Peru
pushes Ramsar Convention over 100 million hectares on World Environment Day
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Peru celebrates World Environment Day with new Ramsar site
The Convention on Wetlands now covers over 100 million hectares
The
secretariat of the Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar, Iran, 1971) is delighted
to announce that, on the occasion of World Environment
Day, 5 June 2002, the wetlands included in the List of Wetlands of
International Importance have now surpassed 100,000,000 hectares (one million
square kilometres). In designating their wetlands for the Ramsar List, the Parties
to the Convention commit themselves to managing them sustainably and practicing
the "wise use principle" in utilizing their abundant resources. There
are presently 131 Contracting Parties to the Ramsar Convention, and they have
designated 1173 wetlands, ranging from 1 hectare to nearly 7 million hectares,
from marshes and fens to oases in arid lands, from peat bogs and intertidal
mudflats to coral reefs and lakes, for the Ramsar List.
The Government of Peru, embodied by the Convention's implementing agency in that country, the Instituto Nacional de Recursos Naturales (INRENA), has chosen to celebrate World Environment Day by making this commitment to sustainable use for a vast complex of rivers and streams, lakes, marshes, and swamp forests in the upper Amazon region. The new Ramsar site, known as Complejo de humedales del Abanico del río Pastaza in Loreto department, covers more than 3.8 million hectares, bringing the total surface area that has been brought under the Ramsar umbrella around the world to 101,078,389 hectares. Peru now has 8 Ramsar sites covering 6,759,388 hectares, a greater Ramsar area than any other nations except Canada, Russia, and Botswana.
Complejo de humedales del Abanico del río Pastaza (centered at 04°00'S 075°25'W) is an enormous alluvial fan composed of volcanic sediments brought down from the Andes of Ecuador and deposited along the river Pastaza and associated streams and secondary rivers leading to the river Marañon. The site contains an extraordinary diversity of both permanent and seasonal wetland types, with abundant lakes and remnant islands. Some 9 species of fauna from CITES Appendix I are supported, as well as 70 from Appendix II, and 17 species found in IUCN's Red List are present. Parts of the site near the river Urituyacu are particularly important for the palms Phytelephas tenuicaulis and Aphandra natalia, and the Pastaza supports a large population of the palm Elaeis oleifera, seen only a few places elsewhere in Peru. Nearly 300 species of fish have been recorded. Human occupation, largely restricted to the banks of the principal rivers, is a low-density mix of indigenous and settler communities who cultivate banana, cassava, and maize. Studies of the area by WWF Perú and the Centro de Datos para la Conservación of the Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina facilitated the preparation of the site's designation.
All members of the Ramsar
family join in welcoming this significant new addition to the List, the more
so because, by bringing the Convention over 100 million hectares, it makes a
particularly auspicious contribution to World Environment Day.
For
further information about the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, please contact
the Ramsar Convention Bureau,
Rue Mauverney 28, CH-1196 Gland, Switzerland (tel +41 22 999 0170, fax +41 22
999 0169, e-mail ramsar@ramsar.org). Posted 2 May 2002, Dwight Peck, Ramsar.