Les désignations utilisées et la présentation des éléments sur cette carte n'impliquent l'expression d'aucune opinion de la part de l'UICN concernant le statut juridique de tout pays, territoire, ville ou zone ou de ses autorités, ou concernant la délimitation de ses frontières.
Developing an Effective Mangrove Rehabilitation Technique
Proportion de la superficie de la contribution comprenant des Zones Clés pour la Biodiversité : 29,7%
Overall Project Aim & Strategic Value The goal of this research is to move beyond conventional mangrove planting by developing and validating a next-generation large-scale rehabilitation technique focused on cost-optimisation. Strategic Objectives 1. Validate Technique Efficacy: to track the long-term survival, vegetative and reproductive growth rates of transplanted native mangrove wildlings across three key species (Laguncularia racemosa, Avicennia germinans, and Rhizophora mangle). 2. Quantify Cost-Effectiveness: to compare the Benefit-Cost Ratio (BCR) of the new wildling transplant technique against current mangrove restoration techniques. 3. Replication: to create a standardised, low-cost operational manual for adoption by researchers, government agencies and NGOs. Snapshot of the Methodology This initiative introduces a next-generation technique to dramatically reduce operational expenditure while maximising ecological success. Supplementing naturally acclimated wildlings that are robust and already reproductive considerably contributes towards closing the canopy, a critical factor in any restoration project. This strategic advantage accelerates natural propagule establishment and recruitment, ensuring the ecosystem becomes self-sustaining faster and requires less long-term intervention. The experimental plot at the Graeme Hall Site will track the performance of 25 transplanted wildlings against 15 control individuals (a 40-individual study) over the project duration, ensuring results are based on robust, comparative data.
Bénéfices potentiels de la conservation sur la sauvegarde de la biodiversité
Réduction potentielle du risque d'extinction des espèces résultant des mesures de réduction des menaces
Valeur absolue (STAR)
0% du potentiel total de conservation de la biodiversité de Barbade est potentiellement couvert par ce projet
0% du potentiel de conservation de la biodiversité de Les Amériques provient de Barbade.
45,4% du potentiel mondial de conservation de la biodiversité provient de Les Amériques.