A New Campaign
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images in this article to expand)
Laguna San Ignacio in Baja California Sur, Mexico is a
well-known destination for many adventurous travelers. Dirt roads lead to
a remote coastal area, which is the last and most pristine whale birthing
lagoon on the planet. Here, visitors can spot hundreds of whale spouts
during the January-March migration season, and sometimes, can even touch a
curious whale.
Thousands of tourists have experienced the overwhelming
sensation of looking a gray whale in the eye, but few realize how fragile
the lagoon’s surroundings really are.248 miles of coastline, including 198
miles of wetlands and mangroves, comprise the one-million-acre Laguna San
Ignacio Wetlands Complex. Green sea turtles, peregrine falcons, and
hundreds
of thousands of migratory waterfowl and shorebirds use the mangroves,
wetlands, and beaches. Laguna San Ignacio is designated as a UNESCO World
Heritage Site, Ramsar site (wetland of international importance), and is
part of the Vizcaino Biosphere Reserve, one of Mexico’s largest protected
areas.
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There is a way to protect Laguna San Ignacio forever.
Ninetynine percent of the land is owned by ejidos (an ejido represents
communally-owned lands by a large group of rural residents). To protect
their way of life and their income from tourism, local ejido leaders have
decided to take matters into their own hands, with the help of Pronatura,
a national-level conservation organization in Mexico, and Wildcoast, a
conservation group based in San Diego that focuses on protecting wild
lands in the Baja California peninsula.
Ejido Luis Echeverria Alvarez has just negotiated a
large-scale conservation easement of 140,847 acres. This easement will
restrict development activities on lands that the ejido controls, and will
establish zoning for economic uses, buffer areas, and protected sites.
This transaction is being closely monitored by the other five adjoining
ejidos, who will soon decide if they would like to participate in a
conservation easement in the future.
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Despite these international and national protection
designations, Laguna San Ignacio was the proposed site for the Mitsubishi
industrial salt facility that was scheduled to be built on the lagoon
shores a few years ago. Rumors of new industrial projects are common,
especially as new port facilities, liquid natural gas terminals, and
coastal development projects are announced further north. A new road,
marina, and resort are proposed for the north shore of Laguna San Ignacio
right now, which invites a frenzy of land speculation. Recent changes to
Mexico’s mangrove regulations leave Laguna San Ignacio’s protected status
weak if development projects are approved for the area. |
Between 2005-2007, Pronatura and Wildcoast will work to protect over one
million acres of pristine coastal lands in the Laguna San Ignacio region
through conservation easements with ejidos and private property owners.
The fundraising goal is $8.6 million, of which the majority will go to
paying the easements in annual installments (or one-time cash payments);
Phase One’s fundraising goal is $1.7 million.
If you are interested in learning more about this campaign,
please visit http://www.icfdn.org or
contact Anne McEnany at 858-677-2915.
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***NEW
CAMPAIGN AT ICF*** |
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The
International Community Foundation is launching a campaign to raise
$125,000, which will help acquire the first conservation easement
with Ejido Luis Echeverria Alvarez.
If you
are interested in learning more about this campaign, please visit
http://www.icfdn.org or
contact
Anne McEnany at 858-677-2915. |
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