All posts by Blue Ventures

Blue Ventures is an award winning marine conservation charity. We rebuild tropical fisheries with coastal communities. On our Beyond Conservation blog you can hear voices from the front line of marine conservation written by our staff and volunteers.

Corals, divemasters and free divers

I arose at 1:30 am in Toliara to meet the Copefrito fish collection truck for the visit with Blue Ventures. Sixty hours, two trucks, one boat full of octopus and one crowded zebu cart later, I walked into Andavadoaka. I...

/ Feb 28, 2007

Get the latest conservation and science news from Blue Ventures

Blue Ventures’ latest Scientific Research Update is now available online. In this edition, learn how marine protected areas may hold the key to keeping global fishery industries healthy and productive. Also in this issue, read about Blue Ventures’ new whale...

/ Feb 1, 2007

No time to write

I had been intending to write a comprehensive, witty, blog about my time here in Andavadoaka but for the last few days the weather has been absolutely stunning so we have all been doing some quite amazing things. For the...

/ Jan 29, 2007

Round trip of local villages

Hello everybody, here are some news from Andavadoaka. Thomas and I went to the Southern villages to collect the data on shark and turtle catch as well as the pictures. We took a different mode of transportation this time as...

/ Jan 26, 2007

Andavadoaka’s first local Dive Master

Blue Ventures wants to congratulate Bic, one of our local Malagasy staff members, for receiving his Dive Master certification. Bic, who has been with Blue Ventures since its founding three years ago, is the first member of the Andavadoaka community...

/ Jan 25, 2007

BV’s Social Enterprise

Blue Ventures’ founder Alasdair Harris was recently highly commended in the Young Enterprising Brits Award and received his honour over breakfast with Gordon Brown in Downing Street. Following Enterprise week in November 2006 a video was developed summarising all the...

/ Jan 25, 2007

The Rainy season…

Expedition 27Well the rains have arrived in Andavadoaka, Madagascar. Upon arriving in Andavadoaka in mid-September, it was hot and dry; so dry that I did not see rain for almost three months. So when someone promised that it did, in...

/ Jan 15, 2007

Duck rediscovered

A species of duck previously thought to be extinct has been resighted on Madagascar. The Madagascar pochard, Aythya innotata, had not been sighted since 1991 despite constant surveys of marshy lakes with lots of reeds and emergent vegetation, believed to...

/ Jan 12, 2007

Time to say ‘Veloma’…

I am back in Andavadoaka after traveling around Madagascar for 2 weeks over my Christmas break. Alan and I had a great time visiting a few national parks, finally getting a chance to see the mountains, rainforest, lemurs, tree frogs...

/ Jan 12, 2007

New species and possible cures

A new species of bat has been discovered, Myzopoda schliemanni, in the dry western forests of Madagascar. New research published onine in the journal Mmmalian Biology states that the new species is particularly unusual as it belongs to very rare...

/ Jan 8, 2007

BV-OFFSET Launch

Exciting news to start the New Year, BV have developed a new project called BV-Offset. Blue Ventures has had great success in protecting coral reefs and other marine systems over the years, but climate change threatens to undo much of...

/ Jan 8, 2007

Interphase tranquility

It’s maintenance fortnight and a cool humid 35 degrees here in Andavadoaka. With an unusually long window between expeditions over the festive season, those of us left behind during this blissfully quiet time on site have a daunting schedule of...

/ Jan 2, 2007

Reminiscing before departure

It’s the final days of the expedition, and i can’t believe it has been 6 weeks, the time has passed so quickly. Mind you, we have done so much in that time, its amazing how we’ve fitted it all in....

/ Dec 18, 2006

New study shows how marine protected areas can increase productivity of fishing industry

Marine protected areas may hold the key to keeping global fishing industries healthy and profitable, a new scientific study in Madagascar reveals. The study looked at a community-run marine protected area (MPA) in southwest Madagascar that implemented seasonal fishing closures...

/ Dec 18, 2006