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“Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill Raynor Micronesia Program Director US Coral Reef Task Force Meeting, Oct. 3, 2003, Saipan, CNMI
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“Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

“Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” –

EMERSON

Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia

Bill Raynor

Micronesia Program

Director US Coral Reef Task Force Meeting, Oct. 3, 2003, Saipan, CNMI

Page 2: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Marjorie Reaka PPTKacky Andrews PPT

Page 3: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

BEFORE WE BEGIN What is the The Nature Conservancy and who IS Bill Raynor? (web)

internships etc.

Page 4: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

http://www.savethehighseas.org/trawling.cfm

Page 5: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

MAP OF ASIA PACIFIC

CSP Newsletter

Sakau drink pics from folder and plant

My pubs

Page 6: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

PACIFIC ISLANDS REPORT

Pacific Islands Development Program/East-West CenterWith Support From Center for Pacific Islands Studies/University of Hawai‘i

PALAU PRESIDENT URGES CONSERVATIONBy Agnes M. Abrau

KOROR, Palau (Palau Horizon, Nov. 9) – Palau President Tommy Remengesau has asked visiting U.S. officials to continue the "battle" against global warming and threats to the world’s biodiversity.

In a speech to the participants of the U.S. Coral Reef Task Force meeting here on Saturday, Remengesau said coral reef conservation is a national, regional and international issue.

He said a global crisis requires global solutions and depends on global partnerships at every level.

Page 7: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

This, he added, "is truly our only hope to preserve our coral reefs for our children."

According to Remengesau, Palau is already a world leader in "ratio of area protected to maintain biological diversity to surface area"

"For Palau, the environment is our economic future. We have no higher issue on our agenda than the preservation of our natural resources. Because of this, we recognize that a delicate balance must be struck between growth and conservation. We also recognize our limitations. It is because of this recognition that we understand that only through real partnerships and sharing will we achieve our mutual conservation goals," Remengesau said.

He added that Palau involves itself in world conservation issues.

Palau is one of the first nations of the world to pass a law that prohibits shark finning within its exclusive economic zone, he said.

The law prohibits commercial fishing within 50 miles of the country’s shores.

Page 8: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Remengesau said Palau also passed a protected area network law "that will stand as the basic framework to allow to meet Palau’s commitment to protect and manage 30 percent of its total reef, mangrove and lagoon area, as well as 20 percent of its forests, by 2010."

Moreover, he said, Palau sponsored, both in the United Nations and in the Pacific Islands Forum, an initiative calling for the cessation of high seas bottom trawling.

Remengesau said that they had discussions with U.S. resource partners regarding the proposed phase II of Palau’s resource management and zoning plan.

November 9, 2005

Marianas Variety: www.mvariety.com

Copyright © 2005 Marianas Variety. All Rights Reserved

Page 9: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

ECOREGIONAL PLANNING

CONSERVATION AREA PLANNING

MEASURES OF SUCCESS

STRATEGIES& ACTIONS

Conservation by Design

(Single- & multi-area)

Page 10: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Steps of Ecoregional Planning

1. Determine the region of interest. ECOREGION

2. Define the representative ecosystems, natural communities, and selected species that should be conserved. CONSERVATION TARGETS

3. Delineate the healthiest examples of these ecosystems, communities, and species. VIABLE OCCURRENCES

4. Decide on how many examples of these ecosystems, communities, and species need to be conserved. GOALS

5. Determine the areas that capture the most and best examples AREAS OF BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE

6. Determine which of these areas are of highest priority to conserve. ACTION AREAS

7. Develop actions that will help to conserve many areas of biological significance. MULTI-AREA STRATEGIES

of these ecosystems, communities, & species.

Page 11: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Why Ecoregional Planning?•Planning starts at regional scales rather than at specific sites, as this allows for conservation of a full range of biodiversity

•Many key threats operate at multi-site scale

•Coordinated efforts can facilitate partnerships and increase strategic use of conservation resources (strategic vs. opportunistic, proactive vs. reactive)

Page 12: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Step 1 - SELECT ECOREGION

Tuna, etc. move around this region’s waters

What is underwater elevation called?Why is it relevant to map for BIO-D?

Page 13: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Pen to delineate

Page 14: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Federated States of Micronesia

•An island nation in the western Pacific•An archipelago of 607 islands•271 sq. miles of land/2,700 sq. miles of lagoons and coral reefs -spread across 1,000,000 sq. miles of ocean

Page 15: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Background and where the $’s from

• FSM National Government received UNDP-GEF assistance to do their National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (NBSAP)

• TNC was undergoing a national/regional expansion, and needed to do Ecoregional Planning

• FSM NBSAP Task Force adopted the ecoregional planning effort

• State BSAP teams assisted with ecoregional planning process as experts and advisors

Page 16: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Step 2 - CONSERVATION TARGETS

Upland broadleaf forestLowland broadleaf forestMontane cloud forestFern/Sedge SavannaLimestone forestIvory nut palm forestClinostigma palm forest

Terrestrial Ecosystems

High island nearshore marine (coral reefs, lagoons, sea grass, etc.)Atoll nearshore marineAtoll/Beach forestAtoll inland mangroveHigh island mangrove

Marine Ecosystems

Chuuk flying foxPohnpei short-earred owlGiant Micronesian geckoManta rayTurtle nesting beachesGiant clams

Selected Species

Freshwater streamTerminalia swamp forestRiparian forestMontane perched Freshwater swampCoastal freshwater marsh

Freshwater & Wetland Ecosystems

Page 17: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Step 3 -VIABLE OCCURRENCES

• How big? • How fragmented?• What % agriculture?• How many invasives?

Upland Broadleaf Forest

• How big?• Water quality?• Intact watershed?• Resilience?• Connectivity?

High Island Nearshore Marine

Page 18: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

FSM Data Gaps•Inshore marine systems/communities - lack of updated maps and health/viability data•Outer islands - lack presence and health/viability data•Open ocean - over all lack of data•Submerged reefs - little data on biodiversity and health/viability•Marine Species - lack updated surveys

Page 19: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Step 4 - GOALS

How much is enough?

Page 20: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Step 5 - AREAS OF BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE

•Pick places that are the most HEALTHY

•Pick places that capture the MOST number of ecosystems, communities & species

•Pick places RESISTANT to large scale threats such as bleaching

•Pick sites that have CONNECTIVITY

•Pick places that are the most FEASIBLE to work in.

Page 21: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Biological ValueNumber/diversity

of targetsHealth or integrity

Urgency of threatFeasibilityLeverage

Step 6 - ACTION AREAS

Page 22: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.
Page 23: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.
Page 24: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.
Page 25: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.
Page 26: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Step 7 - Multi-Area Strategies

Strategies must respond to key marine threats:

•Overfishing- 50% of ABS sites

•Coastal Erosion/Sea Level Rise

•Water pollution - 16%

•Destructive harvesting - 15%

•Basin erosion and sedimentation

Page 27: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.
Page 28: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Partnerships• FSM National Government (NBSAP Task Force, Dept. of

Economic Affairs, NORMA)• Kosrae, Pohnpei, Yap, and Chuuk States• NGOs - CSP, KCSO, GATA,YESC• College Of Micronesia - FSM• UNDP-GEF• Regional Universities (UoG, UH)• US Federal Programs (DOI, USFS, USDA-NRCS, NOAA)• The Nature Conservancy

Page 29: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Benefits of Linking ERP to NBSAP• Government and community ownership of ecoregional

plan (shared “map of success”) • Focus all stakeholders on priority sites, species, and

long-term biological viability• Build partnerships to deal with multi-site threats• Increased strategic use of limited conservation

resources• High visibility to potential donors

Page 30: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

RESULTS SO FAR• Major funding from outside sources to keep work moving• Local leaders staking over process and training younger

members of society to do the work• Multiple areas protected• Measurements and analysis of efforts ongoing• Palau seeking UN status and this will allow it to push such issues and combat certain fishing techniques

Page 31: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

END SLIDE SHOW

Page 32: “Nature always wears the colors of the spirit” – EMERSON Ecoregional Planning: Developing a Blueprint for Biodiversity Conservation in Micronesia Bill.

Other LinkagesMicronesia Conservation Trust - “location in an ABS

site” as grant criteriaMicronesia Leaders in Island Conservation - focus

on leaders and organizations working at ABS sitesCompact Environment Sector - provide funding for

recurrent activities (e.g., protected areas management/enforcement) focussed in ABS sites