International Coastal Cleanup Singapore
Mangrove section

Saturday, 8th September 2001
Introduction | Guidelines | Data | History | Join us | Links | Working Group

Saturday, 15th September 2001 - The beach cleanup who's who!

2001 results! - 2.7 tons of marine debris removed from Buloh - Kranji
mangroves in about 90 minutes, of which 90% is plastic!

Data Summary | Dirty Dozen | Material types

CNA article - by Farah Abdul Rahim, 8th September 2001

Galleries galore! - More than 400 digital photos from the cleanup!



Press release by the Office of Corporate Communications,
the National University of Singapore

This is the 10th anniversary of the event in Singapore, and the 5th year of the Mangrove
Cleanup. The Mangrove cleanup is coordinated this year by the NUS Raffles Museum of
Biodiversity Research, with kind assistance from Sungei Buloh Nature Park and Kate Thome.

Catholic High, Commonwealth Secondary School, Saint Andrew's Junior College, Singapore American School's Middle School,
Singapore American School's SAVE Club, Tao Nan Marlin Sea Scouts, Temasek Junior College (Green Instinx),
Victoria Junior College, Woodllands Ring Secondary School, Yusof Ishak Secondary School

with Sungei Buloh Nature Park, the Singapore Amateur Radio Transmitting Society &
the Nature Society (SIngapore) and volunteers from all three organisations

Sat 1st Sept 2001
9am - 11am
-
Fri 7th Sept 2001
9am - 11am
Sat 8th Sept 2001
8.30am - 1pm
Sat 8th Sept 2001
1pm - 4pm
Briefing for participants about international and local objectives, the sites, procedures and safety.
Introduction to the mangroves of Singapore by guides from NUS, SBNP & NSS.
Cleanup and data submission at Buloh and Kranji mangrove systems during the low tide.
Trash bag transfer from Kranji mangrove the reservoir park by Sea Scouts during the high tide.
NUS Science Auditorium (LT31)
Sungei Buloh Nature Park
Sungei Buloh Nature Park
Sungei Buloh Nature Park

 
 











Introduction

The International Coastal Cleanup is coordinated by the Centre for Marine Conservation. Their webpage has information about the history, motivation, country reports and more. CMC webpage

The Singapore chapter of the International Coastal Cleanup (ICCS) began in 1991. The country coordinator for SIngapore is the Nature Society (Singapore) and by 1997, there were more than 2,500 volunteers participating, sponsored by the Rotary Club of SIngapore and Caltex Oil.

After establishing a strong programme in the beaches, organisers launched the first mangrove cleanup in Singapore during the 6th ICCS in 1997 at the Sungei Mandai Kechil mangroves. Subsequently, the mangrove cleanup has been conducted at the Buloh-Kranji mangroves, operating out of the Sungei Buloh Nature Park. In 1999 (3rd mangrove cleanup), Sungei Buloh Nature Park formally joined the ICC family and jointly ran the event at the park.

This year, in the 10th Anniversary of the ICCS, the mangrove cleanup will reach the core area of the Kranji mangroves, an area with an extremely high load of trash that has accumulated over decades.

Work at this site iss possible this year with the help of ham radio operators from the Singapore Amateur Radio Transmitting Society who will provide the safety commmunication network and canoeists from the Sea Scouts who will organise the removal of trash to pickup points during the afternoon high tide.

The mangrove cleanup will have two pre-event activities: a briefing at the NUS Science Auditorium (LT 31) and an introduction to the mangrove ecosystem at Sungei Buloh Nature Park

See article on the ICCS in the Mangroves of SIngapore I.

 

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Useful guidelines

Help for Organisers, prepared for ICCS, 2001 by NYP GeoCouncil
Guidelines from the Nature Society (Singapore) - 1999
Guidelines from the Centre for Marine Conservation, USA - <1999

 

 

More to come - guidelines for organisers, coordinators, participants.

 

Data recording and compilation

The data card is a double-sided card listing the most common items found along shorelines. Participants record the incidence of items using these cards. Each group of 3-5 studdents can share a card. You can download the data card below, either in MS-Word or in Adobe PDF formats; you will need Acrobat Reader for the latter, and you can dowload for free ) .

At the end of the event, all the data cards for each school should be compiled using the Excel spreadsheet provided below, and submitted to the Data Manager for Singapore the same day.

The Data Manager will compile all the Singapore data from beaches and mangroves and subimt the results to the CMC within a week. You will be able to see the summaries at this webpage at the end of the day of the event. CMC will then compile the international data, which are issued in reports and posted to their webpages.

 

OS format
Data card - dowload Acrobat
Data submission
Mac
PC

 

Data examples

Data for Buloh - Kranji mangroves: Raw data from 8th ICCS (1999) - Dirty Dozen data from 9th ICCS (2000)

More to come - Singapore data records for beaches, other years, dirty dozen, no. of participants, schools with a record, no of bags collected, miles cleaned etc.

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For the record...
Thanks to Karman Chua et al. for scanning the slides!

6th ICC Singapore, 20th September 1997
First mangrove cleanup in Singapore. It was a small crowd (<40) of mainly adults compared to the more then 2,500 volunteers on beaches, but it provided some of the hardest work -
View gallery

7th ICC SIngapore, 19th September, 1998
The ICC was nearly rained out, and in fact, beach sites had to be abandoned because of the threat of lightning strikes. The mangrove session went off okay, though -
View gallery.

8th ICC Singapore, 18th September 1999
It was a bright and sunny day, hence, the brighter pictures! -
View Gallery
Report that appeared in Wetlands, a publication of the Sungei Buloh Nature Park

9th ICC Singapore, 16th September 2000
t mangrove sites in Sungei Buloh and Kranji were students and teachers from the Singapore
American School (high and middle schools), St. Andrew's and Victoria Junior College,
supported by Sungei Buloh Nature Park, the Nature Society (Singapore) & The Habitat Group.
View photos from
Victoria Junior College, SAVE & SAJC

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Interested in joining us?

The mangrove cleanup is hoping to recruit helpers and supervisors for
various aspects of the operations.

Anyone is welcome; it's funa and meaningful. There are all sorts of jobs you can do:
- pick up and categorise the trash on the actual cleanup day,
- "loaders" - strong men who carry the heaviest loads and constantly remove loaded trash bags,
- supervisors to the volunteers,
- guides for nature guiding prior to the event,
- logistics,
- drivers,
- first aid and safety,
- data entry
- photography,
- webpage maintenance (this page sure needs help!)
- etc, etc, etc.

Just email

N. Sivasothi - mangrove cleanup. The working group has already been active.

Patrick Neo (NSS) - the beach cleanup on 15th September 2001 coordinates much larger numbers on the beaches and would appreciate help too!

 

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Links to international efforts

CMC ICC webpage - where it all starts

EPA (US) A Learning Guide on Marine Debris - useful for teachers; downloadable PDF format.

Mangroves - South Africa

Bottle from Singapore makes it to the US!

Webpages/News reports - Bermuda | Brazil | Okinawa | Philipines | Papua New Guinea | Singapore: RGS 1997 - PAYM | South Africa | Ocean Watch, USA | ICC Conference 1999 | California | Delaware | New York | New York State | Virginia | Washington

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The site this year

Buloh (including the park) and Kranji mangroves.

Raffles Museum of Biodiversity Research | Nature Society Singapore | Sungei Buloh Nature Park