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The Maputo National Park, recently established by the Council of Ministers (Decree No. 100/2021 of December 31) and under the authority of the National Administration for Conservation Areas (ANAC), and comprises two former adjacent reserves which were joined under the same managerial team: The Maputo Special Reserve (MSR, established in 1932) and the Ponta do Ouro Partial Marine Reserve (POPMR, est. 2009). The park is located in southern Mozambique, and it is bordered by Maputo Bay and the Indian Ocean. The park, located within the Maputaland Coastal Plain, harbours unique terrestrial, coastal and marine ecosystems and high levels of endemism. The park’s western coastal cordon includes a barrier island system that contributes to the highly productive Maputo Bay, with extensive intertidal seagrass beds and mud flats, mangrove forests and unique shallow-water coral reef communities.

Gestão dos Recursos Naturais pelos Conselhos Comunitários de Pesca

Font: Bemugis

 Beneficiaries

Members of communities specifically in the localities of Santa Maria and Ndelane and also Ilha de Inhaca, in the community of Inhaquene. Beneficiaries are organized into Community Fisheries Councils (CCPs) that involve fishermen, invertebrate collectors and fish sellers.

CCP members skilled to manage an association and their respective funding, and engaged with stakeholders to discuss and enforce fisheries measures to guarantee the sustainable management of subsistence and artisanal fisheries. 

 

Expected results:  15 CCP members trained on associativism, finance management and stakeholder engagement, 90 fishing community members trained in resource fisheries management by CTV, and 12 CCP members trained on enforcement with park authorities by the first semester of the project.

Empower CCPs to establish, communicate and enforce fisheries measures

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Santa Maria, Mabuluco and Inhaca Island communities with skills to develop high quality tourism initiatives and the Santa Maria community developing highly marketable and profitable mariculture mussel for market consumption.

 

 Expected results: At least 10 new community members of Santa working in mussel mariculture livelihoods initiative during the first semester of the project, and 15 community members communities trained in tourism initiatives during the second semester of the project.

Promote alternative livelihoods

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Dissemination of project outcomes successfully implemented by CCP members and fishing communities.  

 

Expected results: At least 03 news articles, 01 Inspiring place article throughout project implementation, 01 short documentary, and 03 testimonial videos by the beneficiaries on lessons learnt, in the last six months of the project, including final monitoring and expenditure auditing upon the completion of the project.

Monitoring, evaluation and communication

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Location

The Maputo National Park, recently established by the Council of Ministers (Decree No. 100/2021 of December 31) and under the authority of the National Administration for Conservation Areas (ANAC), and comprises two former adjacent reserves which were joined under the same managerial team: The Maputo Special Reserve (MSR, established in 1932) and the Ponta do Ouro Partial Marine Reserve (POPMR, est. 2009). The park is located in southern Mozambique, and it is bordered by Maputo Bay and the Indian Ocean. The park, located within the Maputaland Coastal Plain, harbours unique terrestrial, coastal and marine ecosystems and high levels of endemism. The park’s western coastal cordon includes a barrier island system that contributes to the highly productive Maputo Bay, with extensive intertidal seagrass beds and mud flats, mangrove forests and unique shallow-water coral reef communities.

The park has important flagship species such as a population of almost 800 elephants, five species of sea turtles, as well as the IUCN Red Listed dugong. The park has a rich ichthyofauna with more than 1 000 species of fish positively identified, including the largest aggregation recorded of the giant trevally, important groupers (the potato bass and the brindle bass), among many others. The park as long been identified as an important biodiversity hotspot, e.g.: (1) the Ecologically or Biologically Significant Areas (EBSAs) that stretches from the Incomati River to Ponta do Ouro; (2) Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBAs) and Important Plant Areas (IPAs), which includes the MSR, and, (3) the recently classified as a Key Biodiversity Area (KBA). The park is also part of the first marine transboundary area in Africa, the Ponta do Ouro – Kosi Bay TFCA, encompassing the iSimangaliso Wetland Park World Heritage Site. To ensure long-term conservation and ecosystem connectivity, the Government of Mozambique is currently preparing the nomination dossier in order to have it declared as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, as an extension of iSimangaliso.

Populations living within and around the project area have been steadily growing. They are greatly dependent on subsistence rainfed agriculture and domestic livestock. Artisanal and subsistence fisheries is one, if not the most, important activity for the majority, especially the communities living adjacent to Maputo Bay. Artisanal fisheries generate revenue and provide food security. Recent data indicate that the number of dependent fishers and stakeholders has been steadily rising and this is accompanied by an observed increase in fishing effort.

Data collected will depict valuable information on fisheries captures, and impacts on specific stocks of indicator fish and crustacean species. 

 

Expected results: 05 community members, 03 CCP and 03 park rangers identified and trained by CTV by the first semester to collect quality data for the dissemination of the two annual annual reports by the end of the project.

Monitoring artisanal and subsistence fisheries captures and effort

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