Edmonton Journal

Cuba’s natural sea defences under threat

Campaign begins to save mangroves

- Andrea Rodriguez

SURGI DERO DE BATABANO, Cuba — Many people in this hamlet on the southern coast of Cuba remember when the shore lay about 100 metres farther out. That was four decades ago.

Since then, rising waters have gradually swallowed up rustic homes, a narrow highway that once paralleled the coast, even an old military tank that people now use to measure the sea’s yearly advance.

“There was a road there,” said Jose Manuel Herrera, 42, a fisherman and former charcoal harvester, pointing toward the gentle waves. “You could travel from here all the way to Mayabeque.”

Worried by forecasts of rising seas from climate change, the effects of hurricanes and the salinizati­on of farmlands, authoritie­s say they are beginning a forced march to repair Cuba’s first line of defence against the advancing waters — its mangrove thickets, which have been damaged by decades of neglect and uncontroll­ed logging.

In the second half of 2013, a moratorium was declared on mangrove logging. Now, the final touches are being put on a sustainabl­e management master plan that is expected to be in place before the end of the year. Cuban President Raul Castro has said the plan is a top priority.

What makes the effort vital and closely monitored by environmen­talists is that Cuba is one of the few places left in the Caribbean with extensive mangrove forests. Cuba accounts for about 69 per cent of the region’s current mangroves, the New York-based Environmen­tal Defense Fund says. Mangroves act as both a barrier to the sea and a saltwater filter, making them important for coastal health.

Even i n Cuba, experts say the situation is critical.

“The situation is bad. More than 30 per cent of the mangroves are in a critical state,” government forest scientist Reynier Samon said on a recent tour of Surgidero de Batabano, an area where deforestat­ion has been extreme. The rest, he said, are in a state of medium deteriorat­ion.

Mangroves historical­ly have been harvested heavily, for textile dyes, tannins used in the pharmaceut­ical industry, lumber for furniture and charcoal that rural Cubans rely on to fire their kitchens.

But healthy mangrove stands are important to alleviatin­g one of the island’s biggest headaches: Rising seas stand to wipe 122 towns off the map and penetrate up to two kilometres inland in low-lying areas by 2100, posing a serious threat to coastal communitie­s and agricultur­e, according to a government study last year.

Efrain Arrazcaeta, who runs a local environmen­tal non-profit, has witnessed the phenomenon with growing alarm. His group estimates a twometre maritime advance each year, using the submerged tank as a reference point.

“If the mangroves are restored, the mitigation of these effects will be notable,” Arrazcaeta said.

No details of the mangrove plan have been made public. It will apparently include sustainabl­e exploitati­on measures with some logging for the pharmaceut­ical industry under study, though the moratorium will remain more or less in place.

Officials are also waging a public awareness campaign to educate coastal residents to be caretakers of the tangled, mosquitoin­fested thickets. The campaign shows them how their own homes and farms are at stake and urges them to protect freshwater streams vital for maintainin­g the right saline levels.

Extensive reforestat­ion isn’t easy. There’s no way of mechanizin­g the process, which means brigades of workers will have to wade into the swampy terrain and plant each mangrove by hand.

Even deciding what to plant where requires careful study. Red mangroves thrive next to the sea, black mangroves a few metres inland, “yana” mangroves beyond that. And if you plant any variety in a place that’s too salty or not salty enough, it will die.

Financing for the plan comes from various ministries as well as a UN program on climate-change adaptation.

Samon said that in the past year some 36,000 hectares of mangroves have been successful­ly replanted nationwide. The measure complement­s other programs to relocate coastal buildings, protect sand dunes and regulate how close hotels can be to the sea.

 ?? F r a n k l i n R ey e s/ t h e ass o c i at e d p r e ss ?? Government forest scientist Reynier Samon says 30 per cent of Cuba’s mangroves are “in a critical state.”
F r a n k l i n R ey e s/ t h e ass o c i at e d p r e ss Government forest scientist Reynier Samon says 30 per cent of Cuba’s mangroves are “in a critical state.”

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