Highlighting the work of
photographers from the Majority World
I am a Venezuelan
biologist now studying Environment and Development in Britain.
Since 2001 I have been travelling around Venezuela documenting
the conservation status of national parks and promoting environmental
democracy among rural communities who live in the parks and
depend on the natural resources provided by them.
I particularly
enjoy my fieldwork in Laguna de Tacarigua National Park,
which was declared a Ramsar wetland site of international
ecological importance in 1996.
I used to visit
this lagoon with my parents when I was a kid and I wanted
to see how it looked after so long. The
changes
literally shocked me. In a couple of decades the beach
has been occupied by resorts and the blue crabs that frightened
me as a child have disappeared from the lagoon. The fishers
of a neighbouring town, famous for the quality of its fish,
are worried about their future. Although the lagoon gets
dry every few years as a natural process, these dry periods
are
now longer and more frequent than in the past.
The livelihoods
of the fishing communities depend on the lagoon’s
ecological conditions. If the climate continues changing, will
there be any future for them? For
more information about National Parks in Venezuela
see Bioparques
website at
www.bioparques.org
You can also see
my pictures in http://www.flickr.com/ photos/73594239@N00/
Cesar
Aponte |