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Action For Nature International Young Eco-Hero Awards
AFN announces its 2006 INTERNATIONAL YOUNG ECO-HERO AWARDS!
With great pleasure Action For Nature announces its 2006 International Young Eco-Hero
Awards, which recognize young people 8 to 16 years of age for their environmental
achievements. We hope the accomplishments of these outstanding young people will
inspire many others to preserve and protect the Earth upon which all life depends.
First Place
Gabriela McCall Delgado (age 16) - Puerto Rico, USA
James Quadrino (age 14) - New York, USA
Savannah Walters (age 13) - Florida, USA
Second Place
Evan Green (age 10) - California, USA
Tayler McGillis (age 11) - Illinois, USA
Angela Primbas (age 16) - Ohio, USA
Third Place
Anagha Ann Gopakumar (age 10) - Aluva, India
Fourth Place
Chanelle Adams (age 13) - Connecticut, USA
Matt Ward (age 14) - Illinois, USA
Dara Shore (age 16) - New York, USA
Honorable Mention
Kristiana Henderson (age 16) - Washington, USA
Pierce Johnson (age 16) - Delaware, USA
Victor Nashon (age 16) - Tanzania, East Africa
Smitha Ramakrishna (age 14) - Arizona, USA
First Place
Gabriela McCall Delgado (age 16) - Puerto Rico, USA

An avid and expert bird watcher who is able to identify 95 species of birds
in Puerto Rico, Gabriela goes out every day, at different times of the day,
so she can observe different species of birds. She has produced a 60-page
booklet using her own photographs and identifying the different bird species
with both their common and scientific names. The birds she studies are on the
eastern side of the island of Puerto Rico, which has diverse ecosystems
ranging from coastal regions to mangrove swamps, as well as forests and
mountains. To increase her knowledge, Gabriela studied books and the
Internet, and interviewed and worked with biologists. She also developed a
slide show and a computerized puzzle game for elementary schools. She speaks
to groups and distributes her materials through schools, libraries and
community organizations.
Gabriela is providing her information to a local community group which is
working to place restrictions on the redevelopment of a former military
base. When she goes bird watching with her family, she also does clean-ups.
To be a bird watcher, you have to be very patient, Gabriela explains.
"You can't expect the bird to show up when you want it to, and when it
does, you must see the tiniest of details."
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James Quadrino (age 14) - New York, USA

The Staten Island area, where James lives, faces continuing destruction of
native habitat. He learned about this when he became a bird-banding helper
in a local park. James noticed that after a fire, many species of birds,
particularly cavity nesters, such as owls, wood ducks, kestrels and wrens,
had few places to build their nests and raise their young. So after
researching the specifications, James began building bird boxes for the
different types of birds. Each winter he obtains permits; and with help
from park officials, he installs the bird boxes. When the nesting season
starts and babies are born in the spring, he inspects and observes the new
birds daily by looking in the boxes, until youngsters fledge. After that
he cleans out and repairs the boxes, and then sends the data he has collected
to Cornell University's Laboratory of Ornithology.
This sort of work takes dedication and determination, and James' success
resulted in him being selected as an Ambassador to the Birdhouse Network,
sponsored by Cornell Lab. James has given frequent presentations on cavity
nesting birds to schools, park nature centers and clubs. He has also
spoken at the Environmental Protection Agency Headquarters in Washington
D.C., as well as at the Linnaean Society of the American Museum of Natural
History. This hard work is all worthwhile to James when he holds a baby
bird in his hand - he picks them up to count the eggs. "It's
amazing," he says. "The birds are not frightened of me, as I visit
them often." Learn
more about the Birdhouse Network.
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Savannah Walters (age 13) - Florida, USA

When she was a second grader, Savannah learned about the beautiful place
called the Arctic. The same year she also learned that the Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge was in danger of being opened up to oil drilling. From an
Arctic wildlife photographer she also learned that Americans waste four
million gallons of gas every day driving on under-inflated tires. This is
more than it was thought would be obtained from drilling in the Arctic. So
Savannah went into action. Starting with her Brownie Troop, she put balloons
and flyers on every car in the train station parking lot telling people how
they could save gas and help save the environment. She called her new
organization "Pump 'em Up." Since then there have been many events
in several states, and her group is becoming known throughout the world.
To help educate drivers about the importance of keeping their tires fully
inflated, Savannah hands out donated tire gauges, and makes speeches to
schools and the general public. She has been to Washington D.C. three times
to talk with officials. On one occasion she spoke to 5,000 people on The
West Lawn of the United States Capitol. She told them that while there is
talk of this expensive new equipment needed to get oil from our special
wild places, she has a simple tool--a tire gauge--costing 99 cents which
will save up to 4 million gallons of gas a day. "I have definitely
learned that young people have to stand up for what we believe in"
says Savannah, "and then tell people in government, in our communities,
and in Washington, D.C. If we all work together, we can make a
difference." Learn more about
"Pump 'em Up."
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Second Place
Evan Green (age 10) - California, USA

At age 7, Evan got involved with the San Francisco-based Center for
Ecosystem Survival (CES), an organization dedicated to the preservation of
wildlife and their ecosystems worldwide. Evan particularly wanted to help
save rainforests and coral reefs. To get started, he founded a group called
the Red Dragon Conservation Team (RDCT), named for the powerful mythical
creature which, Evan claims, "is all about possibilities." The RDCT, and
Evan, is dedicated to inspiring friends, family members, students,
teachers, businesses, and anyone else he can get to listen, to become more
aware of threatened ecosystems around the world. And not just to become
aware; he wants people to become active stewards for nature through the
purchase and protection of rainforests and coral reefs, one of the primary
goals of CES.
Each year since 2003, Evan has coordinated and organized a team of students
and adults from the RDCT to participate in CES' conservation fundraiser
called Bowl the Planet. Money earned from this fundraiser goes to the
Center's Adopt An Acre and Adopt A Reef programs. Evan's team has so far
raised enough money to save more than 16 acres of threatened habitat in the
Guanacaste Conservation Area of Costa Rica, which contains about 300,000
species of organisms in tropical dry forest, cloud forest, and rainforest -
roughly 2.4% of the world's terrestrial biodiversity. As Evan described it,
"we are saving the homes of jaguars, spider monkeys, orchids, sea turtles,
and thousands of butterflies." As further evidence of his dedication to
this cause, Evan has persevered in his goals even while struggling with a
chronic and debilitating disease. As he said, "You don't have to be an
adult to make a difference."
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Tayler McGillis (age 11) - Illinois, USA

How many cans are there in 11,000 pounds of aluminum? This is how much Tayler
has collected. He rises well before dawn on many days to search the
roadsides and golf courses for the cans he picks up. He has walked over
100 miles on local highways. With his dad, he has also taken apart aluminum
swimming pools, decks, garage doors and streetlights and removed recyclable
material from a condemned mobile home. With the sale of this aluminum, he has
donated more than $7,000 to Habitat for Humanity to build a home for a
low-income community member. He visited the lucky person who now lives in
that home and learned that his contribution paid for the door and window
frames.
Tayler has placed recycling bins in five different communities, given
numerous speeches, distributed flyers listing drop-off sites and been
interviewed by newspapers, TV and radio reporters. He is currently talking
with authorities about setting up a local drop-off center, and trying to get
it funded by local industry, so that he and his parents do not have to drive
long distances to deliver the recycling he has gathered.
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Angela Primbas (age 16) - Ohio, USA

Already active in aquatic concerns and a co-founder and active leader of an
environmental club, Angela learned that the water entering Lake Erie, near
her home, is polluted. It is contaminated by human urban activity, and
contains pesticides, garden and household chemicals, pet waste, oil, and
environmental toxins. This is the number one pollution problem in Lake
Erie. Additionally, the ecosystem in Lake Erie is being changed by the
increasing number of invasive species introduced into it. What was once a
beautiful Great Lake is now being threatened by factors that humans can
control. So Angela got a group of kids together, including her brother, and
founded a club to help Lake Erie called Lake Kleenerz.
Through this club she has designed and published a pamphlet to educate the
public, presented workshops to teachers, science classes and elementary
schools, and educated more than eighty boaters about how they can prevent
the spread of invasive species from surrounding streams and rivers that
empty into Lake Erie. Having done a lot of research to understand this
problem, called "Non Point Source Pollution," Angela now educates
homeowners and students about how they can reduce this pollution in the
streams that lead into the lake. Her club was recently awarded a $1,000
grant from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources to help raise the
awareness of boaters about invasive aquatic species. "We learned that
public education and changing people's behaviors are key elements to
resolving this problem," she says. "I never could have fathomed that a
high school girl from northeast Ohio could reach and educate hundreds of
people."
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Third Place
Anagha Ann Gopakumar (age 10) - Aluva, India

The Kerala area of Southern India, where Anagha lives, has heavy monsoon
rains for three to four months of the year followed by severe drought.
Anagha wanted to help the local farmers, many of whom have no municipal
water supply, so she demonstrated to them how they could harvest and save
rainwater. After reading books, websites and talking with her grandparents,
she set up a system of bamboo gutters on her family's roof to direct the
rainwater into a container. Pebbles and coal filtered the water, which then
entered a pipe leading to a well.
Once installed, she told her neighbors about the collection system and also
helped with the planting of trees, such as acacia, which increase the
absorption of water into the ground. She regularly checked the rainwater
collector and well. After the rain stopped, there was enough water stored
for domestic and agricultural purposes. "As children," says Anagha,
"it is our duty to preserve the natural resources and also to take an
active role in environmental activities."
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Fourth Place
Chanelle Adams (age 13) - Connecticut, USA

While visiting Japan for the World Children's Summit, Chanelle noticed how
clean and neat the streets were there. That inspired her to try to clean
up the streets in her community of Hartford, Connecticut. She contacted
the mayor, wrote letters to environmental departments, the media and all
the officials she could think of, and she invited her friends and school
mates to help. After getting positive responses, she set a date and asked
local stores to donate gloves, trash bags, rakes and brooms. When the day
arrived, about 35 people showed up to help clean up the streets.
On the cleanup day, Chanelle distributed flyers with information on how to
keep the environment clean, and was interviewed by TV and newspaper
reporters. "I learned," says Chanelle, "that you don't have
to grow up to become an environmentalist. You are one right now."
Afterward, other schools approached her to learn how they could do something
similar. "You must start by making a plan" she told them.
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Matt Ward (age 14) - Illinois, USA

While doing some volunteer work at Lake Forest Open Lands, Matt got the
idea of starting a group for teens. Lake Forest Open Lands maintains nature
trails for walking, hiking, and cross-country skiing. The organization also
owns and protects over 750 acres of prairie, savanna, wetland and woodland
in Lake Forest. With the support of Open Lands, Matt founded the
organization WOLVES, Working Open Lands Volunteering Environmental
Students. Starting with 23 seventh and eighth graders, the group has
removed non-native plants and fish from a pond and other parts of the
preserve, and built Great Horned Owl nests.
Their hard work is paying off, as the plants they have put in are thriving.
Matt has learned to be a leader and has enhanced his love of nature and his
knowledge of birds, prairies and plants. He has also learned how good it
feels to do something beneficial for the ecosystem.
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Dara Shore (age 16) - New York, USA

When she was 7 years old, Dara visited a manatee exhibit in Florida. There
she learned that the gentle manatee's only natural enemy is man. She was
determined to show that man can also be the manatee's greatest champion, so
she started giving talks to schools about the dangers manatees face from
boaters, loss of habitat, and pollution. She joined the Save the Manatee
Club in 1997 and became its youngest volunteer. She raised money to help
rehabilitate injured manatees through running booths at events, raffles,
and "adoptions." In addition, she started a group called
"Mission Manatee" for preschoolers, kindergartners and elementary
school students.
She has made presentations to hundreds of students, urging children and
teachers to understand that we share, not dominate, our earth with other
species, and that we must respect and protect them. From these activities
she has learned "that it really is true that one person can make a
difference in helping to improve our world." Check out the
Save the Manatee Club for more
information about helping manatees.
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Honorable Mention
Kristiana Henderson (age 16) - Washington, USA

Kristiana founded the Environmental Action Club in her school in 2004. Since
then she has been encouraging students to get involved in caring for the
environment through letter writing campaigns on various environmental
issues, including global warming and wetland destruction. She has also
offered many energy-saving ideas. The club has organized trash pick-ups,
educated the public on how to recycle Christmas trees, and has planted 600
trees in a natural resource area.
Leading this group has been very positive for Kristiana, who has honed her
political and leadership skills. It has given her hope that she and her
peers will be able to accomplish a lot to protect the world they live in.
Being a positive force in the Earth's future, says Kristiana, is
"fascinating and cool. The environment is not only completely worth
protecting, it's completely relevant to our lives."
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Pierce Johnson (age 16) - Delaware, USA

Pierce was surprised to learn that massive amounts of reusable materials are
thrown away each day. His own school spends over $23,000 each year on paper
alone. To help reduce this waste, Pierce started and is expanding a large
network of recycling efforts at his school. He built the organization
department by department, working with teachers, students and the
administration. Every Tuesday and Thursday, he stays after school and makes
sure all the recycling bins are emptied, no matter how long it takes.
"There were a lot of skeptics when I started the program by
myself," says Pierce, "but now with department chairs,
administrators and students on my side, nothing is impossible."
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Victor Nashon (age 16) - Tanzania, East Africa

When Victor looks around him in his town in Tanzania, East Africa, he sees
all sorts of problems which trouble him, including pollution of water, air
and land. He started his own garden, in which he grows grasses, flowers and
trees, to demonstrate how beautiful land can be if it is cared for. He read
books and pamphlets and searched the Internet to become environmentally well
informed. He also joined the Children's Health and Environment Club to share
his ideas with others. He has taken part in tree planting, cleaned market
places, and cleaned out invasive water hyacinth plants from Lake Victoria.
He has educated, persuaded and reached out to others by speaking, teaching
and creating posters, and through creating stories and games for children.
Victor refers to environmental pollution as the "fever of the world." He is
sad that many people believe environmental issues to be of little concern,
while he sees these issues as long term problems with long lasting effects
that could lead to death, disease and disaster. He continues to work with
others, especially young people, using such creative methods as songs, poems
and art to encourage them to organize and to protect the environment. Victor
believes that through inspiring children he can also reach adults.
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Smitha Ramakrishna (age 14) - Arizona, USA

When Smitha visited India with her parents, she was sad to see that many
children attended schools which did not have a clean water supply. When
she returned to the USA, she started a kid's chapter of ASHA, an action
group that supports education, health care and other basic needs in India.
She also founded AWAKE, Water Activists Karing for the Environment. She
has organized two walk-a-thons which were held on Mahatma Gandhi's birthday
in Tempe, Arizona. Between 150 and 200 people participated, and over
$4,000 has been raised. This money was then used to purchase a treatment
system to provide clean drinking water for children living in the slums in
India. Today, over three thousand kids are getting safe water from this
project.
In March, 2006, Smitha attended the Second Children's World Water Forum in
Mexico, sponsored by UNESCO, where she was chosen as one of 5 children out
of 112 to present her project at an intergenerational panel discussion with
an adult audience from all over the world. She and her group are also
involved with helping protect the San Francisco Peaks, sacred to Native
American tribes near her home.
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