A review of mangrove rehabilitation in the Philippines: successes, failures and future prospects
- Global styles
- MLA
- Vancouver
- Elsevier - Harvard
- APA
- Help
閲覧/開く
日付
2008Page views
6,965ASFA keyword
AGROVOC keyword
Taxonomic term
Metadata
アイテムの詳細レコードを表示するCited times in Scopus
Share
抄録
From half a million hectares at the turn of the century, Philippine mangroves have declined to only 120,000 ha while fish/shrimp culture ponds have increased to 232,000 ha. Mangrove replanting programs have thus been popular, from community initiatives (1930s-1950s) to government-sponsored projects (1970s) to large-scale international development assistance programs (1980s to present). Planting costs escalated from less than US$100 to over $500/ha, with half of the latter amount allocated to administration, supervision and project management. Despite heavy funds for massive rehabilitation of mangrove forests over the last two decades, the long-term survival rates of mangroves are generally low at 10-20%. Poor survival can be mainly traced to two factors: inappropriate species and sites selection. The favored but unsuitable Rhizophora are planted in sandy substrates of exposed coastlines instead of the natural colonizers Avicennia and Sonneratia. More significantly, planting sites are generally in the lower intertidal to subtidal zones where mangroves do not thrive rather than the optimal middle to upper intertidal levels, for a simple reason. Such ideal sites have long been converted to brackishwater fishponds whereas the former are open access areas with no ownership problems. The issue of pond ownership may be complex and difficult, but such should not outweigh ecological requirements: mangroves should be planted where fishponds are, not on seagrass beds and tidal flats where they never existed. This paper reviews eight mangrove initiatives in the Philippines and evaluates the biophysical and institutional factors behind success or failure. The authors recommend specific protocols (among them pushing for a 4:1 mangrove to pond ratio recommended for a healthy ecosystem) and wider policy directions to make mangrove rehabilitation in the country more effective.
記述
SEAFDEC main author. CC covered journal. Open Access Journal. Full text available.
Suggested Citation
Primavera, J., & Esteban, J. M. A. (2008). A review of mangrove rehabilitation in the Philippines: successes, failures and future prospects. Wetlands Ecology and Management , 16(5), 345-358. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11273-008-9101-y
Type
ArticleISSN
0923-4861Collections
- Journal Articles [1229]
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Mangroves as nurseries: Shrimp populations in mangrove and non-mangrove habitats
Primavera, J. H. (Elsevier, 1998)A total of 4845 penaeids belonging to nine species—Metapenaeus anchistus, M. ensis, M. moyebi, M. philippinensis, Penaeus merguiensis, P. monodon, P. semisulcatus, P. latisulcatus and Metapenaeopsis palmensis—were collected ... -
Retaining our mangrove greenbelt: Integrating mangroves and aquaculture
Although multilateral agencies in Southeast Asia have long been promoting that mangroves, and other wetlands, are wastelands to be put into better use, such as conversion to ponds. However, there is a need for Mangrove ... -
Mangrove-Friendly Aquaculture : Proceedings of the Workshop on Mangrove-Friendly Aquaculture organized by the SEAFDEC Aquaculture Department, January 11-15, 1999, Iloilo City, Philippines
Primavera, Jurgenne H.; Garcia, Luis Ma. B.; Castaños, Milagros T.; Surtida, Marilyn B. (Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 2000)The proceedings have three review papers on the mangroves of Southeast Asia, silvofisheries, and Indonesia's integrated mangrove forest and aquaculture systems. The rest of the papers, all on mangrove-friendly aquaculture ...