Effectively Managing Mangroves in a Changing World

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Effectively Managing Mangroves in a Changing World Dr. Zafar Adeel Director, UNU-INWEH 175 Longwood Road South, Hamilton, Canada Zafar.Adeel@unu.edu Worldwide Challenges for Coastal Areas s the world population grows, so does the trend of urbanization and A settling along coastlines. For the first time in human history, over half of the global population lives in urban centers, and these cities predominantly those that are growing fast are along the coastal areas. Combined with smaller, rural communities, the worldwide coastal population stands at over 55%. This underlines a heavy dependency we have on our coastal resource. At the same time, it also is an indicator of the intense competition for the natural and cultural resources between various activities like food production, aquaculture, urban development, transportation, recreation and waste disposal (Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, 2005). The direct consequence of the intense competition within coastal areas is that a number of important coastal ecosystems are under threat, including bays and estuaries, coral reefs and seagrasses, and mangrove and wetland ecosystems. A number of global drivers impact on coastal ecosystems. These include: intensification of large-scale agriculture in response to food security challenges, contributing to nutrient-excess and hypoxia in coastal zones; depletion and degradation of fisheries stocks, often driven by demand in the international food market; influx of pollutants and invasive species through shipping and transportation; and, ecosystem impacts and pollution through illmanaged coastal tourism. Global climate change and rapidly growing population in coastal urban centers further exacerbate adverse impacts on coastal ecosystems. International experts believe that warmer water temperatures particularly in the tropics are going to drive a change in the composition of and interrelationship between species. This leaves us with a fundamental question: How to reverse some of these negative trends and to manage the drivers without impacting sustainable economic growth? The answer lies in the approach in which we bring the science and the scientific community to bear on management and policy solutions; in this way,

2 This Training Course for Better Mangroves Management there is a possibility to be successful in minimizing impacts on coastal areas while ensuring livelihoods of those dependent on these resource-rich areas. Use of scientific and traditional knowledge, together with better understanding of the economic value of healthy coastal ecosystems, can help change the political discourse that eventually determines societal pressures. Schemes around the notion of payment for ecosystem services are a manifestation of this approach, although very few examples are available for coastal ecosystems. Mangroves play a very important role in this equation around conservation and protection of coastal ecosystems. A recent publication by United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health (UNU- INWEH) shows that mangrove ecosystems are valuable both economically and ecologically; they offer a considerable array of ecosystem goods and services that are vital for the human wellbeing, food security, and protection of coastal communities (Van Lavieren et al., 2012). Mangrove forests serve as highly effective global carbon stores and sinks; alongside their living biomass, mangrove soils are carbon-rich, sequestering carbon over millennial timescales. The presence of healthy mangrove ecosystems is critical to both nears-shore fisheries as well as many large-scale fisheries. Mangroves also provide rot resistant, high value timber and excellent fuel wood. In numerous situations, mangrove forests act as a form of natural coastal defense, reducing erosion, attenuating waves and reducing the height of storm surges. We have learned that rapid degradation or loss of mangroves is continuing in most areas. Despite declining rates of loss, mangroves are still disappearing three to five times faster than overall global forest losses. Some countries have lost more than 40% of their mangrove area over a 25- year period and many remaining areas are in a degraded state (Van Lavieren et al., 2012; MEA, 2005). While significant advancements in management of mangrove ecosystems resources in the Asia-Pacific region have been observed in the recent years, there is room for further improvement in how the services

Zafar Adeel 3 provided by coastal ecosystems are perceived and managed. One factor stands out in meeting this challenge: a shortage of human, technical and institutional capacity to manage coastal resources. As many of the countries in the region fall in the developing-country envelope, these shortages often become the limiting factor in arriving at effective responses to the threats faced by mangroves. As part of its mandate, UNU-INWEH remains committed to helping developing countries overcome such capacity shortfalls through training of key personnel and development of research institutions. Mangroves as Key Coastal Ecosystem in the Asia-Pacific region Mangrove ecosystems comprising forests as well as numerous terrestrial and aquatic species are widespread in the Asia-Pacific coastal areas and play an important ecological role while providing a variety of services for human well being. The benefits obtained from these mangrove ecosystems are quite broad and encompass a variety of economic, environmental and social aspects, including carbon sequestration for combating global warming (Fujimoto, 2000) and protection from erosion, flooding, cyclones, typhoons, tsunamis, and tidal waves (Primavera, 2000). It is, therefore, important that the coastal management activities in the Asia-Pacific region give due consideration to management, restoration and conservation of these precious ecosystems. In the recent years, the over-exploitation of coastal areas due to various anthropogenic activities has accelerated the degradation of mangrove ecosystems. The most common threats to mangrove ecosystems can be categorized by sub-region as follows (Van Lavierien et al., 2012): South Asia: Disease (top-dying), erosion, encroachment, land conversion to agriculture and aquaculture, reduced freshwater flow, plantations, poor planning, and storms. Southeast Asia: Land conversion to agriculture and aquaculture, development (coastal, urban), disease, industrial overharvesting, overfishing, gas extraction, poor planning and enforcement, pollution, and sedimentation. East Asia: Development (coastal), land conversion to agriculture and aquaculture, overharvesting, pollution, and unsustainable timber harvest. There are obvious common features in the threats to mangrove ecosystems throughout the region; this resource degradation is mainly related to economic and development activities. The traditional anthropogenic activities in mangroves were limited to subsistence of local coastal communities for provision of fuel, medicine, food and building materials. However, in recent years huge areas of Asian mangrove have been converted to shrimp ponds. (Sudara, 1997; Yeung, 2001). These shrimp farms, often with

4 This Training Course for Better Mangroves Management intense application of fertilizers, nutrients and antibiotics, have resulted in irreversible damage to mangroves. Destruction of mangrove ecosystems primarily through deforestation is quite extensive. For example, the dense mangrove forest in the Sundarbans (Bangladesh and India) and western India has been decimated due to the development of shrimp farming. As a consequence, natural disasters like cyclones have cost thousands of lives and inflicted severe damage to infrastructure. The destruction of mangroves also affects the fishery industries and coastal ecosystem balance (Baran and Hambrey, 1998). The leaf-litter detritus from mangroves is important to fisheries because it provides an essential source of nutrients for the trophic food web and juvenile fish. It is estimated that 90% of all marine organisms spend some portion of their life cycle within mangrove systems (Adeel and Pomeroy, 2002). In Indonesia, which contains about a third of the world s total mangroves areas, more than half of the forests have been cleared during the past fifty years (Sudara, 1997). By the 1980 s, about 800,000 hectares of mangroves in Indonesia had been cleared for transmigration settlement. In Malaysia, approximately one third of the country s mangroves were lost during the second half of the 20 th century, with the largest scale of losses on the western part of the peninsula (Sudara, 1997). Indonesia and Malaysia also use mangroves as a source for the export wood-chip industry and for oil palm cultivation. In Singapore, much of the mangrove forest has been reclaimed for urban development (Sudara, 1997). Vietnam lost many of its mangroves during the Vietnam War, due to pesticide use (Hong, 2000). Aggressive application of pesticides like DDT for vector control and in agricultural activities has also impacted the coastal ecosystems (e.g. in India: Subramanian, 2000). This brief overview of the situation clearly demonstrates that the threats to the mangrove ecosystems in the Asia-Pacific region are serious and demand our immediate and urgent attention. International organizations have a particular role to play as they often have the human, financial and technical resources for facilitating conservation and restoration of mangrove ecosystems. UNU-INWEH s Role in Capacity Building for Mangrove Conservation UNU-INWEH has played a significant role in mangrove conservation and restoration through promotion of education, research and awareness raising. It has developed a complementary approach to existing work on the coastal environment, identifying outstanding areas of need and focusing projects within those areas. One of the most significant contributions of UNU-INWEH s work is to undertake research and capacity development for mangrove conservation and restoration.

Zafar Adeel 5 UNU-INWEH has also made an important contribution to the publication of the Revised World Atlas of Mangroves (2010), working in close collaboration with the International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO), the International Society for Mangrove Ecosystems (ISME), the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the United Nations Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP- WCMC), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), and The Nature Conservancy (TNC). This multi-agency effort has culminated in providing state-of-the-science analysis and mapping of the world s mangrove ecosystems. It has also offered an overview of threats as well as management approaches shown to counter those threats. Importantly, UNU-INWEH has initiated this regional training course on mangrove biodiversity in collaboration with UNESCO and the Annamalai University. This course was modeled after the UNU International Training Workshop on Marine Biodiversity in Mangroves and Coastal Ecosystems, also held at the Annamalai University during February 2000. For over a decade, the training course has served the need for an integrated approach towards management of coastal ecosystems. Accordingly, a particular emphasis of this programme is on the methodologies for assessing, monitoring and conserving biodiversity in mangrove ecosystems. It relies primarily on the expertise and resources available at the Centre for Advanced Studies in Marine Biology at the Annamalai University, while also engaging a number of international experts in this field. The main objective of the Training Course is to build the capacity of professionals and institutions in developing countries of the Asia-Pacific region to undertake monitoring, research and conservation of critical mangrove ecosystems. This is achieved through training of young professionals in the scientific methodology and description of latest research work on related subjects. A secondary objective is to promote and encourage development of a network of professionals from developing countries working in this field. It is anticipated that these young professionals will not only disseminate their knowledge to others in their respective institutions and countries but also facilitate information dissemination at a regional scale. The training course comprises lectures and demonstrations, as well as group discussions. An interesting element of the course is presentations by participants on the mangrove and related ecosystems of their respective country or region. Several field visits to the adjacent Pichavaram mangroves are included to familiarize the participants with the advanced methodologies for taxonomy, monitoring and conservation in mangrove ecosystems.

6 This Training Course for Better Mangroves Management Over the years, mangrove experts and course participants have favorably evaluated this course, and have lauded the initiative and its regional impact. These evaluations have also helped in achieving a number of improvements in the course design and implementation. Continued success of this course ensures that this effective and useful capacity development activity will continue in collaboration with UNU and its partners for many years to come. UNU-INWEH is now working with a number of regional partners to replicate this success in other regions, notably East Africa, West African and the Caribbean region. References Adeel, Z. and King, C. (Eds.) (2002). Conserving our coastal environment A summary of UNU s research on sustainable management of the coastal hydrosphere in the Asia Pacific region, United Nations University, Tokyo, Japan. Adeel, Z. and Pomeroy, R. (2002). Assessment and management of mangrove ecosystems in developing countries, Trees, 16 (2-3) : 235-238. Baran, E. and Hambrey, J. (1998). Mangrove Conservation and Coastal Management in Southeast Asia: What Impact on Fishery Resources? Marine Pollution Bulletin, 37 (8-12) : 431-440. Fujimoto, K. (2000). Belowground carbon sequestration of mangrove forests in the Asia- Pacific Region, Proceedings for the UNU International Workshop Asia-Pacific Cooperation on Research for Conservation of Mangroves, Okinawa, Japan. Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (MEA), 2005. Our Human Planet: Summary for Decision Makers, Island Press, Washington DC, USA. Primavera, J.H. (2000). Philippines mangroves -Status, threats and sustainable development, Proceedings for the UNU International Workshop Asia-Pacific Cooperation on Research for Conservation of Mangroves, Okinawa, Japan. Sudara, S. (1997). Marine Fisheries and Environment in the ASEAN Region, In Environmental Aspects of Responsible Fisheries, Proceedings of the APFIC Symposium, Bangkok: Asia-Pacific Fishery Commission, Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations, pp. 184-205. Subramanian, AN. (2000). Status of Indian Mangroves Pollution - Status of Pichavaram Mangrove, Southeast Coast of India, Proceedings for the UNU International Workshop Asia-Pacific Cooperation on Research for Conservation of Mangroves, 26-30 March, 2000 - Okinawa, Japan. Hanneke Van Lavieren, Mark Spalding, Daniel M. Alongi, Mami Kainuma, Miguel Clu sener- Godt, Zafar Adeel (2012). Securing the Future of Mangroves, UNU-INWEH, Hamilton, Canada. Yeung, Y.M. (2001). Coastal Megacities in Asia: transformation, sustainability and management. Ocean & Coastal Management, 44 : 319-333.