Caribbean Day. ICRI General Meeting Monaco Wednesday 13 January 2010

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Transcription:

Caribbean Day ICRI General Meeting Monaco Wednesday 13 January 2010

The Wider Caribbean ICRI General Meeting Special Session

The Wider Caribbean includes Brazil for ICRI

Wednesday January 13th - Caribbean day 08:30 - Presentation of the reefs in the region 09:00 - Monitoring, Status and threats to reefs, Clive Wilkinson (GCRMN) 09:30- Economic valuation of coral reefs, Lauretta Burke (WRI) 10:00 - Coffee Break

Wednesday January 13th - Caribbean day 10:30 - Major projects in the region Caribbean Challenge, The Nature Conservancy Caribbean Environment Programme (CEP) / UNEP Centres d'activités Régionaux (CAR) / SPAW (Specially Protected Areas and Wildlife) Hélène Souan (CAR SPAW) Fonds Français pour l'environnement Mondial (FFEM) / Agence Française de Développement (AFD), Julien Calas (FFEM) Initiative française pour les récifs coralliens (IFRECOR) U.S. Coral Reef Task Force Discussion 12:30 - Lunch

Wednesday January 13th - Caribbean day 13:30 - Discussions on the following themes: Invasive Alien Species (discussion about the need of a region wide strategy for control) Marine Protected Areas (discussion about management plans, regional indicators and socio-economics aspects) Tourism 17:30 - Conclusions

08:30 - Presentation of the reefs in the region - Nelson Andrade (UNEP CEP) 09:00 - Monitoring, Status and threats to reefs, Clive Wilkinson (GCRMN) 09:30- Economic valuation of coral reefs, Lauretta Burke (WRI) 10:00 - Coffee Break

Threats to Caribbean Coral Reefs Global Change Threats: Coral bleaching Rising levels of CO 2 Diseases, Plagues and Invasives Direct Human Pressures: Over-fishing (& destructive fishing) Sediments Nutrients Development Governance, Awareness and Political Will: Poor management capacity Rising poverty & growing populations Low Political Will

Threats to Caribbean Coral Reefs Global Change Threats: Coral bleaching Rising levels of CO 2 Diseases, Plagues and Invasives Probably the major natural threats Coral bleaching has devastated reefs since ~ 1980 with major losses in 1982-82, 1987, 1990, 1997-98 & 2005 Diseases of corals, especially Acropora spp. Devastated by White Band Disease and many others Invasive or Disease - 95% death of long-spined sea urchin, Diadema antillarum in 1983-84.

Gulf Stream Amazon & Orinoco gyre gyre Panama Canal Entry for Invasive Species?

Threats to Caribbean Coral Reefs Direct Human Pressures: Over-fishing (& destructive fishing) Sediments Nutrients Development Human pressures major threat - all of the above!! Many reefs have few or no fish Sediment covers many reefs especially high volcanic islands; poor land use, agriculture, animal raising Nutrients from sewage threatens reefs in most countries Development populations growing rapidly, tourism development can be damaging

Example: Threats to Reefs in Haiti No MPAs The Current Situation No government unit No human resources in government Few human resources outside government One major NGO FoProBiM - Fondation pour la Protection de la Biodiversité Marine, Jean Wiener, Director

Example: Threats to Reefs in Haiti Over-fishing Sedimentation Mangrove exploitation Coral harvesting (export) Marine turtle exploitation Marine/coastal Pollution

Mangrove Cutting

Mangrove Charcoal Production

Coral Harvesting

Marine Turtle Exploitation

Potential MPA Sites for Haïti

Example: La Gonâve - North

Needs in Haiti Increase local human resources Increase local monitoring Better international surveillance (if no demand - no export incentive for coral) Financial resources

The Wider Caribbean ICRI General Meeting Special Session

Monitoring and Status of Jamaican Reefs ECOSYSTEMS MANAGEMENT BRANCH NATIONAL ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING AGENCY Integrated Coastal Management etc. Environmental Education and Awareness. Co-management of Coastal Resources. Control of Marine Pollution. Research and Monitoring for Management

Monitoring and Status of Jamaican Reefs Baseline fish surveys in sanctuaries Fisheries Bill (draft)- better fisheries, aquaculture management. Aim - improve protected area management via zoning & enforcing regulations Mandate & enforce no net loss policy for all coasts.

Monitoring and Status of Jamaican Reefs Coral Reefs databases, assessment via Video, Reef Check & Rapid Assessment (20 sites instead of 36) Fish abundance low, lionfish invading. Mangroves - map areas remotely & manage impacts via permits and licenses Seagrass beds - better mapping & Inform the development applications

Mean Hard Coral % cover 2008-09 mean - 13.7% (36 sites) 2001-07 mean 14.8% (54 sites) 30.00 25.00 South Coast North Coast Mean Percentage Cover +/-SE 20.00 15.00 10.00 5.00 0.00 Big Pelican West Pigeon Island West Rocky Point Bowden Lime Cay Maiden Cay Wreck Reef El Punto Negrilo Little Bay Drunkenman's Cay Maffessante Reef Sandals Reef SunSet Beach Dickies Reef Gdn of Eel Long Hole Airport Reef Ireland Pen Ocho Rios Reef Columbus Park Bloody Bay Navy Island Jack's Bay Dairy Bull Carib Blue Runway Reef Pear Tree Bottom Buccaneer Reef Monkey Island East 2008/09 mean Sites assessed

Summary of reef status Live coral cover loss from 50% to 10% in 25 yr 100 90 80 Hard Coral Cover 70 60 50 40 30 Mean cover % (weighted) Sample Size (weighted) 20 10 0 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 2004 Year

Example from Guadeloupe

Threats to Caribbean Coral Reefs Governance, Awareness and Political Will: Poor management capacity Rising poverty & growing populations Low Political Will This is major future problem for SIDS Poor management capacity few trained personnel & equipment to manage, raise awareness, enforce & monitoring; few MPAs managed effectively Rising poverty & growing populations negate efforts at conservation, resource use increasing beyond sustainability Low Political Will need strong political will & governance of resources;

Threats to Caribbean Coral Reefs Global Change Threats: Coral bleaching Rising levels of CO 2 Diseases, Plagues and Invasives Direct Human Pressures: Over-fishing (& destructive fishing) Sediments Nutrients Development Governance, Awareness and Political Will: Poor management capacity Rising poverty & growing populations Low Political Will

Importance of Monitoring: First activity in any project Involve all in team (ranger to Minister) Gather data (or work in the dark) Determine what is to be managed Assess value of resources ($) Raise awareness in team Inform the public to gain support

Importance of Monitoring: First activity in any project Involve all in team (ranger to Minister) Gather data (or work in the dark) Determine what is to be managed Assess value of resources ($) Raise awareness in team Inform the public to gain support

CURRENT NODE STRUCTURE Southern Tropical America - Colombia, Brazil, Costa Rica, Panama, Venezuela Mesoamerican Barrier Reef Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico and Pacific side US Caribbean reefs Florida, Flower Garden Banks, Puerto Rico, USVI, Navassa

CURRENT NODE STRUCTURE Lesser Antilles the Organisation of Eastern Caribbean States (OECS) from British Virgin Islands through Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago including French and Netherlands Antilles, Northern Caribbean and Western Atlantic - Jamaica, The Bahamas, Bermuda, Cayman Islands, Cuba, Dominican Republic, Haiti, & Turks and Caicos Islands

Trinidad and Tobago

2005 was exceptional because: Hottest year on record Most severe coral bleaching in the Caribbean Most active hurricane season 26 tropical storms 13 hurricanes 5 very severe (Dennis, Emily, Katrina, Rita & Wilma)

3 o HotSpot image September 2005

No hurricanes through Lesser Antilles.

Coral Bleaching & Mortality in much of Caribbean: Florida, Cuba, Jamaica, USVI, Bahamas, Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico, Belize etc. And the Lesser Antilles

Bleaching of 50% - 90% of corals in: Florida - Barbados Puerto Rico - North coast of Jamaica Cayman Islands - Cuba Northern Dutch Antilles (St. Maarten, Saba, St. Eustatius) Guadeloupe, Martinique, St. Barthelemy

Coral mortality worst recorded Barbados - 17% - 20%; French Caribbean -11% - 30% Guadeloupe, Martinique, St. Barthelemy Dutch Caribbean - 18% US Virgin Islands - 51% loss of coral cover from bleaching & disease

SUMMARY CARIBBEAN REEFS From Status 2008: 12% to 21% reefs destroyed 13% to 31% at critical stage Only 30% to 45% considered healthy Best reefs those remote from humans & land masses (except Cuba); Reefs damaged at different times: Florida in early 1980s Mesoamerica from 1980s to 2005; Big events Diadema loss; white band diseases; bleaching especially 1997/98 & 2005

SUMMARY CARIBBEAN REEFS Major coral mortality since 1980 Causes mix of disease, bleaching and direct human damage Probable losses in best areas from >50% coral cover to <15%; Fish and mollusc resources seriously over fished Tourism part problem, part solution Awareness is increasing Some major initiatives commencing e.g. Caribbean Challenge