Julie Martinez, our environmental education instructor, has been working with elementary school kids in the Rivas province of Nicaragua. The kids are learning about the ecology of tropical dry forests, and starting to address environmental problems in their own community.
We’ve officially launched our sea turtle program in the Rivas province, and La Prensa picked it up to share the story with the rest of Nicaragua.
The campaign, designed to protect critically endangered sea turtles who nest on the beaches of Nicaragua, include environmental education, water conservation, eco-tourism, and local development. It also includes a sea turtle incentive payment program described by country director Liza González:
Es un programa de incentivos. Si hay un comunitario que normalmente se llevaba los huevos de ese nido, entonces el programa va a apoyarlo, si él quiere proteger ese nido va a recibir un incentivo por protección, ese incentivo es equivalente a lo que él ganaría si vendiera los huevos.
The sea turtle payment program offers financial incentives for communities, where turtle eggs were often harvested (or poached) before they hatched, to protect the turtle nests. We pay individuals and make community grants for every protected nest and every turtle hatchling who makes it to the sea.
To support this program, buy one of our sea turtle shower timers, designed to remind you of a very good reason to conserve water.
Please watch our video addressing the issue of poaching parrots in Nicaragua.
Once abundant in tropical forests, the Yellow-naped parrot (Lora Nuca Amarillo in Spanish) is increasingly rare in Nicaragua, where habitat destruction and poaching have reduced its numbers rapidly.
Poachers are often young rural farmers who climb over 15 meters into trees or chop down trees to take parrot chicks out of their nests. Yellow-naped parrots only have one clutch per year (usually just one to three eggs), and are monogamous, so if they lose their mate, they are out of luck for the rest of their lives.
In addition to environmental education which helps children understand the importance of the species they share the forest with, we’re currently caring for orphan parrot fledglings. These parrots were confiscated by the army near the border of Costa Rica, where the poachers were presumably taking them to sell. We are advising the army on the care of the parrot chicks until the Ministry of Environment authorities decide what to do about them.
January’s Science roundup included interesting work on coral reefs:
Compiling geological and biological data from fossils, a team of evolutionary scientists has found indications of the following:
- reefs are important evolutionary cradles independent of their preferred habitat in shallow, tropical environments
- in nonreefal ecosystems, shallow-water environments represent the most important evolutionary cradles
Understanding reefs will help us understand populations of sea turtles and other marine wildlife as reefs face the threats of pollution and climate change.
At Paso Pacifico, in addition to working with donors, government entities, and other NGOs, we also work with private landowners to foster cooperation and habitat-friendly farming and planting and land-use practices.
Especially when working with home and hotel developers, we strongly encourage the use of native flora. We believe a healthy native plant population is one of the keys to saving many birds and other species from extinction.
We understand the desire to plant a bunch of palm trees and colorful euphorbia, instead of the pretty, drought tolerate natives, but one of the most important things to remember is that though we are in the tropics, we are in a tropical DRY forest zone.
We’re thrilled to be featured at the Ecosystems Marketplace in a story about a project auditor with the Rainforest Alliance.
Jeff Hayward: Quantifying Carbon, Communities, and More
Last January, Hayward spent a week visiting a new project in southwestern Nicaragua. Here, large landowners graze cattle on their acreages while farmers hold on to smaller plots of land. At the same time, tourism is booming, with beachfront hotels luring both the Nicaraguan elite and international visitors.
This is all happening in a rare ecosystem: the dry tropical forest.
Environmental NGO Paso Pacifico has been working to protect these forestlands with a range of strategies for the past three years. The organization didn’t initially aim to create a carbon offset program, but with the help of an interested landowner, they designed the Return to Forest project to reforest more than 400 hectares of private cattle lands.
After reviewing the project in his Washington, DC office, Hayward spent a week in Nicaragua with Paso Pacifico’s directors. They visited landowners and evaluated their properties, met with stakeholders and the community members who do everything from work in nurseries to plant trees.
The Ingredients of a Successful Project
Hayward says that, over time, he’s developed the ability to know going in which projects have the highest chance of success.
“The first clue is a well-run organization with a really concrete set of goals and objectives, and the institutional capacity to make it happen,” he says, adding that in Paso Pacifico’s case there was a high level of trust between project organizers and the community. Every landowner had signed a contract with the organization, and they had the original titles to the land, the inscription documents, with everything signed and stamped.
Then Hayward and Rainforest Alliance look at the project’s environmental and social impacts. Are the right tree species being planted? How does the project aid biodiversity? And, how’s the community relationship — are materials in a local language? Are they explained in a way that a non-scientist can understand?
Hayward found a variety of elements that linked environmental goals with the community, including environmental education programs in six communities, training for community members to work in reserves, and developing signage and information on the project in the local language. Paso Pacifico also collaborates with national and international researchers who are studying wildlife, including the yellow-naped parrot and spider monkeys, which will allow the project to study biodiversity over time.
Surviving the Audit
In April, 2008, Paso Pacifico’s project was validated under CCB standards and received a “Gold” designation — the highest rating a project can receive.
“I think one of the reasons it is a really good project is that, deep down inside, it really is a conservation project and that’s why it conforms very well to the CCB standards,” says Paso Pacifico executive director Sarah Otterstrom.
That doesn’t mean the project’s validation was a sure thing — the auditing process may be as nerve-wracking as one from the tax inspector. Hayward “commands a great deal of respect,” Otterstrom says. “He had us shaking in our boots before and during — basically until the audit was over.”
Otterstrom describes his holistic knowledge of forestry, offsets, and working with local communities — and says that while he made the audit process as transparent as possible, Hayward required the projects’ leaders to develop their own approaches to potential problems.
“It just demonstrates his professionalism about auditing and holding projects to the standards that Rainforest Alliance/SmartWood is trying to support,” she says.
The auditing isn’t over, either. CCB validation lasts for five years, so Rainforest Alliance auditors will return in 2013 to monitor the project’s progress; a series of annual project audits will also take place until then. After this, an on-site audit will be done every five years for the project’s planned 40-year lifetime.
