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Ramsar

Vembanad Fish Count - Report of the Participatory Fish Resources Surveys of Vembanad Lake (Kerala) done in 2008 and 2009 by ATREE

Vembanad LakeThe Vembanad estuarine system, the largest of its kind on the west coast of India is known to be abundantly enriched with diverse fishery resources, providing feeding, spawning and rearing areas for a very large proportion of commercial (fin) fish and shellfish. However, ecosystem health of the Vembanad wetlands is alarmingly declining due to a variety of reasons - obstruction of river courses, sand mining & habitat destruction, loss of riparian canopy cover, encroachment, pollution and unethical fishing practices. Reduced summer flow due to drying up of rivers and pollution hazards from agro-chemicals and sewage also lead to mass mortality of fishes. Depletion of fishery resources has changed this ‘inland fish basket’ to an ‘inland wastebasket’, driving the fisherfolk, the primary stakeholders of the lake into a livelihood crisis.Read More

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Vembanad Lake Fish Count Report - ATREE (2008)453.26 KB
Vembanad Lake Fish Count Report - ATREE (2009)616.57 KB

Location

Alappuzha, KL, India
Latitude: 9.490000, Longitude: 76.330000

Ramsar Convention: The Convention on Wetlands, 1971

Read about the Convention on Wetlands, signed in Ramsar, Iran, in 1971.Read More

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