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ENVIRONMENT-INDIA: Dwindling Fish Stocks Spell Trouble By Soma Basu* TAMIL NADU, India, Jun 22 (IPS/IFEJ) - Small waves gently lap at the 15 by 15 feet white platform here, which used to be the venue for happy occasions ranging from pleasant evening sit-outs, marriage functions and Independence Day celebrations for the 2,000 residents of this coastal village in India.
But today, it is the meeting place for residents worried about dwindling
fish stocks in the blue waters of the Indian Ocean – and what this means
for their livelihoods.
The people of Uppoor, located in the Ramanathapuram district in the
southern Indian province of Tamil Nadu, may have been spared the
devastation from the December 2004 tsunami. But they are grappling with
the very real effects of their degraded environment, worsened by changes
in sea levels due to climate change.
"Some of us saved money and purchased motorised boats. But now,
spending on fuel for going into the sea is not worth it," rues Abdul
Qadir, a local fisherman.
Mani Palianchamy, 70, finds it shocking that what has been his family’s
occupation for five generations is slowly becoming unsustainable. "It’s
because of the deepwater and mechanised boat trawling and various other
modernisations," he says sadly.
More than a third of the population along the coastline facing the
Indian Ocean, particularly in southern India’s Gulf of Mannar, depends on
fishing for livelihood. Its fishermen are known for their skills with the
hook-and-line, and fearless deep-sea fishing for sharks. However,
frustration is driving them to the brink now.
Located at the south-eastern tip of the subcontinent, the Gulf of
Mannar Marine Biosphere Reserve, spread over 20 islands and 150 kilometres
of coastline, is the biologically richest coastal region in the country.
The biosphere is home to 42 species of phytoplankton, 3,600 species of
plants and animals, and 117 species of corals, according a study by the M
S Swaminathan Research Foundation.
Commercial exploitation of coral reefs and large-scale removal of
mangrove vegetation are undercutting fish harvests from the Gulf of
Mannar, which has historically had a higher than national average
production.
Development projects like the Sethusamudram Ship Canal Project (SSCP),
warn environmentalists, also threaten to wreak havoc on the environment.
The project aims to link the Arabian Sea with the Bay of Bengal by
dredging the shallow waters and creating a navigable canal across the Gulf
of Mannar, Palk Bay and the Palk Straits. The warm waters of these areas
are home to a complex ecosystem.
Scientists from the National Environment Engineering Research Institute
(NEERI) of Nagpur, western India fears that the change of sea currents due
to dredging can lead to changes in temperature, salinity, turbidity and
flow of nutrients, adversely affecting the unique and sensitive ecosystem
in the area.
"Already, corals have died due to the modest rise in sea temperature.
If the coastal currents are substantially increased, the resultant
temperature change could be significant, thereby further affecting the
coral reefs, which are entire self-contained habitats in themselves, says
Dr V N Karunagaran, formerly with the Swaminathan Foundation at the
Muthupet mangroves in Tamil Nadu’s Thanjuvar district. "Changes of ecology
and the food chain will affect the fish population too."
At present, pollution and oil slicks, waste from ships and unwanted
cargo are brought away and diluted by ocean currents. But if the Palk
currents change due to development projects, more pollutants will reach
the coastal areas.
"Canal dredging is also likely to stir up the dust and toxins that lie
beneath the seabed. These will adversely affect the population of corals,
oysters and sea cucumbers. Other species, too, will be impacted by the
turbidity. There has been no systematic survey of the geology of the
seabed to be excavated," according to Rakesh Kumar, a scientist with
NEERI.
An upsurge of coastal currents due to the Sethusamudram project can
also lead to higher tides, stronger waves and thus, coastal erosion.
A country paper compiled by Delhi-based Tata Energy Research Institute
and the Ministry of Environment in 2000 had projected that a one-metre
rise in sea level could displace as many as 7.1 million people who depend
on the sea for their livelihood.
Studies also indicate that a two to four degree Centigrade rise in sea
surface temperature could increase cyclone intensity by 10 to 20 percent.
This would not only displace coastal residents, but also devastate
low-income rural areas in India.
According to the Chennai-based Institute for Ocean Management,
ultraviolet radiation levels, caused by the depletion of the ozone layer
due to increased greenhouse gas emissions, have gone up by seven percent
since a decade ago. This, says the study, translates into loss of income
for fishing communities.
"Data suggests that sea levels in India have been rising by 2.5
millimetres each year since the 1950s. Still, climate change is yet to
become a priority area of research, even though several global studies
name India as among the 27 countries most vulnerable to the impacts of
global warming and the accelerated rise in sea levels," says Prof. A
Sankaran of Madurai Kamaraj University.
"Climate change has a direct effect on our livelihood. But we are
completely marginalised by the government and NGO sector," agrees the
fisherman, Abdul.
(*This story is part of a series of features on sustainable development by
IPS - Inter Press Service, and IFEJ - the International Federation of
Environmental Journalists.) (END/2007)
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