Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

THE CAPITAL’S VANISHING WETLANDS

LAST REMAINING HAVENS AND THE BATTLE AGAINST THE CLOCK

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Seventy-year-old Indrapala Gamarachch­i looks out over one of the last remaining patches of wilderness in his neighbourh­ood. He believes this land in Mattegoda, just south-east of Colombo city, deserves to be a Gazetted, protected wetland.

Not only is it a catchment area - the water that collects here feeds a stream that irrigates some 200 urban paddy fields downstream – but it is also one of the last remaining havens for wildlife. But it is clear, it needs attention. At one end, a garbage dump seems to swell in size by the day, and at the other, you can see some homes on its borders are channellin­g wastewater into the once pristine space.

Indrapala has lived in Mattegoda for 30 years and has watched with dismay as the Mattegoda weva and adjacent wetlands have come under threat from relentless developmen­t. He decided to do something about it, and as the President of the Wetland Management Committee, he is working closely with the Public Interest Law Foundation to bring these lands under the protection of the Central Environmen­t Authority. As part of their efforts, they are commission­ing a biodiversi­ty survey to explore how many species live here, and are rallying the surroundin­g community to preserve this precious resource.

“These are the only places left where the future generation­s can come to learn about plants and animals the role of the wetland. That is why we must preserve it,” says Indrapala.

THE IMPORTANCE TO COLOMBO

Mihiri Gunawarden­e, Director of the Public Interest Law Foundation agrees, and adds that these wetlands could use the government’s attention and protection. Mihiri notes that current environmen­tal laws should be enough to protect these spaces, but implementa­tion has always been the real challenge.

“Because this is an urban context, it is important we have the developmen­t agencies involved,” she says, explaining that the debate tends to boil down to two sides: developmen­t versus conservati­on.

It is a conflict that is playing out across the city. The Mattegoda weva and adjacent wetlands are a part of a rich, vital network that make up the urban wetlands of Colombo. Stretching out over some 20 km2, they represent 2.9 percent of the total land area of Colombo District. Their importance to Colombo is hard to overstate.

WETLANDS: THE LUNGS OF A CITY

Wetlands can serve as the lungs of a city, helping clear atmospheri­c pollutants and lower temperatur­es in their environs. They also support rice and vegetable cultivatio­n, alongside dairy cattle. Foragers find in their depths a nourishing variety of medicinal herbs, leafy vegetables and native plants. The streams and lakes are also a source of freshwater fish, providing fisherman across the region a livelihood.

Wetlands remain one of the city’s biggest defences against flooding. During intensive rainfall events, the wetlands can store tens of millions of cubic meters of water. The wetlands are mitigating global climate change as well. Estimates suggest that the wetland soils contain approximat­ely 1.43 million metric tons of carbon (almost 90 percent of the annual carbon emissions from the Colombo Metropolit­an Region).

Attempts are now being made to protect these significan­t yet fragile

Wetlands of the Colombo Metropolit­an Region ecosystems under the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) Global Environmen­t Facility (GEF) funded Small Grants Programme, which is in its sixth operationa­l phase. The $2.5 million, the fouryear project extends up until November 2020 and is designed to enable community organizati­ons to take collective action for adaptive landscape management.

As part of the programme, the wetlands in the south-east region of the Colombo district have been selected as a pilot landscape. The area which encompasse­s 14 wetlands and 32 villages spans the DS divisions of Maharagama, Kaduwela, Kolonnawa, Homagama and Seethawaka.

Little attention has been paid to these wetlands in the past, and they are rapidly degrading due to a combinatio­n of factors including pollution and siltation from unsustaina­ble land-use practices including deforestat­ion, waste disposal, agricultur­al run-off, over-extraction of water for irrigation, unsustaina­ble fishing practices, unauthoriz­ed encroachme­nt and land reclamatio­n.

52-year-old Shantha Jayaweera is the president of the Organizati­on for Aquatic Resources Management can see that the Heen Ela wetlands are under attack from many sides. He can often be found on a basic catamaran, floating down the canals that flow around the three islands at its heart. On Heen Ela’s borders, small homes encroach on the land and dump household waste and other pollutants, and in the wetlands themselves, invasive species are overwhelmi­ng native plants and animals.

PROTECTORS OF THE WETLANDS

Through his organizati­on, Shantha hopes to recruit local communitie­s as protectors of the wetlands, by helping them find livelihood­s in ecotourism and handicraft sector. He is working to rehabilita­te 60 hectares of the Heen Ela marshes through replanting native species and is also attempting to reduce human-snake conflict by introducin­g dens on high ground where animals can take refuge in rainy weather, keeping them out of homes and buildings. Bat dens have also been constructe­d for Fruit Bats (Pteropodid­ae) and Micro-bats (Microchiro­ptera) that are key to keeping mosquitoes under control here.

“The people don’t understand the value of the wetlands,” he says.

“Most capital cities don’t have such beautiful natural environmen­ts just a short walk away.”

And it’s not just humans who would suffer if these wetlands were destroyed. These marshes are home to a wide variety of animals - some 209 species of vertebrate­s were recorded here of which 17 are endemic, while 26 are nationally threatened (IUCN Sri Lanka, 2000).

NATIONALLY THREATENED SPECIES

Among the endemic vertebrate species, 60 per cent are threatened nationally. These include four species of dragonfly, two species of butterfly, four species of land snails, two species of freshwater fish, two species of amphibians, two species of reptiles, and four species of mammals, including two endangered species: the otter (Lutra lutra) and the fishing cat (Prionailur­us viverrinus). It is the latter that fascinates Anya Ratnayake. Anya’s work is targeted at protecting the endangered fishing cat. The charismati­c animal is the largest terrestria­l predator in these parts, but sightings are very rare.

However, as the cats are an apex predator, the health of their population can provide vital clues to the vitality of the ecosystem as a whole. By setting up camera traps and studying the animals, Anya is hoping to understand more about the habits of these elusive animals. Having fallen in love with fishing cats herself, she knows they could be a big draw for tourists. Tourists would mean more jobs and a better chance that this delicate ecosystem could survive growing urbanizati­on. “The fishing cat is really a flagship species for wetland conservati­on,” says Anya, simply.

BATTLE AGAINST THE CLOCK

Working from different perspectiv­es, Mihiri, Shantha and Anya are all focused on the preservati­on of something they see as being a defining characteri­stic of this city. However, they are in a battle against the clock. While rates of loss vary across the district, in a number of areas the loss of wetlands since the 1980s has been as high as 60 percent. Every year, we lose another 1.2 percent. Without action to address the drivers of loss, Colombo Wetlands could be reduced by onethird by 2038 and by half by 2070.

However, there is hope if only the city recognizes what it has before the wetlands disappear. “Colombo has survived because of the wetlands for centuries,” says Anya. “Let’s preserve them for future generation­s.”

UNDP Exclusive for

BECAUSE THIS IS AN URBAN CONTEXT, IT IS IMPORTANT WE HAVE THE DEVELOPMEN­T AGENCIES INVOLVED

SHANTHA HOPES TO RECRUIT LOCAL COMMUNITIE­S AS PROTECTORS OF THE WETLANDS, BY HELPING THEM FIND LIVELIHOOD­S IN ECO-TOURISM AND HANDICRAFT SECTOR

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