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  UNEP 18 Jul 06
Climate Change Threat to Pacific Ocean Mangroves

PlanetArk 18 Jul 06
Pacific Mangroves Disappearing Under Rising Seas
Reporting by Michael Perry, editing by David Fogarty

Yahoo News 17 Jul 06
UN says mangroves in Pacific under threat
By Michael Casey, AP Environmental Writer

BANGKOK, Thailand - Rising seas caused by climate change could destroy half the mangroves on some Pacific islands, according to a United Nations study released Monday.

The study, which assessed mangroves on 16 Pacific islands, said the impact could be greatly reduced if nations take measures to limit coastal development, reduce pollution and restore mangroves that have been destroyed or degraded.

"There is an urgent need to help vulnerable communities adapt to the sea level rise which is already underway," Achim Steiner, executive director of the United Nations Environment Program, said in a statement.

Mangroves — woody shrubs or trees that grow in coastal areas — have been shown to provide important shoreline protection while serving as nurseries for fish and other marine life.

Pacific islanders depend on mangroves for food but also harvest dyes from them which they use to treat textiles and fishing nets, the U.N. said.

About half of mangroves have been destroyed worldwide, mostly because of development and pollution. But in recent years, climate change has posed an additional threat since rising seas effectively drown the mangroves.

Mangroves in the Pacific, the U.N. said, are especially vulnerable because some Pacific islands do not rise higher than 4 meters (13 feet) above sea level and most development is concentrated in coastal plains.

Already, rising seas in Vanuatu and Papua New Guinea in the southwest Pacific have forced hundreds of islanders to abandon vulnerable coastal homes for higher ground.

The U.N. study found that on average about 13 percent of mangroves in the Pacific would be destroyed by the rising waters, with the worst hit being American Samoa, Fiji, Tuvalu, and the Federated States of Micronesia.

The U.N. warned that the loss of mangroves on these islands will "increase the threat to human safety and shoreline development from coastal hazards such as erosion, flooding and storm waves."

"Mangrove loss will also reduce coastal water quality, reduce biodiversity and eliminate fish nursery habitats," the report said.

PlanetArk 18 Jul 06
Pacific Mangroves Disappearing Under Rising Seas
Reporting by Michael Perry, editing by David Fogarty

SYDNEY - Global warming could lead to the destruction of more than half the mangrove wetlands of some Pacific islands, wiping out or reducing marine breeding grounds that support multi-million dollar fisheries, a UN report says.

A UN Environment Programme (UNEP) report looking at the impact of rising seas on mangroves in 16 Pacific nations found the worst hit-islands would be American Samoa, Fiji, Tuvalu and the Federated States of Micronesia.

The report, released on Monday, found that these island nations could lose more than half their mangroves by the end of the century.

"The true economic value of ecosystems like mangroves is now starting to emerge," said report coordinator Kitty Simonds. "Mangroves are important nurseries for fish, act to filter coastal pollution and are important sources of timber and construction materials for local communities," she said. "Pacific islanders also harvest dyes from mangroves to treat textiles, nets and fish traps."

The report said goods and services generated by mangroves may be worth an average of US$900,000 per square km, depending on their location and uses. An estimated 75 percent of commercially caught prawns in Australia's tropical state of Queensland depend on mangroves. In Malaysia, a 400 sq km (154 sq miles) managed mangrove forest in Matang supports a fishery worth US$100 million a year.

Mangroves also protect islands from flooding during storms, with mangroves estimated to reduce wave energy by 75 percent, said the report. For example, mangroves proved crucial in limiting damage to some sections of coast during the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.

The report called for a reduction in pollution from land-based sources to make existing mangroves more healthy and resilient to rising seas caused by a warming atmosphere.

Most scientists say burning fossil fuels such as oil, coal and gas is leading to a rapid rise in greenhouse gases that are warming the atmosphere, melting glaciers and causing oceans to expand. Global warming is also expected to lead to more extreme weather, including stronger cyclones in the Pacific.

The report said roughly half the world's mangroves have been lost since 1900 as a result of clearing for development.

"There are many compelling reasons for fighting climate change -- the threats to mangroves in the Pacific underline yet another reason to act," said UNEP executive director Achim Steiner in a statement. "There is also an urgent need to help vulnerable communities adapt to the sea level rise which is already underway."

UNEP 18 Jul 06
Climate Change Threat to Pacific Ocean Mangroves
Coping Strategies for Coastal Zone Managers Outlined in New UNEP-Backed Report

Nairobi, Apia, Honolulu, 18 July 2006 - Action is needed to conserve mangroves in the Pacific amid concern that rising sea levels, linked with climate change, are set to drown large areas of these precious and economically important ecosystems.

Studies, announced today by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), indicate that some islands in the region could see over half of the mangroves steadily lost by the end of the century, with the worst hit being American Samoa, Fiji, Tuvalu, and the Federated States of Micronesia.

The study, which has assessed the vulnerability of the 16 Pacific Island countries and territories that have native mangroves, finds that overall as much as 13 per cent of the mangrove area may be lost.

It makes a series of recommendations to coastal planners. These include reducing pollution from land-based sources in order to make existing mangroves more healthy and resilient, alongside restoring lost or degraded mangroves wetlands. Setting back coastal infrastructure and development to allow mangroves to spread inland may also be possible along some sections of Pacific island coastlines, says the report.

Achim Steiner, UNEP's Executive Director, said: "There are many compelling reasons for fighting climate change--the threats to mangroves in the Pacific, and by inference across other low lying parts of the tropics, underline yet another reason to act".

"Industrialized nations must meet their commitments under the Kyoto Protocol, the international emission-reduction treaty, as a first step to the even deeper cuts needed to stabilize the atmosphere," he added. "But there is also an urgent need to help vulnerable communities adapt to the sea level rise which is already underway. This report provides sensible and sound advice on management regimes needed to boost the health and resilience of coastal zones and coastal ecosystems like mangroves in the face of current and future threats," said Mr. Steiner.

The new report, "Pacific Island Mangroves in a Changing Climate and Rising Seas", has been compiled by the Regional Seas Programme of UNEP, the Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP) based in Apia, Samoa, the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council in Honolulu, United States, and well over a dozen additional agencies and organizations from the Pacific Islands region.

Kitty Simonds, Executive Director of the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management Council, explained, "Mangrove wetlands' functional links with other coastal ecosystems and their important contribution to near shore fisheries production make it critical for Pacific Island governments and local communities to act now to ensure the sustainable provision of mangrove ecosystem services. The Council has recently begun to replace its existing suite of Fishery Management Plans with integrated ecosystem-based plans for each island archipelago. The results and recommendations stemming from this study are contributing to the development of these new place-based Fishery Ecosystem Plans."

The true economic value of ecosystems like mangroves is now starting to emerge as a result of landmark reports such as the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment, the work of some 1,300 scientists and experts.

Others assessments include the recently published "In the Front Line: Shoreline Protection and other Ecosystem Services from Mangroves and Coral Reefs" compiled by organizations including UNEP's World Conservation Monitoring Centre.

They underline that, in common with other terrestrial and marine ecosystems such as coral reefs, mangroves provide an array of valuable goods and services upon which local people and industries like tourism depend.

Mangroves are important nurseries for fish, act to filter coastal pollution and are important sources of timber and construction materials for local communities. Pacific islanders also harvest dyes from mangroves to treat textiles, nets and fish traps.

The health of mangroves also affects the health of other economically and biologically important ecosystems, including coral reefs and seagrass beds.

Mangroves provide important shoreline protection. Wave energy may be reduced by 75 per cent during a wave's passage through 200 metres of mangrove forest.

According to some estimates, the goods and services generated by mangroves may be worth an average of $900,000 per square kilometer, depending on their location and uses.

Studies in Thailand put the figure at up to $3.5 million per square kilometer and in American Samoa at just over $100,000 per square kilometer.

An estimated 75 per cent of commercially caught prawns in Queensland, Australia, depend on mangroves.

A 400 square kilometer managed mangrove forests in Matang, Malaysia, supports a fishery worth $100 million a year.

Forestry products from the Matang mangroves are worth $10 million annually, it is estimated.

Roughly half the world's mangrove area has been lost since 1900 as a result of clearances for developments like shrimp farms. 35 per cent of this loss has occurred in the past two decades.

Eric Gilman of the University of Tasmania and the report's lead author said: "The report not only spells out the threats, but also identifies national and regional priority needs for technical and institutional capacity building."

"The report also offers the elements of site-specific strategies that managers of coastal zones can implement to minimize and offset anticipated mangrove losses from climate change affects. These focus on community-based approaches and integrated coastal zone management as well as increased public awareness and outreach," he added.

Vainuupo Jungblut, Associate Ramsar Officer at SPREP and one of the report's authors, said: "One of the major challenges the Pacific Islands region faces is climate change and sea level rise, and adjusting to the responses of coastal ecosystems to these forces. The challenge for the region is to implement appropriate and affordable adaptation measures with limited resources. This report will assist Pacific Island land-use managers to assess vulnerability as well as identify appropriate adaptation techniques."

Hanneke Van Lavieren of UNEP's Regional Seas Programme and another author said: "The 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development set an ambitious target--to achieve a significant reduction in the current rate of loss of biodiversity by 2010-- as one contribution to fighting poverty and delivering prosperity. We hope this new report and its recommendations on mangroves and climate change can play its part towards achieving the biodiversity goal in the Pacific".

links
"Pacific Island Mangroves in a Changing Climate and Rising Seas" (pdf)
In the Front Line: Shoreline Protection and other Ecosystem Services from Mangroves and Coral Reefs (pdf)
Coral Reefs and Mangroves of the World website on the UNEP website
Related articles on Wild shores and Global warming
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