Web Ring
LewisEnv.com
RoyRLewis3.com
MangroveRestoration.com
SeagrassRestorationNow.com

:: WELCOME  ::

Welcome to the Mangrove Restoration website. Our goal is to ensure the survival of the worlds various mangrove species through preservation and conservation.

Please take a moment to read our “Secrets Revealed” page, and stop by the Downloads pages for further information about mangroves. You will find links to related web sites as well as some downloadable PDF files to view.

If you have any questions our would like to get in touch with us, please click the Contact Info button. Thanks for visiting MangroveRestoration.com!

:: NEWS and ANNOUNCEMENTS   ::

 

Mangrove Ecology, Management and Restoration
Training Course 2010- Click Here

For more information see download #13

Massive Mangrove Restoration Backfires

By David Malakoff
ScienceNOW Daily News
15 July 2008


One of the world's most intensive efforts to restore coastal mangrove forests is failing--in large part because people are planting the trees in the wrong places. Ironically, the restoration effort may also be harming other coastal habitats in the Philippines, according to a new study.


Over the past century, the islands that make up the Philippines have lost nearly three-quarters of their mangrove forests. The trees--which grow in brackish coastal waters on leggy roots--create key habitats for fish and shellfish. But settlers routinely cleared the flooded forests for development and ponds for fish farming. To reverse the trend, conservation groups began fanning out across the archipelago 2 decades ago, planting 44,000 hectares with hundreds of millions of mangrove seedlings.


Many of those trees were doomed to die quick deaths, according to biologists Maricar Samson and Rene Rollon of the University of the Philippines in Quezon City. In the current issue of Ambio, the researchers report that surveys of more than 70 restoration sites often found mostly dead, dying, or "dismally stunted" trees. The major problem, they say, is that planters didn't understand the mangrove's biological needs and placed seedlings in mudflats, sandflats, or sea-grass meadows that can't support the trees. Some of these areas have inadequate nutrients; in other places, strong winds and currents batter the seedlings. What's worse, the failed plantings sometimes pack a double ecological whammy, as restoration activities disturbed or damaged otherwise healthy habitats.

To get mangrove restoration back on track, Samson and Rollon say planters need better guidance on where to place the seedlings. Typically, the researchers say, the best locations are on gently sloping hill bottoms that are above mean sea level and flooded by the tides less than one-third of the time. The team says the Philippine government also needs to make it easier to convert abandoned or unproductive fish ponds back to mangrove swamps. But Samson admits this is a thorny legal and political issue, because landowners are reluctant to give up potentially valuable shorefront. As a result, the researchers write that they are "pessimistic about the 'voluntary surrender' of these pieces of wetlands back to nature."


The Philippines's dismal experience with mangrove restoration is not unique, says Roy "Robin" Lewis III, a prominent expert in the field and director of Lewis Environmental Services, a private restoration firm in Salt Springs, Florida. His studies have shown that mangrove restorers around the globe routinely fail to understand the tree's biology and that conflicts with landowners and political leaders can doom projects. Too often, he says, "ignorance and greed rule."

DON'T LET YOUR MANGROVE RESTORATION PROJECT BE A FAILURE LIKE THAT DESCRIBED ABOVE. PLAN ON ATTENDING THE NEXT "MANGROVE FOREST ECOLOGY, MANAGEMENT AND RESTORATION TRAINING COURSE", MARCH 3-5, 2010, HOLLYWOOD, FLORIDA. MORE INFORMATION ON THIS WEBSITE OR EMAIL ROBIN LEWIS AT LESRRL3@AOL.COM.

 

For more information or questions, please contact:

Roy R. "Robin" Lewis III, Professional Wetland Scientist
Ecological Society of America Certified Senior Ecologist
Board Certified Environmental Professional # 1611”
Mailing Address: PO Box 5430, Salt Springs, Florida 32134
Street Address: 23797 NE 189th St., Salt Springs, FL 32134
Voice: 01.352.546.4842 or 01.888.889.9684   
Fax:   01.352.546.5224 or 01.813.649.1425
E-mail:
LESRRL3@AOL.COM
Web:
WWW.MANGROVERESTORATION.COM
Web:
WWW.LEWISENV.COM
Mobile: 01.813.505.3999
E-mail to Mobile:
<8135053999@mobile.att.net>
Satellite Phone: 011.8816.3141.4629
Satellite Messaging:
www.iridium.com

"You will never know what is going on unless you hear the whistle of the bullets"
General George S. Patton, Jr.

                         Designed By: Bender Web Design