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Stop draining the swamp: it's time to tackle wetland loss

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 September 2018

Matt Walpole*
Affiliation:
Fauna & Flora International, Cambridge, UK
Nick Davidson
Affiliation:
Nick Davidson Environmental, Wigmore, UK, and Institute for Land, Water and Society, Charles Sturt University, Albury, New South Wales, Australia
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Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © Fauna & Flora International 2018 

Wetlands (including marsh, fen, peatland, lakes, rivers, tidal areas and shallow coastal zones) are amongst the most biodiverse and economically valuable ecosystems (Russi et al., Reference Russi, ten Brink, Farmer, Badura, Coates and Förster2013; Costanza et al., Reference Costanza, de Groot, Sutton, van der Ploeg, Anderson and Kubiszewski2014). They are also some of the most imperilled, with continuing declines in area, quality and benefits to people (Gardner et al., Reference Gardner, Barchiesi, Beltrame, Finlayson, Galewski and Harrison2015). Recent estimates suggest an 87% global decline in natural wetland area since pre-industrial times (Davidson, Reference Davidson2014), losses that persist into the current decade across all continents (Dixon et al., Reference Dixon, Loh, Davidson and Walpole2016). That wetlands are often in areas of high agricultural productivity or high development pressure—such as coastal areas—has not helped their cause. Yet ultimately wetland loss is a result of a combination of neglect, ignorance and land-use choices that don't fully recognize wetland values, including water and food security and human health.

This issue of Oryx delves into the problems confronting a wide range of wetland-dependent species. Small, fragmented, isolated wetlands are the last refuge for some: for the range-restricted Dades trout in Morocco climate change is likely to reduce suitable habitat (Clavero et al., Reference Clavero, Calzada, Esquivias, Veríssimo, Hermoso, Qninba and Delibes2018), and in Asia once-common otters (Li & Chan, Reference Li and Chan2018) and fishing cats (Thaung et al., Reference Thaung, Herranz Muñoz, Holden, Willcox and Souter2018) persist only in remnant populations that often lie outside protected areas.

Relationships between local communities, wetlands and wildlife are often complex. Use of wetland resources can be a safety net for the poorest households yet rising household income can lead to greater resource extraction and wetland degradation (Scales et al., Reference Scales, Friess, Glass and Ravaoarinorotsihoarana2018).

Human use of wetlands can bring wildlife into conflict with people. Swamp deer in northern India (Paul et al., Reference Paul, Pandav, Mohan, Habib, Niham and Mondol2018), marsh deer in South America (Iezzi et al., Reference Iezzi, Fracassi and Pereira2018), and crocodiles in the Sundarbans (Das & Jana, Reference Das and Jana2018) have all been persecuted. Other species are affected by human-facilitated invasive species: the Vulnerable reticulated flatwoods salamander has declined as a result of feral swine invading its wetland breeding grounds (Jones et al., Reference Jones, Gorman, Rincon, Allen, Haas and Engeman2018). Others have been squeezed out: the Critically Endangered Aloatra lemur has been pushed to the brink by the conversion of its marshland home for rice cultivation (Waeber et al., Reference Waeber, Reibelt, Randriamalala, Moser, Raveloarimalala and Ralainasolo2018).

Nevertheless, sustainable wetland management can create positive conditions for wildlife. Incentive-based conservation agreements in Colombia have helped to protect threatened Amazonian fish (Mora et al., Reference Mora, Palacios and Niesten2018), and locally-managed harvesting of saltwater crocodile eggs in northern Australia has reduced offtake compared with external commercial operations (Corey et al., Reference Corey, Webb, Manolis, Fordham, Austin and Fukuda2018). Long-term monitoring can also help determine appropriate management interventions. Canova & Balestrieri (Reference Canova and Balestrieri2018) used such an approach to reveal how dredging influenced the breeding cycle of the Italian agile frog.

Restoration is an increasingly important tool for wetland conservation. In Cambridgeshire the Great Fen, one of the most ambitious ecological restoration projects in Europe, is returning drained fenland to its former inundated glory, and wildlife is thriving. Yet even artificial wetlands, which have increased markedly as natural wetlands continue to decline (Davidson et al., Reference Davidson, Fluet-Chouinard and Finlayson2018), can provide valuable wildlife havens. In one uplifting example, a threatened frog that was presumed extirpated from southern California was rediscovered in artificial ponds on a former trout farm (Backlin et al., Reference Backlin, Richmond, Gallegos, Christensen and Fisher2018). When things become critical, ex situ captive breeding and later reintroduction may be required (Biega & Martin, Reference Biega and Martin2018).

The plight of wetlands is championed internationally by the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands of International Importance. Originally signed in 1971, it provides a framework for national action and international cooperation in the conservation and wise use of wetlands (Finlayson et al., Reference Finlayson, Davidson, Pritchard, Milton and MacKay2011). Signatories commit to incorporating wetland conservation and wise use into their national development through appropriate policies and actions, and to maintaining the ecological character of designated Ramsar sites, of which there are currently c. 2,300.

Reports from Contracting Parties suggest that designated Ramsar sites are in better condition than others, yet information from the last round of national reporting indicates that 30% of the global area under Ramsar site designation is deteriorating. If this is the case for the c. 18% of the world's estimated 12 million km2 of wetlands that have been Ramsar designated (Davidson et al., Reference Davidson, Fluet-Chouinard and Finlayson2018), it is little wonder that other wetlands are being destroyed or degraded.

Only about half of all Contracting Parties have a national wetland policy. Less than half have a comprehensive national wetland inventory. With respect to threats, only 42% of Contracting Parties have inventoried invasive species in wetlands and only a third have established national policies or guidelines on their control and management. Only just over half of all Ramsar sites have management plans that are being implemented, and only a third of Contracting Parties have a mechanism in place to ensure that negative human impacts on their Ramsar sites are reported.

Moreover, despite close cooperation with other biodiversity-related conventions (Davidson & Coates, Reference Davidson and Coates2011), the Ramsar Convention remains outside the UN-administered multilateral mainstream. Despite being relevant to many of the UN Sustainable Development Goals, wetlands only receive explicit mention in a single target under Goal 6 on water management and another under Goal 15 on conserving terrestrial and inland freshwater ecosystems, neither of which has an agreed means to monitor progress in improving wetland condition.

Although Ramsar has made significant efforts to highlight the multiple values of wetlands to society (exemplified through its theme-based approach to World Wetland Day celebrations), wetland biodiversity remains neglected. Populations of freshwater species have declined by 81% since 1970, faster than species in any other ecosystem (WWF, 2016).

We know a great deal about how important wetlands are for people, but as a society we have not yet meaningfully acted on wetland loss. We need responses on a much broader scale by fully integrating wetlands into economic policy and decision-making. As governments convene at the Ramsar Conference of Parties in Dubai this month (October 2018), it is time to reverse the neglect of these comparatively small but incomparably valuable areas. Draining the swamp is not the wisest plan…

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