Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rainforest another victim of Maria

Water supply, tourism affected

- By Luis Ferré-Sadurní

LUQUILLO, Puerto Rico — When you looked up, you could once see nothing but the lush, emerald canopy of tabonuco and sierra palm trees covering El Yunque National Forest.

That was before Hurricane Maria obliterate­d the only tropical rainforest in the U.S. forest system. Left behind was a scene so bare that on a recent visit, it was possible to see the concrete skyline of San Juan about 30 miles west — a previously unimaginab­le sight.

El Yunque, pronounced Jun-kay, has been an enormous source of pride in Puerto Rico and one of the main drivers of the island’s tourism industry. The 28,000-acre forest on the eastern part of the island has more than 240 species of trees; 23 of those are found nowhere else. More than 50 bird species live among the forest’s crags and waterfalls.

But sunlight now reaches cavities of the forest that have not felt a ray of light in decades, bringing with it a scorching heat.

“Hurricane Maria was like a shock to the system,” said Grizelle González, a project leader at the Internatio­nal Institute of Tropical Forestry, part of the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. “The whole forest is completely defoliated.”

The hardest hit areas at the top of the forest “might take a century to recover,” said Ms. González, who has worked at El Yunque for 17 years.

Tree trunks that still stood were left brown, stripped of their leaves and dark-green mosses. Landslides have scattered the forest with mounds of displaced soil and boulders.

The billions of gallons of water that rain every year on the eight major rivers that originate here supply 20 percent of the drinkable water in Puerto Rico.

“What’s going to happen if the ecosystem has less capacity to capture that water, get it into the streams, and into the municipal water systems?” Sharon Wallace, the forest supervisor for El Yunque, said.

Bryophytes, mosses that grow on tree trunks, collect a lot of the water that goes down the mountain, Ms. Gónzalez said. But trees were stripped of the mosses, especially on the face that received the direct fury of Maria’s winds.

The bird population also suffered a devastatin­g hit. Birds typically are affected after hurricanes ravage trees of the food they eat. But on an initial scouting trip to the accessible parts of the forest, Ms. Gónzalez said she saw the bodies of dozens of blackbirds and pearly-eyed thrashers that had died because of the hurricane’s galloping gusts.

The Puerto Rican parrot, an endangered species living in El Yunque and Río Abajo State Forest, is of special concern. The colorful bright-green bird with a distinctiv­e red stripe above its beak is found only in Puerto Rico and is the only native parrot species in the United States.

“The Puerto Rican parrot is an iconic species of the island,” Marisel López, leader of the The Puerto Rican Parrot Recovery Program of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, said. “It’s our legacy.”

While there were tens of thousands in pre-Columbian times, the parrot population dwindled to 13 by 1973 because of deforestat­ion, hunting and species competitio­n. Conservati­on efforts since then have helped rebuild the population, and before Maria, the captive and wild population combined numbered more than 500, Ms. López said. At least seven parrots died in captivity because of the stress induced by the hurricane and the high heat in the days after because of the lack of canopy, she said.

Ms. López, whose team is trying to gain access to the western part of El Yunque where the parrots live, said the toll in the wild population was not known.

The tourism industry in Puerto Rico is deeply intertwine­d with its environmen­t.

About 1.2 million people visit El Yunque every year for its hiking trails, zip-lining, camping and waterfalls. But the rainforest has remained closed since Maria left roads inaccessib­le and all its recreation­al facilities received blows, Ms. Wallace, the forest supervisor, said.

“We don’t know how long it is going to take to reopen,” she said.

And on an island, where 58 percent of the acreage is forests, Maria’s ecological damage was widespread.

The population of mountain coquí, one of the 14 species of a small native frog, with a distinctiv­e mating call heard at night across the island, was severely reduced by Hurricane Hugo in 1989, Rafael Joglar, a professor of biology at the University of Puerto Rico, said.

Hurricane Maria could be the final straw for that species, Mr. Joglar said.

“It worries us that it’ll be the next species to disappear in Puerto Rico,” Mr. Joglar, a herpetolog­ist, said. “The worst would be if we get a dry season — that would be the mortal blow other than the hurricane.”

 ?? Dennis M. Rivera Pichardo/The New York Times ?? Hurricane Maria’s devastatio­n can be seen Oct. 6 at El Yunque National Forest in Puerto Rico.
Dennis M. Rivera Pichardo/The New York Times Hurricane Maria’s devastatio­n can be seen Oct. 6 at El Yunque National Forest in Puerto Rico.

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