|
What's
New @ Ramsar
Forum
on management of wetland centres, China, 2006

2nd
Wetland Forum, Xixi, Hangzhou, China,
20-22 October 2006
Jointly
organised by the State Forestry Administration of China (the Ramsar Administrative
Authority) and the Hangzhou Municipal Government, this Forum brought together
160 people to discuss the creation, utilisation
and management of wetland parks. Participants came from a range
of backgrounds, including key members of China's Administrative Authority,
wetland managers within China, managers and educators from wetland education
centres, predominantly from Asia and Oceania, but also from other regions,
representatives from the Hangzhoug municipality, and the Xixi Wetland
Park management team, as well as wetland restoration experts. Two members
of the Ramsar Secretariat attended and made presentations, Lei
Guangchun, the Senior Advisor for Asia, and Sandra
Hails, the CEPA Programme Officer.
Xixi
National Wetland Park, an ancient wetland that began as a lake
and was converted to fishing ponds and flooded paddy fields over 1,000
years ago, still produces and markets fish from the ponds as well as harvesting
and marketing persimmons from trees bordering them. Although on a smaller
scale than in past years, silk production carries on with the mulberry
trees around the ponds supplying the leaves to feed the silkworms. At
the same time, the wetland has been developed to allow visitors to experience
the beauty of the scenery on foot and by boat, and to learn more of the
long cultural history of the ecosystem. Since its opening in 2005, the
park has welcomed over 977,000 visitors.
During the opening
ceremony of the Forum on October 20th, participants were addressed by
Mr Zhang Jianlong, Deputy Director
General of the State Forestry Administration, Mr
Sun Zhonghuan, the Mayor of Hangzhou, and the Hangzhou Municipal
Party Committee Secretary, Mr Wang Guoping.
Mr Wang noted that the 10 km2 Xixi Wetland Park is the first National
Wetland Park in China. He defined wetland parks as large wetlands with
a distinctive ecological, cultural, aesthetic and biological identity
that are intended for conservation, leisure, education, and research,
where conservation and utilisation to maximise ecological, social and
economic benefits are possible. He distinguished between these and National
Nature Reserves, which are natural areas intended only for conservation
and research. Mr Wang emphasized that the development of wetland parks,
although new to China, is considered an important component of the country's
approach to wetland management. Lei Guangchun, Ramsar's Senior Advisor
for Asia, made an opening address on behalf of Ramsar's Secretary General,
and Sandra Hails, CEPA Programme Officer, delivered a keynote presentation
on Ramsar's CEPA Programme and the roles it identifies for wetland centres
and wetland parks in the conservation and wise use of wetlands.
Following the opening
ceremony, participants spent the afternoon on a guided boat tour of the
Xixi Wetland Park, a beautiful area, although the overcast weather limited
the photographic opportunities. Participants were able to view the fish
ponds as well as persimmon and mulberry trees by boat and also visited
on foot, at various points, exhibitions of the cultural history of the
park, including fishing and silk production, as well as the activities
of a number of famous artists and writers who had lived in this wetland
area centuries ago, drawing inspiration from its scenery and tranquillity.
The 21st was a full
day of plenary presentations, the morning session chaired by Lei Guangchun.
Ten presentations covered practical experiences in the development, management,
and activities of wetland centres and wetland parks, and the topics were
broad-ranging, covering methodological approaches to planning and managing
parks, wetland restoration techniques, and on-the-ground approaches to
managing wetland centres, including designing education programmes, approaches
to maintaining financial viability, the importance of volunteer programmes,
etc.
On the following
morning, participants had to choose between three concurrent sessions,
each with 5-6 presentations, under the themes of Programming and designing
of wetland parks; Construction and management of wetland parks; and CEPA
in wetland parks, the latter session chaired by Sandra Hails.
In the CEPA session,
four presenters took us variously through the diversity of education programmes
that a wetland centre must develop to cater for the range of visitors,
developing programmes that particularly target teachers and schoolchildren,
designing centres to cater for physically disabled visitors, and using
interview techniques to identify types of visitors and examine their positive
and negative experiences during the visit. Two presenters looked at the
use of CEPA tools from a rather different perspective, one focusing on
the CEPA tools used in a lake restoration project where local people were
the key targets as important polluters of the lake environment, and another
on an international project to rescue a flagship species - the crested
ibis - and on the CEPA tools used with rice farmers to control water quality
in key habitat areas.
Between sessions,
the CEPA Programme Officer spent valuable time discussing the development
of the Wetland Link International - Asia (WLI-Asia)
network of centres, the first regional network to be set up within the
global WLI network. Colleagues from Asian wetland centres who were instrumental
in setting up WLI-Asia and the global Wetland Link International Coordinator,
Malcolm Whitehead, had the opportunity
to discuss plans for the upcoming WLI-Asia symposium in January 2007 that
is being jointly organised by the Hong Kong Wetland Park and WWF's Mai
Po Marshes Nature Reserve, funded by the Hong Kong government.
Overall the Forum
was an ideal opportunity for the exchange of practical experiences in
the many aspects involved in creating and managing wetland centres and
parks. In her concluding remarks, Ms. Yin Hong,
Director General of the Ramsar Convention Implementation Office in China,
emphasized the importance of wetland parks and the role of wetland CEPA
in promoting wetland conservation and wise use among all stakeholders,
including decision-makers and local communities.
--
Sandra Hails and Lei Guangchun, Ramsar

Participants
seated in the plenary hall

Signboard
at park entrance

Walking trails are well signposted.

Well
maintained paths and bridges for walkers

Participants
ready to set off on field trip around Xixi

Park
workers on a well-earned tea break

Moody
scene

Participants
stop off at one of the main cultural centres

A
hall dedicated to Xixi's many famous artists and writers

Central
courtyard at the cultural centre

Silkworms
feeding on the Park's mulberry leaves

Silk
embroidery

Fishermens'
houses

The
ubiquitous water hyacinth has to be vigorously managed at the Park

Chris
Wood, who has helped the Park management with the development of an education
centre at Xixi, demonstrates an electronic game.

Displays
at the education centre

--
Photos by Sandra Hails
For
further information about the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, please contact
the Ramsar Convention Secretariat, Rue Mauverney 28,
CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22 999 0169,
e-mail ).
Posted 30 October 2006, Dwight Peck, Ramsar.
 
|