What is the issue?
The steady loss of mangroves in the Sundarbans makes conservation efforts vital.
What are mangroves?
	- A mangrove is a shrub or small tree that grows in coastal saline or brackish water. 
 	- Mangroves are salt tolerant trees, also called halophytes, and are adapted to life in harsh coastal conditions. 
 	- They are adapted to the low oxygen (anoxic) conditions of waterlogged mud.
 
What are the importance of mangroves?
	- It is a nature's shield against cyclones, ecological disasters and as protector of shorelines.
 	- Breeding and nursery grounds for a variety of marine animals.
 	- Good source of timber, fuel and fodder.
 	- Purifies air by absorbing pollutants in the air.
 
What are the significance of Sundarbans mangroves?
	- It is the largest single block of tidal halophytic mangrove forest in the world.
 	- It is spread across parts of Bangladesh's Khulna Division and the Indian state of West Bengal.
 	- In the Ganga-Brahmaputra delta, Sundari trees are found, which provide durable hard timber. 
 	- This mangrove forests are known to serve as a habitat for turtles, crocodiles, gharials, snakes and tigers. 
 	- This area covers a National Park, Tiger reserve and a Biosphere Reserve.
 	- It serves as a protective flood barrier for the inhabitants of Kolkata during cyclone.
 
What is the need for conservation?
	- Long-term damage to the mangroves on the Indian side occurred when forests were cut to facilitate cultivation. 
 	- Climate change appears to be a threat to the entire 10,000 sq km area. 
 	- There is also a unique population of tigers that live here, adapted to move easily across the land-sea interface. 
 	- Human settlements which depends on this mangroves for their lively hood, which will be ruined due to environmental concerns.
 
How it can be done?
	- Local actions are needed to protect the banks from erosion.
 	- Strengthening the mangroves with endemic species that can thrive in changing salinity conditions can provide co-benefits to local communities. 
 	- Ecotourism holds the potential to raise awareness and funds for the conservation. 
 	- International climate finance to be channelled to India and Bangladesh for the region’s preservation.
 	- Climate research and social science have a synergistic role in giving the Sundarbans a greater chance of survival.
 
 
Source: The Hindu