Since declaring independence in 1981, Belize has enacted many environmental protection laws aimed at the preservation of the country's natural and cultural heritage, as well as its wealth of natural resources. These acts have established a number of different types of protected areas, with each category having its own set of regulations dictating public access, resource extraction, land use and ownership.
Roughly 26% (2.6 million acres, or 1.22 million hectares) of Belizean land and sea is preserved within a total of 95 reserves, which vary in their purpose and level of protection. [1] [2] This network of protected areas exists under a variety of management structures: [3]
However, most of these protected areas are actually for the management of resource use and extraction, rather than for the preservation of the environment. [1] [2]
Situated within the Mesoamerican hotspot, Belize has a high level of terrestrial and aquatic biodiversity. It is home to more than 150 species of mammals, 540 of birds, 150 of amphibians and reptiles, nearly 600 species of freshwater and marine fish and 3,408 species of vascular plants. [4] The country contains a vast array of ecosystems, many of which are critical habitats for threatened and endangered species.
The Mesoamerican Barrier Reef System, stretching the full length of the country's coastline, is the largest unbroken coral reef complex in the Western Hemisphere. In Belize, the reef's rich diversity of corals and other marine life has qualified it to be designated a World Heritage Site, in recognition of its consequent global importance. [4]
Much of the mainland of Belize forms part of the Mesoamerican Biological Corridor, which comprises a network of protected areas linked by biological corridors, stretching from Mexico to Panamá. [4] Belize has two large, unified, blocks of intact virgin rainforest that are likely to be the last strongholds for species that require large, undisturbed areas for their long-term survival, such as the jaguar. [5]
The number of species endemic to Belize is low, since Belize is a small country and does not have many habitats that are unique. Most of the few endemics are found in the Maya Mountains and in the lowland savannas of Belize. [6]
1924 | Forests Act. [7] |
---|---|
1927 | Forests Department is created. |
1948 | Fisheries Act. [8] |
1972 | Ancient Monuments and Antiquities Act. [9] |
1981 | National Park System Act, [10] Wildlife Protection Act. [11] |
1989 | Department of the Environment is created. |
1992 | Environmental Protection Act. [12] |
1996 | Protected Areas Conservation Trust (PACT) is created. |
Up until the 1970s, Belize, formerly British Honduras, had relatively relaxed environmental laws that went largely unenforced. However, with the formation of the Belize Audubon Society in 1969, [13] public awareness of the value of conservation grew rapidly. After gaining independence in 1981, the government passed both the National Park System Act and the Wildlife Protection Act, designating an array of protected areas of different status, and providing a codification for the protection of the immense biodiversity of life contained in the parks. [14]
Since then, governmental departments such as the Department of the Environment and the Forests Department, both under the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment, were established to research and regulate the issues and laws concerning the country's protected areas. Soon following was the Environmental Protection Act of 1992, which outlined the statutory powers of the Department of the Environment.
To ensure proper financial backing, the Protected Areas Conservation Trust (PACT) was created in 1996. This trust is responsible for all funds raising, and the allocation of funds to protected areas. [15]
Belize is party to a number of legally binding multilateral environmental agreements, many of which deal with proper management of the country's natural resources. [16] These include, most notably, the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage, Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), Convention to Combat Desertification (CCD), Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCCC). [17] Since its ratification of the Ramsar Convention in 1998, Belize has had two sites designated as wetlands of international importance: Crooked Tree Wildlife Sanctuary, in 1998, and Sarstoon-Temash National Park, in 2005. [18]
In October 2003, the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment began developing a comprehensive "National Protected Areas Policy & System Plan", which focuses on establishing a balance between environmental conservation and the need for economic development, as well as on rationalising the allocation of financial funding and human resources across the protected areas system. [5] [19]
"Reflecting the current thrust in national development, the Work Plan is founded on the need to ensure that biodiversity conservation becomes an important and integral part of national social and economic development. The adopted guiding principle being that the potential contribution of the Protected Areas System to national development and poverty alleviation is maximised, thereby putting the system on a sound and rational footing."
— Jan Meerman, Protected Area System Assessment & Analysis [5]
An evaluation compiled in 2005 identified a number of flaws in the system. These included a lack of government co-ordination with private landowners, and an overall insufficience of data for reference, planning and management. It criticised the unnecessarily large number of management units, many of which overlap considerably and incongruously, and suggested that it would be more efficient to create a single agency responsible for all areas of natural resource management. [5]
The analysis also noted the need for stricter conservation methods in forest reserves, and to encourage sustainable methods of resource extraction. It stressed the need to further protect and maintain biological corridors in their entirety, which would require the co-operation and participation of private landowners. [5] Another ecotype identified as lacking proper attention was the country's deep water ecosystems, which had received neither formal protection nor any research into whether they should be. [5]
As part of an attempt to prioritise resource allocation (both human and financial) across the system, the protected areas were ranked on their ecological, socio-cultural and economic value. [2] The following areas were ranked as the most ecologically important in the country: [2]
It is important to note that many of the top-scoring reserves, including Río Bravo, are privately owned. It was recommended that this scoring system be used to monitor the performance of protected areas in the future. [5] The full analysis of the system was published in November 2005. [19]
Overall oversight of conservation and management of protected areas in Belize is the responsibility of the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment. The country's system of private reserves are co-ordinated under the Belize Association of Private Protected Areas.
The Belize Audubon Society (BAS) was founded in 1969, [13] and oversees a total of nine protected areas, including 4 natural monuments, 2 national parks, 2 wildlife sanctuaries and 1 nature reserve. [14]
The Protected Areas Conservation Trust (PACT), founded in 1995, provides funds for the development of conservation and the promotion of environmentally sound management of Belize's natural and cultural resources, in order to foster sustainable development. It is primarily financed by the collection of a conservation levy included in the country's airport departure tax. [15]
To protect as many different species and ecosystems as possible, methods of conservation biology are used to maximise the biodiversity of each park or reserve. There are design methods to these parks on both the micro and macro scale.
When designing a particular park, care is taken to ensure that the area contains as many different ecosystems as possible, and allows enough space for populations of species to thrive. An edge effect, or the negative impacts of having developed or destroyed land all the way up to the edge of protected area, can be very detrimental to the organisms living in the preserve. To compensate for this, parks are planned to have as much of a buffer zone as possible to prevent destructive practices all the way to a parks perimeter. Well planned protected areas also prevent phenomenon such as habitat fragmentation. For instance, the Bladen Nature Reserve, an area of pristine primary rainforest, is surrounded on all sides by other less regulated protected areas, ensuring that no negative edge effects will ever reach the borders of the reserve. [20]
On the larger scale, parks are designed together to create corridors, or areas of passage for migratory or wide-ranging species. A great example of this is the planned Mesoamerican Biological Corridor, which, when completed, will allow for the migration of animals from Mexico through Central America and down into South America.
As part of the process to assess the conservation status and the risk of local extinction of native species, the Ministry of Natural Resources and the Environment maintains a "National List of Critical Species", including both terrestrial and marine species, prepared under the IUCN guidelines for regional red lists. While the list uses IUCN terminology, it does not claim to have followed the IUCN Red List methodology to the full extent. [21]
Under the system applied in the IUCN Red List database, species are classified in nine categories, set through criteria such as rate of decline, population size, area of geographic distribution, and degree of population and distribution fragmentation.
Order | Species | English name | IUCN class | Status in Belize | Justification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amphibians | Agalychnis moreletii | Morelet's treefrog | CR | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Bolitoglossa dofleini | Doflein's salamander | NT | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Bufo campbelli | Campbell's rainforest toad | NT | LC | 3 |
Amphibians | Smilisca cyanosticta | Blue-spotted Mexican treefrog | NT | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Eleutherodactylus chac | Chac's rainfrog | NT | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Eleutherodactylus laticeps | Broad-headed rainfrog | NT | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Eleutherodactylus leprus | Leprus chirping frog | VU | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Eleutherodactylus psephosypharus | Limestone rainfrog | VU | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Eleutherodactylus sabrinus | Long-legged streamfrog | EN | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Eleutherodactylus sandersoni | Sanderson's streamfrog | EN | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Bromeliohyla bromeliacia | Bromeliad treefrog | EN | DD | 3 |
Amphibians | Rana juliani | Maya Mountains frog | NT | NT | 2 |
Birds | Agamia agami | Agami heron | VU | 6,8 | |
Birds | Ajaia ajaja | Roseate spoonbill | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Amazona oratrix | Yellow-headed amazon | EN | EN | 4,8,9,10 |
Birds | Amazona xantholora | Yellow-lored amazon | VU | 10 | |
Birds | Anous stolidus | Brown noddy | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Ara macao cyanoptera | Scarlet macaw | EN | 4,8,9,11 | |
Birds | Ardea herodias | Great blue heron | VU | 4,10 | |
Birds | Asio stygius | Stygian owl | VU | 10 | |
Birds | Bubo virginianus | Great horned owl | VU | 10 | |
Birds | Cairina moschata | Muscovy duck | VU | 4 | |
Birds | Columba leucocephala | White-crowned pigeon | NT | VU | 4,7 |
Birds | Contopus cooperi | Olive-sided flycatcher | NT | DD | |
Birds | Crax rubra | Great curassow | VU | VU | 4,9 |
Birds | Dendrocygna autumnalis | Black-bellied whistling duck | VU | 4,10 | |
Birds | Dendrocygna bicolor | Fulvous whistling duck | VU | 4,10 | |
Birds | Dendroica cerulea | Cerulean warbler | VU | VU | |
Birds | Egretta rufescens | Reddish egret | NT | VU | 6,10 |
Birds | Egretta thula | Snowy egret | VU | 6,10 | |
Birds | Egretta tricolor | Tricoloured heron | VU | 6,10 | |
Birds | Electron carinatum | Keel-billed motmot | VU | VU | 3,8,9 |
Birds | Eudocimus albus | White ibis | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Falco deiroleucus | Orange-breasted falcon | VU | 8,9 | |
Birds | Fregata magnificens | Magnificent frigatebird | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Harpia harpyja | Harpy eagle | NT | CR | 4,7,9,10 |
Birds | Harpyhaliaetus solitarius | Solitary eagle | NT | CR | 4,7,10 |
Birds | Jabiru mycteria | Jabiru | VU | 4,7,9,10, 11 | |
Birds | Laterallus jamaicensis | Black rail | NT | DD | |
Birds | Melanoptila glabrirostris | Black catbird | NT | NT | 8,9 |
Birds | Meleagris ocellata | Ocellated turkey | NT | VU | 3,4,9 |
Birds | Morphnus guianensis | Crested eagle | NT | CR | 4,7,10 |
Birds | Mycteria americana | Wood stork | VU | 4,6,10 | |
Birds | Nyctanassa violacea | Yellow-crowned night-heron | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Nycticorax nycticorax | Black-crowned night-heron | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Pelecanus occidentalis | Brown pelican | VU | 6,10 | |
Birds | Penelope purpurascens | Crested guan | VU | 4 | |
Birds | Nannopterum auritum | Double-crested cormorant | VU | 4,6,10 | |
Birds | Nannopterum brasilianum | Neotropic cormorant | VU | 4,6,10 | |
Birds | Onychoprion anaethetus | Bridled tern | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Onychoprion fuscatus | Sooty tern | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Pionopsitta haematotis | Brown-hooded parrot | DD | ||
Birds | Sarcoramphus papa | King vulture | VU | 7,8,9 | |
Birds | Sterna dougallii | Roseate tern | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Sternula antillarum | Least tern | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Sula leucogaster | Brown booby | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Sula sula | Red-footed booby | VU | 6 | |
Birds | Thalasseus acuflavidus | Cabot's tern | VU | 6 | |
Corals | Anthozoa (all species) | Gorgonians, Telestaceans, Alcyonaceans, Antipatharians, Scleractinians | VU | VU | 9 |
Corals | Hydrozoa (all species) | Fire corals, lace corals | VU | VU | 9 |
Fishes | Balistes vetula | Queen triggerfish | VU | VU | 4,5 |
Fishes | Dermatolepis inermis | Marbled grouper | VU | CD | 1,4,5,6 |
Fishes | Epinephelus itajara | Goliath grouper | CR | CD | 1,4,5,6,9 |
Fishes | Epinephelus morio | Red grouper | NT | CD | 1,4,5,6 |
Fishes | Epinephelus nigritus | Warsaw grouper | CR | CD | 1,4,5,6 |
Fishes | Epinephelus niveatus | Snowy grouper | VU | CD | 1,4,5,6 |
Fishes | Epinephelus striatus | Nassau grouper | EN | CD | 1,4,5,6,9 |
Fishes | Hippocampus erectus | Lined seahorse | VU | DD | |
Fishes | Hippocampus reidi | Longsnout seahorse | DD | DD | |
Fishes | Lachnolaimus maximus | Hogfish | VU | VU | 4,5 |
Fishes | Lutjanus analis | Mutton snapper | VU | VU | 4,5,6 |
Fishes | Lutjanus cyanopterus | Cubera snapper | VU | VU | 4,5,6 |
Fishes | Mycteroperca venenosa | Yellowfin grouper | NT | CD | 1,4,5,6 |
Fishes | Pagrus pagrus | Red porgy | EN | DD | 4,5 |
Fishes | Sanopus astrifer | Whitespotted toadfish | VU | DD | |
Fishes | Sanopus greenfieldorum | Whitelined toadfish | VU | DD | |
Fishes | Sanopus reticulatus | Reticulated toadfish | VU | DD | |
Fishes | Sanopus splendidus | Splendid toadfish | VU | DD | |
Fishes | Scarus guacamaia | Rainbow parrotfish | VU | VU | 4,5 |
Sharks | Carcharhinus leucas | Bull shark | NT | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Carcharhinus limbatus | Blacktip shark | NT | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Carcharhinus longimanus | Oceanic whitetip shark | VU | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Carcharhinus plumbeus | Sandbar shark | NT | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Galeocerdo cuvier | Tiger shark | NT | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Isurus oxyrinchus | Shortfin mako | VU | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Mustelus canis | Dusky smoothhound | NT | DD | |
Sharks | Negaprion brevirostris | Lemon shark | NT | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Prionace glauca | Blue shark | NT | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Pristis pectinata | Smalltooth sawfish | CR | CR | 4,5 |
Sharks | Pristis perotteti | Largetooth sawfish | CR | CR | 4,5 |
Sharks | Rhincodon typus | Whale shark | VU | VU | 7,8,9 |
Sharks | Sphyrna lewini | Scalloped hammerhead | EN | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Sphyrna mokarran | Great hammerhead | EN | DD | 4,5,9,10 |
Sharks | Sphyrna zygaena | Smooth mammerhead | NT | NT | 4,5,9,10 |
Mammals | Alouatta pigra | Guatemalan black howler | EN | VU | 3,9 |
Mammals | Ateles geoffroyi | Central American spider monkey | EN | VU | 9 |
Mammals | Balaenoptera physalus | Fin whale | EN | DD | 9 |
Mammals | Balantiopteryx io | Thomas's sac-winged bat | VU | VU | 8 |
Mammals | Bauerus dubiaquercus | Van Gelder's bat | NT | VU | 8 |
Mammals | Cabassous centralis | Northern naked-tailed armadillo | DD | DD | 8 |
Mammals | Centronycteris centralis | Shaggy bat | VU | 8 | |
Mammals | Dicotyles pecari | White-lipped peccary | NT | VU | 4,7,10 |
Mammals | Globicephala macrorhynchus | Short-finned pilot whale | DD | DD | 9 |
Mammals | Herpailurus yaguarondi | Yaguarundi | LC | 10 | |
Mammals | Leopardus pardalis | Ocelot | VU | 4,9,10 | |
Mammals | Leopardus wiedii | Margay | NT | VU | 9,10 |
Mammals | Lontra longicaudis | Neotropical river otter | DD | VU | 10 |
Mammals | Mazama pandora | Yucatán brown brocket deer | VU | DD | 3,4 |
Mammals | Molossops greenhalli | Greenhall's mastiff bat | VU | 8 | |
Mammals | Mormoops megalphylla | Ghost-faced bat | NT | 8 | |
Mammals | Myotis elegans | Elegant myotis | VU | 8 | |
Mammals | Panthera onca | Jaguar | NT | NT | 4,7,9,10 |
Mammals | Physeter macrocephalus | Sperm whale | VU | DD | 9 |
Mammals | Pteronotus gymnonotus | Greater naked-back bat | NT | 8 | |
Mammals | Puma concolor | Puma | NT | 4,7,9,10 | |
Mammals | Stenella frontalis | Atlantic spotted dolphin | DD | VU | 9 |
Mammals | Stenella Iongirostris | Spinner dolphin | DD | DD | 9 |
Mammals | Steno bredanensis | Rough-toothed dolphin | DD | 9 | |
Mammals | Tapirus bairdii | Central American tapir | EN | VU | 4,9,10 |
Mammals | Thyroptera tricolor | Spix's disk-winged bat | VU | 8 | |
Mammals | Trichechus manatus | West Indian manatee | EN | VU | 4,9 |
Mammals | Turiopsis truncatus | Common bottlenose dolphin | VU | 9 | |
Plants | Ceratozamia robusta | VU | VU | 3 | |
Plants | Pithecellobium johansenii | EN | DD | ||
Plants | Quiina schippii | EN | DD | ||
Plants | Schippia concolor | Mountain pimento | VU | LC | 2 |
Plants | Swietenia macrophylla | Large-leaved mahogany | VU | VU | 5,9 |
Plants | Zamia prasina | CR | DD | 2,8 | |
Plants | Zamia sp. Nov. | Un-described Zamia | VU | 2,8 | |
Plants | Zamia variegata | Variegated zamia | EN | VU | 3,9 |
Reptiles | Caretta caretta | Loggerhead | EN | EN | 4,5,6,9 |
Reptiles | Chelonia mydas | Green turtle | EN | EN | 4,5,6,9 |
Reptiles | Crocodylus acutus | American crocodile | VU | NT | 4,9,10 |
Reptiles | Crocodylus moreletii | Morelet's crocodile | CD | CD | 3,4,5,9,10 |
Reptiles | Dermatemys mawii | Central American river turtle | CR | EN | 3,4,5,9 |
Reptiles | Dermochelys coriacea | Leatherback | CR | CR | 4,9 |
Reptiles | Eretmochelys imbricata | Hawksbill turtle | CR | CR | 4,5,6,9 |
Reptiles | Phyllodactylus insularis | Belize leaf-toed gecko | NT | 2 | |
Reptiles | Staurotypus triporcatus | Mexican musk turtle | NT | NT | 4 |
Reptiles | Trachemys scripta | Common slider | NT | LC | 4 |
Because amphibians are especially sensitive to environmental contamination, they are considered excellent indicators of the health of an ecosystem. [23] Neotropic forests host the world's greatest diversity of anuran species. In Belize, amphibian populations remain largely undetermined due to their isolation and probable scarcity, [21] [24] and subsequently only fragmentary information is available on their status and distribution. [25]
From the mid-19th century, various scientific explorers such as Godman, Morelet and Salvin conducted herpetological research from samples collected in Belize and the surrounding Petén Basin. [25] It was not until 1941, however, that herpetologist Karl P. Schmidt made the first attempt to summarise the various species of amphibians in Belize. His studies were summarised in a series of papers by Neill and Allen during the late 1950s and 1960s. Similar reports were later published by R. W. Henderson during the 1970s, C. J. McCoy between 1966 and 1990, [25] and Campbell and Vannini (1989), [26] Meerman (1993), [27] Strafford (1994), [28] and Meyer and Farneti-Foster (1996). [24] These contributed to an increased understanding and an updated checklist of the amphibian species occurring in the country. [25]
A total of 550 avian species have been recorded in Belize, including four globally threatened species. Although it has no politically endemic birds, the country is important for the protection of some 36 biome-restricted species. [16] Situated at the northern end of the Mesoamerican mainland, Belize is an important flyway for migratory birds. This route, while still relatively healthy, is under constant threat from anthropogenic activities, including urban and coastal development and increasingly fragmented habitats. [16] Other major concerns surrounding avian conservation in Belize are the effects of hunting and poaching on population trends. Recent marked declines in certain species has spurred a growing interest in engaging locals at all levels to monitor avian populations. [16]
The early stages of bird conservation in Belize are attributed to the Belize Audubon Society, whose first conservation project was the jabiru, added to Belize's list of protected species in 1973. [16] In 1977, the government established seven bird sanctuaries for the protection of waterfowl nesting and roosting colonies. These currently amount to approximately 13 acres (5.3 ha) of mangrove forests along the leeward shorelines of small cayes. [30] In 1984, however, a field study noted that, due to the absence of wardens, all but one of these cayes had been destroyed by hunters and fishermen. [31]
In 2004, BirdLife International, in partnership with the Belize Audubon Society, delineated six Important Bird Areas in the country, [16] each representing an average of 347 species. [32] While these areas are not formally protected areas, their identification serves to create awareness and guide future conservation initiatives aimed at avian biodiversity. The establishment of monitoring activities has been identified as a key priority in ascertaining the health of these areas. [16]
Poaching is a serious concern for local bird conservationists. Because of the large range of many avian species, surveillance of this activity is almost impossible. The scarlet macaw, threatened with extinction in Belize, has one of its last havens in the Chiquibul forests. Poaching remains almost unchecked in this remote region. [29] Stretching along the border with Guatemala, the birds are smuggled and then sold for high prices on international markets. A macaw chick can be sold for approximately 2,400 quetzales (about BZ$700, or US$310), while adults will fetch up to 4000 quetzales (about BZ$1000, or US$520). [29]
From January to July ever year, the Upper Macal becomes an active breeding ground for macaws. [29] According to the Friends for Conservation and Development, charged with maintaining surveillance in the Chiquibul area, the breeding ground is a prime target for smugglers. In 2009, ten macaws, valued at up to BZ$10,000, were reportedly taken from the Upper Macal by a single poaching party, and then sold in Las Flores, Guatemala. [29] In June 2010, the director of the organisation announced that it had upgraded its monitoring program in this area, but were limited by manpower and resources. [29]
In Guatemala, the macaw population has been diminished primarily due to the robbing of chicks and consequently, we understood that the same fate was prone to occur in Belize. ... We have upgraded our monitoring program, yet Guatemalans are elusive. ... Loss of chicks at the hands of Guatemalan poachers engaged in the pet trade and the removal of the nesting habitat can wipe out the remaining wild populations of macaws in Belize in a few years. [29]
April, May and June are the months when illegal activities spike. Other species, such as the endangered curassow have also been illegally hunted. [29]
The status of eagles in Belize was first summarised in a study by Jack C. Eitniear in 1986. [33] Since then, many of the species recorded by Eitniear have declined as a result of shooting, poaching, and habitat and nest destruction.
A number of initiatives now exist for the conservation of eagle species in Belize. Among them is the Belize Harpy Eagle Restoration Program, started in 2003 by Sharon Matola, the director of the Belize Zoo, for the re-establishment of the harpy eagle within Belize. Captive-bred harpy eagles were released in the Rio Bravo forest, chosen for its ecological quality and preserved connection to similarly protected forests in Guatemala and Mexico. As of November 2009, 14 individuals had been released and were being tracked by The Peregrine Fund. At the beginning of 2011, scientists confirmed the presence of harpy eagle nest in the Bladen Nature Reserve, which represented the first confirmed breeding pair in Belize in over 60 years. [34] It was seen as a major comeback for the species and a success for conservation efforts. [35]
Other avian-based conservation initiatives include Belize Bird Rescue, an organisation founded in April 2004 for the rehabilitation of injured and orphaned birds, with a particular focus on parrots. [36]
Jaguars require a large, undisturbed territory with a high density of prey. For this reason, the species is coming increasingly under pressure from the expanding human impact on its environment. In 2005, Jan Meerman, the leading biologist in the government's conservation review committee, wrote:
Increasingly it becomes obvious that the long-term survival of jaguars in close proximity to human habitation and activities is unlikely. More and more the species will be driven back to the last 'wild areas' of the country. [39]
Meerman's terminology was derived from a 2004 study by the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), which identified two remaining "wild areas" in Belize: [40]
This amounts to total area of approximately 1,760,000 acres (710,000 ha). Because of the minimal human presence in these areas, it is probable that they will become the last strongholds of the jaguar within Belize. [39] A state-sponsored analysis in 2005 estimated the population of adult jaguars within these two blocks to be around 400 and 200 respectively. [39] A 2002 study by the National Autonomous University of Mexico concluded that for the long-term survival of jaguar populations, the minimum population should not fall below 650 adult individuals. [41] Based on this, the last two potential strongholds for jaguars in Belize are—independently—insufficient to allow for conservation of the species in the long term. The survival of the population will therefore strongly depend on the preservation of narrow corridors allowing inter-migrations of jaguar populations from other areas, and in the northern block, the continued connection to adjacent populations across the border. [39] The maintenance of a high-density prey base will also be an important factor. [39]
Surveys conducted in 2004 by the WCS calculated the average density of jaguars in three of the country's protected areas: [39]
The first of these, Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, was declared in February 1986 the world's first jaguar preserve. [42] Hunting has been prohibited in the area since 1984. Prior to its recent expansion, the reserve contained the highest density of jaguars ever recorded, [43] and is regarded as one of the most important areas for the conservation of the species. [38]
The Antillean manatee, a subspecies of Trichechus manatus , is sparsely distributed throughout the Caribbean. They are threatened by loss of habitat, poaching, entanglement with fishing gear, and increased boating activity. In Belize, manatee distribution principally coincides with 4 protected areas, at least 3 of which were declared specifically for the conservation of this species:
Collectively, these areas cover approximately 55% of the significant manatee distribution within Belize. [44]
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2011) |
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (April 2011) |
Belize's maritime territory is home to 13 species of grouper. Surveys conducted by the Green Reef Environmental Institute in 2001 and 2002 concluded that local populations of grouper were in rapid decline, [46] and all species of grouper native to Belize are now considered "conservation dependent". [21]
Highly prized by fishermen, groupers once constituted one of the most commercially valuable exports of Belize. [46] [47] [48] Annual spawning aggregations at specific times and locations have made the species highly vulnerable to over-fishing. [47] Fertile females contain sacks of roe that sell for up to four times more per pound than the actual fish itself, [49] meaning that in many cases individuals will be removed before they have had the chance to reproduce. [50] Belize is one of the few Caribbean countries that still allow for these species to be fished. [48]
Representative of the trend in grouper populations throughout the Caribbean is the endemic and now-endangered Nassau grouper (Epinephelus striatus), [46] once one of the most commonly caught fishes in Belize. [47] About one-third of the spawning aggregations sites for this species have disappeared due to over-fishing. [47] Annual spawning occurs in specific locations on the outer reef shelf during the days around the full moon of December and January. Aggregations can range anywhere from a dozen to up to several thousand adult individuals and are usually in the same site each year, making an easy target for fishermen. [48] [50] [51] This intensive harvesting of reproductively active individuals, often before they have had the chance to spawn, [50] has resulted in a marked decline in both abundance and size. [47] [48] [51] One site for example, Caye Glory, historically provided a catch of up to 1,200–1,800 Nassau groupers per boat per spawning season during the 1960s. In 2001, at the same site, fishers caught just 9 individuals out of an aggregation of 21 groupers. [47] In addition, groupers typically take a long time to reach maturity. [50] Because of this, over the past few years females have continued to decrease in average size, indicating that more mature females are being removed, leaving behind young females with fewer eggs. [48]
A study in September 2002 determined that many of the spawning sites of the Nassau grouper were in fact "multi-species" aggregations with an average of between 6 and 7 species recorded at 16 sites during the January 2002 spawning season. [52]
In November 2002, under pressure from environmental organisations, the government agreed to protect 11 of these sites from commercial fishing during the spawning season. [53] [54] [55] The most significant of these are at Glover's Reef and Sandbore Caye, which have been identified as the only two viable sites remaining for the species, of nine historically known locations. [45] [46] At Glover's Reef, scientists documented an 80% decrease in grouper populations since the 1970s. [47] [51] In 2002, both the sites were declared special marine reserves, permanently closed to fishing. [45] These and five other sites are regularly monitored by a taskforce of the Wildlife Conservation Society. [54] Its report of the 2009 spawning season at Glover's Reef concluded that numbers were still in decline, and that the majority of the individuals recorded were immature and less than the legal minimum landing size. [55]
In addition to the easily discernible ecological effects, there are serious economic impacts on local communities when fish stock are depleted. A study in January 2001 estimated that the value of the largest spawning aggregation sites, if fished, would be realised and exhausted within a decade, since the species would disappear with low chances of recovery. [47] Attempts in the past to close the sites to fishing failed because some denied that the species was in decline, arguing that it simply relocates its aggregations from year to year. [46] Following the Green Reef surveys, however, the closure and monitoring of remaining known aggregation sites was seen as essential to ensure their long-term viability, and subsequently the survival of both the species and the fishing industry that depends on it. [47]
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Belize is widely regarded by experts as a highly forested country, often cited as having the highest percentage of forest cover in Central America. [56] A study completed in 1996 determined, however, that the country's forest cover has been in decline. The clearing of land for agricultural and urban development has had a quantifiable impact on vegetation cover, as have forest fires. [56] However, in the context of the wider region, Belize's deforestation rates are relatively low, due to a lower population density, a more urbanised population, [56] and a history of protecting its forests. [57] [58]
Forest cover facts: [56]
- Total forest area: 3,374,612 acres (13,657 km2)
- % of land area: 62.7%
- Primary forest cover: 2,838,267 acres (11,486 km2)
- % of land area: 20.9%
- % total forest area: 34.0%
Studies conducted by various researchers estimate that between 1989 and 1994, forest covered between 65 and 67% of the country's total area; although one earlier study put the figure at over 74%. Prior to this, the extent of Belize's forests remains largely unknown. In 1959, a map was published estimating Belize's natural vegetation prior to colonial settlement of the territory, which showed forest cover at almost 89%. In 2004, it was approximated at around 62%, meaning that in the ten-year period between 1994 and 2004, the country lost a total of 561,473 hectares of forest cover. [56]
A study conducted in 2010 by SERVIR (Sistema Regional de Visualización y Monitoreo) and CATHALAC (Centro del Agua del Trópico Húmedo para América Latina y El Caribe), retrospectively estimated the country's total forest cover datasets for 1980, 1989, 1994, 2000, 2004 and 2010. [56] It drew on data from previous studies, but used remote sensing, and was recognised by the intergovernmental Group on Earth Observations (GEO), of which Belize is a member. [59] It reported that in mid-November 1980, Belize had around 4,200,000 acres (17,000 km2) (75.9%) of forest cover, which declined to 3,400,000 acres (14,000 km2) (62.7%) by late February 2010. This concluded that over the thirty-year period, 725,173 acres (2,934.67 km2) (17.4%) of the country's total forest area in 1980 had been lost by 2010, representing an average annual deforestation rate of 24,835 acres (100.50 km2) (0.6%) per year. It also concluded that the period with the highest average annual deforestation rate was 2000-2004, at 71,960 acres (291.2 km2) per year. This slowed to 15,101 acres (61.11 km2) per year in the subsequent period 2004-2010, which recorded the second lowest rate after 1980-1989. [56]
The same study found that, throughout the period researched, the Cayo district remained the most forested region both relatively and in plain quantity. It also, however, recorded a greater absolute loss than any other district, while Corozal had the highest relative loss, with almost a third of the forest which had existed there in 1980 being razed by 2010 due to agricultural expansion. [56]
Perhaps the most compelling finding of the study was that, over the thirty-year period studied, only 15% of deforestation occurred in protected areas, while 85% occurred outside. [56]
This estimation of Belize's current stock of forest carbon at over 300 million tons allows the country to fulfil one of the criteria for the REDD initiative (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation). [58] [60] Belize is a signatory to a number of multilateral environmental agreements requiring the regular monitoring of national forest cover and overall land use. [56]
In 1993, the Forestry Department estimated that Belize had 2,481,897 acres (1,004,388 ha) of land with potential for timber extraction. Of this only 409,939 acres (165,896 ha) or 14% was within forest reserves. The most recent study, in 2005, approximated the exploitable forest cover as 2,616,300 acres (1,058,800 ha), of which 437,400 acres (177,000 ha) or 17% was in forest reserves. In both studies, slopped areas with a gradient of over 10% were excluded. [61]
The later study also noted that a large percentage of extractable timber reserves were located on private land. Therefore, the presence of a sustainable logging industry in Belize largely depends on landowners keeping forests intact and managing the land for sustainable timber extraction. However, the study noted that under the current Land Tax, there is an enormous disincentive for this. [61]
Floral species endemic to Belize are few, given the country's small size. [6] One endemic species of cycad known as Zamia prasina is considered endemic to remote areas of the Maya Mountains, in southwest Belize. IUCN assessment reported that populations were trending towards decline, and that less than 100 plants were known, which prompted the Belizean government to take measures for its conservation. [62] Other endemic species include Schippia concolor and Dorstenia belizensis . [6]
A nature reserve is a protected area of importance for flora, fauna, funga, or features of geological or other special interest, which is reserved and managed for purposes of conservation and to provide special opportunities for study or research. They may be designated by government institutions in some countries, or by private landowners, such as charities and research institutions. Nature reserves fall into different IUCN categories depending on the level of protection afforded by local laws. Normally it is more strictly protected than a nature park. Various jurisdictions may use other terminology, such as ecological protection area or private protected area in legislation and in official titles of the reserves.
Placencia is a small village located in the Stann Creek District of Belize.
The flora of Belize is highly diverse by regional standards, given the country's small geographical extent. Situated on the Caribbean coast of northern Central America the flora and vegetation have been intimately intertwined with Belize's history. The nation itself grew out of British timber extraction activities from the 17th century onwards, at first for logwood and later for mahogany, fondly called "red gold" because of its high cost and was much sought after by European aristocracy. Central America generally is thought to have gained much of it characteristic flora during the "Great American interchange" during which time South American elements migrated north after the geological closure of the isthmus of Panama. Few Amazonian elements penetrate as far north as Belize and in species composition the forests of Belize are most similar to the forests of the Petén (Guatemala) and the Yucatán (Mexico).
World Land Trust is a UK registered charity. Acting on its tagline of "Saving Land, Saving Species", the trust raises money to buy and then protect environmentally-threatened land, and therefore species, in Africa, Asia, and Central and South America. Since 1989, 1.1 million ha have been directly saved across all WLT programmes. A further 1.3 million ha have been co-funded by WLT. At the time of writing, 2,361,353 ha have been protected by WLT partners in all and 11,452,226 ha have been connected by WLT-funded corridors and extensions.
The Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary is a nature reserve in the Stann Creek District of south-central Belize. It was established to protect the forests, fauna and watersheds of an approximately 400 square kilometres (150 sq mi) area of the eastern slopes of the Maya Mountains.
Victoria Peak within the Maya Mountains is the second highest mountain in Belize, at a height of 1,120 metres (3,675 ft). The highest peak in the country, Doyle's Delight, at a height of 1,124 metres (3,688 ft), is located 57 kilometres (35 mi) southwest of Victoria Peak. Victoria Peak is situated in the Stann Creek District of Belize, in the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, and is home to many flora and fauna common to Belize. It was pronounced a natural monument in 1998, comprising about 4,847 acres bordered by the Sittee River Wildlife Reserve, Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, and Chiquibul National Park.
Monkey River is a coastal watercourse in southern Belize that rises in the Maya Mountains and discharges to the Caribbean Sea near Monkey River Town. One of Belize's major rivers, Monkey River has northern headwaters which originate in the Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, where the Swasey Branch drains the East Basin of that wildlife sanctuary. Further south, the Bladen Branch watercourse drains the eastern slopes of the Maya Mountains including the ancient Mayan settlement areas of Lubaantun and Nim Li Punit. These two watercourses join to form the Monkey River approximately 16 kilometres upstream from the mouth of the Monkey River. The Monkey River is readily navigated throughout the year using small boats, but navigation above the major confluence becomes more difficult due to lack of depth when the dry season starts about February. Habitats in this watershed provide cover for such diverse species as the ocelot, jaguar, Guatemalan black howler, bare-throated tiger heron, Morelet's crocodile, fer-de-lance and manatee.
Tourism in Belize is a major industry in the country. The sector has grown in the 2020s, with international arrivals reportedly increasing 30% in 2024, the highest rate in the Caribbean. Former Prime Minister Dean Barrow stated his intention to use tourism to combat poverty throughout the country.
Protected areas of Sri Lanka are administrated by Department of Forest Conservation and Department of Wildlife Conservation of Sri Lanka.There are 501 protected areas in Sri Lanka. The protected areas that fall under supervision of the Department of Forest Conservation include forests defined in National Heritage Wilderness Area Act in 1988, forest reservations, and forests managed for sustainability. Sinharaja Forest Reserve is an example for a National Heritage forest. There are 32 forests categorized as conservation forests including Knuckles Mountain Range. Strict nature reserves, national parks, nature reserves, forest corridors, and sanctuaries recognized under the Flora and Fauna Protection Ordinance are managed by Department of Wildlife Conservation. Total of all protected areas is 1,767,000 ha. Protected areas in Sri Lanka account for 26.5 percent of the total area. This is a higher percentage of protected areas than in all of Asia and much of the World.
Peru has some of the greatest biodiversity in the world. It belongs to the select group of mega diverse countries because of the presence of the Andes, Amazon rainforest, and the Pacific Ocean. It has the fourth-most tropical forests of any country and the ninth-most forest area. The country is ranked among the five countries with the greatest biodiversity in the world according to various studies.
Bacalar Chico National Park and Marine Reserve (BCNPMR) is a protected area and UNESCO World Heritage Site on the northern part of Ambergris Caye in Belize.
Ecology Project International is a non-profit organization based in Missoula, Montana, dedicated to developing place-based, ecological education partnerships between local experts and youth to address conservation issues. Ecology Project International (EPI) works with students and educators at seven program sites around the world: Belize, Costa Rica, mainland Ecuador, Galápagos Islands, Hawaii, Mexico, and Yellowstone.
Bladen Nature Reserve in Belize is a landscape of caves, sinkholes, streams and rivers, old growth rainforest and an abundance of highly diverse flora and fauna which includes a great deal of rare and endemic species.
Glover's Reef is a partially submerged atoll located off the southern coast of Belize, approximately 45 km (28 mi) from the mainland. It forms part of the outermost boundary of the Belize Barrier Reef, and is one of its three atolls, besides Turneffe Atoll and Lighthouse Reef.
Half Moon Caye is an island and natural monument of Belize located at the southeast corner of Lighthouse Reef Atoll. This natural monument was the first nature reserve to have been established in Belize under the National Park Systems Act in 1981 and first marine protected area in Central America. This is also Belize's oldest site of wildlife protection since it was first designated as a bird sanctuary in 1924 to protect the habitat of the red-footed booby birds.
Gladden Spit and Silk Cayes Marine Reserve (GSSCMR) is a protected marine reserve in the central part of Belize's Barrier Reef. It covers approximately 25,980 acres (10,510 ha) lying 36 kilometres (22 mi) off the coast of Placencia. Established in 2003, The reserve comes under the authority of the government's Fisheries Department, but is managed by the Southern Environmental Association, a community-based organisation.
Lighthouse Reef is an atoll in the Caribbean Sea, the easternmost part of the Belize Barrier Reef and one of its three atolls, the other two being Turneffe Atoll and Glover's Reef. Lighthouse Reef is located about 80 kilometres (50 mi) southeast of Belize City. The atoll is of oblong shape, approximately 35 kilometres (22 mi) long from north to south, and about 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) wide. It forms a shallow sandy lagoon with an area of 120 square kilometres (46 sq mi) and a depth between 2 and 6 metres deep.
The Golden Stream Corridor Preserve is a nature preserve in Belize with a unique diversity of habitat types and ecosystems. The preserve is owned and managed by Ya'axche' Conservation Trust. The preserve protects the Golden Stream watershed.
The Maya Golden Landscape is an area in Belize of approximately 275,000 hectares consisting of protected areas, agriculture, private lands and many small communities that is under the management of the Ya'axché Conservation Trust in Toledo District. The Landscape area encompasses the Bladen Nature Reserve, Colombia River Forest Reserve, Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary, Deep River Forest River Reserve, Port Honduras Marine Reserve, along with commercial and subsistence farmland. Most of the area is dominated with various types of broadleaf forests which varies with topography, soil type and the disturbance history. One disturbance that affect the area, as well, is fires caused by agricultural farming due to the slash and burn practice.
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