Jamaica Gleaner

Scientist insists on enhanced investment in coastal ecosystems

- Pwr.gleaner@gmail.com

WITH JAMAICA and the Caribbean still under the weight of climate change threats, despite the prevailing COVID-19 pandemic, the case was recently made for a scale up of investment in holistic coastal ecosystems, such as mangroves, seagrasses and coral reefs.

The arguments were recently advanced by Professor Mona Webber, Director of the Centre for Marine Sciences at the University of the West Indies and head of the Discovery Bay Marine Laboratory during a Tedxworthi­ngton talk.

“Although compromise­d, these coastal ecosystems are critical in the fight against climate change effects and they still offer the capacity to recover and the capacity to recover against the ravages of climate change,”she said in her opening salvo.

“Mitigating their destructio­n and loss is very important because Jamaica and the Caribbean has as much as 75 per cent of the population living in the coastal zone and, in fact, if you consider coastal as far inland as the effects of the sea is felt, then the entire island is coastal,” she added.

Among the climate threats facing the Jamaica and the region are sea level rise, extreme hurricane events and extreme droughts. At the same time, the implicatio­ns of these impacts extend to impaired food and water security.

Included in the prescribed response is the need to advance mitigation efforts, as reflected in a slowing of global warming which is fueled by greenhouse gases, including carbon dioxide; and adaptation, which is about advancing interventi­ons that build coping capacity.

COMPROMISE­D ECOSYSTEMS

Investing in compromise­d coastal ecosystems ticks both boxes.

“Mitigating through coastal ecosystem rehabilita­tion has convinced us that we have the ability to adapt and it depends on having healthy coastal ecosystems. And so the UWI and its partners haver esearched effective approaches to mangrove ecosystem rehabilita­tion,” Weber explained.

Their efforts, she said, extend as far back as 2008 when they had their first coastal plant nursery for mangrove seedlings and then again in 2011.

“These nurseries can produce up to 20,000 seedlings and these seedlings are acclimated so they are appropriat­e for the conditions in which we need to plant them,” Webber told

The Gleaner.

“But also in 2008, we benefitted from a workshop from the late Robin Lewis III and here we had real hands-on exposure to mangrove rehabilita­tion. So now we have our own mangrove rehabilita­tion expert, Mr. Camilo Trench,” she said.

The first order of business, she noted, has been to survey the mangroves to see what caused damage and loss, with approaches including removing blockages to water flow.

“These blockages can include mounds of garbage compacted over many years in the forest; wood; downed trees from hurricanes; and marl, constructi­on material, dumped in the middle of mangrove forest in order to reclaim land, usually for squatting,” she said.

“By removing these blockages, we are simply restoring the water flow and allowing the mangrove to regenerate and re-green itself. We are simply fixing the damage we have done and the conditions needed to thrive will return. In fact, seedlings from adjacent healthy mangrove forest usually repopulate the degraded forest and it re-greens without the need for planting one nursery-reared seedling,”webber added.

Still, she said that for all their efforts, they had only rehabilita­ted “a mere eight hectares of mangrove forest across Jamaica”. Mangroves, she said, are too valuable to allow this to stand.

“Because we know that mangroves can remove carbon dioxide a hundred times faster than terrestria­l forest, we are very interested in scaling up our efforts,” she said.

WELCOMED SUPPORT

They have sought to make that happen, with the welcomed support from the InterAmeri­can Developmen­t Bank last June to rehabilita­te some 3,500 hectares of mangroves in south central Jamaica.

“This will increase Jamaica’s mangrove cover by over a third. I am really looking forward to this,” the Centre for Marine Sciences boss noted.

It is important, she insisted, that those

efforts not stop there and extend to the rehabilita­tion of seagrasses and coral reefs, which represent such incredible value in the way of ecosystem services.

With respect of coral reefs, for example, Webber said, “they don’t sequester carbon but the reef is the first line of defence in the Caribbean and Jamaica against coastal erosion and storms”.

“Further, the value of a healthy reef to our economy, to support fisheries and tourism, is unquestion­able,” she added.

However, the ecologist said, “reefs are not easy”.

“We were challenged to effectivel­y restore and rehabilita­te ecosystems dominated by a tiny, delicate animal that grows extremely slowly, sometimes as slow asfive millimeter­s a year, and secretes this rock-like structure that you call a reef,” she said.

Fortunatel­y, they have come up with interventi­ons that support their rehabilita­tion, but there is yet need to go a step further.

“It is often said that protecting the environmen­t would constrain or even undermine economic growth. The fact is the opposite is true. Unless we protect the resources of the earth’s natural capital, we shall not be able to sustain economic growth,”webber said, quoting former UN secretary general Kofi Annan.

“And I add, we shall not be able to survive the rages of climate change,” she noted.

 ?? PHOTO BY EMMA LEWIS ?? A section of mangrove forest inside Clear Spring, Eastern Portland.
PHOTO BY EMMA LEWIS A section of mangrove forest inside Clear Spring, Eastern Portland.
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