Fishermen grow mangroves in Sri Lanka

Fishermen grow mangroves in Sri Lanka

The fisher folk of Sri Lanka’s north-western coast, are convinced that well-tended mangroves can protect lives and property against the monsoon rains that lash the island from July to October.

One such person is Milan Gamage, a 35-year-old woman, who planted mangroves behind her home on the edge of the Puttalam lagoon in 2008. They are now mature enough to shield her modest residence from heavy rains, tides and high winds.

Fishermen and mangroves- now protected in Sri Lanka
Fishermen and mangroves- now protected in Sri Lanka

“The plants break the force of the waves, the rain and the wind, so we don’t get battered as we used to in the past,” Gamage says.

The mangroves were planted under a project initiated by the Small Fishers Foundation of Sri Lanka (Sudeesa), a national non-governmental organisation working with the small fisher community. In April, Sudeesa along with the US-based NGO Seacology launched a project to help conserve Sri Lanka’s 8,815 hectares of mangroves spread of over 40 lagoons.

The five year project costing US$3.5 million will provide 15,000 persons, half of them widows, financial assistance to set up cottage industries. In return the beneficiaries will look after assigned plots of mangroves.

Over the last decade, Sudeesa has planted over 170,000 new mangrove plants in 860 hectares around the Puttalam Lagoon that is home to the largest extent of mangroves in Sri Lanka at 3,200 hectares.

“Mangroves are a vital part of the ecosystem as the large plants act as a buffer against high tide, large waves and monsoon waves crashing on to the shore,” says Douglas Thisera, a director at Sudeesa. He adds that mangroves have also been found to sequester carbon better than many other plant species.

Large prawn farms can seriously harm the sea environment. Puttalam, an area highly vulnerable sea erosion, was degraded by the setting up of large prawn farms that were finally shut down due to the spread of disease. “The economic benefits from prawn farming were nowhere near the damage it caused to the environment,” Thisera says. In areas where mangroves were spared, the erosion rate was low.

Sudeesa chief, Anurudha Wickremasinghe stated that pilot projects in Puttalam, where grants worth over US$ 400,000 were disbursed over the last decade, have proved successful. “Now we are going island-wide with this project,” he said. Under the project some 3,385 hectares of mangrove forests are to be restored.

In support of the project, the Sri Lankan government has declared mangroves as protected areas to be patrolled by forest rangers.

 

2 Responses to "Fishermen grow mangroves in Sri Lanka"

  1. ALLEN BHAI   July 1, 2015 at 3:10 pm

    such nice story . they should do so in bangladesh also

    • Saurabh Sinha   July 2, 2015 at 9:26 am

      Why Bangladesh? What about Sundarbans and Orissa/ Odisha which are losing their mangroves to prawn farming?