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Sunday, March 30, 2025

Better protection needed for Caroni

by

20160201

"Hey Luke, we have rac­coons in Trinidad?"This is just one of many ques­tions cu­ri­ous folk ask Dr Luke Ros­tant and col­leagues at the Uni­ver­si­ty of the West In­dies' (UWI's) De­part­ment of Life Sci­ences.

And the an­swer is yes: we do in­deed have rac­coons here. They are Crab-eat­ing Rac­coons (Pro­cy­on can­criv­o­rous), and they hang out in the Ca­roni Swamp, among oth­er places, where they can find their favourite foods: crabs and oth­er crus­taceans, small frogs, eggs and var­i­ous plant life.

They weigh any­thing be­tween four to 26 lbs, and are soli­tary, noc­tur­nal, elu­sive crea­tures–which is why we rarely see them.

Dr Luke Ros­tant is the Pro­gramme Co­or­di­na­tor for the MSc in Bio­di­ver­si­ty Con­ser­va­tion and Sus­tain­able De­vel­op­ment in the Caribbean. Late last year Ros­tant, along with Lee Ann Bed­doe (the Pro­gramme Man­ag­er) and lec­tur­ers of the De­part­ment of Life Sci­ences, fin­ished over­see­ing a se­ries of im­por­tant re­search projects in the Ca­roni Swamp, in­clud­ing one on the Crab-eat­ing Rac­coon. The Guardian in­ter­viewed Dr Ros­tant re­cent­ly for an up­date on these swamp stud­ies, to mark World Wet­lands Day to­day.

The 24 UWI stud­ies spanned the swamp's rich bio­di­ver­si­ty, from bats to blue crabs, and looked at some es­sen­tial en­vi­ron­men­tal ser­vices as well as liveli­hoods the swamp pro­vides.The stud­ies all fell un­der the um­brel­la project of the Ca­roni Swamp Re­search& De­vel­op­ment Im­pact (RDI) Fund. UWI's RDI Fund sup­ports mul­ti­dis­ci­pli­nary projects that ad­dress press­ing de­vel­op­ment chal­lenges, in an ef­fort to link aca­d­e­m­ic schol­ar­ship with re­al world so­cioe­co­nom­ic needs.

Much of this re­cent Ca­roni Swamp re­search work, it is im­por­tant to note, has not been done be­fore, al­though it builds on pre­vi­ous re­search ef­forts at UWI and in­sti­tu­tions like the IMA.

It re­mains true that our sci­en­tists of­ten don't have even ba­sic base­line da­ta on many kinds of swamp life–da­ta which is es­sen­tial for de­vel­op­ing ef­fi­cient, ef­fec­tive con­ser­va­tion and man­age­ment pro­grammes.

The re­sult? We don't ef­fec­tive­ly or in­tel­li­gent­ly man­age many of our nat­ur­al re­sources–such as the Ca­roni Swamp–as well as we should, be­cause we don't have poli­cies in­formed by ac­cu­rate bi­o­log­i­cal or en­vi­ron­men­tal da­ta. UWI's re­cent Ca­roni Swamp re­search projects aim to ad­dress some of these ma­jor knowl­edge gaps about Ca­roni Swamp life and the eco­log­i­cal ser­vices the swamp pro­vides.

Swamp threats: a re­view

�2 Hu­mans have trans­formed or de­stroyed half of all man­grove ecosys­tems in the en­tire world. The Ca­roni Swamp is no ex­cep­tion: in the 1920s up to 1954, rice farm­ers changed the Ca­roni Swamp's drainage/hy­drol­o­gy un­der the Cipri­ani Recla­ma­tion Scheme. They built em­bank­ments, cut chan­nels, and two tide ex­clu­sion sluices were built. This in­creased the ar­eas of fresh­wa­ter marsh and agri­cul­tur­al lands in the swamp.

�2 The Recla­ma­tion Scheme end­ed in 1954; canals fell in­to dis­re­pair and less fresh wa­ter en­tered. Build­ing of the Ca­roni Are­na Dam fur­ther re­duced fresh­wa­ter in­flow in­to swamp.

�2 Since 1957, salt wa­ter has in­trud­ed fur­ther in­land, and man­grove trees now out­com­pete marsh veg­e­ta­tion.

�2 From 1922-1986, var­i­ous T&T gov­ern­ments have built roads, sewage ponds, and a large, un­lined garbage dump (Beetham dump) on swamp land. They al­so dredged the Ca­roni Riv­er to widen it. All this ac­tiv­i­ty killed more than 500 ha of man­grove for­est–and the life with­in it–on the swamp's north­ern edge.

�2 The Beetham dump is lo­cat­ed too near the north­ern bound­ary of the Ca­roni Swamp, with the pos­si­bil­i­ty of di­verse tox­ins leach­ing in­to the ground­wa­ter and af­fect­ing life in the swamp over many gen­er­a­tions.

�2 Since the 1960s, res­i­dents of cen­tral Trinidad have been dump­ing their trash in­to rivers which all even­tu­al­ly emp­ty in­to the swamp via the Ca­roni Riv­er and re­lat­ed riv­er sys­tems. The Ca­roni Riv­er is among the most heav­i­ly pol­lut­ed in all of Trinidad, re­ceiv­ing wastes from sewage, in­dus­tri­al waste­water and agri­cul­tur­al runoff (Phelps, 1997) that has killed off much riv­er life.

�2 Il­le­gal hunt­ing/poach­ing threat­ens swamp an­i­mal life; war­dens are in­suf­fi­cient to mon­i­tor the area.

�2 More re­cent­ly (with­in the last few years), pri­vate landown­ers have cleared more wet­land ar­eas in the swamp. Il­le­gal hous­ing is al­so en­croach­ing on the swamp's east­ern bound­ary. Ur­ban and agri­cul­tur­al de­vel­op­ment now sur­round the swamp on three sides, heav­i­ly im­pact­ing the coastal ecosys­tem.

�2 De­spite the threats, the swamp still sus­tains bio­di­verse life–so far. How­ev­er, in­suf­fi­cient tox­i­c­i­ty stud­ies have been done on plants or wildlife to as­sess pos­si­ble bioac­cu­mu­la­tion of tox­ins, or oth­er ill ef­fects, as a re­sult of hu­man-caused pol­lu­tion drain­ing in­to the swamp.

(Source: Ra­han­na Ju­man and Deanesh Ram­se­wak, 2012: Land cov­er changes in the Ca­roni Swamp Ram­sar site, Trinidad [1947 and 2007]: im­pli­ca­tions for man­age­ment)


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