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Status:
Unrestrained urban development poses
a serious threat, both in terms of increasing
erosion and as a source of pollution
and untreated sewage. Destructive fishing
practices from both commercial and artisanal
fisheries are also contributors.
Risk:
Marginal communities that depend on
aquatic resources for 80% of there protein
intake. |
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Aquatic
biomes are the single most important ecosystem
on earth covering 75% of the Earths
surface. Fresh water meets our needs for
fluids and vast oceans supply the majority
of the worlds oxygen.
Mangrove
(mangue) are the
coastal equivalent of tropical forests on
land. Brazil has one of the largest
extensions of "manguezal" in the
world. Year after year, fish by the thousand
spawn in these Brazilian sea forests. Hundreds
of migratory birds, marine creatures and
reptiles depend on its woody salt resistant
vegetation for survival. Manguezals
live between the sea and the land in areas
which are flooded by tides. Coastal artisan
fishers are dependent on its storehouse
of materials which provide food, medicines,
shelter and tools.
Today,
manguezals are competing with
agriculture, salt extraction, tourist development
and infrastructure. But the biggest threat
comes from shrimp farms which constitute
the main cause of mangrove destruction loss
in northeast Brazil and the world.
Coral
Reefs. The coral
reefs of northeast Brazil extends nearly
the entire length of its 4000 km coastline.
The only coral reefs
in the whole south Atlantic region,
they are separated from the reefs of the
Caribbean by natural barriers. This isolation
has created a unique fauna most of which
are found nowhere else in the world.
The
reefs support a high diversity of fish,
on which local communities depend. Many
other organisms thrive in coral reefs: crustaceans,
mollusks, algae, sponges and sea worms.
Without
reefs Mangroves would not survive. Coral
Reefs stand between the ocean and the sea-forest
protecting its fragile plants and fish nurseries
from wave damage. Today, there is no legislation
or management plan outside of limited protected
areas, to protect these reefs, from current
threats, such as over fishing, uncontrolled
tourism, sediment runoff, pollution, etc.
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