Friday, February 1, 2008

FAO warns of 'alarming' loss of mangroves

Mangrove swamps protects shorelines from storms, flooding and saltwater intrusion. They also provide rich ecosystems that shelter a teeming array of plants and animals. These keystone habitats have been shrinking at an "alarming rate," according to the Food and Agriculture Organization, the UN food agency, in a new publication called "The World's Mangroves." Terra Daily via Agence France-Presse reports: ..."The world has lost around 3.6 million hectares (8.9 million acres) of mangroves since 1980, equivalent to an alarming 20 percent loss of total mangrove area," the Rome-based Food and Agriculture Organisation said in a report. The total area covered by mangroves dropped from 18.8 million hectares in 1980 to 15.2 million in 2005....

"Mangroves are important forested wetlands, and most countries have now banned the conversion of mangroves for aquaculture," said Wulf Killmann, a forestry expert at the FAO. "They assess the impact on the environment before using mangrove areas for other purposes," he added.

"This has led to better protection and management of mangroves in some countries," he said, adding: "But overall, the loss of these coastal forests remains alarming. The rate of mangrove loss is significantly higher than the loss of any other types of forests."

...The main causes of the destruction of mangrove swampland include population pressure, conversion for aquaculture, agriculture, infrastructure and tourism, as well as pollution and natural disasters, FAO said. Asia showed the greatest loss of more than 1.9 million hectares over the 25-year period of the study, mainly through land use changes. Indonesia, Australia, Brazil, Nigeria and Mexico together account for about half of the world's mangroves.

Photo of a mangrove swamp showing the root system underwater by NOAA (Wikimedia Commons)

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