Abstract
The Philippines is one of the countries with the most number of true – mangrove species (about 42 species, 18 families, Table 1) (Primavera, 2004; Spalding et al 2010; Polidoro et al 2010). However Philippine mangrove forests suffered greatly from anthropogenic activities, i.e. cutting for firewood and charcoal, siltation caused by upland deforestation, and conversion of mangrove areas to shrimp ponds, fishponds and salt ponds (Primavera 1991, 1995, 2000; Field, 1998; FAO, 2003, 2007). From 1918 (~450,000) to 1998 (112,400), mangrove cover declined by more than 75% (Figure 1). In 2007, the remaining mangrove areas in the Philippines was estimated at 289,350 hectares (DENR-NAMRIA 2007), a value which is 61% (176,950) higher than 1998 estimate. However, most of these are estimates based on satellite images that need to be validated on field.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
S., M., & N., R. (2011). Mangrove Revegetation Potentials of Brackish-Water Pond Areas in the Philippines. In Aquaculture and the Environment - A Shared Destiny. InTech. https://doi.org/10.5772/28222
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