SIGNIFICANCE OF LIVING COASTAL RESOURCES
Living coastal resources are found within major coastal ecosystems consisting of coral reefs, mangroves, seagrass beds, benthic systems, and estuaries or lagoons. Coastal ecosystems, particularly estuaries and inshore marine waters have the highest rate of primary production as compared to terrestrial and oceanic regions. Daily gross production rate in terms of grams of dry organic matter per square metre area for the narrow coastal band ranges from 10 to 25, with all other regions having substantially lower values (2). The coastal band conveniently thought of as the transition area between land and sea, holdsthis great diversity of ecosystems, each characterized by its own unique ecological feature. Conditions here may be harsh with wide fluctuations in temperature and salinity, but because of the abundance of food supply, these areas can and do support a high diversity of species which have become efficiently adapted to the widely fluctuating environmental conditions. These ecosystems remain productive because of tidal action which circulates food and nutrients rapidly and efficiently and at the same time washes away waste materials. They also serve as efficient nutrient traps of the continuous nutrient input washed down from land. Within these ecosystems, the autotrophic and heterotrophic layers are maintained in close contact so that energy transfer is more direct and better utilized. Primary productionoccurs all year round especially in the tropics, and the diversity of plant life (phytoplankton, benthic microflora, macroalgae and seagrasses) ensures a high primary production rate. A review of primary productivity rates of various ecosystems showed that the values for coastal ecosystems were far greater than for those of land, freshwater or the open ocean.
The average gross primary productivity (gm C/m2/year) was 2300 to 5074 for
References: 1. Snedaker, S.C. and Getter, CD. Coastal Resources Management Guidelines. Renewable Resources Information Series, Coastal Management Publication No. 2, National Park Service, U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Washington D.C., 1985. 2. Odum, E.P. Fundamentals of Ecology. Saunders (Ed.), 2nd Edition, Philadelphia, 1959. 3. Birkeland, C. and Grosenbaugh, D. Ecological Interactions Between Tropical Coastal Ecosystems. UNEP Regional Seas Reports and Studies No. 73, United Nations Environment Programme, 1985. 4. International Institute for Environment and Development & World Resources Institute. World Resources 1987: An Assessment of the Resources Base that Supports Global Economy, Basic Books, New York, 1987. 5. IUCN/UNEP. Management and Conservation of Renewable Marine Resources in the Indian Ocean Region: Overview. UNEP Regional Seas Reports and Studies No. 60, United Nations Environment Programme, 1985. 7. Chan, H.T. Malaysia, Country Report. In: Umali et al (Eds.), Mangroves of Asia and the Pacific: Status and Management. Tech. Rept. of UNDP/UNESCO Research and Training Pilot Programme on Mangrove Ecosystems in Asia and the Pacific (RAS/79/002), 1986. 11. Saenger, P., Hegerl, E.J. and Davie, J.D.S. Global Status of Mangrove Ecosystems. Commission on Ecology Papers No. 3, IUCN, Switzerland, 1983. 12. MacNae, W. Mangrove Forests and Fisheries. FAO Indian Ocean Fisheries Programme IOFC/DEV/74/34, 1974. 13. Unar, M. and Naamin N. A Review of the Indonesian Shrimp Fisheries and their Management. In: Gulland and Rothchild (Eds.), Penaeid Shrimps - Their Biology and Management, Fishing News Books, Guildford, 1984. 14. Salm, R.V. and Halim, I.M. Marine Conservation Data Atlas: Indonesia. IUCN/WWF Project 3108, 1984. 15. White, A.T. Coral Reefs - Valuable Resources of Southeast Asia. ICLARM Education Series 1, International Centre for Living Aquatic Resources Management, Manila, 1987. 17. Basson, P.W., Burchard, J.E., Hardy, J.T. and Price, A.R.G. Biotopes of the Western Arabian Gulf: Marine Life and Environments of Saudi Arabia, Aramco, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, 1977. 18. Ahmad, Y.J. and Sammy, G.K. Guidelines to Environmental Impact Assessment in Developing Countries, Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1985. 19. Dartnall A.J. and Jones, M. A Manual of Survey Methods - Living Resources in Coastal Areas, Australian Institute of Marine Science, 1986. 20. Kenchington, R.A. and Hudson, B.E.T. Coral Reef Management Handbook. UNESCO Regional Office for Science and Technology for Southeast Asia, 1984. 21 Ellis, D.V. Quality Control of Biological Surveys. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 1988, 19 (10), 506-512. 22. Ellis, D.V. and Cross, S.F. A Protocol for Inter-laboratory Calibrations of Biological Species Identification (Ring Tests). Water Res., 1981, 15, 1107-1108. 23. Wu, R.S.S. Effects of Taxonomie Uncertainty in Species Diversity Indices. Mar. Env.Res., 1982,6, 215-225.