Showing posts with label Special events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Special events. Show all posts

Cape Town Accredited As a Ramsar Wetland City

 The City of Cape Town is South Africa's first city to be accredited as a Ramsar Wetland City.

The city is home to over 11 000 hectares of wetlands, which provide essential services such as disaster risk reduction and contributes to climate change adaptation and mitigation.

"Over the past 20 years, the city has implemented several initiatives, both inside and outside of protected areas, with the aim of rehabilitating wetlands and conserving these natural assets," the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment said on Friday.

The announcement was made at the 14th Conference of Parties to the United Nations Convention on Wetlands, known as the Ramsar Convention, being held in Geneva, Switzerland, from 5 to 13 November 2022.

To read the complete original article, click here.

World Wetlands Day - 2 Feb 2020

Celebrated annually to raise global awareness about the value of wetlands.

Theme for 2020: Wetlands and Biodiversity

Get involved:

  • Organize an event to raise awareness about the importance of wetlands biodiversity
  • Register and upload your event to worldwetlandsday.org 
  • Visit worldwetlandsday.org to download information materials to share and raise awareness
  • Learn about the types of wetlands in your country









World Wetlands Day - 2 Feb 2018


4 billion people, about half of the world’s population live in urban areas today. By 2050 that number is expected to increase as more people move into cities in search of jobs and better opportunities. 

Urbanization is one of the key defining mega-trends of our time. It’s completely transforming where and how people will live in the future. In fact it is estimated that the number of mega-cities with more than ten million inhabitants will jump from 31 to 41 by 2030.

A rapidly growing urban population comes with enormous challenges for city planners and managers. They have to ensure that cities today can deliver not only basic services such as accommodation, transport and water, but that these cities are safe, resilient and environmentally friendly.

Every year on 2 February, we celebrate World Wetlands Day, to raise global awareness about the important role of wetlands for people and the planet. This year’s theme “Wetlands for a Sustainable Urban Future,” highlights the important role of wetlands for sustainable urbanization. Urban wetlands are essential and contribute to making cities liveable.  During storms, urban wetlands absorb excess rainfall, which reduces flooding in cities and prevents disasters and their subsequent costs. The abundant vegetation found in urban wetlands, acts as a filter for domestic and industrial waste and this contributes to improving water quality.  Urban wetlands supply cities with water and are green spaces for recreation which helps to promote human wellbeing.

Today`s current development of human settlements is a major concern for wetland conservation and wise use. As cities grow and demand for land increases, the tendency is to encroach on wetlands. They are often viewed as wasteland available to dump waste or be converted for other purposes. Yet when preserved and sustainably used, urban wetlands can provide cities with multiple economic, social and cultural benefits. They are prize land not wasteland and therefore should be integrated into the development and management plans of cities.  We encourage cities to adopt policies and actions which will help to conserve urban wetlands. There are already successful examples of cities that have committed to sustainably use their wetlands. 

There are 23 Ramsar wetlands in South Africa of which 4 are in or nearby urban areas:
  • Blesbokspruit near Nigel in Gauteng
  • Bot-Klein Estuarine System near Hermanus in Western Cape
  • Langebaan in the Western Cape
  • Falsebay Nature Reserve in the Cape Town metro

Happy World Wetlands Day 2018!    

World Wetlands Day 2017

World Wetlands Day is celebrated every year on the 2nd February. It is initiated and organised by the international Ramsar organisation based in Switzerland. The theme for 2017 is “Wetlands for Disaster Risk Reduction”. The goal is to inform people about the importance of healthy, well managed wetlands which can reduce the impact of damage due to natural disasters.

Wetlands are of the most important natural resources on earth. It ensures a balance in our bio-diversity and offers water, food and breeding habitat for a large variety of living organisms.

One of the direct benefits of wetlands, specifically for humans, is the fact that wetlands can drastically reduce the risk of damage as a result of natural disasters.

The frequency of disasters worldwide has more than doubled in just 35 years, driven by climate- and weather related hazards like flooding, tropical cyclones and droughts. UN Water estimates that 90% of all natural hazards are water-related. And the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicts even more extreme events
going forward.

Statistics about these disasters are shocking: 1.35 million people died as a result of disasters between 1996 and 2015. In material terms, weather related disasters caused US$3.3 trillion in damage between 1980 and 2014.

Defined as flat land areas that are flooded with water, either seasonally or permanently, wetlands are a natural buffer against disasters.

The amount of water on planet earth cannot increase, but it also cannot decrease. The two factors that affect the availability of water are the population growth, and the management of water sources. Wetlands play a critical role in the management of water sources.

It functions like a huge sponge that slows down the flow of water through an area and at the same time clear the water from impurities. In a way it is similar to the human kidneys: it absorbs and slows down the flow of water, filters impurities, and prevents major floods further downstream.

When an extreme event hits, healthy wetlands can absorb some of the shock, cushioning the damage in local communities. In Hikkaduwa, Sri Lanka where offshore coral reefs are protected through a marine park, the damage from the 2004 tsunami extended just 50m inland. In nearby Peraliya, where coral mining had degraded the reefs, the damage extended 1.5 km inland.

Wetlands can also speed up the recovery and help to “build back better” after a disaster, acting as natural water filters and nutrient restorers. After a 1999 cyclone that hit Odisha in eastern India, rice paddies that were protected by mangroves recovered their food production much more quickly than croplands without the buffer.

Wetland types that help us cope with extreme weather events, include the following:

1. Mangroves
Mangroves are salt-water tolerant shrubs and trees that grow in shallow, tropical coastal waters. Their roots bind the shoreline and reduce the impact of cyclones/hurricanes and tsunamis. A good example of a mangrove wetland is at the St Lucia lake in KwaZulu-Natal.

2. Coral Reefs
Coral reefs are solid structures found in shallow, tropical waters and are built by living colonies of tiny coral polyps. In addition to being a habitat for several marine species, coral reefs also act as offshore wave barriers. The Coral Reefs of Tongaland on the northern coast of KwaZulu-Natal is one of South Africa’s Ramsar wetlands.

3. Rivers and flood plains
During sudden floods, flood plains act as a giant reservoir which can spread and store flood water over a wide area, reducing damage downstream.

4. Inland deltas
When rivers flow into a wide, flat inland lake without draining into the ocean, an inland delta is formed. The best example is the Okavango Delta in Botswana which provides a habitat for a large number of animals, birds and plants in an otherwise dry, arid area.

5. Peatlands
Peatlands are water-saturated lands containing decomposed plant material up to 30 meters deep that has accumulated over time. They cover 3% of the earth’s land surface and store more than twice as much carbon as all of the world’s forests combined. It play an important role in mitigating some effects of climate change.

Several activities occur world wide to celebrate World Wetlands Day. Most of these are organised by the institutions responsible for the Ramsar wetlands of that country. I am aware of events in South Africa at St Lucia, Edendale near Pietermaritzburg, and Colbyn near Pretoria. The Department of Environment Affairs plans an official event for 17 February at Esselen Park Pans, Thembisa in the Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality.

If you are close to a wetland, contact them to find out what happens there and how you can get involved.