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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Praveen J <[email protected]>
Date: 24 April 2010 09:31
Subject: [Fwd: Mangrove species may perish in a decade: global study


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: jayadevan ek <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Apr 24, 2010 at 8:49 AM
Subject: Mangrove species may perish in a decade: global study
To: Praveen J <[email protected]>


http://www.hindu.com/2010/04/24/stories/2010042456081800.htm


*Mangrove species may perish in a decade: global study * Staff
Reporter *80% of mangrove areas in India, Southeast Asia lost over 60
years
*  — Photo: C. Suresh Kumar

* In danger:Mangroves at Ayiramthengu in Kollam district that face high risk
of getting lost. *

KOLLAM: Several among the 70 known species of mangroves are at high risk of
extinction and may disappear well before the next decade if protective
measures are not enforced, warns the first global study by U.S. researchers.

Eleven of these have been placed on the red list of threatened species kept
by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

The study, led by Beth A. Polidoro attached to the Global Marine Species
Assessment unit based at Old Dominion University, Virginia, shows that about
80 per cent of the mangrove areas in India and Southeast Asia have been lost
over the past 60 years.

In India alone, over 40 per cent of the mangrove area on the west coast has
been destroyed for aquaculture, agriculture, coastal development and urban
development.

Disappearing at 2%-8%

The global mangrove area loss since 1980 stands at between 20 and 35 per
cent. The areas are disappearing at 2-8 per cent per year and the rates are
expected to continue unless mangrove forests are protected as a valuable
resource, says the study recently published in PloS One, journal published
by the Public Library of Science.

In addition, 40 per cent of the animal species that are restricted to
mangrove habitat are at an elevated risk of extinction due to extensive
habitat loss.

Given the accelerating rate of loss, mangrove forests may at least
functionally disappear in around 100 years, the study states.

Mangrove forests are the economic foundations of many tropical regions
providing at least $1.6 billion per year in ecosystem services worldwide.

It is also estimated that almost 80 per cent of the global fish catches are
directly or indirectly dependent on mangroves. These are provided by
mangroves, occupying only 0.12 per cent of the world's total land area.

Implementation of conservation plans for mangroves have largely been done in
the absence of species-specific information, says the study. Tree felling,
aquaculture and overexploitation of fisheries in mangrove areas are expected
to be the greatest threats to mangrove species over the next 10-15 years.

Unlike other forests, mangrove forests consist of a relatively few species
with 30-40 in the most diverse sites. Another big threat to mangroves is
climate change, says the study.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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