Mangroves: 2000
Publications
Author:
Walters, B.B.
Title: Local mangrove planting in the Philippines:
Are fisherfolk and fishpond owners effective restorationists?
Publication: Restoration Ecology 8(3):
237-246, 2000.
© Blackwell Science
Notes: Local
fisherfolk and fishpond owners have been practicing
''restoration'' of mangrove forests in some parts of the
Philippines for decades, well before governments and
non-government organizations began to promote the activity as a
conservation tool. This paper examines ecological characteristics
of these mangrove plantations and compares them to natural
mangroves in the same areas. Mangrove planters were interviewed
and plantation and natural mangrove forests were surveyed to
measure forest structure, composition and regeneration. Compared
with natural forests, mangrove plantations were characterized by
high densities of small stems, shorter and narrower canopies, and
fewer species. For both economic and ecological reasons, the vast
majority of people dispersed and planted only Rhizophora
mucronata/stylosa and, furthermore, they often thinned
other species out of planted areas. There was remarkably little
subsequent recruitment of other, non-planted mangrove species into
plantations up to 50 and 60 years of age. This pattern held across
a diversity of sites, including plantations that had not been
selectively cut or weeded. Important ecological and economic
benefits result from local mangrove planting, but catalyzing
diverse forest regeneration - at least in the short to medium term
- is not one of them. The lesson: if you want to restore diverse
mangrove forests, you have to plant diverse mangrove
forests.
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