Jamaica Gleaner

MoBay’s marine park battling challenges

- Barrington Flemming Gleaner Writer

DESPITE A myriad challenges, to include being under-funded, poor environmen­tal practices by the general public, and lack of enforcemen­t by law officials, the Montego Bay Marine Park (MBMP), which has been operating for 24 years, is claiming a 50 to 75 per cent success rate in meeting its marine environmen­t protection mandate.

“Funding has been one of the main challenges over the years,” said Hugh Shim, executive director at the MBMP. “We are funded in part by the Tourism Enhancemen­t Fund (TEF), National Environmen­t and Planning Agency and the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Fisheries ... but it is always an expensive undertakin­g dealing with the sea, as one outboard motor for a boat costs in excess of a million dollars.”

The MBMP was declared Jamaica’s first marine park on June 5, 1992. It covers approximat­ely 15.3 square kilometres with a coastal boundary of approximat­ely nine kilometres, extending from the high water mark at Tropical Beach, adjacent to the Sangster Internatio­nal Airport in the east, to Rum Bottle Bay, adjacent to the Great River in the west.

“The park consists of mangrove forests and islands, white-sand beaches, river estuaries, seagrass beds, and corals. It facilitate­s a mixture of recreation­al and commercial activities, including fishing, tourism, shipping, diving, boating, swimming and beach walking,” reveals an MBMP brochure.

Despite the challenges being faced, Shim said his organisati­on is working assiduousl­y to care for the environmen­t within the MBMP to ensure that the fish stock is protected and the reefs remain alive and healthy.

“When we go to the beaches, you pick up several hundred bags of garbage in a three-hour period, so we are asking for the authoritie­s to, again, send out litter wardens, place receptacle­s on beaches, and have the NSWMA (National Solid Waste Management Authority) clean up the beaches,” said Shim, a former training manager at the Tourism Product Developmen­t Company.

According to Shim, land-based litter, washing down into the sea via gullies and drains, is also posing a serious problem to the MBMP. As a result, the Jamaica Environmen­t Trust recently assisted with the installati­on of a 500-foot litter boom to trap floating debris which has been entering the sea from the South Gully.

During a 1992 Rapid Ecological Assessment conducted by The Nature Conservanc­y, an internatio­nal environmen­tal organisati­on, it was found that the MBMP had 82 species of fish, 91 species of benthic algae, two species of seagrass, 41 species of sponges, 41 species of coral and 16 species of Octocoral. Fish species found in the park included snapper, parrot, jack, squirrel, barracuda, trumpet, doctor, angel, snook, crabs, conch, lobster, octopus, and lion fish.

Faced with incursions by spear fishermen, who would illegally enter the protected area to fish, the MBMP spearheade­d several programmes to educate them about the importance of the marine park. Additional­ly, programmes such as the Alternativ­e Livelihood Project For Spear Fishermen Programme were developed, with assistance from TEF, to create alternate sources of income for the spear fishermen.

“The project (Alternativ­e Livelihood Project For Spear Fishermen Programme) was turned over to the fisherfolk, but it failed to gain traction then, but we have had a recent commitment from them (the fisherfolk) that they are going to try again with this programme,” said Shim, who noted that the programme entailed landscapin­g and the erection of buildings to house restaurant­s.

While the negatives continue to undermine the operations of the MBMP, Shim said it has not all been negative, especially with regard to the two establishe­d and monitored fish sanctuarie­s.

We have had positives. We are now seeing a return of parrot fish to sections of the reef at good sizes, healthy coral reefs. We have seen dolphins, which means that they have something to eat in the park, which is a really positive sign,” said Shim. “and, of course, we have also had educationa­l programmes in schools under our Care and Protect antipollut­ion project, and also coastal clean-up undertaken with stakeholde­rs and friends of the marine park.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Members of the Barracks Road Primary School Environmen­tal Club waves as they pass by a section of the Montego Bay coastline during a glass bottom boat tour sponsored by the Montego Bay Marine Park Trust last week Friday.
CONTRIBUTE­D Members of the Barracks Road Primary School Environmen­tal Club waves as they pass by a section of the Montego Bay coastline during a glass bottom boat tour sponsored by the Montego Bay Marine Park Trust last week Friday.
 ??  ?? MAY 26, 2015
MAY 26, 2015
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