Posts Tagged ‘Mangrove Action Project’

The Rapid Depletion of the World’s Mangrove Forests

Friday, October 10th, 2008

Mangroves can be described as ‘rainforests by the sea’.  Large stretches of the sub-tropical and tropical coastlines of Asia, Africa, Oceania, the Americas and the Caribbean are fringed by mangroves, once estimated to cover an area of over 32 million hectares.  Now, less than 15 million hectares remain —less than half the original area.  The depletion of the world’s mangroves is due to excessive shrimp farms, tourist complexes and intense land development.  According to the latest study by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the current rate of mangrove loss is around 1% per annum—or around 150,000 ha of new mangrove area loss per year.  Now, the Mangrove Action Project (MAP) is working with other organizations in the global South towards restoring degraded and cleared mangrove areas as a high priority.  MAP is especially interested in restoring some of the 250,000 ha of abandoned shrimp farms located in former coastal wetland areas, especially in Asia and Latin America. But, even more importantly, MAP is working to help conserve and protect existing mangrove wetlands around the world.