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SOLOMON ISLANDS the wilderness lodge 8° 47´S 158° 14´E |
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Species lists Birds
List Kuchu Mago Frog Project report
Image galleries Kavolavata River Valley / Mt Mariu Frogs
(partner links at bottom of page) Bob
Johannes & Edvard Hviding
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Of Reef AND Rainforest Gatokae Island is home to exceptional examples of both of planet Earth's great storehouses of biodiversity - coral reefs and tropical rainforest. In 2004 The Nature Conservancy funded a five week marine REA survey of the main Solomons island chain including Gatokae which resulted in 'the Coral Triangle' - the area of global extreme coral reef biodiversity - being extended to include the Solomon Islands, and this was just the beginning of scientific exploration of Solomons reefs. Gatokae, as is most of the Solomons, is covered in luxuriant tropical rainforest right down to the coral, and this represents one of the least studied and poorly understood ecosystems on Earth. Wilderness is gradually accumulating a reference library of what has so far been documented, refer to the 'Reference Library' link at left. The
proximity of these two incredibly rich ecosystems provides a staggering
array of marine and terrestrial species, unique habitats, and unequalled
natural scenery. In addition, the oceanic aspect of Gatokae, minimal population
pressure, and the absence of feral pigs - unique amongst the large islands
of the Solomons archipelago - make for a very intact environment. Extremely
high rates of endemism, great variation between neighboring island populations,
unique evolutionary traits and niches, and great numbers of unrecorded
species all make for a stunning natural classroom and labratory. The Wilderness
Lodge is working with leading field biologists to assist in identfying
this biological heritage in order to learn how best to ensure it's viability
in the 21st century. Due
to unregulated logging activity by foreign corporations however, both
of these globally-critical ecosystems are threatened, and the scope of
pressures these ecosystems face is rapidly expanding as globalisation
impacts on indigenous people's lifestyles and development aspirations.
The logging has produced alarmingly few benefits for the people of nearby
Marovo Lagoon - after many years and millions of cubic metres of tropical
hardwood being extracted there is still not one single doctor to care
for the region's twelve thousand people for example - and the environmental,
cultural, and social impacts of the logging have already proven to be
disastrous. Gold and mineral exploration at several sites in the watershed
of Marovo Lagoon on nearby Vangunu and New Georgia Islands underlines
the urgent need to strengthen environmental management capacity in a country
that lacks even basic National Parks legislation. To help redress this situation on Gatokae, The Wilderness Lodge was established in 2002 to provide sustainable income alternatives to the indigenous people of southeatern Gatokae and establish an example of environmentally and socially sustainable business in what is a very challenging and fragile environment. The Lodge's day-to-day operation involves many measures to promote resource conservation, both through direct actions and by providing sustainable incomes to the indigenous owners of these lands and reefs through a diverse range of ecotourism income specifically structured to enhance natural and cultural integrity. As a result of the scale of the external environmental threats faced and the rate at which habitat degradation has proceeded on neighbouring islands, Wilderness has embarked on developing conservation strategies with local communities to help broaden the reach and increase the scale of benefits accruing to the broader Gatokae community and beyond. If additional realistic, practical, and readily-implementable income alternatives are not realised, indigenous resource owners face no choice but to accede to logging and mining agreements in order to meet livelihood essentials such as food, school fees, and medical assistance. Partnering for the Long Term Already the interest for carefully targeted and implemeted conservation measures has been heartening, both from within the indigenous Gatokae community and from the international conservation and scientific communities. We have been fortunate enough to engage with several eminently qualified conservation biologists and organisations. These include Patrick Pikacha, biologist and conservation champion from Marovo Lagoon who heads Conservation International in the Solomons and publishes Melanesian Geo magazine; Dr James Udy and Simon Albert of the University of Queensland's 'Conserving the Marine Biodiversity of Marovo Lagoon' Project; Dr Chris Filardi of the AMNH Centre for Biodiversity & Conservation, veteran Solomons field biologist and grassroots conservation trojan; David Leeming, designer and technical adviser of the ground-breaking DLCP and PFnet rural communications and e-learning networks which will enable delivery of conservation awareness and capacity-building directly to rural communities. Please check out the links below for background on these dedicated people and organisations. The range of information accessible via this page will increase as the conservation initiative develops [and as fieldwork allows!]. For
grassroots relevancy to balance this formal capacity and expertise we
rely on Wilderness's long-established working relationship with Gatokae
communities [the Lodge is located in Peava Village] and the individual
stakeholders of Gatokae's natural heritage. We believe that by linking
the local capacity, need and desire for sustainability with the conservation
expertise and resources available we can work to halt the rapid decline
of biodiversity and cultural integrity that we are now experiencing. Through
these unique alliances we can develop strategy that will help protect
this and other threatened tropical island ecosystems. The Work Wilderness continues to work with the above partners to develop these conservation initiatives, combining awareness and education work in Gatokae communities with intense field trips to inventory fauna and flora and exchange biodiversity and ecosystem knowledge with indigenous stakeholders.
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