

Jaltemba Sol
MEXICO: Putting a Price Tag on
Destruction of Mangroves
By
Emilio Godoy
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MEXICO CITY, Jul 24 (IPS) - The destruction of the rich
mangroves along the coasts of northwestern Mexico has had a heavy impact on
fisheries in that area, according to a new study that attempts to put a price
tag on these fragile ecosystems.
The report says that the mangroves
of the Gulf of California, wedged between the Baja Peninsula and the mainland of
Mexico, support more than 26 highly profitable fisheries and provide 37,500
dollars in benefits per hectare a year.
"There is a correlation between the
quantity of mangroves and catches of species like catfish, sea bass, snapper and
crab," Ezequiel Ezcurra, director of the Biodiversity. Research Centre of the
Californias for the San Diego Natural History Museum, told IPS.
Ezcurra was one
of the six authors of the repo
rt, which was published Monday in the early online
edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in the United
States.
The researchers from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University
of California at San Diego found that more than 30 percent of the catch by
small-scale fishermen between 2001 and 2005 in the Gulf of California came from
species that depend on mangroves, which are ecosystems made up of trees and
shrubs that grow in saline coastal habitats in tropical and subtropical areas.
The
study was released ahead of International Mangrove Day, which is commemorated
Jul. 26.
Based on a combination of field studies and geographical
and economic factors, the researchers found that from 2001 to 2005, 13 Gulf of
California fishing regions produced an annual average of 11,500 tons of fish and
crabs that originate in the mangroves, which brought in around 19 million
dollars for local fishermen.
The scientists estimated that one hectare of red mangrove
(Rhizophora mangle) -- the mangrove species that is most commonly found closest
to the water line -- in the area produces annually around 37,500 dollars worth
of fish and crabs, with the long-term value projected at over 600,000 dollars in
30 years, hundreds of times the price tag set on this key ecosystem by the
Mexican government.
"The real services and benefits provided by the mangroves
are not fully appreciated. Besides, there are no data on the benefits of the
projects that have led to their destruction," Esperanza Salazar, the head of
Bios Iguana, an environmental group based in the northwestern Mexican state of
Colima, commented to IPS.
Local and international environmental organisations have
long warned that the construction of high-end tourist resorts, shrimp farming
and industrial expansion are destroying the mangroves at an alarming rate.
Bios
Iguana is carrying out a campaign against the installation of a regasification
plant in the Pacific Ocean port of Manzanillo, in Colima state. Two percent of
the states 3,192 hectares of mangrove swamps are lost annually. Cuyutln
Lagoon, where the plant is to be built, accounts for nearly half -- 1,500
hectares -- of the states mangroves and is home to endangered species of
crocodiles and iguanas.
According to official figures, there are around 800,000
hectares of mangroves in Mexico, 10,000 of which disappear every year.
The "Mangroves
of Mexico" programme carried out by the National Commission for the Knowledge
and Use of Biodiversity (CONABIO) reports that the Yucatan Peninsula in the
Caribbean has the greatest total area of mangroves, covering 349,252 hectares.
Mexicos
Caribbean coastal region also has the highest mangrove deforestation rate in the
country, approximately 12 percent, mainly due to the construction of tourist
resorts and to overall urban growth.
Cancn, a Caribbean resort city, was
hit hard by Hurricane Wilma in October 2005, which left 250,000 dead or homeless
and caused millions of dollars in material damages. The unusually severe impact
was the result of the degradation of coastal areas, according to experts.
"Mangroves are
quite resistant to hurricanes and help minimise their impact," said Ezcurra.
In
February 2007, the federal government amended Mexicos general law on wildlife
in order to prohibit any destruction of mangroves. But the real estate and
tourism industries have brought pressure to bear to get article 60 of the law
modified and thus obtain permits to cut down mangroves as long as they plant new
ones on other areas of the coast.
So far, lobbying by some 100
environmental groups has kept the proposed modification from moving through
Congress.
During the government of conservative president Vicente
Fox (2000-2006), the state National Fund to Foment Tourism sold coastal areas
covered by mangroves for between one and 14 dollars per square metre.
The extreme
underestimation of the benefits generated by mangroves for fisheries, in
contrast to the projected benefits of coastal developments and aquaculture,
reveals a crisis of planning and regulation in the coastal areas of the Gulf of
California, says the study by the Scripps Institution of Oceanography
researchers.
CONABIOs Mangroves of Mexico programme has identified
mangrove forests in immediate need of environmental rehabilitation.
The programmes
long-term goal is to gauge the rate of change and identify the main factors that
have led to the transformation of mangroves over the last 30 years, determine
the areas most suitable for conservation and rehabilitation, and design
guidelines and indicators for monitoring these fragile ecosystems.
"In the
industrial and port zones of Colima, ecosystems that are extremely important for
the country are being destroyed in exchange for projects that only benefit a
few," said Salazar, whose organisation belongs to the Red Manglar Internacional
(International Mangrove Network).
The study published Monday concludes
that the precarious state of coastal wetlands in northwestern Mexico and around
the world must not be ignored, particularly at a time when food production has
far-reaching implications for human welfare. (END/2008)