Saturday, February 6, 2010

Keeping wetlands from becoming wastelands

Stephen Leahy in IPS: Swamps, marshes and other wetlands are beginning to be recognised as a country's 'green jewels', even in a tropical paradise like Mahé Island here in the Seychelles, with its stunning beaches and dramatic granite outcrops. "Wetlands are one of the world's richest ecosystems on the planet," said Joel Morgan, minister for environment, natural resources and transport, Republic of Seychelles.

"We islanders live closer to nature than many others and we have long understood the importance of wetlands and environmental services and resources they provide us with," Morgan said at the first-ever World Wetlands Week. Normally, World Wetlands Day is Feb. 2, but this year the Ramsar Convention, an intergovernmental treaty on conservation and wise use of wetlands and their resources, is celebrating wetlands around the world throughout the entire week.

The Seychelles were chosen for the global launch of World Wetlands Week because they exemplified the Ramsar principle of wise use successfully balancing tourism, development, food security and biodiversity, said Anada Tiega, secretary general of the Ramsar Convention. "The Seychelles has done a good job implementing the Ramsar Convention," Tiega said in the opening ceremony.

The Seychelles Islands are a tropical archipelago 1,800 kilometres off the east coast of Africa with a population of just 85,000 people. They comprise 115 islands - the Inner Islands are tall and granitic and the outer low-lying comprise coralline cays, atolls and reef islands. Although generally small in size, wetlands of various kinds can be found on most islands…..

Part of Port Launay Marine National Park, Mahe, Seychelles, shot by Dino Sassi - Marcel Fayon, Wikimedia Commons

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