Abu Dhabi shows off plantation on Saadiyat, Jubail Islands
Binsal Abdul Kader Gulf News 8 Feb 11;
Abu Dhabi: Abu Dhabi has a great wall to protect it from possible natural calamities originating from the sea. The wall can also mitigate climate change.
Mangroves on the eastern corniche and on the small islands close to Abu Dhabi island guarantee the protection of developmental projects on the coastal areas including real estate projects from natural calamities from the sea, officials of Environment Agency Abu Dhabi (EAD), said.
"You can remember that it was not the concrete buildings or walls but mangroves withstood the deadly Tsunami waves in 2004 in many affected countries," Thabit Al Abdul Salam, Director of Biodiversity Management Sector at EAD, said.
He spoke to journalists during a media tour to the new mangrove plantations on Saadiyat and Jubail Islands. Mangroves mitigate the climate change by absorbing carbon from the environment, Abdul Salam added.
Numbers
-800,000 mangrove plants planted on Saadiyath and Jubail islands
-72 square kilometre mangrove cover in Abu Dhabi
-Abu Dhabi has the second largest mangroves coverage in the Gulf region after Iran (Iran has around 90 square kilometre)
Thousands of mangroves planted, and more to come
Vesela Todorova The National 8 Feb 11;
ABU DHABI // As the last of 800,000 mangrove saplings were added to a reforestation effort along the capital's coastline yesterday, environmental officials pledged that more of the indigenous trees will be planted throughout the emirate.
Plans by the Environment Agency - Abu Dhabi (EAD) to restore mangrove habitats that have been affected by development will be extended to coastal areas in the Western Region, and to Ghantoot by the Dubai border, officials said.
Since official record keeping on mangrove habitats in Abu Dhabi began in 2001, EAD has recorded the loss of 20 square kilometres to make room for coastal developments.
"Mangroves were once everywhere in Abu Dhabi," said Dr Thabit al Abdessalaam, the EAD director of biodiversity management.
Officials estimate that Abu Dhabi has 72 sq km of mangrove habitat, second in the region only to Iran, which has about 90 sq km.
The rehabilitation work that finished yesterday began in November 2009 and involved planting 800,000 saplings on Jubail Island. Jubail is located off Saadiyat Island, which is under development by the Tourism Development and Investment Company (TDIC) to become the capital's cultural district.
The TDIC also ran a separate mangrove-planting effort that produced about a million saplings since spring 2008, on Saadiyat and elsewhere around the capital.
Dr al Abdessalaam said the reforestation effort had to be carefully planned so that the seedlings - of the Avicennia marina, or black mangrove, variety - stood a good chance of success.
"We did not want to dredge to create channels," he said. "We had to make sure that only areas that had water inundation would be planted."
The team conducted surveys of the area from the air and on the ground to ensure that any planting would not destroy salt marshes and mudflats, which are also important natural habitats.
Yesterday the first of the 800,000 saplings planted, now a year old, appeared to be thriving. They had grown to about 60 centimetres, with their roots - which need exposure to air to breathe - clearly visible sticking up from the sand. The muddy shore on which the mangroves had been planted was full of gastropods, a type of mollusc that serves as a food source for birds, part of the ecosystem that mangroves help to sustain.
"These were not here before we planted the mangroves," Dr Himansu Das, a scientist with the EAD, said.
Besides providing food and shelter for many species of birds, mangroves are also important nurseries for healthy fisheries, with many species of fish and invertebrates such as shrimp starting their lives in the calm, nutrient-rich waters of mangrove swamps.
While more mangroves are to be planted in Ghantoot, Mirfa and Tareef in the Western Region, the EAD has not yet decided when the work will start or how many trees there will be.
"The goal is not to increase areas of mangroves," Dr al Abdessalaam said. "The goal is to restore the habitat, to mitigate and reduce the effects of coastal development."
Mangroves like a pinch of salt
Mangrove forests are among nature’s most biologically productive habitats. They are important to fisheries as they provide shelter for many species of juvenile fish. Birds, invertebrates and even marine turtles need them survive.
Mangrove forests are also important to stabilise and protect the coastline, and to sequester greenhouse gases, said Dr Thabit al Abdessalaam, director of biodiversity at the Environment Agency – Abu Dhabi.
Mangroves are unique in that they do not need fresh water to survive.
The UAE’s variety is the highly salt-tolerant Avicennia marina, commonly known as grey or black mangrove.
Because the mud where they grow contains very little oxygen, grey mangroves have developed aerial roots above water, allowing them to breathe.
The trees survive in harsh, saline conditions by secreting salt through special glands on their leaves.
* Vesela Todorova