Mangroves
provide the tropics with protection from the increasing incidence of storms and
flooding caused by taiphoons and tsunamis. But the coastal forests are in
decline. Efforts are underway to bring them back.
A green forest, rising out of the ocean, hugging the coastline like a green lifebelt - mangroves live only in tropical areas. They need warm conditions and a mixture of salt and fresh water. Their branches and web of aerial roots are home to numerous bird species. The waters around their base are alive with fish, the sediment crawling with crabs.
A green forest, rising out of the ocean, hugging the coastline like a green lifebelt - mangroves live only in tropical areas. They need warm conditions and a mixture of salt and fresh water. Their branches and web of aerial roots are home to numerous bird species. The waters around their base are alive with fish, the sediment crawling with crabs.
But since
the 1980s, mangroves have declined by around 35 percent for various reasons.
They often have to make way for harbors, airports or housing. Even more of the
mangroves have been sacrificed for shrimp ponds that feed international demand
for the small crustaceans, Ulrich Saint-Paul of the University of Bremen's
Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Ecology, told DW.
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| Mangroves provide rich pickings for fishermen |
"[Mangroves]
are not only important breeding areas for crabs and fish. They also protect the
coast. They act as barriers against storms. And they play a major role in
regulating the world's climate as a CO2 sink," explained Saint-Paul.
Long-term objectives such as coastal protection, maintaining ecosystems or
protecting the climate are being sacrificed for short-term profits, he added.
Building
dams and diverting of rivers also poses a threat to mangroves.
"They
need fresh water as well as salty," Rene Capote, who monitored mangroves
in his native Cuba while working with the University of Bonn told DW.
"Even if you are far inland and you divert or block a freshwater source,
the water will stop reaching mangroves and kill them."
Mangroves
also filter much of the sediment coming from the land side, keeping the sea
water clean in many areas. "That is very important for tourism in beach
areas, and for the health of related ecosystems like coral reefs," both
important economic factors, said Capote.
Natural
wave-breakers
In the case
of extreme weather events, mangroves act as protective barriers in several
different ways: by absorbing large amounts of water, reducing flooding after
heavy rain and by breaking the power of wind and waves.
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| Mangrove roots absorb water and filter sediment |
During
Typhoon Haiyan, which hit the Philippines in November, mangroves could have
reduced the impact of the storm surge.
A study by
Wetlands International shows that every kilometer of mangroves can reduce the
height of the water by up to half a meter. Even the smallest abatement can save
lives. Tonneijck stressed that the trees also provide firewood and building
material in the aftermath of an extreme weather event.
"But
to really reduce a whole storm surge, you would need very wide
greenbelts," she cautioned. For that reason, she advocates a combination
of natural and man-made measures in threatened tropical areas where the
mangroves have disappeared. "For example you could have a dike with a
mangrove belt in front of it to protect the dike."
Replanting
the tidal forests can also help reclaim land that has eroded away. Tonneijck's
group is working in an area of central Java where mangroves were replaced by
aquaculture ponds for shrimp and fish, contributing to the erosion of hundreds
of meters of coastline.
Restoration
often fails in areas that suffer from erosion because the sediment balance is
disturbed. Sediment can be trapped through "building with nature,"
using engineering techniques in combination with natural processes, says
Tonneijck.
The project
in Indonesia uses permeable dams made of local materials like bamboo and
brushwood in front of the coastline. These structures mimic the function of
mangrove roots and branches, as they dissipate waves and trap sediment. Once
the sediment is stable, mangroves will naturally recolonize and form a new
protective barrier. This method has been applied with salt marshes along the
coasts of the Netherlands and Germany for centuries.
Bremen's
Ulrich Saint-Paul says organizations like the World Bank are investing
considerable amounts of money in projects to restore mangroves. "But in my
view they always make one mistake: They plant the mangroves in monocultures,
just like pine or fir plantations in Europe. This fails to take account of
natural biodiversity, which lends a forest a far higher degree of ecological
stability."
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| Replanting mangroves helps if conditions are right |
Sustainable
shrimp culture
Capote
argues for a sustainable approach to existing mangroves as well as restoration
projects. "You can have sustainable aquaculture in the sense that only a
portion of the mangrove area is used and restored afterward, on a rotational
basis."
Reducing
pollution from shrimp feed is another important factor. "There is a limit
to how many shrimps can be nursed in a mangrove area," Capote said.
"You can either have very high short-term profits that end when all the
mangrove area has been killed. Or you can have a longer-term approach, with
lower profits, when mangroves are given time to recover naturally."
Awareness
of the value of mangroves rises after every catastrophic extreme weather event
in tropical areas. But it doesn't last long, says Ulrich Saint-Paul.
"We
need a long-term education program, especially in schools and adult education,
to make it clear to people in mangrove regions how important the forests are
and why we need to protect them."





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