MWAZARO BEACH, Kenya, Mar 08 (IPS) – Because the world celebrates Worldwide Ladies’s Day, IPS brings a narrative of girls who’re each creating financial alternatives for themselves and serving to to cut back the influence of local weather change.Almost two kilometers into the Indian Ocean from the Mwazaro seaside shoreline in Lunga Lunga Sub-County, Kwale County, ladies might be noticed seated within the shallow ocean waters or tying strings to erected poles parallel to the waves. It’s a fascinating sight to see rows of seaweed farms within the Indian Ocean.
Seaweeds are a gaggle of algae present in seawater and are available inexperienced, crimson, and brown species. The seaweed farms are a predominantly female-dominated type of aquaculture and their homeowners can solely be noticed throughout low tide, particularly within the morning. As soon as the tide is available in, the ladies will start their journey again to the shores because the waters slowly rise.
Saumu Hamadi tells IPS that in 2016, residents of Mwambao village alongside the Mwazaro seaside shoreline began a community-led, community-driven initiative to preserve mangroves, defend the setting, and restore their fisheries, which had been destroyed by vital mangrove forest degradation.
“We realized that the extra our mangroves disappeared, the fish ran away and so did the fishermen. We depend on fish for meals and cash. Males promote the massive fish, such because the kingfish, shark, and rayfish, to the seaside accommodations, and girls promote crabs and prawns by the roadside or in small village markets. The scenario was threatening our each day bread and we determined to volunteer as a group to revive and defend our mangroves,” Hamadi explains.
“There have been too many individuals chopping down mangrove timber, destroying the locations that the fish we rely on name dwelling. There was additionally numerous soil erosion and the water flowing alongside the River Hamisi that pours into the Indian Ocean inside this village’s shoreline carried the soil into the ocean, polluting it. We shaped two group teams: Mwambao Mkuyuni Youth and Bati Seaside Mwambao. Ladies make up 80 p.c of the members in each teams.”
Abdalla Bidii Lewa, a group coordinator on mangrove restoration in Pongwe Kikoneni ward the place Mwambao village is situated and chair of Bati Seaweed Farmers, tells IPS, “Mangroves have protected our villages and surrounding areas from excessive climate and disasters reminiscent of people who affected massive elements of the coastal area in the course of the heavy floods in November and early December 2023. The place homes had been swept away and farmlands destroyed, we had been secure from the catastrophe.”
Analysis reveals mangroves considerably stop the development of local weather change whereas additionally enjoying a serious function in limiting its influence. That is crucial as temperatures rise dangerously, sea degree shoots to alarming ranges, and coastal climate-induced disasters turn into frequent, intense, and extreme, with catastrophic outcomes.
To avert coastal local weather hazards and safe mangrove-related advantages for current and future generations, the group undertook mangrove conservation and restoration actions in earnest.
Then, in 2017, a scientist conducting analysis into seaweed farming utilizing the off-bottom seaweed farming technique—tying algal fonds or seaweed seeds to ropes connected between wood pegs pushed into the ocean sediment—approached ladies in the neighborhood.
“Of the 2 seaweed strains that develop on Kenya’s south coast, cottonii and spinosum, the scientist advisable that we plant spinosum and gave us the seeds. Seaweeds don’t want one thing to develop on. We erect sticks into the bottom contained in the ocean water throughout low tides and plant seaweed seeds by tying them to strings mounted on these sticks. We harvest each 45 days. We’ve to tie the strings and place the sticks correctly in order that they don’t seem to be swept away throughout excessive tides,” says Rehema Abdalla, a seaweed farmer in Mwambao village.
On issues that aquaculture may type the entry level for mangrove degradation, Hamadi says, “It isn’t the case with seaweed. The mangroves are essential to the survival of our seaweeds by guaranteeing that now we have regular, secure tides and waves. When seaweeds are swept away, they keep trapped throughout the roots of the mangroves and we gather them from there. It’s uncommon, however every so often, the tides might be very sturdy.”
Lewa says seaweed farming is rising as a brand new and sustainable local weather change mitigation technique whereas providing communities adjoining to mangroves and coastlines another livelihood, decreasing dependency on fishing and pure assets inside mangrove forests and the oceans. Seaweeds are superfoods, extremely nutritious, can be utilized in sushi, soups, salads, and smoothies, and are an asset within the feed business, cosmetics, and prescription drugs.
“The quantity of seaweed harvested will depend on the quantity planted and each 45 days, you’re going to get a harvest. In the meanwhile, one kilogram of seaweed goes for USD 22 (Ksh 35). I’m at the moment concentrating on making USD 467 (Ksh 75,000) each 45 days from seaweed. We additionally promote seaweed seeds to different ladies doing mangrove conservation, reminiscent of Imani Gazi and the Gazi Ladies Mangrove Restoration Group, from inside Kwale County,” Hamadi says.
Seaweeds praise mangroves by absorbing vitamins reminiscent of nitrogen, phosphorous, and carbon dioxide. They don’t require soil, fertilizer, freshwater, or pesticides, and so they considerably enhance the setting wherein they develop. Seaweeds effectively soak up carbon dioxide, utilizing it to develop and even when harvested, the carbon stays within the ocean.
Analysis reveals that seaweed can pull extra greenhouse gases from the water in comparison with seagrass, salt marshes, and mangroves based mostly on biomass. Mwazaro’s seaside group is on observe so as to add seaweed as a part of their blue carbon sink, setting the tempo for different coastal communities.
All the identical, the ladies are dealing with challenges reminiscent of an absence of mortar boats to assist transport their harvest to the shore. At the moment, they use a tedious course of whereby they tie sacks of seaweed on their waste and await the onset of excessive tide within the early afternoon to push them from the seaweed farms to the shore. They’re additionally struggling to entry a bigger market, at the moment counting on one main large-scale purchaser and small consumers throughout the village and different mangrove conservation teams from neighboring villages.
IPS UN Bureau Report
This function is printed with the assist of Open Society Foundations.
© Inter Press Service (2024) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service