Jamaica Gleaner

Big bucks in biodiversi­ty

Marine scientist makes case for conservati­on

- Pwr.gleaner@gmail.com

THE GLOBAL call for attention for natural systems, even in a time of COVID-19, continues to gain traction locally, with respected marine biologist and ecologist Professor Mona Webber noting their immense economic value as reason enough for prioritisa­tion.

“As the world faces numerous challenges and population­s become more marginalis­ed, there is a tendency to disregard the issues of natural systems and their associated biodiversi­ty. However, the services produced by natural ecosystems and their associated biota are valued at two times what humans produce each year,” she told

“Forty per cent of the world’s economy depends on its biodiversi­ty and 80 per cent of the needs of the poor/marginalis­ed are derived from biological resources (biodiversi­ty),” added Webber who heads the Centre for Marine Sciences at The University of the West Indies, Mona.

While recognizin­g the need for a continued robust response to the global pandemic, which has infected more than 38 million persons and claimed more than one million lives, Webber said there is a place for biodiversi­ty conservati­on in that response.

“Biodiversi­ty/ecosystem loss or degradatio­n will only worsen the plight of the marginalis­ed and compromise our ability to effectivel­y respond to the pandemic. Conserving natural systems and their biodiversi­ty needs to be seen as investing in the natural infrastruc­ture that supports our economy, as well as the health and well-being of our people,” she said.

“Maintainin­g biodiversi­ty improves resilience to this pandemic and other crises of the future,”Webber added.

Her comments come in the wake of the recent

The Gleaner.

United Nations Summit on Biodiversi­ty that was hosted under the theme, ‘Urgent Action on Biodiversi­ty for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t’.

That event also drew the comment of a number of other local and regional stakeholde­rs who have come out as champions for biodiversi­ty, including head of Caribbean Natural Resources Institute Nicole Leotaud.

“Protecting nature must be at the heart of Caribbean COVID-19 recovery and climate resilience, and we need strong leadership to prioritise biodiversi­ty conservati­on as a central pillar in Caribbean developmen­t,” she has said.

“There is strong commitment and action by civil society and local communitie­s to protect biodiversi­ty and nature-based livelihood­s, but more needs to be done at the political level,” Leotaud added.

DESTROYING HABITATS

Eleanor Jones, head of the consultanc­y firm Environmen­t Solutions Limited who does work across the Caribbean, has herself weighed in on the subject.

“We need to understand what biodiversi­ty is. It basically relates to species, which includes us, and the interactio­n with their habitats. The single biggest threat to biodiversi­ty is the habitat, and what we are saying is that as we are destroying habitat, we are running wildlife out of their places and bringing them closer to humans and causing, for example, a jump of diseases from animals to humans,” she told The Gleaner some weeks ago.

“With COVID-19, food production becomes increasing­ly important and biodiversi­ty is critical to food production, on sea and on land, for marine and terrestria­l life. So when we are talking [about] biodiversi­ty conservati­on, what we are talking about is food production, sustainabl­e supplies of clean water, clean air, and preventing disease,” added Jones, who is also a member of the Private Sector Associatio­n of Jamaica.

“It is, therefore, critical that we do not destroy our

forest cover, and that we pay attention to maintainin­g marine life and protecting sensitive areas,” she said further.

Representa­tives f rom t he United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) have themselves been vocal on the subject, as the seeming enhanced risks of plastics pollution associated with the global pandemic response, for example, put natural systems and species in jeopardy.

For her part, Ileana Lopez, Specially Protected Area and Wildlife/Marine Biodiversi­ty programme officer with the UNEP, said climate change and land-use changes are widely recognised as being among the most important threats to biodiversi­ty and ecosystem

services; and should be addressed.

“Drastic modificati­ons of biodiversi­ty-rich ecosystems and many losses of species are occurring due to human interventi­ons. Changes in the frequency, intensity, and extent of vegetation fires and habitat modificati­on as a result of land-use change could negate natural adaptive processes and lead to extinction,” she said.

“The effect of these negative impacts could be deep and widespread because changes in ecosystems will affect water supply, fuelwood, and other ecosystem services,” Lopez said added.

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