DEGRADATION
OF WETLANDS AND NEED FOR COMMUNITY LED WETLAND MANAGEMENT PLAN
Dr Ranjita
Bania
Being
in the high rainfall zone along with the two major river systems, the Brahmaputra
and the Barak, the state of Assam possesses a mosaic of varying sizes of
wetlands ranging from lentic to lotic habitats. These wetlands harbour a wide
variety of aquafauna ranging from tiny rotifers, small fishes to the giant
turtles inhabiting in its diverse habitats. Beel-
the term used to coin the wetlands in Assam is unique in nature. They have a
great role to play in preserving the earth’s fragile eco-system and are
regarded as direct or indirect life supporting systems for millions of living
beings having immense socio economic and cultural importance. But their values
are often overlooked.
As per the report of
National Wetland Atlas prepared under National Wetland Inventory and Assessment
Project, Assam has 11178 wetlands with 764372 ha area spreading over the twin
valleys covering around 9.74 percent of the geographic area. These wetlands are
water bodies of diverse origin, size, shape, depth inundation pattern,
ecological characteristics etc. which are under severe threat in the state now.
Most of the beels
of Assam are located in the floodplains of the Brahmaputra and Barak, as such
when the river continuously widens due to severe bank erosion, it becomes
braided in many areas. As a result shallow channels sometime totally dried up
during winter. Heavy siltation not only raised the river bed but also
blocked connecting channel of beels,
preventing auto-stocking of fish and auto-removal of floating macrophytes
during monsoon resulting in extermination of wetland species. Over exploitation
of resources mainly fish through indiscriminate killing by using pesticides and
other illegal devices is a major threat to the already depleted fishery
resources of floodplain lakes.
Another
cause of great concern is the shrinkage of wetland area due to excessive
anthropogenic activities. Conversion of wetland for human settlement and
agricultural developments, construction of road, industries (brick kiln for instance), bridge
over wetland and dam in the upstream of connected river, dumping of solid
wastes, unsustainable levels of grazing and fishing activities will lead to substantial
economic and ecological losses in the long term. The lake of boundary
demarcation of the wetland habitats indirectly encourages the illegal
encroachment as well as the insensitive approach to wetland values results in
garbage dumping too.
Many
of the wetlands even in the forest area near the oil fields are used as the
dumping ground for the untreated oil effluents and the municipal wastes converting
them to uplands, causing pollution as well, as in case of Upper Dehing Reserve
Forest under Digboi Forest Division.
Wetland used as Garbage dumping site at Upper Dehing Reserve Forest, Digboi |
Besides, construction of oil pipelines
near the wetland area or over it has also been observed in many places of upper
Assam including Maguri-Motapung
beel ignoring its ecological values. The
leakage of crude oil from the oil pipe line adversely affects the aquatic biota
including the wild animals using the water body for their biological need. The
open cast coal mining in Ledo area of Tinsukia district has also been reported
to deteriorate the water quality of the existing water bodies of nearby area
causing them almost unproductive. All these unplanned shortsighted
anthropogenic activities have resulted in rendering the eco-system integrity of
many of the beels of Assam in peril.
Pollution
from industry and agriculture is an additional impact on fish stocks. Assam has
around 800 tea gardens leaving the gardens of small tea grower which form the
bulk of tea industry in India. Many of these use chemical pesticides and
herbicides which are drained to the nearby beels
with the rainwater which again add to the cause for gradual depletion of the
population of a good number of species which were fairly common in this part of
the country not very long ago. Consequently, the aquatic biodiversity of the
wetlands are already under severe threat and if immediate and effective conservation
measures are not taken up, it is feared that many important aquatic species
will be wiped out in near future.
The
growing concern about the conservation of wetland biodiversity has led the
search for more eco-friendly, sustainable and more effective as well as
economic strategies. Identification of the key drivers of wetland change and
adoption of suitable mitigation measures is the only way to combat the loss of
wetland habitats. Therefore, probable natural and anthropogenic factors should
be quantified and their adverse impacts should be shared with the common people
to make them aware the needs of wetland conservation, thus making them a vital
part of the conservation programme.
It
cannot be denied that the Wetland (Conservation and Management) Rules, 2010
issued by the Government of India (under the Environment protection Act, 1986)
is not at all successful providing security to these threatened habitats which
call for the need of revisiting the rule. The NGOs working in the field of
wetland conservations is demanding special act for wetlands of Assam through
formation of the State Authority of Wetlands highlighting the importance of
riverine connectivity along with the Deepor beel
Wetland Authority for conservation and management of the said unique water
bodies. The issue has drawn the attention of scientific community not only in
national but also in global level. International Union for Conservation of Nature’s
initiative for Ecosystem for life - A India-Bangladesh Initiative has validated
the fact including Deepor beel as
their one of the study sites. Being a part of this programme through Aaranyak, the author raised the riverine connectivity and fisheries issues
in various national and international platforms. The Aaranyak group
headed by Partha J Das is constantly urging to clean up the connected channels
of the beel to protect the Guwahati
city from the havoc of artificial flood problem as observed during last couple
of years which reached its peak in 2014. Nevertheless, deep
understanding on wetlands is the call of the hour to meet the need for clean
and measurable values and services they provide basically to inform and
evaluate option for a development scheme.
At
this summit, lack of ‘Wetland Management Plan’ is highly felt. The ownership
issue of wetlands is not very much transparent in Assam and cannot be neglected
while thinking of overall development. According to the available reports, only
430 numbers of beels are registered
which can be leased out. The lease holder, in general uses the beel only for harvesting fish of their own
interest without any investment or ranching. Thus, collection of a particular
species may result in rapid declination of the said species. To prevent this
type of monotony and to go for sustainable development of these habitats in the
long run, one cannot refute the dearth of proper management plan in Assam. A
community led multidisciplinal-multistakeholder wetland management plan owned
by the community is the need of the day which can only revive our wetlands for
longer duration with desired development. The successful implementation of this
new concept in ground though seems very simple but needs constant effort with
careful handling so as to deal with the sensitive issues of communities without
harming the ethnicity. Special care should be taken to prepare the local community
to implement the desired activities necessary for enrichment of wetland
resources. Distribution
of benefits from wetland management should also be ensured without any conflict
in the locality.