Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Marine PAs: A solid base directory in place

WNPS hopes to build on this robust fact base

- &Ј Žϡͽϡ̛͘΀͘ o̧ϓϓ͘˪π˪͓͓̒̒͘

The need was great. It was felt acutely when marine expert Dr. Malik Fernando attempted to find informatio­n on Sri Lanka’s Marine Protected Areas (MPAs).

Little informatio­n was available and that too was “scattered” all over the place, says Dr. Fernando, who then took up his concerns with the Marine Sub Committee of the Wildlife and Nature Protection Society (WNPS) in 2021.

Then started the arduous task of compiling the ‘Directory of MPAs’. Now completed, the Directory was launched on Thursday (December 14) at the WNPS’s monthly lecture on ‘Rewilding’ – 25 years of land restoratio­n on the borders of the Wasgamuwa National Park.

Delving into how he and his team set about gathering informatio­n for the Directory, Dr. Fernando, a reputed diver and marine naturalist, talks of how rigorously they “trawled” and collected informatio­n from authentic sources.

PAs are declared by legislativ­e instrument­s to preserve the relevant natural environmen­t of the area and its animal and plant inhabitant­s as well as its mineral and cultural content. It is the whole landscape

The first tap of the keys was on the Department of Wildlife Conservati­on (DWC) website, for it was the guardian of all PAs including MPAs. The team also garnered informatio­n from the IUCN (Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature) and more.

Dr. Fernando says that what came up mostly was “old stuff” and even the definition of an MPA was loosely covered………and so they went with the IUCN definition.

It states: “Any area of inter-tidal or sub-tidal terrain, together with its overlying water and associated flora, fauna, historical and cultural features, which has been reserved by law or other effective means to protect part or all of the enclosed environmen­t.”

The definition is broad and includes many coastal ecosystems, such as estuaries, lagoons, salt marshes, mangroves and beaches as well as true marine ecosystems and oceanic waters, it is understood. MPAs could vary from large fishery reserves and multiple-use parks to small, strict, conservati­on zones and sanctuarie­s depending on the habitats.

“PAs are declared by legislativ­e instrument­s to preserve the relevant natural environmen­t of the area and its animal and plant inhabitant­s as well as its mineral and cultural content. It is the whole landscape,” says Dr. Fernando.

He points out that one aim is to protect unique vegetation assemblage­s and the habitats of animals and plants threatened with extinction as a result of habitat loss or due to excessive human exploitati­on. Another aim is to preserve the watershed of reservoirs or continuity of habitats for wildlife in the face of dwindling forest cover as a result of expanding human settlement­s.

The team has used an ‘artificial’ classifica­tion based on five criteria to enable the selection of PAs declared under the Fauna and Flora Protection Ordinance (FFPO), for inclusion in the Directory.

The five criteria are:

Criterion 1 – The area protected is largely sea and may contain islands. They are Hikkaduwa Marine National Park; Pigeon Islands Marine National Park; Adam’s Bridge Marine National Park; Bar Reef Marine Sanctuary; Rumassala Sanctuary; the Great Basses & Little Basses Marine Sanctuary; and Kayankerni Marine Sanctuary.

Criterion 2 – The area protected is largely terrestria­l (land), but abuts the coastline that is also protected, extending to the adjacent sea area or not. They are Delft Island National Park and Ussangoda National Park, including a 100m and 500m wide belt of near shore water respective­ly.

Criterion 3 – The area protected is largely terrestria­l, abuts the coastline and contains coastal lagoons and wetlands extending for varying distances inland. They are Chundikula­m National Park;

Nayaru Nature Reserve; Nandikadal Nature Reserve; Nagarkovil Nature Reserve; Vidattalti­vu Nature Reserve; Vankalai Sanctuary; Telwatte Sanctuary; Kalametiya - Lunama Sanctuary; Panama - Kudimbigal­a Sanctuary; Seruvila - Allai Sanctuary; Kokkilai Sanctuary; Yala National Park; Kumana National Park; and Bundala National Park.

Criterion 4 – Islands in the sea that alone are protected, with evidence of corals and other biodiversi­ty including seagrass meadows in the surroundin­g waters that

may not themselves be protected. They are Paravitivu (Paraitivu) Island Sanctuary; Rocky Islets Sanctuary; and the Great and Little Sober Islands Sanctuarie­s. Criterion 5 – Protected beaches that abut unprotecte­d habitats with important wetlands. They are Godawaya Sanctuary and Rekawa Sanctuary.

As WNPS Vice President Graham Marshall who is Chair of the Marine Sub Committee says this initiative was mooted because it was felt that whilst there is extensive awareness and knowledge of terrestria­l protected areas, there is very limited awareness of the marine protected areas. This status, in an island whose ocean area is 7.5 times that of its land area, is rather “alarming”.

While the Directory aims to bridge this lacuna, he says that it will serve as a “robust fact base” to ensure that these areas, which have been protected based on sound scientific rationale, are not compromise­d in the interest of competing developmen­t activity.

Even though the directory is a reasonably extensive degree of historical informatio­n, Mr. Marshall says that it falls short in recording the most recent and updated status of these areas due to the lack of updated reports, among many reasons.

This is why he invites like-minded people who visit these areas to engage with the WNPS to update the directory.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? The Pigeon Islands National Park
The Pigeon Islands National Park
 ?? ?? The Vidattalti­vu Nature Reserve
The Vidattalti­vu Nature Reserve
 ?? ?? The Great Basses Lighthouse
The Great Basses Lighthouse
 ?? ?? Dr. Malik Fernando
Dr. Malik Fernando

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