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Newsletter 6

Zoë

Little_egret
For the past two months, we have had the privilege of living with a little bittern (Ixobrychus minutus) who was hurt and found in a very poor state outside of Mr. Christofis’ Hotel Irini in Livadia.

A hotel guest found her injured on the patio outside of his room. He took the bird to Mr. Christofis who gave her to Tasos Aliferis, our Island Doctor and Mayor, who promptly brought her to us along with oral rehydration salts and a syringe. When we held her to administer the water infused with salts through a syringe that she desperately needed, we saw her frightened, in a state of shock, exhausted but instinctively trying to survive. She captured our hearts, earned our respect and so she became known as Zoë meaning “Life”. We immediately contacted Mr. Philippos Dragoumis of the Hellenic Wildlife Hospital who suggested that since Zoe was in such poor health she could not survive the long voyage to the island of Aegina where the Hospital is located. Zoe was hungry, dehydrated, exhausted, missing feathers along the top ridge of her entire neck and, most disconcertedly, was unable to use and stand on her left leg. Mr. Dragoumis advised us to feed her fresh, raw fish twice a day along with sufficient water to replicate her natural diet. He also reminded us that Zoë would naturally miss the October migration to Africa due to her anticipated long period of recovery. Making a special place in our home for her has been a real joy. Since she is immobile, we take her out during this beautiful autumn weather for feeding and she is alert to every sound of nature including the nightingales, rednecks, owls, and night herons that recently left Tilos for Africa.

Zoë has been more than a patient to us: she has actually been a teacher. We watch her relentless struggle to find the life she previously knew, her refusal to give up, her creative ways of balancing herself and moving about in her nest by using her left wing in place of her left leg and her courage in accepting us as a potentially threatening species when we handle her and feed her. Her proven adaptability and character during this transitional period following her injury from which Dr. Dragoumis said she might not survive is a good lesson for us all. It serves as an inspiration to us to accept the reality of life’s adversities and work constructively to improve the conditions that confront us. I try to imagine that in a few months she will hopefully be free to join her family of birds as they return to our island to give life to another generation. We will have to wait and see.

Little_egret_nest
Little Bitterns are the smallest members of the Ciconiiformes family which include herons, storks and ibises. They breed in extensive or small reed beds, overgrown reedy ponds and ditches. They are summer visitors to Europe and they winter in Africa. They nest on a platform of reeds often raised above water-level in reedbeds or bushes. They are very reclusive and often retreat from danger by climbing and running instead of flying. They frequent Tilos and can be seen where they used to live by aquatic ecosystems before they were dried out for tourism development or agricultural use.

We would like to thank Nikitas Asimakis (Municipal Water Co. employee) who was the first contributor of fresh fish for Zoë, followed by Michalis Papagregoriou (Waste Disposal Plant employee) and Michalis Kypreos (Eleni Supermarket owner). Pavlos Charalambakis (Municipal bus driver) made a special trip with the Tilos bus to ensure Zoë’s food supply. Their genuine eagerness to provide for this little bittern reflects the growing sensitivity on the island to preserve our Aegean wildlife heritage.

Hunting Tales

Deer
Lifting the twelve year old hunting ban on Tilos continues to be on the priority agenda of the General Secretary of the Periphery of Southern Aegean. A long list of hunting clubs, a few conservation organizations, and our Association have been invited by the General Secretary to attend a meeting to resolve the General Secretary’s political problem of satisfying recreational hunters, most of whom do not reside on Tilos but desire to come to the island, kill off certain wildlife, and then leave the broken flora and injured animals on the island to return to their undisturbed homes. The issue of lifting the hunting ban on Tilos has significant scientific, legal, and most importantly ethical and moral implications.

On the evening of October 7, 2004, following a rainy day, a fire of suspicious origin broke out in an inaccessible northwest part of our island. According to the fire-fighters on the scene, the most probable cause of the fire was incendiary material propelled by one or more flare guns that could only have been fired from a boat in the sea since the area is virtually impossible to access from land due to its steep, hard terrain, complete absence of walking paths or roads and the threatening presence of sheer cliffs. Our Tilos volunteer fire-fighters risked their lives in combating the fire which seriously threatened the village of Megalo Horio at one point when the evening wind began blowing from the north. The suspicious fire began at night so that it could not be combated from the air since the airplanes and helicopters of the Dodecanese Fire Department do not fly at night. What made the fire more suspicious in origin was the fact that the previous day’s rain created a high level of ground humidity and water retention thus requiring a strong and enduring fiery material beyond cigarettes, for example, to create the conflagration that ensued. The most distressing fact was when more than one unhappy resident said in the presence of non-resident witnesses that this was a criminal act of arson representing the revenge of hunters who wanted to punish us for resisting their attempts to open hunting on Tilos. We hope that such declarations are untrue. What was discouraging was that a few pro-hunting members of our small community tried to capitalize on the fear generated by the firefighters’ conclusion of arson to promote their cause. This climate of fear does not build a constructive road of dialogue in preparation for our upcoming meeting with the pro-hunting groups.

The majority of Tilos residents who support the hunting ban are asking for your help. Please, consider sending an e-mail to the Secretary General of the Periphery of Southern Aegean in support of the continuation of the hunting ban on Tilos. The General Secretary’s e-mail address is: grgenikou@saregion.gr or by signing our Petition to the General Secretary of the Periphery of Southern Aegean at: http://www.petitiononline.com/proact02/petition.html. Please, consider also joining our Association. Your membership support will add strength to our efforts and assist us in responding to the public opinion campaign that the hunting clubs have engaged to gain support for the lifting of the hunting ban on our island.

Tilos Park Board of Directors

Lupins
Our first elections were concluded at the General Assembly of the Founding Members of the Tilos Park Association (TPA) on October 26, 2004, in the Livadia Community of Tilos. It is with great pride that we present to you our first Board of Directors.

1. President: Anastasios Aliferis, MD, Mayor of Tilos
2. Vice President: Konstantinos Mentzelopoulos
3. Scientific Director: Aimilia Drouga, Phd
4. Finance Director: Spyridon Logothetis
5. Legal Director: Eleftherios Levantis
6. Strategic Development Director: Konstantinos Sakellaris, Vice Mayor of Tilos
7. Press Director: Panagiotis Vouros
8. Marketing & Business Development Director: Michael Kypraios, Member of the Tilos City Council
9. Purchasing Director: Elena Pissa

We congratulate and thank our newly elected Board Members for their spirit of volunteerism in upholding the aims of the TPA.

We Need Your Help

St_irene
Please, consider becoming a Member of the Tilos Park Association. Your membership will add strength to our voice in the preservation of the natural heritage of Tilos.
To receive a membership application package, please respond to this e-mail by filling out and returning the following form. Thank you for your consideration and your support.

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If you missed any of our past Newsletters, you can read them by visiting the following address on the Internet:

http://tilos-park.typepad.com/tilos_park_newsletter/2004/11/index.html

(Please, copy and paste this address on your browser.)

Newsletter 5

The Tilos Park Elections

Eristos_2
Dear Members of the Tilos Park:

It is Election time! Thank you for your support that enabled us to arrive at this crucial moment for our Association’s development. As per Article 10 of our bylaws, the positions are:

1. President (Community relations representative; person responsible for Board of Directors members’ execution of duties).
2. Vice-president (executes also duties of Director of Association Administration and General Secretary).
3. Scientific Director (supervisor of the Scientific Committee).
4. Economic Director (executes also the duties of Treasurer).
5. Legal Director (liaison with the legal counsel officially retained by the association; the legal Director cannot serve as association legal counsel during this term of Board of Directors office).
6. Director of Strategic Growth (the development of the association business plan).
7. Director of Press (in charge of all the publications of the association and the public relations with the members of the press).
8. Director of Marketing and Business Development (in charge of the marketing, promotional and business development activities of the association).
9. Director of Purchasing (in charge of the selection of suppliers to the association).

I have the pleasure to present to you biographical notes of all who expressed an interest or have been nominated to serve our membership from a position on the Board of Directors. Thank you once again for your support and remember: Every vote is important to us!

Sincerely yours,

Konstantinos Mentzelopoulos
Director

Candidate for President

Anastasios Aliferis, MD, was born in Lahi, Laconia, Greece, on November 12, 1951. Tasos, as his friends call him, has been the elected Mayor of Tilos since 1995. During this period he has been responsible for attracting €12.585.473 in public and private investment funds for the island’s infrastructure development that have improved the quality of life for residents and visitors alike. A devoted environmentalist, Tasos initiated a campaign to ban hunting on Tilos. This successful campaign earned him the support of the majority of Tilians, 6.000 environmentalists from throughout Europe who signed a petition that was delivered to the European Parliament and an award from the Greek Society for the Protection of Nature. Tasos is the President of the Tilos 21st Century shipping company, the medical doctor of Tilos and the founder of the Tilos Telemedicine service, which has become a telemedicine pilot program for all the islands of the Mediterranean. As Mayor, Tasos commissioned the environmental study that earned Tilos the recognition of being a SPA (Special Protection Area for the Birds) and a NATURA area. Tasos is is a founding member of the Tilos Park Association and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the President.

Candidate for Vice President

Konstantinos Mentzelopoulos was born in Athens, Greece, on September 29, 1956. His long-standing career has been in business development and serving environmental and humanitarian causes. He has served as the Managing Director of H. J. Meyers & Co., Inc, the largest Californian independent investment bank, as an adviser to the Social Fund of the Commission of the European Union, as the Executive Director of The Pullman-Washington Chamber of Commerce, as the President of the Hellenic-American Chamber of Commerce, as the Founder and Director of the Californian Council of European-American Chambers of Commerce, as the Director of the Axios Foundation, as a member of the Executive Committee of the Los Angeles Rainbow Coalition, and has been a long standing member of the American Marketing Association, American Personnel Industrial Relations Association, Sierra Club, Greenpeace International, Nature Conservancy, Audubon Society, Jacque Yves Cousteau Society, WWF International, Save the Wolf Maine Coalition, Greek Ornithological Society, Save the Children International, Amnesty International, American Civil Liberties Union, Rotary International and Slow Food International. Constantine’s articles and photographs have been published on many American and European publications and he worked as a volunteer news editor for the KPCC FM radio station in California, which is part of the National Public Radio Network. Constantine resides on Tilos and he is currently working as an Adviser to the Tilos Municipality. He is the Founder and the Interim Director of the Tilos Park Association, and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Vice President.

Candidate for Scientific Director

Aimilia Drougas, Ph.D., was born in Athens, Greece, on July 18, 1959. Aimilia is a biologist, geologist-oceanographer, professor at the Structural & Civil Department of TEI of Piraeus and general secretary of the Cetacean Rescue & Rehabilitation Research Center-ARION. She worked as a biologist for US Environmental Protection Agencies, as a chemical engineer and Q/A analyst for a ceramic microchip manufacturer, conducted geotechnical, hydro-geological, environmental and oceanographic feasibility studies for community and private sectors and specialized on management of biodiverse ecosystems and coastal protected areas. Aimilia has been trained since 1978 in underwater research and dolphin rescuing and management, as well as, marine turtle research and conservation through United Nations/Specially Protected Areas programs and the Ministries of Environment and Agriculture and the US National Coast Guard. She directed the Mediterranean Association to Save Sea Turtles, served as the President of the DELPHIS Society for the conservation of cetaceans, co-founded the Cetacean Rescue & Rehabilitation Research Center at Halkidiki, Greece, and she is a fellow member of the International Oceanographic Foundation, the National Resources Defense Council in USA, a member of the Marine Mammal Society, the International Association for Aquatic Animal Medicine, the European Cetacean Society, the Hellenic Chamber of Sustainable Development and Biodiversity, member of the Executive Committee on marine protection at Friends of the Earth-Greece and at the Hellenic Rescue Network “PROMETHEUS” for Natural Disasters on coastal and marine environment. In her lifetime she has also been a member or scientific advisor of Greenpeace International-Chicago’s Great Lakes, WWF International, Sierra Club, Jacque Yves Cousteau Society, Oceanic Society, the Nature Conservancy, the Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Underwater Research and Activities club. Aimilia is a founding member of the Tilos Park Association and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Scientific Director.

Candidate for Financial Director

Spiridon Logothetis was born in Athens, Greece, on February 8, 1971. Spiros, as his friends call him, graduated with a degree in Business Administration/Accountancy from the University of Piraeus. Spiros has worked for the Private and Public Sector holding the positions of Accountant, Internal Financial Auditor and Financial Analyst. He is a long standing member of the Economic Chamber and he is a licensed Economic Adviser and Accountant-Tax Specialist. He resides on Tilos and he is currently working as an independent accountant and for the Citizens Information Centre of the Greek Ministry of Interior Affairs. Spiros is a founding member of the Tilos Park Association and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Financial Director.

Candidate for Legal Director

Eleftherios Levantis, Μ. Sc., was born in Athens on January 23, 1963. He is a member of the Athens Bar Association and a Ph.D. candidate at the Athens Law School specializing on international and European Environmental Law, on the establishment and management of Marine Protected Areas in the EU. He is a Lecturer for Environmental law and policy at the Greek Police Academy and a legal counsel and consultant in environmental law for the General Secretary of the Regional Administration of Attica. He worked as a consultant for the Cypriot government on the approximation of the Cypriot Environmental legislation to the European Union environmental aquis and for the IUCN Environmental Law Center. He represented the European Public Law Center, as well as national and international non-governmental environmental organizations to the Council of Europe in Scientific Workshops as well as the Proceedings of the Bern Convention on the protection of European Wildlife and Natural Habitats. Eleftherios has consulted and represented national or international environmental organizations (Archipelagos Marine and coastal management, Mediterranean SOS Action Group, Zakynthine Ecological Movement, MEDASSET) to national authorities and he was the legal advisor of the international Environmental Organization ‘Mediterranean Association to Save the Sea Turtles’. He is a member of the Scientific Committee of the bimonthly legal magazine “Environment and Law”, a member of the European Environmental Law Association, the Scientific Committee of the environmental NGO ‘Archipelagos’, the Greek Environmental Law Association, the Greek Society of Environmental law and the Heidelberg Alumni International. Eleftherios is a founding member of the Tilos Park Foundation and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Legal Director.

Candidate for Director of Strategic Growth

Susan Hannon, PhD., is a Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Alberta, Canada, Director of the Meanook Biological Research Station, and a member of the NSERC advisory panel for CWS/University Research Chairs, American Ornithologists Union, WISEST Committee (Women in Science), International Ornithological Congress, Steering Committee of the Boreal Bird Centre, Scientific Advisory Committee of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, Space Committee of the Biological Sciences Dept. of the University of Alberta, Animal Behavior Society, British Ecological Society, Canadian Nature Federation, Cooper Ornithological Society, Society of Canadian Ornithologists, Society for Conservation Biology and Ecological Society of America. Dr. Hannon has been awarded the Killam Annual Professorship, the McCalla Professorship, and the NSERC University of Alberta Research Fellowship. Susan is a founding member of the Tilos Park Foundation and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Strategic Growth Director.

Candidate for Director of Press

Panagiotis Vouros was born in Greece on December 14, 1967. In April 1993 he graduated from the University of the Aegean with a degree in Environmental Science. His thesis objective was on the Dynamics of bacterial-phytoplanktonic systems influenced by eutrophication. After competing his military service at the Military Navy in 1994, he attended a two-year postgraduate course in the Department of Environment; Throughout his PhD candidacy, he designed his thesis on the Contribution of air-pollution levels in microenvironments on total exposure of civil population, which he nearly finished because of external, family crisis, beyond his power. Between 1997-2001, he worked in the Private Sector in various enterprises having as a main object, that of his studies. Suggestively, we report his occupation as a Research assistant for the “Air and Sante’ programmed, in cooperation with partners from England, France and Greece; in an Environmental Education programmed of air pollution and health effects, which was held by the Medical School of Athens University, other Environmental Education Centers, Phytopathological Institutes and the Mediterranean Environment Company. He has also contributed to the writing of a guide for school educators, holding the title ’Transport Networks and the Environment’ within the framework of the work ‘Planning and production of Educative Environmental material’. He has also worked in Vocational Training Centers (K.E.K.) and in a business consultancy company, as an executive, as well as a special scientific partner/consultant for the Development and Operation of a Recycling Program at the company’s headquarters. Since 1995 he has voluntarily occupied himself with Environmental Education Programs and more specifically in their Planning, Organization and Materialization, all over Greece. Panagiotis holds an Installation Systems Consultant Certificate, ISO 14000 as well as HACCP Systems. To conclude, since 1995 Panagiotis has been the president and vice-president of the Organization of Environmental Education and Culture at the Department of the Environment of which he is also the founder, as well as the Environmental Organizations’ Network for the Environmental Education in Greece. Since August 2003,he has been executing his duties as a vice-president and Public Relations and Press’ representative of the Employees’ Association of the Cyclades Prefecture. Since December 2001, he has been working for the Department of Planning and Environment of the Cyclades Prefecture, with multi-dimensional responsibilities aiming at the protection of the Environment in the Cyclades. Panagiotis is a founding member of the Tilos Park Foundation and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Press Director.

Candidate for Director of Marketing & Business Development

Michael Kypraios was born in Rhodes on February 28, 1969. He manages the family owned Eleni Hotel and Eleni Grocery Market both located in Livadia, Tilos. He has been elected as a Member of the Tilos City Council since 2002. Michael holds the position of the President of the Tilos Hotel Owners Association, the First Secretary of the Greek Socialist Party (PASOK) branch on Tilos, the Vice President of the Tilos Cultural Association and he was a founding member of the Action Committee to ban hunting on Tilos. Michael is a founding member of the Tilos Park Foundation and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Director for Marketing and Business Development.

Candidate for Director of Purchasing

Ilias Christofis was born in Rhodes on August 20, 1956. He is the President of Christofis Holidays and Managing Director of the Hotel Irini both in Livadia, Tilos. Ilias is an elected Member of the Tilos City Council, a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tilos 21st Century Shipping Company and a member of the Tilos Cultural Association. Ilias is a founding member of the Tilos Park Foundation and wishes to serve its membership from the position of the Director of Purchasing.

Newsletter 4

A Visit to Tilos by Dr. Susan Hannon

St_andreas_cape
August may not be the best time to visit Tilos Island, especially for a Canadian coming from a cool, wet western summer. My first impressions were: a hot, dry, inhospitable environment. Luckily the people were anything but!

My host, Konstantinos Mentzelopoulos, was very warm and welcoming and filled with enthusiasm and ideas for setting up a park on this wonderful island. I was joined by oceanographer Dr. Aimilia Drougas and Mr. Xenofon Kappas, Director of the Greek Ornithological Society, in my trip to investigate the island and I learned a lot from each of them about the geological origins of the island and the life of the Eleornora’s falcon respectively. We were met at the wharf at Livadia by Konstantinos, who looked like a boy scout troop leader, garbed in shorts, khaki shirt and brimmed hat and armed with a corn-cob pipe. We convened at a nearby café and Konstantinos gave us a brief history of the island and how he came to live here. He pointed out on a map the locations of the proposed protected areas: mostly high rocky areas and parts of islets surrounding the island. These are areas where local citizens have bought into the idea of the park, but, like many places in the world, they are spots where the possibility of human economic gain are slim. I found that my host had many ideas as to how other areas on the Island could be either brought into the park or could be used in a sustainable way.

I spent four days on the island, one day touring around the whole island, visiting Mikro Horio, Megalo Horio, the caves with the pygmy elephant bones, wonderful long clean beaches, and the marvelous jewel on the west side: the monastery at Agios Pandeleimonas. Other days were filled with swimming, hiking to the north and south of Livadia along spectacular trails with views of pristine beaches, terraced hills, blue rock thrush flitting over the rocks, goats, more goats and always the blue, blue sky and translucent water meeting at the coast of Turkey in the distance. And of course, many more discussions with Konstantinos and his wonderful wife Candice.

What I found most intriguing was the idea that mammals and birds had adapted over thousands of years to cultural landscapes, in particular the grain that was planted on the terraced slopes. With the exodus of people from Tilos after the war, these terraces were abandoned and species that relied on them have declined. One of the more innovative management plans is to restore these grain crops in the hopes of expanding populations at the lower end of the food chain. This will hopefully enhance populations of birds of prey, such as the Eleornora’s falcon and Bonelli’s eagle. Interestingly, after I left Tilos, I went to Hamburg, Germany and there learned about the restoration of another cultural landscape: heath lands. These habitats have also disappeared taking with them many charismatic species, such as the black grouse. The conservation challenges in Germany and Tilos are similar: restoration of cultural and natural landscapes and the development of sustainable agricultural practices and ecotourism that will give long-term economic benefits to local people, thereby ensuring support for conservation efforts.

Tilos is an incredible place that has not been spoiled by unrestrained unsustainable development. It is one of the few places left in the Aegean Sea like this and thus is of global importance as a representative of a rare ecosystem. With good planning, a strong vision and a will to make it so, it could emerge as a world model for ecologically and economically sustainable development.

The Tilos Park Elections

Eristos_1_1
Dear Members of the Tilos Park Association:

It is Election time! Thank you for your warm-hearted support that has enabled us to arrive at this crucial moment for our Association’s development. Please, consider serving on our Board for the next two year term. Your skills, experience, and enthusiasm are needed. As per Article 10 of our bylaws, the positions are:

1. President (Community relations representative; person responsible for Board of Directors members’ execution of duties).
2. Vice-president (executes also duties of Director of Association Administration and General Secretary).
3. Scientific Director (supervisor of the Scientific Committee).
4. Economic Director (executes also the duties of Treasurer).
5. Legal Director (liaison with the legal counsel officially retained by the association; the legal Director cannot serve as association legal counsel during this term of Board of Directors office).
6. Director of Strategic Growth (the development of the association business plan).
7. Director of Press (in charge of all the publications of the association and the public relations with the members of the press).
8. Director of Marketing and Business Development (in charge of the marketing, promotional and business development activities of the association).
9. Director of Purchasing (in charge of the selection of suppliers to the association).

I am looking forward to receiving your nominations and/or candidacies as well as a brief biography of each candidate which must be sent via e-mail no later than September 25th. Thereafter, you will receive the next issue of our newsletter with brief biographies of all who have expressed an interest or have been nominated to serve our membership by standing for election for a Board of Directors position. Voting ballots will then be sent via e-mail to all of our members. Thank you once again for your support and remember: your vote is important to us!

Sincerely yours,

Konstantinos Mentzelopoulos
Director
E-mail: Tilos-Park@otenet.gr

Newsletter 3

The threat of hunting looms over Tilos

Megalo_horio_1
The twelve year old hunting ban on Tilos is in danger of being lifted. The ban has protected our endangered bird species identified by the European Union as being of special global importance. Renewed efforts by national hunting clubs and others to lift the hunting ban on our small (63 sq. km.) island were announced publicly on Friday August 27, 2004 by the new Secretary General of the Aegean Periphery, an appointee of the newly elected Greek government. Our Association delivered a written response to the Periphery office on Monday August 30 providing scientific and legal bases in support of the ban. Official hunting season begins in Greece on September 15, 2004.

On September 3, 2004, the Tilos City Council passed a resolution supporting the continuation of the existing hunting ban on the island and authorized Mayor Anastasios Aliferis, MD, to take all necessary actions to preserve the ban to protect our irreplaceable and endangered aviary wildlife.

The residents of Tilos who support the hunting ban are asking for your help. Please, consider sending an e-mail to the Secretary General of the Periphery of Southern Aegean in support of the continuation of the hunting ban on Tilos. The General Secretary’s e-mail address is: grgenikou@saregion.gr .Please, consider joining our Association. Your membership support will add strength to our efforts and assist us in responding to the public opinion campaign that the hunting clubs have engaged to gain support for the lifting of the hunting ban on our island.

The Tilos Park Response

Motacilla_alba
On August 28, 2004, the Director of our Association was notified of the Periphery of Southern Aegean General Secretary’s decision to examine the issue of lifting the existing hunting ban on the island of Tilos. This information arrived together with the disturbing news heard on the radio that the five thousand members of the Dodecanese hunting clubs were preparing an “invasion” on the island in an effort to “punish” the Municipality for its “renegade” approach to hunting.

The very next business day after we were informed of the disturbing news, the following letter (written in Greek and English) was submitted via facsimile and by e-mail to the General Secretary of the Periphery of Southern Aegean with confirmation of its receipt and documented protocol.

August 30, 2004

Charalampos Kokkinos
Secretary General
Periphery of Southern Aegean
Eptanisou 35
GR-84100 Ermoupolis
E-mail: grgenikou@saregion.gr

Dear Secretary General:

It has come to my attention as Acting Director of the Tilos Park Association, a non-profit Association, that the Office of the Southern Aegean Periphery is considering the issue of whether to lift the hunting ban on the portion of Tilos Island that is not included in the permanent Wildlife Refuge established by the Greek Ministry of Agriculture.

Since your recent appointment to the Office of the Aegean Periphery, on which I would like to extend my sincere congratulations, it is understandable that there has not been a sufficient amount of time for you to become familiar with the unique characteristics and circumstances of Tilos that distinguish it from the other islands in the Dodecanese island chain. It is, therefore, with respect that I would like to take this opportunity to acquaint your office with the recent developments concerning the laws of the European Union that govern Tilos as a Special Protection Area, a status which has already been conferred upon our island in its entirety and, most importantly, the economic viability of the island in the foreseeable future that is of great importance to us all.

European Union Laws

As you are undoubtedly aware, European Union Council Directive 79/409/EEC issued April 2, 1979 governs the actions taken by all of the Member States concerning the conservation of bird species living in the wild state in the European territory of the Member States. The Directive requires the protection, management and control of these species. The European Court of Justice has the judicial authority to interpret the provisions of the Directive. As a result, case law has been developing on the subject for the last twenty five years. It is well established that Greece, as a Member State, has an affirmative legal obligation to implement all of the provisions of the Directive [Commission vs. Belgium, Case No. 247/85, ECR 1987, page 3029, paragraph 6].

Pertinent parts of the Directive, relevant case law and advisory documents provided by the Commission of the European Union as herein collectively discussed are attached hereto as Addendum I for your convenience and referral.

Tilos Has Endangered Species Required By The EU To Be Protected

Based upon the extensive independent scientific documentation of the species of wild birds nesting, breeding and feeding throughout the island [see Life Natura LIFE04NAT/GR/00101 entitled “Tilos: Conservation Management of an Island Special Protection Area” hereinafter referred to as “Natura Study”] and the measures that need to be affirmatively taken in order to conserve such naturally occurring species on Tilos including species identified as endangered in the Directive and having international importance [see Natura Study], Greece is legally bound by the provisions of the Directive to act affirmatively to ensure the protection of these birds.

The Directive Identifies The Actions To Be Taken By Greece

Greece is required to protect the bird species governed by the Directive; conserve their habitat where they nest, breed and forage for food; and avoid significant disturbances to the birds that would endanger their lives or cause them to devote unnecessary energy to flight from danger rather than feeding and reproducing.

Your attention is invited to Article 4 of the Directive that provides the legal framework for our obligations. Our bird species “shall be the subject of special conservation measures concerning their habitat in order to ensure their survival and reproduction in their area of distribution” [Article 4, Section 1]. “In respect of the protection areas referred to in Section 1 … above, Member States shall take appropriate steps to avoid ANY significant disturbances affecting the birds regarding the objectives of this Article” [Article 4, Section 4].

Endangered Bird Species on Tilos Are Subject To Disturbances By Human Activity

Tilos is internationally recognized by the scientific community as being a “small island” of 63 square km [Natura Study, Section B, 2004-6/1]. The nesting and breeding sites of the endangered species targeted by the Natura Study and included in the Directive have been documented on an illustrated map of Tilos, a copy of which is available for your review. According to the map, the endangered bird of prey species as well as the birds on which they feed (such as the Chukar) are scattered throughout the island. Therefore, the introduction of a new human activity on the island, such as hunting, (previously unknown to the current generation of birds) would create a significant disturbance as such term of art has become developed by the European Court of Justice and the Commission of the European Union.

According to the Natura Study, 11/3 entitled “Threat 3”, page 15, “Nearly all threatened species present in the [Tilos] site are affected by human-induced and inappropriate pressures due to lack of awareness.” In the European Court of Justice Case No. C-435/92 [France], the Court interpreted the meaning of “disturbance” of wildlife and noted that disturbance is not limited to the depletion of the species. The term “disturbance” has been developed to include the concept that “disturbances caused by hunting force these birds to devote most of their energy to moving to other spots and to fleeing to the detriment of time spent feeding and resting.” [Guidance Document on Hunting Under Council Directive 79/409EEC on Conservation of Wild Birds, Article 2.6.15]

National, Regional and Local Greece Conservation Measures Included Hunting Ban

In reliance upon the affirmative obligations imposed upon Greece under the Directive to protect our bird species on Tilos and with the understanding that the international community has been monitoring our actions, the Ministry of Agriculture through its establishment of our Wild Refuge area on sixty percent of the island and the Office of the Southern Aegean Periphery through its Administrative Order banning hunting on the remaining forty percent, began the conservation measures required to be taken under the provisions of the Directive. These actions taken at the national and regional levels in concert with the continuous support of the Municipality of Tilos reflect the mandatory legal compliance required to be taken by Greece in order to avoid potential prosecution under the terms of the Directive.

Life Natura Project Investment Completes Greece’s Conservation Obligations

As of the date of this letter, Greece is in full compliance with the terms of the Directive by taking affirmative conservation measures to protect the island bird species listed in the Directive by committing to the implementation of the terms of a Life Natura Project on Tilos. This Natura program approved in 2004 by the Commission of the European Union provides Eight Hundred Fifty Thousand Euros of investment capital to the island. The partnership consisting of the European Union, the Greek Ministry of Agriculture, the Municipality of Tilos and Oikos E.P.E. is currently in the process of building the infrastructure for the bird conservation as well as for the equally important ecotourism that is vital to the economy of the island. Lifting the hunting ban would directly conflict with and undermine the objectives of the Life Natura program as set forth in the Natura Study.

Reducing Protection Area By Lifting Hunting Ban Violates EU Case Law

Case No. C-57/89, Commission of the European Communities vs. The Federal Republic of Germany concerns the application of the habitat protection provisions of Article 4 of the Directive and directly relates to the subject of removing hunting ban restrictions on Tilos currently under consideration by your office. The Court stated “That interpretation of Article 4 Section 4 of the Directive is borne out by the ninth recital in the preamble which underlines the special importance which the Directive attaches to special conservation measures concerning the habitats of the birds listed in Annex I [of the Directive] in order to ensure their survival and reproduction in their areas of distribution. It follows that the power of Member States to reduce the extent of a special protection area can be justified ONLY on exceptional grounds.”

Thirty percent of Tilos’ resident bird species are listed in Annex I of the Directive and Tilos is already designated as a Special Protection Area with hunting ban restrictions imposed on the entire island for the last decade by the Greek governmental authorities. According to judicial precedent, ANY reduction of the special protection area already existing on Tilos by the introduction of hunting can only be justified on exceptional grounds which do not exist in the subject case of Tilos and may require accountability to the Commission of the European Union through questions posed by members of the European Parliament.

Allowing Hunting Violates Guidance Document on Hunting Under 79/409/EEC

Pursuant to Article 2, Section 4, Subsection 2 of the Guidance Document on Hunting Under Directive 79/409/EEC, “Article 7, Sections 1 and 4 of the Directive require the implementation of general principles that must be applied in relation to the practice of hunting. Member States MUST ensure that hunting … does not jeopardize conservation efforts in their [the birds’] area of distribution. This clearly implies that the practice of hunting must not represent a significant threat to efforts for the conservation of both huntable and non-huntable species. The national hunting regime should take into account this potential disturbing aspect of hunting.”

In consideration of the massive conservation efforts currently being undertaken by the Life Natura program on Tilos under the auspices of the Commission of the European Union, any introduction of hunting on this small island would present a significant disturbance to all of the wild bird species thus jeopardizing the conservation efforts and violating the provisions of the aforementioned documents.

Falco Eleonorae Reproduces During Hunting Season, Therefore Hunting Prohibited

The endangered resident bird of prey species entitled Falco eleonorae which nests and breeds on Tilos in the autumn, would be significantly disturbed by any introduction of hunting to this small island as evidenced by the location of its documented nesting sites identified on the illustrated map referred to above. The time period for reproduction as such term is used in the ornithological community includes the time required by young birds to attain the ability of flight. Therefore, the reproduction period incorporating nesting, egg hatching and flight learning activities occurs during and therefore conflicts with the hunting season which must therefore be disallowed on Tilos.

Relying Upon Compliance With EU Laws, Tilos Developed Ecotourism

As evidenced by the letter of support for maintaining the complete hunting ban that your office received from the President of the Tilos Hotel Association, the Tilos tourism industry has worked hard through significant promotional investment to develop ecotourism on the island. Ecotourism within the tourist industry embodies the concept of tourist attraction to sites of natural beauty and special protection allowing visitors to approach wildlife in its native habitat without fear or flight on the part of nature. Hunting incites universal fear of man in wildlife species threatened by such an incursion into their natural habitat. Tourists specifically seek nature tours of locations that have hunting bans so that they can get close to nature, photograph, observe and often paint the wildlife scenes on their holiday journeys.

It is with great pleasure that I can report to you our progress to date on the success of our ecotourism promotion. As a result of our comprehensive promotional efforts to ecotourism operators and the Tilos Municipality’s advertising investment (illustrations of which are available for your review), we are in the process of negotiating directly with international ecotourism operators including two large ecotourism operators in Scandinavia and Germany for 2005 bookings. “My travel” is the Scandinavian tour operator with more than one million clients per year, and their office has specifically developed an ecotourism department exclusively for such eco-holidays. Their office representatives have visited Tilos as the island’s guests and are preparing packages for Tilos as a holiday destination. The second operator is a German travel agency which has advised us of their present intention to introduce One Thousand Five Hundred (1,500) clients to Tilos in April 2005 representing approximately Seven Hundred Fifty Thousand Euros (750,000 euros) of travel investment in our island, exclusive of restaurant and gift purchases that are customarily made by visitors.

The financial revenue to this island during the “off season” during which ecotourism thrives due to the favorable weather conditions for viewing and experiencing nature is of extreme critical importance to this small island whose economy is essentially predicated upon tourism. To fill hotel rooms and restaurants during the “off seasons” when our weather is accommodating, boat travel is viable, wildlife is abundant and diverse, and our residents desperately seek employment is an objective which the Municipality of Tilos, the Tilos Hotel Association, the Tilos Culture Association and the Tilos Park Foundation have been working hard to achieve for years.

According to the Natura Study, Section 11/3, “local people are aware of the general value of the site [Tilos], primarily due to the Municipality’s hunting restriction initiatives.” Such European Union recognition of the value of Tilos PRIMARILY due to the hunting ban is further evidence of the contribution that the hunting ban has made to the economy of the island which is currently proving in financial terms to be realized and significant through the employment and revenue benefits accruing through ecotourism.

Office of the Periphery Failure to Notify Citizens of Public Meeting Re: Hunting

I was disappointed to learn that your meeting with the Mayor of Tilos on Friday August 27, 2004 was represented to Dr. Aliferis in advance to be a private and informal meeting at your office when in actual fact the meeting consisted of a large partisan group including representatives of the Greek Hunting Clubs. The failure by your office to provide adequate public notice of a public meeting in a government office during regular business hours to discuss a subject of local, regional, national and European Union importance with legal, political and socio-economic significance is very disturbing. The failure of such public notice and the invitation extended by your office to Greek Hunting Club representatives resulting in the exclusion of other interested parties is inconsistent with the democratic principles upon which our nation operates. This occurrence should be alarming to those who learn of this unfortunate oversight by receipt of copies of this letter as set forth below.

Conclusion

For reasons set forth above, the Tilos Park Foundation opposes the termination of the hunting ban restrictions under consideration by your office and supports any legal, including injunctive, relief that may be undertaken to preserve the status quo on the island. Tilos has successfully made the transition to eco-tourism representing a significant financial contribution and revenue base for island employment. Tilos eco-tourism is now sufficiently advanced to provide a specific amount of money damages (representing evidentiary proof) that would be sustained in the event of loss of tour bookings should the hunting ban be lifted by the Office of the Aegean Periphery.

Should you have any questions or need any additional information, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Sincerely yours,

Konstantinos A. Mentzelopoulos
Director

cc:

1. Jillian Evans, Member of the European Parliament, Committee on the Environment.
2. Dr. Anastasios Aliferis, Mayor, Tilos Municipality.
3. Michalis Kypreos, President, Tilos Hotel Association.
4. Xenofon Kappas, Director, Hellenic Ornithological Society
5. George Sfikas, President, Greek Society for the Protection of Nature.

We Need Your Help

Ophisops_elegans
Please, consider becoming a Member of the Tilos Park Association. Your membership will add strength to our voice in the preservation of the natural heritage of Tilos. To receive a membership application package, please respond to this e-mail by filling out and returning the following form to Tilos-Park@otenet.gr . Thank you for your consideration and your support.

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Newsletter 2

The Eagles of Tilos

Bonelli's Eagle (Hieraaetus fasciatus)

The Bonelli Eagle is a medium-large, powerful eagle with broad wings, which has been classified by the European Union as an endangered species with a breeding population numbering only 862-1072 breeding pairs. The global range of the Bonelli Eagle extends from the Iberian Peninsula and NW Africa across southern Europe, the Middle East and Arabian Peninsula through Afghanistan to India, south China and Indonesia. Tilos hosts three pairs of this wonderful bird of prey, which represent 30% of the Bonelli Eagle population in the Southern Aegean.

The Bonelli Eagle stick nest is usually located on rocky cliffs and over the years it can reach a huge size. Laying extends from early January to mid April but most clutches are laid between mid February and mid March. Normally two eggs are laid. Incubation is mainly by the females and lasts 37-40 days. The fledgling period is 61-77 days and the juveniles stay in the parental territory for 12-16 weeks before reaching independence. Breeding birds are sedentary but juveniles and immature ones may wander over large distances, and are frequently found on low altitude plains with high prey density which normally lack breeding pairs.

The Bonelli Eagle preys on medium-sized mammals and birds of a wide range of species. Rabbits and partridges are the preferred prey but it also preys on rodents, pigeons and lizards.

In an upcoming issue of our newsletter we will present to you the Golden Eagle.

Sparrow Song

According to a recent report in "Proceedings of the Royal Society of London", male sparrows that learned songs well when they were young are more successful at attracting mates than males that don't remember how to hit all the right notes. And the slackers can forget about trying to make up for their learning deficit with new and original songs. It turns out that female sparrows prefer songs that come closest to those they heard when they were chicks.

The study also suggests that song-learning abilities reflect a bird's nutritional history, which, in turn, affects its brain development. So the female sparrow's ear is discerning those time-honored, most faithfully rendered songs as a way of selecting the best-fit males for mating.

Faces of the Tilos Park

Anemone
The true wealth of any organization lies in the minds and hearts of those individuals whose efforts contribute to the achievement of its goals. This section of the newsletter will be devoted to acquainting you with people from around the world who are helping to make our dreams come true.

Last week Dr. Susan Hannon, a Founding Member of our Association, arrived in Tilos from Canada brimming with enthusiasm to explore the island and offer her assistance in this nascent stage of the park development.

Her stellar credentials reflect the quality and value of her gracious contribution of ideas which included a special focus on the character of the island’s indigenous aviary population and natural habitat. With a composite view of the interdependence of man and nature on this small island, their surprising ability to thrive and not just survive on Tilos due to the abundance of natural spring water, and the existence of essential components for a successful park, she drew from her global consulting experience in identifying important tasks to be completed for the creation of a Natural Park that will benefit, and not diminish, the quality of life for man as well as nature on Tilos.

One special feature of her approach to the protection of nature is her recognition of the importance of human culture including its pleasures and pastimes in the development of protected areas. Her view is to reasonably incorporate, rather than prohibit, previously existing lawful activities in a park setting that is in the midst of human habitat. Experience has shown that respect for human values and traditions in concert with the protection of nature against a backdrop of compromise and moderation for mutual benefit ensures the best chance of long term success for the park. It is with our deep appreciation and gratitude to Dr. Hannon that we are so pleased to share with our readers her valuable contributions to our island. We hope to see her again very soon.

Susan Hannon, PhD., is a Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at the University of Alberta, Director of the Meanook Biological Research Station, and a member of the NSERC advisory panel for CWS/University Research Chairs, American Ornithologists Union, WISEST Committee (Women in Science), International Ornithological Congress, Steering Committee of the Boreal Bird Centre, Scientific Advisory Committee of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, Space Committee of the Biological Sciences Dept. of the University of Alberta, Animal Behavior Society, British Ecological Society, Canadian Nature Federation, Cooper Ornithological Society, Society of Canadian Ornithologists, Society for Conservation Biology and Ecological Society of America. Dr. Hannon has been awarded the Killam Annual Professorship, the McCalla Professorship, and the NSERC University of Alberta Research Fellowship.

We Need Your Help

Sylvia_melanocephala
Please, consider becoming a Member of the Tilos Park Association. Your membership will add strength to our voice in the preservation of the natural heritage of Tilos. To receive a membership application package, please respond to this e-mail by filling out and returning the following form. Thank you for your consideration and your support.

First Name: …………………………………………………………………………………………………….
Last Name: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Are you 18 or older (Yes or No)? ………………………………………………………………….
Profession: ………………………………………………………………………………………………………
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Newsletter 1

Tilos_park_logo

On October 4, 2003, an international assembly of Tilos residents, scientists, representatives of the Local Authority, University and Research Institutes and Organizations, as well as global environmental organizations met in the Livadia community of Tilos to create the “Tilos Park,” a non-profit association. On July 5, 2004, the Greek Court in Rhodes issued a judicial decree officially establishing the Tilos Park association.

As described in its bylaws, the aims of the association are:

1. the maintenance and protection of all components and values of the natural environment in the land and marine region of the island cluster of Tilos.
2. the maintenance and protection of all components and values of the cultural environment of the island cluster of Tilos.
3. the maintenance and protection of all components and values of the landscape of the island cluster of Tilos.
4. the realization of all necessary action by the management for the maintenance and protection of the natural and cultural environment and the landscape of the island cluster of Tilos.
5. the briefing, informing, sensitization and activation of residents, collective institutions, visitors and more generally the users of the land and marine region of the island cluster of Tilos.
6. the scientific research and study of the natural and cultural environment of the island cluster of Tilos.
7. the identification and promotion of the values and natural wealth in the land and marine region of the island cluster of Tilos for conservation.
8. the attraction of visitors and the growth of tourism in a form that is compatible with the conservation and protection of the natural and cultural environment of the island cluster of Tilos.
9. the environmental briefing and education of the users of the land and marine region of island cluster of Tilos.
10. the growth of volunteerism for the protection of the natural and cultural environment of the island cluster of Tilos.
11. the achievement of sustainable development and balanced economic growth along with the maintenance of social cohesion within the framework of the protection of the environment in the island cluster of Tilos.
12. the creation of the educational organization entitled " Aegean Centre for Environmental Studies" for the education in management of protected regions and more generally for the benefit of knowledge concerning the protection of the environment.
13. the creation of a centre of protection of rural/farm animals and plants of the Aegean that are threatened with extinction.
14. the support of farmers and livestock-breeders who practice organic production and contribute to the environmental protection and/or expansion of the protected region in the island cluster of Tilos.
15. the promotion of the establishment of officially protected areas within the island cluster of Tilos by the Greek state and the compliance with all rules, regulations and laws promulgated in support thereof.
16. the management of Tilos’ protected areas.

The Tilos Park Logo

In honor of the twelve year effort by the Tilos Municipality and its residents to protect their natural heritage, the Tilos Park Association decided to use the image of a Tillian partridge as its logo. The Tilos Park association logo is a creation and offer of George Sfikas, painter, writer and President of the Greek Society for the Protection of Nature.

Tilos Park Founding Members

The City of Tilos, the Athens University Zoological Museum, the Mediterranean Garden Society, the World Commission on Protected Areas, Dr. Anastasios Aliferis, Panayiotis Vouros, Dr. Enrico Cavina, Michael Davies, Dr. Aimilia Drouga, Martinos Gaetlich, Dr. Susan Hannon, Nikolaos Theodorides, Anna Theodoridou, Miltiades Kalamaras, Athanasios Karteros, Dr. Anastasia Komninou, Ioannis Koronaios, Michael Kypreos, Eleftherios Levantis, Maria Thessalou Legaki, Spiros Logothetis, Eugenia Loupaki, Christina Mega, Dr. Candice Mentzelopoulou, Konstantinos Mentzelopoulos, Demetri Michalos, Paris Papatheodorou, Faidon Papatheodorou, George Pastrikos, Elena Pissa, Konstantinos Sakelaris, Dr. Andreas Sioulas, Dr. Nikolaos Symeonides, George Sfikas and Ilias Christofis.

Tilos

Livadia_1
Tilos is an Aegean island with nineteen beaches, twelve mountains, seven medieval castles, a Byzantine monastery and two hundred churches, a cave full of natural discoveries, a village that is a declared cultural monument, a hundred bird species, hundreds of wild flowers and herbs, and five hundred residents.

Sixteen different types of ecologically balanced habitats, or biotopes, including four hundred types of plants and over a hundred bird species comprise the island’s remarkable natural world. Every visitor to Tilos becomes an honorary bird watcher as the beauty and richness of the island’s aviary world is impossible to miss. Eagles, falcons and other birds of prey together with shags, cormorants, seagulls, rollers, bee-eaters, golden orioles, jays, doves, owls, nightingales, swallows, sparrows and herons, just to name a few, fill the island’s skies. The island has also become an Islander Partridge haven thanks to the self imposed hunting ban which was inaugurated in 1987.

We Need Your Help

Cynthia_cardui
Please, consider becoming a Member of the Tilos Park Association. Your membership will add strength to our voice in trying to achieve the aims of our Association and support our efforts in saving from extinction the endangered bird species that have made Tilos their home. For membership information please send an e-mail with your name and e-mail address to: Tilos-Park@otenet.gr Thank you for your consideration.