Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Wetlands again ravaged for illegal prawn farming

- By Tharushi Weerasingh­e

The wildlife department has instructed its office in Puttalam to once again restore almost two acres of mangroves in the Anawilunda­wa sanctuary that had been illegally cleared overnight on Tuesday to make way for a prawn farm.

Anawilunda­wa is a Ramsar wetland falling deemed of internatio­nal importance under the UNESCO Ramsar Convention. Six out of 2,331 Ramsar wetlands worldwide are in Sri Lanka according to a 2018 report, and Anawilunda­wa is one of them.

A 35- year- old prawn farmer from Udappuwa has been arrested for his suspected involvemen­t in the illegal activity at Anawilunda­wa.

The government will punish the perpetrato­rs “to the fullest extent of the law, regardless of the sort of power the guilty parties will attempt to throw around,” Wildlife and Forest Conservati­on Minister C. B. Ratnayake said.

Department of Wildlife Conservati­on ( DWC), Officials who found the illegally cleared area on Wednesday morning had been told curtly that it had been done with the permission of “the minister”.

The DWC said legal action was underway in the Chilaw Magistrate’s Court. Police are searching for more suspects and the heavy machines used in the rapid operation. A driver is also under arrest and a backhoe confiscate­d.

Officials said they had found old prawn tanks had been cleaned in readiness to restart the farm.

There had been prawn farms in the area around two decades ago but these had been shut down. For the past two years, the DWC has been working on the restoratio­n of some 20 hectares of abandoned prawn farms in the Anawilunda­wa sanctuary to return the wetlands to their former state.

Department officers say they will lose no time in repairing the two acres

again damaged. “We received orders from Colombo to restart the restoratio­n process of the mangroves now,” WCD Assistant Director in Puttalam Eranda Gamage said. “It will begin again.”

The Ramsar area of Anawilunda­wa is 1,397ha in extent. With its unique combinatio­n of mangroves, freshwater, and the lagoon habitats, the sanctuary is home to numerous birds.

There are also six giant manmade tanks and three secondary tanks, each interconne­cted and working as a unit. The nine tanks store water for irrigation and cultivatio­n and provide refuge to 150 species of water birds including threatened species. The fishermen of Puttalam are also dependent on the habitat.

Artificial digging, untreated waste and chemicals are killing mangroves and their ecosystem, conservati­onists say.

“Fish need mangroves to breathe in, so the destructio­n of mangroves has a severe ripple effect on the whole system,” Samantha Gunasekara, former deputy director of Customs (Biodiversi­ty) and the current president of the Lanka Nature

Conservati­onists, said.

He called the “employment provision” argument of prawn farming advocates a bogus claim. Prawn farms, he argues, generally create two jobs at most: security and drain-cutting.

“We should have learned our lesson with what happened to the Mundalama lagoon,” Mr. Gunasekara said. The once- beautiful Mundalama lagoon was hit by a white spot disease that obliterate­d entire ecosystems after prawn farms were started up there.

Now, 90 per cent of these prawn farms have been abandoned. Invasive prawn species such as “wanami” were introduced into the area by the organisati­ons that had profited from the farms.

Additional reporting by our Puttalam

Correspond­ent,

Hiran Priyantha Jayasinghe

The Ramsar area of Anawilunda­wa is 1,397ha in extent. With its unique combinatio­n of mangroves, freshwater, and the lagoon habitats, the sanctuary is home to numerous birds.

 ??  ?? Wildlife Department officers say they will lose no time in repairing the two acres again damaged. Pix by Hiran Priyankara Jayasinghe
Wildlife Department officers say they will lose no time in repairing the two acres again damaged. Pix by Hiran Priyankara Jayasinghe

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