The MAP News |
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FEATURE STORY MANGROVES: OUR FOOD, OUR LIFE GUATEMALA – The mangrove ecosystem is a unique ecosystem; fragile, the source of life and livelihood protection for people and coastal communities. Mangroves are also territory, tradition and culture. They represent only 1% of the world's forests, yet are one of the five most productive ecological units in the world. Industrial activities such as shrimp farming, oil exploration, tourism industry large-scale urban projects, construction of dams, among other projects, have led to the decline of mangroves and livelihood that sustains a critical point; threatened and endangered. Despite the destruction, the mangroves are the main source of food for communities and indigenous communities that inhabit them. Fish, shellfish and other species that inhabit this ecosystem, represent the fruits for activities such as fishing, collecting shells, crabs, and other staple food products for coastal populations. Let us pause to remember the mangrove forest of the world this July 26th! LEA MAS EN ESPANOL AFRICA Sierra Leone’s environmental agency poised to protect wetlands SIERRA LEON - Sierra Leone`s National Protection Agency (EPA) has vowed to prosecute people who make embankment on a select group of sites identified as under threat from environmental degradation. An official of the agency said Thursday the areas concerned have been declared protected by law and one of them, the Aberdeen Creek in the west end of the capital Freetown, is designated a Ramsar site. The Ramsar Convention is an international treaty for the conservation and sustainable utilization of wetlands. It came into force in Sierra Leone in April 2000, after signing it in 1996 and that binds the country to protect the area. The Aberdeen Creek is home to a vast variety of bird species and it is a major breeding ground for fish. But because of pressure on housing, people have colonized every available space in the highly overpopulated capital, including swampy areas like the creek. READ MORE ASIA Ecological Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Carbon THAILAND - Mangroves are known to be one of the most dense carbon storage systems on earth “containing on average 1,023Mg carbon per hectare” with the soils accounting for “49-98% of carbon storage in these systems” making them at least twice as effective carbon stores when compared to other tropical forests. This high degree of carbon storage is due primarily to the tendency of water-logged soil to become anaerobic or devoid of oxygen quicker and at a higher level than most other soils. The lack of oxygen hinders microbial decomposition, thus allowing carbon rich soil to be stored for an almost indefinite amount of time especially if undisturbed. Jacob Bukoski, a graduate student at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, is currently writing his thesis in which he describes a predictive model of mangrove carbon stocks in Southeast Asia. MAP has had the privilege of helping support Jacob’s field work because we see it as very valuable for the community and for mangrove conservation and restoration. While Jacob uses CIFOR’s “Protocols for the measurement, monitoring and reporting of structure, biomass and carbon stocks in mangrove forests” as a manual for his research, my story-telling below is a rough outline of the guide in accordance to our field work research. READ MORE Prestigious recognition for sustainable performance MYANMAR - The national Energy Globe Award Myanmar 2015 was awarded to the project “Community-based Ecological Mangrove Restoration (CBEMR)" of Mangrove Action Project. Shortly summarized the project focuses on: CBEMR is a project for mangrove restoration and reforestation in Asia, for knowledge exchange and action to reduce climate change and protect forest biodiversity with the goal of creating demonstration sites and restoring abandoned shrimp ponds. As part of this year’s World Environment Day the project was also presented by Energy Globe as part of a global online campaign (http://www.energyglobe.info) to a wide audience. The campaign ran under the patronage of UNESCO and in cooperation with UNEP and received great recognition and a large echo. “To be honored with this award is a great recognition of our work for a better environment and motivates us to continue our endeavors in the future" Alfredo Quarto, National Energy Globe Winner Myanmar READ MORE Income for Coastal Communities for Mangrove Protection THAILAND - MAP Asia Coordinator, Jim Enright, was invited to attend a regional inception workshop for the project entitled ‘Income for Coastal Communities for Mangrove Protection’ May 7-9 in Bangkok. The objective of the project is to develop a low cost mechanism enabling investors to responsibly promote mangrove conservation, carbon emissions reduction and sustainable development through the provision of funding to local communities for livelihood diversification, resource enhancement and coastal protection. The lack of sustainable funding to support mangrove restoration is the driver for this project which has taken several years of preparation and donor hunting. The workshop brought together 38 representatives from Government, UN agencies, NGOs, the private sector and academics. Project activities will take place in Pakistan, Thailand and Viet Nam. The project is funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) through the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). It is implemented by the FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Office (FAO-RAP), within the framework of the Mangroves for the Future (MFF) initiative, with assistance from the USAID Lowering Emissions in Asia’s Forests (LEAF) Program and the UN-REDD Programme. READ MORE How shrimp farming wreaked havoc on Sri Lanka's coasts Sri Lanka - We are not far from the ocean here. The air smells of salt and sulphur, of marine life. But the square of black, cracked mud in front of us, bounded by its four crumbling walls of sand, is no place for living things. It was previously a pond for cultivating tiger prawns, the lucrative species that was the reason for cutting the lush mangrove forest that once covered this area. The recent history of this abandoned place is sadly representative of the story of thousands of hectares in this region in the west of Sri Lanka. A swelling appetite for shrimps and prawns in America, Europe and Japan has fuelled industrial farming of shellfish in the past few decades. The industry now has a farm-gate value of $10bn (£6.4bn) per year globally and the prawn in your sandwich is much more likely to have come from a pond than from the sea. While the industry is dominated by the likes of China, Vietnam and Thailand, a large number of other countries have invested heavily in cultivation too. READ MORE A Chemical That Killed a Countryside & Scarred a People VIETNAM – Mangroves are sturdy trees. Recognizable by their extensive root systems, these trees can thrive in muddy soil, sand, peat, even coral. They tolerate water much saltier than most other plants and survive flooding during severe storms. It is perhaps their sturdiness that led mangroves to be one of the most significant targets in the Vietnam War. During the war, communist guerilla fighters would often take refuge in Vietnam’s thick jungles. Mangroves, among other types of flora, provided shelter from eyes in the sky seeking to deliver air strikes in strategic locations. So the U.S. military exposed guerillas by bombarding the trees themselves with huge amounts of defoliants, chemical herbicides that cause the leaves to fall off of plants. The most infamous defoliant was Agent Orange, named for the orange stripes marking the drums it was shipped in. Foreign aid from the U.S. toward alleviating the effects of Agent Orange has been focused on environmental remediation rather than health care. The the need for aid to alleviate patients’ suffering is paramount and, in some ways, is more immediate than the need for research to find out how dioxins affect us. READ MORE AMERICAS Editor’s Note: We at MAP send our sincere condolences to the family and friends of Julio Lopez for their tragic loss. It is with deep regret that we learn of his murder because of his commitment to social and environmental justice. His good work for the coastal communities and the mangroves should not be forgotten. We hope that justice will be swift in arresting and prosecuting those perpetrators of this wrongdoing. Another Brave “Soldier” for Environmental Justice Murdered in Guatemala Letter from RedManglar in Guatemala: GUATEMALA - With deep sorrow and indignation we have received the news earlier today, (Wednesday July 15) the brutal and cowardly murder of our colleague, Julio Lopez , Nueva Concepcion, Escuintla in Guatemala. Besides being vice president of the Asobordas, and chairman of the village COCODE Tecojate, Julio also was part of COGMANGLAR and Redmanglar International. Our partner was a staunch defender of the rights of communities and nature, work in several actions in defense of rivers, mangroves and against violations committed several ventures and comment against the population. In Cogmanglar, Redmanglar and Asobordas. We are deeply shocked and strongly condemn his killing, which took away a brother and fellow in our just struggles. All he wanted was the Common good and welfare of its people. Julio developed his work in one of the most violent municipalities in our country, Nueva Concepcion, now stained with blood again. Justice for our fellow soldier. Our condolences go to his family and friends. We'll always remember Julio, thanks for joining us on this path. REDMANGLAR 88 environmental advocates killed in Latin America in 2014 BRAZIL – Eighty-eight environmentalists were murdered in Latin America during 2014, according to a report by the international organization Global Witness. That amount is equivalent to three quarters of the murders of environmental activists worldwide, the report entitled "How many more?". "Every week at least two people are murdered for taking a stand against environmental destruction," says the report. "Some are shot by police during protests, others are sought by murderers. As companies seek to exploit new lands, more and more people have paid the ultimate price for their opposition, "says the report. The report also indicates that 40 percent of the victims are native peoples. Brazil leads the list with 29 activists killed, followed by Colombia with 25, 12 in Honduras, Peru 9 5 Guatemala, Paraguay 3, while in Ecuador and Costa Rica one. LEA MAS EN ESPANOL Crown Jewel of Cuba’s Coral Reefs CUBA - A marine biologist and director of Cuba’s Center for Coastal Ecosystem Research, Dr. Pina has spent much of his career studying the abundance of fish and other wildlife in this archipelago 50 miles off Cuba’s south coast, a region so fecund it has been called the Galápagos of the Caribbean. But Dr. Pina still has a long list of questions he would like to pursue. For example, he is eager to learn more about the biology, travel patterns and habits of sharks and Atlantic goliath grouper here, large, highly mobile predators that are important to coral reefs and a major tourist draw. And he hopes someday to understand why the reef in Jardines de la Reina is so resilient, when other reefs around the world are dying, succumbing to overfishing, pollution, coastal development and the effects of climate change. Scientists like Dr. Pina have only just begun to explore and document the wealth of aquatic life in the waters of the archipelago and the Gulf of Ana Maria to its north: how many species there are, the size of their populations, how they move from one area to another and where their spawning and nursery grounds are. READ MORE Seafood Watch reevaluates La. shrimp fishery USA - Louisiana commercial shrimping gear is getting an upgrade now that the state’s governor, Bobby Jindal, has signed a bill into law that will allow the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries to mandate that all bottom trawls be equipped with turtle excluder devices (TEDs) moving forward. The passing of Louisiana House Bill 668 dismantles a previous 1987 state law that prevented La. Department of Wildlife and Fisheries agents from enforcing federal turtle-excluder device regulations. Endorsed by the Louisiana Shrimp Task Force, the bill will work to prevent unnecessary sea turtle deaths at the grips of shrimp trawls, which are estimated to kill 50,000 turtles annually when not supplemented with TEDs. "Today is a monumental day for our shrimp industry and will show the world that Louisiana fishermen and processors have always been concerned with the successful management of our shrimp fishery," Mark Abraham, the shrimp task force's chairman, said in a statement on 1 July. READ MORE OCEANA Teachers become students at hands-on science class AUSTRALIA - University Gladstone campus will be bursting with primary school teachers from across Queensland in August for National Science Week. The university is holding a hands-on event open to teachers and pre-service teachers, on Saturday and Sunday, August 22-23. An $18,266 grant received from the QGC will help to grow the exciting event. Coordinator and CQUniversity Research Fellow Dr Linda Pfeiffer said the Gladstone Marina campus location was a perfect hub for practical experiences for teachers. "We'll look at a number of aspects of environmental science in Gladstone - from water quality testing in our lab, to a guided industry bus tour, a Botanic Gardens visit, and a networking event with long-time wildlife educator Ranger Stacey from Totally Wild," Dr Pfeiffer said. The two-day event will also include a theatrical challenge for participants, to perform "The Mangrove Drama", and a boat trip and tour of Quoin Island's Turtle Rehabilitation Centre. READ MORE LAST WORD(S) Good afternoon, everyone! With great joy I share with you, that Mangrove Action Project and AEPA FALCON are driving in Venezuela the Children's Art Contest "Points of color in the mangroves" initiative seeks to project through the graphics, the perception of our children and adolescents on mangrove ecosystems, its importance and the need to protect as a world heritage. We thank all, the dissemination of this material, which attach to the legal rules of the competition and promotional poster. Education is really the strategy to awaken love and conscience. I take this opportunity to thank Monica Quarto MAP, for their support and endorsement, as Alfredo for always believing in AEPA Falcon Venezuela. Experience the mangrove ecosystem! MAS Best regards Henderson Jose Colina Ecological Association for Environmental Preservation State Falcón - Venezuela (0058) 0268.411.10.77 / 0414.688.72.65 AEPAFALCON Facebook: FALCON 100% ENVIRONMENTAL AEPA BACK TO TOP Not yet a subscriber? Click here to subscribe. Please cut and paste these news alerts/ action alerts on to your own lists and contacts. Help us spread the word and further generate letters of concern, as this can make a big difference in helping to halt a wrongdoing or encourage correct action.
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Thursday, July 23, 2015
MAP News Issue 369, July 25, 2015
Income for Coastal Communities for Mangrove Protection
MAP Asia Coordinator, Jim Enright, was invited to attend a regional inception workshop for the project entitled ‘Income for Coastal Communities for Mangrove Protection’ May 7-9 in Bangkok. The objective of the project is to develop a low cost mechanism enabling investors to responsibly promote mangrove conservation, carbon emissions reduction and sustainable development through the provision of funding to local communities for livelihood diversification, resource enhancement and coastal protection. The lack of sustainable funding to support mangrove restoration is the driver for this project which has taken several years of preparation and donor hunting. The workshop brought together 38 representatives from Government, UN agencies, NGOs, the private sector and academics. Project activities will take place in Pakistan, Thailand and Viet Nam.
The project is funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) through the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). It is implemented by the FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Office (FAO-RAP), within the framework of the Mangroves for the Future (MFF) initiative, with assistance from the USAID Lowering Emissions in Asia’s Forests (LEAF) Program and the UN-REDD Programme.
The objectives of the inception workshop were:
1. To formally launch the project
2. To collect expert and stakeholder feedback on proposed project activities and outputs
3. To use the collected feedback to inform project methodology, including a revised work plan
This initiative seeks to develop a mechanism enabling investors to responsibly promote mangrove
conservation/restoration, carbon emissions reduction and sustainable development through the provision of funding to local communities. A key purpose of the mechanism is to facilitate flows of funding to smaller mangrove areas in support of environmental externalities where entry into voluntary and compliance markets for carbon is not economically feasible. The mechanism will also provide an alternative income for fisher folk enabling reduction of fishing effort and regeneration of fish stocks.
Conservation/restoration of mangroves will also support sustainable fisheries management and support rebuilding of fish stocks. The work thus aims to facilitate mangrove conservation/restoration, replenishment of fish stocks and livelihood development while providing public and corporate entities with an opportunity to invest in climate change mitigation and socio-economic development.
Following the workshop a half-day field trip was held to visit a mangrove restoration site at the Bang Kaew, Samut Songkram, in the Upper Gulf of Thailand which is suffering from extreme coastal erosion. The Bang Kaew site represents an organized community afforestation effort to plant mangrove seedlings, behind a bamboo wave barrier, hoping to establish a future mangrove wind and wave defense for the community.
Developing a simple low-cost mangrove carbon stock assessment is one of the project goals and MAP Intern, Robbie Carrasco, spent a week along with villager from Klang Island assisting Jacob Bukoski of Yale’s School of Forestry and the Environment collect field data in mangrove in the Krabi River Estuary Ramsar site. Field data is being collected in Thailand and Vietnam to test a multiple linear regression model he has developed to predict levels of biomass and carbon in mangrove ecosystems.
The project is funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) through the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN). It is implemented by the FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific Office (FAO-RAP), within the framework of the Mangroves for the Future (MFF) initiative, with assistance from the USAID Lowering Emissions in Asia’s Forests (LEAF) Program and the UN-REDD Programme.
The objectives of the inception workshop were:
1. To formally launch the project
2. To collect expert and stakeholder feedback on proposed project activities and outputs
3. To use the collected feedback to inform project methodology, including a revised work plan
This initiative seeks to develop a mechanism enabling investors to responsibly promote mangrove
conservation/restoration, carbon emissions reduction and sustainable development through the provision of funding to local communities. A key purpose of the mechanism is to facilitate flows of funding to smaller mangrove areas in support of environmental externalities where entry into voluntary and compliance markets for carbon is not economically feasible. The mechanism will also provide an alternative income for fisher folk enabling reduction of fishing effort and regeneration of fish stocks.
Conservation/restoration of mangroves will also support sustainable fisheries management and support rebuilding of fish stocks. The work thus aims to facilitate mangrove conservation/restoration, replenishment of fish stocks and livelihood development while providing public and corporate entities with an opportunity to invest in climate change mitigation and socio-economic development.
Following the workshop a half-day field trip was held to visit a mangrove restoration site at the Bang Kaew, Samut Songkram, in the Upper Gulf of Thailand which is suffering from extreme coastal erosion. The Bang Kaew site represents an organized community afforestation effort to plant mangrove seedlings, behind a bamboo wave barrier, hoping to establish a future mangrove wind and wave defense for the community.
Developing a simple low-cost mangrove carbon stock assessment is one of the project goals and MAP Intern, Robbie Carrasco, spent a week along with villager from Klang Island assisting Jacob Bukoski of Yale’s School of Forestry and the Environment collect field data in mangrove in the Krabi River Estuary Ramsar site. Field data is being collected in Thailand and Vietnam to test a multiple linear regression model he has developed to predict levels of biomass and carbon in mangrove ecosystems.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Ecological Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Carbon
Ecological
Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Carbon
Counting the Carbon in Mangrove Forests on the Southwest
Coast of Thailand
By Robbie Carrasco
The mosquitos buzzed and the sun
pierced the canopy as we slowly made our way through the dense tangled webs of
mangrove roots and knee-deep mud. Moving through a mangrove forest is a
humbling experience where you can feel trapped and claustrophobic, but at the
same time feeling awed by the sheer density and volume of the above-ground root
systems. The first thing that came to my mind while trekking through these
forests to our sampling site was that of being an ecological Indiana Jones, but
instead of uncovering ancient human artifacts we were digging into mother
nature’s history books by measuring the carbon stored deep in these beautiful
yet intimidating wetlands.
Mangroves are known to be one of
the most dense carbon storage systems on earth “containing on average 1,023Mg
carbon per hectare” with the soils accounting for “49-98% of carbon storage in
these systems” making them at least twice as effective carbon stores when compared
to other tropical forests (Donato, D.C., Kauffman, J.B.,
Murdiyarso, D., Kurnianto, S., Stidham., and M. Kanninen, 2011) . This high degree of
carbon storage is due primarily to the tendency of water-logged soil to become
anaerobic or devoid of oxygen quicker and at a higher level than most other
soils. This lack of oxygen hinders microbial decomposition, thus allowing
carbon rich soil to be stored for an almost indefinite amount of time
especially if undisturbed. With humans releasing unprecedented amounts of
greenhouse gases into the atmosphere and deforestation being the second leading
cause of anthropocentric CO2 emissions, it is clear that we must take the
necessary steps to protect these natural carbon sequestration systems from land
use change.
Programs such as the United Nations
REDD+ programme (un-redd.org) and
Mangroves for the Future’s “Income for Coastal Communities for Mangrove Protection
(mangrovesforthefuture.org) support projects that measure carbon values of
mangrove forests and help gather data on how to help protect and save mangroves
from land use changes. By collecting samples and data from within these forests
we can measure the amount of carbon stored in the mangroves and the underlying soils.
This allows us to assign numerical values to the services that the forests
provide through carbon sequestration. Such information gained from this
research is a powerful tool to spur conservation and restoration, thus making
it easier for us to make informed decisions regarding mangrove forests and
their future land use. And with mangroves being lost at about 1% per year (FAO, 2007) it makes it more
important than ever to have a clear idea of exactly what goods and services these
forests provide to society before we let them disappear.
Jacob Bukoski, a graduate student
at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, is currently writing
his thesis in which he describes a predictive model of mangrove carbon stocks in
Southeast Asia. MAP has had the privilege of helping support Jacob’s field work
because we see it as very valuable for the community and for mangrove
conservation and restoration. I had the pleasure of spending a week with Jacob
and our Thai helpers on Koh Klang in the Krabi province assisting him with his
field work. While Jacob uses CIFOR’s “Protocols for the measurement, monitoring
and reporting of structure, biomass and carbon stocks in mangrove forests” (Kauffman,
J.B. and Donato, D.C., 2012) as a manual for his
research, my story-telling below is a rough outline of the guide in accordance
to our field work research.
After selecting our sampling sites with the use of a random
GPS location generator in the target mangrove forest, Jacob, the team and I set
out by long tail boat to attempt to get as close as we could to each site by
water.
We had to then trek, crawl and swim our way to the location
of the GPS coordinates of each sampling site.
Each sampling site consisted of one plot and then five
subplots within that plot. We were able to complete about one plot containing 5
subplots per day. The initial task after arrival at the sampling site was to determine
the subplot’s perimeter using a compass and measuring tape by measuring 12
meters out from the subplot’s center in four opposing directions. In the
photograph above, Bang Baw begins to count fallen twigs, limbs, and branches below
the measuring tape as well as calculating the percentage of canopy cover above
the measuring tape in the subplot.
Next, Bang San measures the diameter of the trees within
seven meters of the center of the subplot at either chest height or 30cm above
the roots.
Bang Ream is seen here collecting a soil sample. Soil
samples are collected from a depth of up to two meters using an auger and are packaged
for shipment to Bangkok for carbon testing at a laboratory in Kasetsart
University.
At the completion of collecting forest biomass
information at the first subplot, we use the compass to direct us and measure
25 meters from that point to determine the next subplot; we will repeat the
process for the next subplots until all five at that plot are completed.
Left to Right; Bang Ream’s son, Bang Ream, Robbie (author),
Bang Jui, Bang Sa, Bang Baw
As you can see, there are many components
to the collection of field data. Everything must be accomplished precisely in
accordance to the pre-determined protocols to ensure valid and useful data. These
data are subsequently entered into a larger equation that can be used to
calculate the overall carbon content of the forest. Jacob can then use his work
here to verify his model that predicts the overall carbon content of mangrove
forests using a set of inputs like latitude, precipitation, tree size, etc.
The ultimate goal is to accurately
predict the carbon content of a pinpoint area of mangrove forest by using
simple and inexpensive data instead of relying on costly field work. Jacob’s
work is a part of the larger “Income for coastal communities for protecting
mangroves project” which “aims to
develop a low cost mechanism enabling investors to responsibly promote mangrove
conservation, carbon emissions reduction and sustainable development, through
the provision of funding to local communities for livelihood diversification,
resource enhancement and coastal protection.” (https://www.mangrovesforthefuture.org/grants/regional-grant-facilities/income-for-coastal-communities-for-mangrove-protection/).
Thanks to Jacob’s research MAP has
been able to use this opportunity to obtain and analyze soil core samples from other
sites on Koh Klang Island which are in the MAP Ecosystems Protecting
Infrastructure and Communities (EPIC) program. These two sites, which are
within several kilometers of where Jacob’s plots are located in the Krabi river
estuary, will offer us a view into the soils degradation from shrimp farming
practices, primarily its predicted loss of carbon content. This will allow us a
close comparison between the secondary growth of the sampled plots in the Krabi
River Estuary and the soil of abandoned shrimp farms located in former mangrove
forests. With this information MAP will be able to determine the levels of
carbon present in the abandoned shrimp farms which have been devoid of mangrove
vegetation for about the past thirty years. This valuable information will help
us better understand the value of our conservation and restoration work in terms
of carbon sequestration. The soil cores will provide evidence as to whether
shrimp farming releases large amounts of the carbon stored in these soils into
the atmosphere. An update on this section will be released once the soils have
been analyzed and we have received the appropriate data, but for now we expect
that the EPIC site soil holds significantly less amount of carbon than the
healthy mangrove forest soils at the plots in the Krabi river estuary.
This is a picture taken of EPIC site 2, an abandoned
shrimp pond, which has been devoid of mangroves the past 30 years and used to look like the mangrove forest pictures seen above.
Many times in the field we were met
with an incredible diversity of physical and mental challenges, but we carried
on just as Indiana Jones would carry on regardless of the hardships. Whether
assaulted by mosquitoes, stuck in knee-deep mud, or swimming back to our boat
because high tide came without us noticing, we could only laugh and joke about
these predicaments, dismissing them with the saying “mai bpen rai” which
translates to “no worries”. We found no hidden jewels or great treasure in our
trek through the forest, but we knew that the overarching goals of this
endeavor is actually of much greater value: a stabilized climate, sustainable
enterprise and environmental justice.
And exploring these forests gave me
a new appreciation for the things in life that at first glance may seem as useless,
dull and expendable which I suppose those who bulldoze these magical forests must
feel. But when we look more closely you come to realize the splendor in every
aspect of these forests--and as you look even closer it all comes alive before
your eyes. The crabs scuttle, the mud skippers bicker, the mangrove tree leaves
rustle in the wind and you are reminded of the importance of this special place
between land and sea for its intrinsic natural beauty, carbon sequestration and
its support of sustainable livelihoods, coastal protection, habitat, erosion
mitigation, and so much more.
References
Donato, D.C., Kauffman, J.B., Murdiyarso, D., Kurnianto,
S., Stidham., and M. Kanninen. (2011). Mangroves among the most carbon-rich
forests in the tropics. Nature Geoscience, Vol. 4. DOI:
10.1038/NGEO1123.
FAO, U. (2007). The World's Mangroves 1980-2005,
FAO Forestry Paper 153. Rome: Forest Resources Divison, FAO. The Food and
Agriculture Organization of the UN.
Kauffman, J.B. and Donato, D.C. (2012). Protocols
for the measurement, monitoring and reporting of structure, biomass and
carbon stocks in mangrove forests. Working Paper 86. CIFOR, Bogor,
Indonesia: Center For International Forestry Research.
By Robbie
Carrasco
Project Development
Assistant
Mangrove
Action Project
robbie.carrasco@gmail.com
Saturday, July 11, 2015
JULY 26 is MANGROVE ACTION DAY!
A Call To Action July 26th, 2015
"Under It All" photo by Deanna Kathrina Maranion |
Mangrove Action Project joins the International Day for the Mangrove
Mangrove.is: health, food, economy, biodiversity, and sustainability
Mangrove.is: health, food, economy, biodiversity, and sustainability
Mangrove Action Project joins Redmanglar and other conservation groups for another year to celebrate International Day for the Mangrove.
A Bit of Historical Background:
To understand the significance of the 26th of July
we need to go back a little in time. It was 1998 when the communities of
ancestral users of the mangroves of Ecuador decided to join forces in a big campaign
where the local and national media were invited. They received the support from
members of various organizations from Honduras, Guatemala, Colombia, the United
States (all of them, at that moment, part of a growing global network opposing
shrimp farm expansion) and the members of the worldwide crew of the Greenpeace
ship Rainbow Warrior.
On the 26th
of July, the communities joined in a
concerted action to re-establish the mangrove wetlands in an illegal shrimp
pond. The action involved members in breaking down the walls of the shrimp pond
and replanting mangrove seedlings in the drained pond soil. That same day, the National Coordinator in Defense of
the Mangroves in Ecuador was created. A public statement was delivered to the
National Authorities at that time, demanding a stop to the mangrove destruction
and promoting the concession of the mangroves to the organized grassroots
communities of the mangroves.
To feed the consumer demand for shrimp in the US, EU
and Japan, mangrove forests have been cut, people have been driven away from
their land, and soil and water have been polluted for more than thirty years in
tropical countries. Industrial shrimp farming has caused about 35 percent of
the worldwide loss of mangroves. Mangrove forests are a crucial ecosystem - the
breeding place for wild fisheries, tremendous carbon sinks and vital habitat
for scores of animals. Mangroves also offer the coastal communities food,
medicines and protection against hurricanes and tsunamis.
Since 1998 the 26th
of July has been called the
"International Day of Mangroves" or “Mangrove Action Day,”
commemorating the Greenpeace activist Hayhow Daniel Nanoto, who died of a heart
attack while involved in a massive protest action in Ecuador led by the
environmental organizations FUNDECOl (Ecuador) and the crew from the Greenpeace
flagship Rainbow Warrior.
“… the 26th
of July is the day when we all,
communities and organizations working in defense of the mangroves, joined for
the first time as (in the Bible) little "Davids" confronting a big
"Goliath" which is the shrimp industry. That is the main point in
this celebration, but please, don't forget Nanoto who left his life in the
mangroves of Muisne…”
From Veronica of FUNDECOL in Ecuador
We at Mangrove Action Project again join forces with
our friends around the world to celebrate the 17th International Mangrove
Action Day on July 26th. We wish to invite all reading this message
to please join us in this Day of Action and Solidarity with the global struggle
to Save the Mangroves! It is only through our cooperative, global actions will
we succeed!
This Mangrove Action Day, please step forward with MAP
to help reverse the loss of mangrove forests and protect the rights of coastal
communities to sustainably manage and conserve their coastal wetlands and the
myriad of life sustained by the mangroves. Help us at MAP counter climate
change and species extinction. Help us restore the habitat of our oceans’
marine life, the last hunting grounds of the Bengal tiger and the refuge for
countless migratory birds, mammals and insects. Please act today for the life
of our mother planet, for all of our future and the future of our children’s
children!
For the Mangroves and the
Mangrove Communities!
Alfredo
Quarto, Executive Director
Mangrove
Action Project
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By: Isabel Robinson, MAP Volunteer Intern Some months ago I decided to come to Thailand and do an internship in mangrove conservation, ...
MAP News Issue #596 = April 20, 2024
ENTRIES NOW OPEN! Mangrove Photography Awards 2024 10 Years Celebrating Mangroves GLOBAL - MAP has launched our 10th Mangrove Photograp...