Wetlands crucial for our well-being

South Africa - Cape Town - Freshwater Research Centre's Kate Snaddon (left) and Tumisho Ngobela (right) collecting samples from the Princess Vlei during a school visit. The Department of Water and Sanitation in conjunction with the Western Cape Wetlands Forum and several other stakeholders commemorated World Wetlands Day (WWD) at Grassy Park's Princess Vlei. Picture: Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA)

South Africa - Cape Town - Freshwater Research Centre's Kate Snaddon (left) and Tumisho Ngobela (right) collecting samples from the Princess Vlei during a school visit. The Department of Water and Sanitation in conjunction with the Western Cape Wetlands Forum and several other stakeholders commemorated World Wetlands Day (WWD) at Grassy Park's Princess Vlei. Picture: Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA)

Published Feb 11, 2024

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As World Wetlands Day was commemorated on February 2, it is important that we commit ourselves to protecting and preserving the wetlands in our communities as wetlands are crucial for the wellbeing of humans and other living creatures.

World Wetlands Day is an important day on the environmental calendar as it aims to raise global awareness and understanding of the critical importance of wetlands.

This year, World Wetlands Day was celebrated under the theme “Wetlands and Human Well-being”, which highlights the interconnectedness of wetlands and human life and well-being.

Healthy wetlands equate to our well-being whether through the provision of clean water, as a source of food, or by protecting us from extreme weather events.

Human beings have depended on wetlands for centuries, drawing sustenance, inspiration and resilience from these productive ecosystems.

This theme therefore calls on each of us to value and steward our wetlands. Wetlands provide essential freshwater, contribute to global food production, and act as natural shock absorbers mitigating rainfall impacts and reduce flooding.

Wetlands have numerous important benefits which include increased biodiversity, replenished and filtered water supply, enhanced protection against floods and storms, more local and sustainable livelihoods reducing poverty, increased tourism and higher quality leisure time, increased carbon storage and avoided emissions.

As a water-scarce country, we need all available water resources. We therefore need to play our role in protecting and preserving our wetlands to ensure sustainable supply of quality water for our generation and generations to come.

Despite the numerous important benefits that humans receive from wetlands, human beings are the main causes of damage and destruction of wetlands. Wetlands are being destroyed by unsustainable agricultural practices, pollution, mining and human settlements.

As cities grow, so does the demand for land, the tendency is to encroach on wetlands which are disappearing fast. We need to stop this activity and protect and preserve the remaining wetlands.

* Themba khoza, Mpumalanga Department of Water and Sanitation.

** The views expressed here are not necessarily those of Independent Media.

Cape Argus

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