Experts of the Villa Clara Research and
Environmental Service Center are working in projects on the
knowledge and use of a vegetable formation, very valuable in the
case of any possible sea penetration due to hurricanes and other
environmental problems.
For Carlos Luis Reyes, specialist of the scientific institution,
these plants are located between the sea and land; and have a
variety of ecological functions especially where they are found
the entrance of the sea is reduced and less dangerous.
The vegetation formed by the red and dark mangroves, first, its
roots in the water and second in the land and more distant; the
variety known as the patabán, serve as a barrier against the
salinity of the soil before the pulverization of particles of
the waves that hit the coast.
Reyes urges for the care of the shrubs against unconscious
people, as they also contribute to the development of fish,
lobsters, shrimps and other commercially valuable species that
look for food and refuge in the roots in its early stages.
This ecosystem is closely related with the marine
nourishment and coral reefs, among them the important
inter-relation between among them.
To learn on the situation of the mangroves in
Villa Clara, a project was started which was first done in Santa
Maria key, important tourism development area in the country´s
central province united by what is called as a pedraplén which
is a man made road connecting the town of Caibarién.
The execution of the research has among its
objectives the characterization of these shrubs in order to
learn and protect them.
Angel Quirós, head of the marine ecology group,
explained how costly it is to recover the damages produced to
the armor plate and bridges over the sea, intense hurricanes,
inflicting the search of a technology to seed these protector
plants.
The vegetable spontaneously grew in several areas of the path to
the tourism complex and specialists are looking for ways to
plant them in areas where they do not grow in order for the
roots to fasten on to a rock becoming a defense to strong winds
and waves.
Ivan Martin, specialist from the CESAM, said the first tests are
currently underway because November is the month naturally
selected for its repopulation.
A positive effect could lead to a large scale
growth on the pedraplén in the coming year.
According to the text, Mangroves on the Cuban Archipelago by a
group of authors, this vegetable formation occupies 5 percent of
the national territory, a forth of the forest coverage and
offers an environmental service with ecological, strategic and
economic repercussion.