New Straits Times

PRESERVING MANGROVES AND SUSTAINABL­E DEVELOPMEN­T

The health of mangroves has dwindled and this must be arrested, writes

- DR A. ALDRIE AMIR

LIKE humans, mangrove forests require a consistent supply of clean and healthy fresh water for their survival. This is an important basic need often misunderst­ood by resource managers, thinking mangroves would survive only in saline hydrologic­al condition.

Just like other plants and living organisms, mangroves use fresh water and oxygen for their physiologi­cal developmen­t. But as opposed to other types of plants, mangroves dominate sheltered intertidal zones and tolerate the salty environmen­t.

Mangroves mainly flourish in brackish estuarine areas where the tidal water meets the fresh water. Here, various physical, chemical and biological exchanges and transactio­ns take place.

For instance, the nutrients and silts transporte­d by water from both the marine and the terrestria­l environmen­ts merge in the estuary to promote land building and sediment enrichment, and in due time, the ecosystem balances and stabilises itself.

Incidental­ly, the process includes the loading of anthropoge­nic pollutants, and therein lies the additional challenge for mangroves to remediate.

Naturally, mangroves as an ecosystem are very efficient at playing the remediatin­g role. However now, the imbalance widens between the ever increasing load of pollutants with the continuous decline of mangrove forests, decreasing their ability to function effectivel­y in providing these substantia­l ecosystem services.

Damming and impoundmen­t of rivers elevate this imbalance. On one hand, dams lower the volume and minimise the speed of fresh water flow, increasing the salinity of water and the concentrat­ion of pollutants in the estuaries.

On the other hand, some rivers

With advanced knowledge and modern technologi­es, we might have discovered new ways to sustain our economy, but we should not neglect the natural resources that has provided the basic foundation for our survival in the first place.

are locked by barrages for flood control and to maintain the depth of water to allow for tour boats and cruises to operate, among others. One must understand that mangroves favour the flow of water and the exchange of tides, but they will not survive in waterlogge­d areas.

This negligence on the environmen­tal aspects of river management results in a destructiv­e chain reaction.

River impoundmen­t disrupts the hydrology of a river, causing mangroves and riparian plants to die and suffocates marine fauna as the water becomes stagnant, anoxic and toxic. This situation will backfire and cause river tourism to collapse.

On a more critical note, river pollution is a major issue in Malaysia as we can hardly find crystal clear rivers anymore, especially in the peninsula.

The effluents and pollutants released into the rivers eventually reach the mangroves and enter the ocean, affecting other downstream ecosystems such as the seagrasses and corals.

Therefore, water quality and pollution control should be a primary concern for all Malaysians.

Based on the recent catastroph­e in Sungai Kim Kim and other previous cases, we obviously cannot just rely on the Department of Environmen­t and the Environmen­tal Quality Act alone.

Controllin­g water and river pollution must begin right before the start of any kind of activities on land, particular­ly when they involve land acquisitio­n, land clearing and land-use change.

Hence, the state exco, the district and land offices together with the municipali­ties must be the first authoritie­s to set and enforce the ground rules before accepting the idea, approving the proposal and giving out licence for any activity to be carried out on land, and on water for that matter.

Too often we hear sad pleas and shocking complaints from villagers about polluting projects and developmen­t, either establishe­d legally or illegally, happening near them without any prior notice. Of course other relevant agencies, stakeholde­rs and the public have their roles to play too, and it is now the time to coordinate and identify the gaps in the existing legal and enforcemen­t tools and standard operating procedures to overcome this cross-sectoral issue. It is important to note that many major towns and cities throughout Malaysia are located on coastal areas.

Many of which have evolved with a direct link and dependency on the resources from and surroundin­g their rivers, estuaries and coasts. As the towns and cities develop, the priority on sustaining the health of mangroves and rivers has dwindled.

Our attachment to these natural resources as our lifeline has somehow diminished. It seems like our design for economic developmen­t has undermined the importance of the environmen­t, one of the triple bottom lines of sustainabl­e developmen­t, and this is actually a very bad sign.

Unsustaina­ble developmen­t is a destructiv­e key that kills civilisati­ons. This had happened before to some old and ancient societies and this may happen again if we don’t care and if we continue to ignore.

With advanced knowledge and modern technologi­es, we might have discovered new ways, solutions and alternativ­es to sustain our economy, but we should not neglect the original surroundin­g — the natural resources and the environmen­t — that have provided the basic foundation for our survival in the first place.

Water and rivers are the agents and medium that connect lives and provide living for many millions of their dependents, and it is our responsibi­lity to protect and to manage them well.

In order to do that, we must not go down the unsustaina­ble developmen­t road as it will take us to a dead end, from which no exit is possible, not even a U-turn. The writer is senior lecturer and research fellow at Institute for Environmen­t and Developmen­t (Lestari), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia and coordinato­r for the Malaysian Mangrove Research Alliance and Network (MyMangrove)

 ??  ?? Mangroves favour the flow of water and the exchange of tides, but they will not survive in waterlogge­d areas locked by barrages for flood control and tourist boats.
Mangroves favour the flow of water and the exchange of tides, but they will not survive in waterlogge­d areas locked by barrages for flood control and tourist boats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia