Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Human activity contribute­s to death of mangroves — scientists

- BY ROMARDO LYONS Staff reporter lyonsr@jamaicaobs­erver.com

DON’T blame it on weather systems alone. Scientists have said that the impact of human activity has also contribute­d to some of the die off of mangroves in southern Clarendon, where about 45 per cent between Milk River and Salt River are dead.

The University of the West Indies (UWI) Solutions for Developing Countries’ (SODECO) chief scientist, Professor Terrence Forrester told the Jamaica Observer that people and their environmen­ts are one, and as a result, people’s actions often time impact their environmen­ts — whether intentiona­l or not.

“We are not different from the environmen­t; we are a part of the environmen­t. There are good things that we do but there are a lot of bad things that we tend to do. We really shouldn’t, but we cut down mangrove trees to make charcoal. People are doing it because it is the leading livelihood here — after the collapse of the sugar industry — followed by fishing, and fish are getting lesser and lesser due to overfishin­g,” Forrester said at a Jamaica Observer Press Club staged in collaborat­ion with the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation at Halse Hall Great House in Clarendon last Thursday.

“This project is meant to understand the socio-economic dynamics and the market forces behind charcoal. In addition to that, we recognise that it damages people’s health,” he continued.

Forrester said that another detrimenta­l practice is the cutting down or bulldozing of mangrove habitats to make settlement­s.

“When these are unplanned and you find that people in a particular area — that I won’t name — want to get to the sea, they get the municipal authority to lay down a road through the mangroves. They are putting down hard structures that interfere with the water flow, and hard structures that displace mangroves,” he said.

Minister without portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Senator Matthew Samuda told the Sunday Observer that there is a connection between social and economic degradatio­n.

“Cutting down usually happens because of the social degradatio­n and economic impact in the space — it’s not just cutting down for cutting down sake. Economic motivation is one of the issues that forestry officers will have, and not just in this area. It is that economic need to extract in an unsustaina­ble manner,” he said.

Further, improper waste disposal is known to be a cause of flooding but what a lot of people don’t realise, Forrester explained, is that flood waters in turn damage mangrove forests.

“The plastics not only wash up on the shore but they also block up the inlets going in; it’s going to get worse with climate change. And the little bit of rain that comes when we are drought-stricken, we want to ensure that gushes in at the bank, which is why a part of the restoratio­n is to do like NWA [National Works Agency] — clean the channels and

 ?? ?? Local scientists say trenches were opened at Jackson Bay, Portland Cottage, in southern Clarendon. As a result, there is now tidal flushing, allowing for more freshwater flow which is habitable for fish.
Local scientists say trenches were opened at Jackson Bay, Portland Cottage, in southern Clarendon. As a result, there is now tidal flushing, allowing for more freshwater flow which is habitable for fish.

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