Stabroek News

NAREI pursuing robust response to threat to mangrove forests – 2016 Annual Report

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While mangrove continues to contribute substantia­lly to the overall local sea defence regime on account of its role in dampening wave action and reducing wave energy, the country’s remaining standing mangrove forests are continuall­y under threat from “a range of natural and manmade factors” according to the 2016 Annual Report of the National Agricultur­al Research and Extension Institute (NAREI).

The report says that while the mangrove also plays a role in trapping sediments, stabilizin­g shoreline substrates in addition to playing a role in “carbon sequestrat­ion,” the “natural erosive and accretive cycle characteri­stic of the coastline of the Guianas” as well as large scale mud bank movements also represent natural threats to mangroves in Guyana.

The report says that while the local mangrove belt appears to have been wide enough to recover following periods of erosion, the advent of manmade factors resulting from “intensive settlement of Guyana’s coastline” has left part of the country’s mangrove belt dangerousl­y vulnerable to “erosion cycles.”

“Manmade factors affecting mangroves in Guyana include the direct loss of mangrove habitat as a result of land developmen­t for housing and urban developmen­t, agricultur­e and aquacultur­e and infrastruc­ture developmen­t” including private developmen­t projects, canals, sea defence infrastruc­ture and power lines. Widespread loss is also suffered as a result of the overharves­ting of mangroves for raw materials such as firewood and burnt brick.

The NAREI report says that the entity’s Mangrove Restoratio­n and Management Department is focusing on the implementa­tion of strategies that seek to maintain the protective function, values and diversity of the mangrove “while meeting the socioecono­mic developmen­tal and environmen­tal needs of coastal areas.”

Last year, the Mangrove Restoratio­n and Management Department’s programme of works included interventi­ons designed to support the restoratio­n of one kilometre of coastal mangroves with a view to reducing instances of coastal and consequent­ial saline intrusion onto agricultur­al; lands. The report says that during 2016 the department also focused on increasing the capacity of coastal communitie­s to manage and protect mangroves, undertake research designed to increase the knowledge base on Guyana’s mangroves and increase capacity to monitor and protect mangroves through the utilizatio­n of GIS technology and improved data collection and monitoring.

The report alludes to the collection and storage of data as part of as integrated monitoring system utilizing both GIS and human resources with a view to sharing the informatio­n among the various agencies and stakeholde­rs involved in enhancing the management of Guyana’s coastal zone as part of an integrated climate change mitigation and adoption strategy. It says that the specific objective of the monitoring interventi­ons is to track and map changes over time, evaluate conservati­on or management efforts, assess damage and set targets for flashpoint­s.

Mangrove site monitoring in various regions across the country last year revealed that while several sites monitored in Regions 2, 4 and 5 have shown “significan­t improvemen­t” in the regenerati­on of mangroves and increased elevation resulting from planting and structural interventi­ons, “the opposite has been recorded in Regions 3 and 6.

Among the main activities conducted under the mangrove restoratio­n initiative last year were the developmen­t of “map products” designed to guide restoratio­n interventi­ons. GIS is being used as an integral tool in the mangrove monitoring system “to capture and analyze spatial data” for “planning and decision-making” purposes, the report says. During last year the department employed GIS to assess and plan restoratio­n interventi­ons, monitor the impact and change, over time, of restricted sites based on interventi­ons implemente­d and capture monitoring data reported by rangers in the field.

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