![]() |
|||||||
|
|
|||||||
| Save our seahorses | |||||||
| Seahorses are fast disappearing and not just into the cooking pot. DEBRA CHONG joins the Save Our Seahorses brigade for a day and learns what's at stake. | |||||||
| “THERE used to be seahorses
a-plenty here. We used to catch and sell them to Singapore, 50 sen for
one. Now, you’d be lucky to see even one.”
So said the weather-beaten fisherman from Tanjung Kupang, Johor. He was also our hired boatman for the day, charged to ferry us from the rickety wooden jetty in his seaside village to the Straits of Tebrau, roughly 2km downstream of Sungai Pulai estuary. Beneath the murky, mucky waters is an incredible world that is home to diverse marine lifeforms including the endangered dugong, Green turtle and Spotted seahorse. For a few hours some days a month, this magnificent world becomes accessible to the intrepid human visitor, when the tide is at its lowest.
As if by magic, the waters part and a carpet of emerald green unrolls before one’s eyes. At 1.8km long (and up to 200m at its widest), it is Malaysia’s single largest tract of seagrass bed. “In the middle of the Johor Straits, you’re standing on a green carpet filled with life. It’s amazing,” said Choo Chee Kuang, 28, programme coordinator of Save Our Seahorses, SOS for short. A local non-profit organisation, it was formed last year to create and enhance community awareness and co-operation for marine conservation particularly in the vicinity of Sungai Pulai estuary. In an effort to educate the local community, it roped in students from the nearby SMK Gelang Patah to help conduct on-site research. For the teenaged Geography Club members, it was an eye-opening experience being able to walk on the sea, hold a ‘live’ seahorse in one’s hand and even taste dugong food, Halophila ovalis, a round-leaf seagrass favoured by the shy sea mammal. Sungai Pulai estuary is possibly the richest marine bio-diversity spot in the country. “It’s very rare for an estuary to have a seagrass bed, mangrove swamp and coral reefs so close to each other,” said Choo, who also lectures in Marine Science at the University College of Science and Technology, Terengganu. In 2003, Sungai Pulai basin, one of three in Johor, was gazetted a Wetland of International Importance. The status is not lightly awarded. In plain speak, the ecosystem is recognised as being greatly valuable to the whole world. Coral reefs and seagrass beds breed myriad marine species of fish and other seafood. According to a World Wildlife Fund fact sheet updated in March this year, Southeast Asia is considered the global epicentre of marine diversity. In the Straits of Malacca, the yield from coral reefs is thought to be worth US$563 million (RM2.139 billion). After the Dec 26, 2004 tsunami that affected much of Asia, many governments are waking up to the role of mangrove swamps in protecting against coastline erosion. Flora and fauna in these wetlands also filter pollutants and make the water clean and clear again. The rising tide over the seagrass was miraculously crystal — we could see through to the bottom of the bottom of the Johor sea! Naturally, they have their limits. That is why Ramsar sites are closely monitored to ensure that any development will not harm the natural environment or life forms contained within the area. Unfortunately, that particular tract of seagrass bed we visited lies just outside the boundaries of the Sungai Pulai Ramsar site. That means, it is unprotected. Since 1995, increased human activity has endangered the balance of this delicate marine environment. Motorised fan blades from boats and ships that ply the narrow channel shred the seagrasses. Seagrasses are very much like land grasses. The only noticeable difference is the former grows on soil underwater. They still depend on sunlight and nutrient-rich soil to grow. Rapid construction of industrial plants and housing developments create pollutants that choke the life out of the seagrasses, as do encroaching seawalls. Choo is fearful. An adjacent plot was destroyed the same year the Ramsar Bureau in Switzerland conferred the honour on Sungai Pulai, Tanjung Piai and Pulau Kukup. His goal is for the policy-makers to designate the seagrass bed a fully-protected area. “Seahorses, seagrasses, mangrove swamps and coral reefs are closely-related. In order to protect the seahorse, we need to protect its habitat.” That day, Lady Luck smiled on us. We spotted two seahorses at the fringe of the seagrass bed. One was female, the other a male which had just given birth.
How to help * Donate to the Save Our Seahorses fund * Purchase of satellite images of the seagrass beds. * Construction of an on site research station. * A three-to-five- metre boat and outboard engine. Cheques can be made out to SUARAM KOMMUNIKASI. Send to: Suaram For further details, visit www.sosmalaysia.org |
|||||||
|
COPYRIGHT © NST ONLINE ARTICLE REPRODUCED HERE FOR THE PURPOSE OF NATURE CONSERVATION AND EDUCATION |