Title: Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
1Ramsar Convention on Wetlands
- Wetlands and Water supporting life sustaining
wetlands - Kampala, Uganda, 8-15 November
- Final Presentation
- Task Group Sean Mandel, Aimee Barnes
- Megan Stouffer, and Emily Capello
2Summary of the Presentation
- Definition of a Wetland and the Ecological
Services Wetlands Provide - Drivers of Wetland Degradation
- Wetlands Problems
- Introduction to Ramsar and the COP 9 Resolution
IX.4 Annex - Solutions Proposed by COP 9
- Controversies of the Proposed Solutions
- Monitoring and Measurements of Success
3What is a Wetland?
- Wetlands are difficult to define
- Range of hydrological conditions
- Great variation in size, location, and human
influence - Distinguishing features of wetlands
- Presence of standing water
- Unique wetland soil
- Vegetation adapted to or tolerant of saturated
soils
4Why Protect Wetlands?
- Healthy wetlands provide important services
- Ecological
- Recreational
- Scientific
- Cultural
- Economic
Photos www.ramsar.org
5Drivers of Degradation Destruction of Wetlands
Aquaculture
Public Perception
Agriculture
Urban/Suburban Development
Photo Oyster leases at Wallis Lake, NSW (photo
by Dave Ryan) http//www.ozestuaries.org/indicator
s/aqua_pressure.jsp
Photo US Fish and Wildlife Service
http//www.fws.gov/midwest/saginawNRDA/restore.htm
l
Photo http//www.ecopix.net/natresmanage/natresma
nage.htm
Photo www.nrcs.usda.gov/ wetlands/wildrice.jpg
6Problem Loss and Fragmentation of Wetlands
- Development, agriculture, and aquaculture lead to
habitat fragmentation - Barriers for water provision and irrigation
redirect water - Fish cannot reach spawning grounds or food
sources - Habitat destruction and fragmentation is the
number one cause of declining fish populations
7Implications of Wetland Loss and Fragmentation
- Decreased ecological integrity and services
- Loss of groundwater reserves
- Shoreline erosion
- Loss of spawning and feeding grounds for fish
- Decline in commercial/noncommercial populations
Photo http//www.coastal.crc.org.au/wetlands/imag
es/riparian2.gif
8Implications of Wetland Loss and Fragmentation
- Loss of storm protection services
- Storm surge protection through friction and
absorption - Wave height reduction by causing waves to touch
bottom earlier and break - Soil retention by lowering water velocities
Photo http//www.ruggedelegantliving.com/a/images
/Hurricane.Katrina.Help.jpg
Photo http//www.katrinahelp. com/hurricane-katri
na-2.jpg
Photohttp//www.rotary5470.org/IMupload/yaht20cl
ub.jpeg
9Implications of Loss of Storm Protection Services
- Decreased natural barrier
- against extreme weather events
- Increased flooding
- Increased destruction due to storms
- Destruction of fisheries and their infrastructure
Photo http//www.foxnews.com/photo_essay/photoess
ay_566_images/katrina_redcross_450.jpg
10Problem Pollution
- Development, agriculture, and aquaculture lead
to - Discharge of excess nutrients (nitrogen (N) and
phosphorus (P)) from sewage, soaps and
detergents, and agricultural runoff - Sediments from soil erosion
- Toxins (heavy metals and organic compounds like
mercury and PCBs) - Improperly managed wetlands cannot effectively
filter pollutants
11Implications of Pollution
- Decreased water quality
- Bioaccumulation of toxins in wetland species
- Decline in native plant, fish, and waterfowl
populations - Eutrophication of wetlands
Photo http//www.midwestadvocates.org/media/advoc
acyupdates/2004/Advocacy20Update20August202004/
fishkillpicture.jpg
12So What Happens?
13Mission of Convention
- "the conservation and wise use of all wetlands
through local, regional and national actions and
international cooperation, as a contribution
towards achieving sustainable development
throughout the world."
(Cop7 1999, San Jose, Costa Rica)
14Key Data
- Current sites 1608 wetland sites
- Number of parties 152 nations
- Surface area 345 million acres
- Categories Marine Coastal, Inland,
Human-Made - Encompasses 42 wetland types
Photo David Trilling (2006) Iraq
15Legislation vs. Agreement
- Legislation is law
- Mandates and enforces behavior
- Passed by a governing body
- Agreements or
- treaties
- Contractual
- agreement
- Can be binding
- or prescriptive
Photo www.ramsar.org
16- Conference of Parties (COP) 9 Resolution
IX.4-Annex - The Ramsar Convention and Conservation,
Production and Sustainable Use of Fisheries
Resources
17Solutions of COP 9 Resolution IX.4 Annex
- Sustainable management of wetland ecosystems for
fisheries - Increased international cooperation
- Improvements to information on the status of
fisheries in Ramsar sites
Photo www.corila.it/images/ligneCWC3.jpg
181. Sustainable management of wetland ecosystems
for fisheries
- Wise use and maintenance of ecological
structure of wetlands
Photos www.ramsar.org
19Implementation Wise Use Framework
- The Ramsar Toolkit
- 14 handbooks on how to implement the Ramsar
Convention
Photos www.ramsar.org
202. Increased International Cooperation
- Salmon migration
- Chum
- Chinook
- Sockeye
Source www.sookesalmonenhancementsociety.com
213. Improvements to information on the status of
fisheries in Ramsar sites
- Salmon Indicators at Izembek National Wildlife
Refuge1st U.S. RAMSAR site - Important salmon spawning ground
- Require pure, well-oxygenated cold water
- Indicators
- abundance
- genetic diversity
- geographic distribution
- stage of lifecycle
Photo www.mms.gov
22Controversies Related to Wetland
Destruction/Ramsar COP 9 Policies
- Mitigated wetlands
- Cross-border cooperation on ecological goals
Photo www.ramsar.org
231. Mitigation of Wetlands
- Do constructed wetlands have the same quality as
natural wetlands? - Can compensate for wetland loss and restore
formerly impacted wetlands - Can require management for several decades
- Quality sacrificed for quantity
- Mitigated wetland might not reflect the
characteristics of the natural wetland it is
replacing
24Past Losses and Mitigation
Image http//www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/Conservati
onAndEnvironment/images/WETLANDLOSS.gif
252. Cross-Border Resource Management
- 5 of 22 US Ramsar sites span state or
international borders
Map Microsoft Encarta
26Measuring the Success of COP 9 Resolution IX.4
- Indicator Criteria
- Simple and pragmatic
- Capable of distinguishing the difference made by
the Ramsar Convention - Reflective of multiple variables
- Related to readily available information
- Serviceable by wide popular audiences
Photo www.dorf.rwth-aachen.de
27Priority Indicators2006-2008
- Overall conservation status of wetlands
- Water-related indicator(s)
- Overall population trends of wetland taxa
Source www.ramsar.org
28Future Monitoring
- Finalization of current indicators
- Status and trends report 2008 2011
- Inclusion of more indicators
- Wise use policy
- Wetland services for humans
- Additional water-related indicators
Photo www.nationalgeographic.com
29Conclusion
- Wetlands provide important ecological and
socio-economic services - Degradation limits their ability to provide these
services - COP 9 of Ramsar proposes several solutions to
reduce wetland destruction and promote wetland
conservation for sustainable fisheries - Implementation of U.S. wetland conservation
measures in conjunction with existing policy has
improved management and monitoring of our nations
wetlands
30Acknowledgements
- The RAMSAR Group
- Aimee Barnes, Emily Capello, Matthew Ebright,
Emily Gaskin, Lauren Kell, Megan Stouffer,
Rebecca Smith, Sean Mandel, Whitney Blake, Helen
Morris , Flora Lee - and congratulations to all our fellow classmates
for making it through the summer term!
31Thank You Professor Cook!
32Drivers of Degradation Destruction of Wetlands
Aquaculture
Agriculture
Public Perception
Urban/Suburban Development
Photos http//www.ozestuaries.org/indicators/aqua
_pressure.jsp http//www.ecopix.net/natresmanage/n
atresmanage.htm http//www.fws.gov/midwest/saginaw
NRDA/restore.html http//www.nrcs.usda.gov/wetland
s/wildrice.jpg