Explore the winners of our 2024 Children’s Mangrove Art Contest!

Skip to main content
Back to case studies

Fostering a sustainable network in Honduras

Location: Honduras

Timeline: February 2015

Goal: To work collaboratively with local officials to persuade local villagers and village leaders to reduce the cutting of mangrove trees and forests.

 

 

Partners

Consultores en Desarrollo y Ambiente (CODA)

CODA

U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

USFS
globe black

MAP’s second CBEMR training session in Honduras featuring 24 participants

leaf black

Government officers, NGO staff, locals and regional experts collaborated on a demonstration project

Resulted in a network of mangrove rangers that engages local communities and encourages sustainable management

What we did

MAP’s second CBEMR training session in Honduras brought together government officers, NGOs staff, including Goldman (Environment) Prize winner Jorge Varela Marquez, members of NGO Consultores en Desarrollo y Ambiente CODA, local people and regional experts. This meeting of minds and determination formed a network to patrol the gulf and persuade local villagers and village leaders to reduce the cutting of mangroves. The week-long training significantly built on participants’ understanding of mangrove ecology through theory of community-based ecological mangrove restoration. Demonstrations took place on Isle de Pajaros, an island in a dynamic Gulf setting that suffers from poor hydrology, which was negatively affecting the trees.

 

Here, participants practiced research techniques and successfully improved the hydrology in the middle of the island, allowing the island to drain effectively at lower tides. Following the training, a network funded by the USFWS was established, run by Jorge Varela Marquez and fishermen Jose Damilo and Jose Leonidas. The group has continued to engage local communities to encourage them to restrain their villagers from cutting mangrove. In addition, the “mangrove rangers” have encouraged local communities to sustainably manage their surrounding mangrove wetlands for the benefit of local communities.

Interested in working with us?

Get in touch with us at cassie@mangroveactionproject.org

Related work