Mid-March....
spring migrating birds are on the move while resident and summer
species are gearing up for another breeding season in the Algarve’s
Lagoa dos Salgados. Something else is in the air now too: fresh hope
that greater care will soon be given to this coastal lagoon.
Lagoa
dos Salgados, an ecological gem, has been suffering abuse for many
years - and it still is today. Human disturbance to wildlife and farm
animal damage to habitat go unchecked.
Fishermen
with night-vision equipment are still outwitting the environmental
police and illegally trapping eels, fish and shrimps. Diving birds,
terrapins and water voles also die in these traps. Stray dogs
fed by parked campervan owners go on the rampage by the lakeside and
kill what they can.
The
abuse is obvious but the relevant authorities seem unable or
unwilling to take action. Does the general public really care?
An
innovative project is about to be launched based on the conviction
that nature conservation is an obligation for all. The initiative
will involve various sectors of society, from public authorities and
private companies to community groups and individual volunteers.
Cidadania
para o Ambiente
is being organised by SPEA, the Portuguese ornithological society,
with funding from the Toyota Motor Corporation of Japan.
It
is one of two such projects in Portugal to be backed by Toyota, the
other being in a wetland area near Aveiro in the north. Both have
internationally agreed Important Area for Birds and Biodiversity
(IBA) status.
The
Salgados project will be unveiled at a day-long workshop session in
Albufeira on Friday 18th. All interested parties will be welcome.
The
current situation and special needs at the lagoon will be discussed
during the meeting and this will form the basis for defining what
activities should be undertaken and by whom.
SPEA’s
Executive Director Luis Costa will be pressing for unified action.
“The aim is to develop alternative models of management based on
the participation of civil society and relevant stakeholders at local
level: communities, municipalities, NGO’s, farmers, scouts, etc,”
he says.
The
Lagoa dos Salgados and surrounding area is home, seasonally or
all-year-round, to a remarkable range of waders, waterfowl and other
aquatic birds, as well as raptors and passerines, some rare or
endangered.
The
lagoon is playing an important economic role in eco-tourism in the
Algarve, though of course it is impossible to place a value on such
sightings as a flock of 200 Greater Flamingos, Black-winged Stilts
busily feeding at close range, or much more secretive Little Bitterns
and Purple Gallinules skulking in the reedbeds.
All
forms of wildlife are currently benefiting from a bespoke system put
in place to control the level and quality of water in the lagoon.
This, however, is not enough to fully take care of an ecosystem that
environmental groups have been fighting to safeguard for well over a
decade.
The
major tourist resort planned for a great swathe of land adjacent to
the lagoon is a distinct issue and not directly related to the
“citizens for the environment” project.
There
are no indications that construction is likely to start any time soon
and anyway a court decision is awaited on its future, but the
development remains a threat.
Luis
Costa is optimistic. “A good management scheme involving
citizenship and volunteers will hopefully increase the arguments
against a development that could cause the degradation of the site.”
* The meeting on Friday 18th March will be in the Biblioteca
Municipal de Albufeira, starting at 10am.