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Nature
group fights to protect Honduran biodiversity
By SUYAPA CARIAS TEGUCIGALPA -- For nearly 50 years, The Nature Conservancy (TNC), a
private international conservation group headquartered in Arlington,
Virginia, has helped to protect more than 10 million acres of ecologically
significant habitat in the United States and more than 55 million acres in
the rest of the American continent, Asia and the Pacific. In the early 90s, the program arrived in Honduras, where it has focused
its efforts on two key areas: El Cusuco National Park in the Merendon
mountain range and the Rio Platano Biosphere in La Mosquitia, both of which
are part of a system of 107 government protected areas. Karen Luz, current TNC director for Honduras and Nicaragua, said they
first started purchasing privately-owned lands in the United States with
funds raised from private and corporate donations.
However, innovations and adjustments have been made to their
preservation and funding strategies as the organization has progressively
expanded its coverage in and outside the sponsor country. "We realized that our strategy abroad had to be different from the
one applied in the United States, where there is a good national park system
that is adequately protected by the national government, while in Latin
America, most of these systems are underfunded," said Luz.
"But we understand that it would be very hard for the Honduran
government alone to do a good enough job with the resources they have
available. Environment is just
not a high priority in a country this poor.
That is a fact, and that is why we are here."
Although the constant clearing of forest land by small farmers is
considered as the greatest threat for the conservation of Honduras'
biodiversity, Luz said that this practice is nothing more than the
consequences of the country's extreme poverty.
"It is their only way to assure their survival, and if they
remain as poor as they are in the countryside, there is no way to stop them
from doing what they need to do to support their families," she pointed
out.
PARTNERSHIPS
Rather than buying private lands or looking for guilty parties, the TNC
has found it much more effective providing technical and financial
assistance to local non-governmental organizations dedicated to protecting
specific sites in Central America. "This
is a more sustainable approach to conservation, because if we want long-term
results, we must count on local people that worry and care about the
issue."
So far, the Hector Rodrigo Pastor Fasquelle Foundation and the MOPAWI
organization, created to preserve the natural resources at El Cusuco
National Park and the Rio Platano Biosphere, respectively, are the main TNC
partners in Honduras. "In Cusuco, we have offered assistance in terms of training park
guards, and doing education and reforestation projects with the local
residents," said the former World Bank environmental specialist.
Here, TNC also helped to produce a "rapid ecological
assessment," a survey through which they discovered that some of the
most important areas in terms of biodiversity were actually outside park
boundaries. With the results in
their hands, they immediately called government environmental authorities to
make the necessary corrections. Since 1997, TNC has been involved in protecting La Mosquitia, a unique,
assortment of different ecosystems threatened by the expansion of the
agricultural frontier in several areas, even though the indigenous
population seems to have a harmonious relationship with their ecosystem.
LOW PROFILE, HIGH POTENTIAL
Although they receive financial assistance from the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID) and some U.S. private donors, the
organization's budget seems always minimal compared to the amount of work
that needs to be done. "Roughly, I estimate, we are using around $225,000 a
year in Honduras, but it's never enough," said Luz. However, she expressed satisfaction over the fact that at least one
Honduran firm has already demonstrated a real interest in supporting the TNC
cause: ELCOSA, a private power company headquartered in Puerto Cortes.
"Hopefully, other companies will... follow their example,"
she added. According to Luz, one of the
principal problems they face in increasing their budget is the lack of
knowledge the North American people have with respect to Honduras.
"Unfortunately, Honduras does not have a very high profile in
terms of being a country that people visit or know about; when they talk
about ecotourism in Latin America they usually refer to Costa Rica, Brazil
or Belize. But Honduras has all
the potential to develop that sector," she said. Precisely, Luz mentioned TNC's interest in expanding their program to the
North Coast and the Bay Islands, given the great economic possibilities they
represent as international recreational destinations.
"Tourism is very important for protected areas, because it
demonstrates to people that conservation pays off, that it can bring true
economic development." Moreover, she applauded the initiative of the governments of the region
to establish the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor.
"It is a very simple concept to grasp, so it communicates very
effectively to people an important issue, which is trying to make sure that
we don't deforest the whole Central American isthmus, and it provides
mechanisms for more coordination across borders." For more information about TNC in Honduras, call 238-7016/220-4570, or contact their headquarters in Virginia at (703) 841-5300, web site <http://www.tnc.org>.
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