VietNamNet Bridge – Coastal communities in the south are in danger of losing their livelihoods to increasing land erosion resulting from the loss of a natural buffer - mangrove forests.

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Mangrove forest in Ha Tien Province. Without the protection of mangroves, waves and tides are hitting the sea dyke harder, hastening erosion and increasing the risk of breaches.—Photo www.panoramio.com

 

 

For many years now, landslides have become a common phenomenon in Kien Giang Province’s Hon Dat District, with Tho Son, Lình Huynh, and Binh Giang communes among the worst hit.

The most gravely affected area is the strip of coastal land stretching from Hon Queo Hamlet in Tho Son Commune to Binh Hoa Hamlet, Binh Giang Commune. Mangrove forests have completely disappeared in some sections here.

Without the protection of mangroves, waves and tides are hitting the sea dyke harder, hastening erosion and increasing the risk of breaches.

Tran Trong Than, a resident of Hon Me Hamlet, said he’d been allotted a coastal mangrove forest area of six hectares 13 years ago. Erosion has reduced this to a little over 1.5 hectares at the moment.

Similarly, Nguyen Van Thu of Binh Hoa Hamlet said that in the past two years alone, the coastal protection forest assigned to his family has lost some 30 metres to the sea.

Two layers

The mangrove forests of An Bien and An Minh districts stretch through 10 communes with total length of 60 kilometres, covering an area of 4,000 hectares, and are divided into primary and secondary protection layers.

The primary protection layer is a 1.120 ha area of white mangroves (avicennia marina), and the secondary layer is a 3,000ha area of red mangroves (rhizophoraceae).

This protective area has been weakened in many sections where the sea has penetrated several kilometres inland and broken down the landmass along 25 kilometres of the coastline.

Most of the secondary layer forests have been allotted to households for protection, management, as well as economic exploitation within prescribed limits.

Residents say that in the last two years, coastal erosion, exacerbated by climate change, has swept hundreds of hectares of aquaculture farms and nearly 60 per cent of the original mangrove area into the sea.

Previously, the main source of income for the households was aquaculture under the forests’ canopy, but worsening erosion and diminishing incomes have forced many to relocate.

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Coastal erosion, exacerbated by climate change, has swept hundreds of hectares of aquaculture farms and nearly 60 per cent of the original mangrove area into the sea.— Photo baotintuc.vn

 

 

 

Solutions

Given the threat of climate change and harmful human actions, radical are needed to ensure the safety of sea dykes, officials say.

“Only when the dykes are secure can we hope to maintain the forests and guarantee people’s livelihoods,” said Nguyen Thanh Linh, Deputy Director of the An Bien – An Minh Forest Management Department.

While most residents living in the proximity of the mangroves are aware of the importance of the buffer zone, there are many who have destroyed the mangrove forests, weakening the protection layer, he said.

The actions of such people have affected the community’s aquaculture farms as a whole, he added.

Regeneration efforts

In addressing the issue of erosion in coastal areas of Kiên Giang Province, officials are seeking solutions to regenerate lost mangrove forests.

Truong Van Thuoc, Chief of the Vam Ray Forest Management Station under the Hon Dat – Kien Hoa Forest Management Board, said that apart from measures currently in place to protect and expand existing mangrove forests, the board has selected plants suitable to each area’s soil conditions so as to improve survival rates.

They hope this will help create sustainable, good quality forests, especially in areas currently at risk of serious erosion, he said.

Pham Van Hung, Director of the Hon Dat – Kien Ha Forest Management Board, said they have set up a five-hectare nursery to prepare trees for a six-year (2015-2020) project to restore and develop coastal mangrove forests in Giong Ke Hamlet.

The board will continue its efforts to safeguard the forests with the engagement of coastal communities, he added.

In doing so, they are following directions from authorities higher up to promote new, climate-smart models of farming, including the selection of resilient plants and livestock breeds, such as melaleuca cajuputy and Snakeskin gourami.

The board is also trying to demarcate coastal protection forests and speed up reforestation and afforestation of mangroves.

Local authorities also said that they are working to clarify the rights and duties of those allocated forest areas to encourage the growth of mangroves in coastal areas.

        
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