Title: THE ROLE OF MARINE ECOSYSTEMS IN HAZARD MANAGEMENT
1The Role of Marine
Ecosystems
in Hazard Management
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30th,2006
Angelique
Brathwaite
Marine Biologist
1
CZMU
2NATURAL DISASTERS
- Marine and coastal ecosystems act as natural
buffers - Loss of natural buffers turns natural events into
human disasters - At least 70-90 of the energy from wind
generated waves is absorbed depending on how
healthy these ecosystems are and their physical
and ecological characteristics - (UNESCO State of the Worlds Oceans Report)
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
3NATURAL BUFFERS
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
4CORAL REEFS NATURAL BREAKWATERS
- Allow waves to dissipate 70-90 of their
destructive energy offshore - Area covered by
- Bank reefs 15.9 km
- Fringing reefs 1.53 km
- Approx. 80 fringing reefs lost
- Bank reefs decreased from 37.3 - 23.2 over a
decade
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
5ANTHOPOGENIC STRESSORS
Anchor damage
Tourism pressure
Land based sources of marine pollution
Harvesting for sale
Destructive fishing
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
6MANGROVES NATURAL SHOCK ABSORBERS
- Buffers
- Limit floodwater inundation
- Mangroves covered almost our entire coastline
- Destroyed approx. 95
- Primarily via coastal construction
Replaced by
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
7RUBBLE, SEA GRASS, BEACH, DUNES
- Not much help in a major disaster
- BUT
- can offer some protection against wave action
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
8ASIA TSUNAMI EXCERPTS
- Human destruction played a significant role in
the damage caused by the tsunami in Asia - When seismic waves struck Indias Tamil Nadu,
areas with dense mangroves suffered fewer
casualties and less damage to property than those
minus barriers - Places that had healthy coral reefs and intact
mangroves were far less badly hit than places
where the reefs had been damaged and mangroves
ripped out and replaced by beachfront hotels and
prawn farms (Simon Cripps, Director of WWFs
Global Marine Programme for India)
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
9s
- WWF estimates that coral reefs provide US 9
billion annually in economic benefits associated
with coastal protection - The Maldives spent 10 million per km to install
artificial breakwaters to protect shores after
the natural reef was degraded. (Agence
France-Presse)
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
10- Education programmes and early warning systems
will significantly reduce the number of human
casualties, but it will only be through careful
coastal and land-use planning that the economic
and social costs of such disasters can be kept to
a minimum - Isabelle Louis, Director of WWF Internationals
Asia-Pacific Programme.
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006
11- HEALTHY ECOSYSTEMS
- SAVE LIVES!
Coastal Planning for Disaster Management Seminar
June 30, 2006