Maiden Labrador Walk!
8th March 2008 marks the maiden walk @ Labrador Park with Toddycats! Guides for the day were nature veteran Sivasothi, ever-passionate Oi Yee and Justin...









Labels: walk
The flora and fauna of the rocky shore at Labrador Park, Singapore
8th March 2008 marks the maiden walk @ Labrador Park with Toddycats! Guides for the day were nature veteran Sivasothi, ever-passionate Oi Yee and Justin...









Labels: walk
Ever since the newspaper article on 29th Oct 2007 featuring the Singapore Polytechnic's SEACILs project. Some wildlife bloggers, upon discovery that the debris they found on the intertidal of Labrador shores were linked to their project, began blogging extensively about their concerns for Labrador habitat.
Haven't been back to Labrador in a looooooong time and I realize how much I miss it...
Today the nerites were out in full force after a short shower... the colours.. just amazing
a mollusc threesome
ovalis galore
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more seagrass
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somehow halimedas never fail to amuse me.
can u spot the two crabs?
Yes Labrador is the ONLY rocky shore left on mainland Singapore. And it is SUPPOSEDLY gazetted as a nature reserve.. and yet.. we see all this...
an abandoned motor, tyres, fish traps, a failed artificial reef project, neglect of construction near the cofferdam, an idol found floating on the shore, more rubbish.. sigh. depressing.
doesn't it make you think that we're not doing enough for this 'nature reserve'? why make it a reserve in the first place if its not going to receive any proper protection?
having not visited Labrador in a looong time, I was appalled to read this entry on the wildfilms blog. Perfect example of a project gone wrong. Looking forward to seeing what Singapore Poly has to say about this.

"Effects of shore height and visitor pressure on the diversity and distribution of four intertidal taxa at Labrador beach, Singapore." By Danwei Huang, Peter A. Todd, Loke Ming Chou, Kheng Hui Ang, Pei Ya Boon, Liyan Cheng, Han Ling & Wan-Jean Lee, 2006. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology, 54(2): 477-484. [pdf available]
Went to explore Labrador on Tuesday and Thursday this week, and it was the first time I'd been there in eons! The last time I was there was definitely before the work on the coffer dam started.






It was crabs galore at Labrador's rocky shore today. First spotted, by sharp-eyed Ria Tan of Wild Singapore, was a rarely seen moon crab, which are far more common on the Northern shores. It was swimming into a patch of seaweed when spotted. We placed it on the sand, where it promptly buried itself completely, presumably a way of hiding from both predators and potential prey.




