with newer and more efficient compact
fluorescent bulbs can save as much as 30 percent on electricity. And
installing occupancy sensors so that lights go on and off as people enter
and leave rooms can save an additional five percent. Furthermore, building
managers can save up to 15 percent on electricity bills by programming
thermostats to trigger warming and cooling as needed during the workday
while hibernating at night and on the weekends when buildings are mostly
empty.
Periodically assessing and retooling heating and cooling systems can achieve
additional energy savings. Any heating and cooling equipment older than a
decade, for example, is probably ripe for an upgrade to a newer more energy
efficient system. The federal government’s Energy Star program, administered
jointly by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Energy,
rates the energy-efficiency of lighting, office equipment and
heating/cooling systems from a wide range of manufacturers. Purchasing
administrators can browse the Energy Star website to find out which models
and systems will save a company the most money.
A handful of environmental groups are walking the talk via recent “green”
retrofits to their office spaces. The National Audubon Society, Natural
Resources Defense Council and Environmental Defense, for example, have
installed occupancy sensors and compact fluorescent lighting throughout
their offices, and in some cases have installed windows and configured their
workspaces to make use of natural daylight instead of artificial light where
possible.
GOT AN ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTION? Send it to: EarthTalk, c/o E/The
Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; or submit your
question at:
www.emagazine.com, or e-mail us at:
earthtalk@emagazine.com.