In Senegal’s Saloum Delta, mangrove forests are disappearing at an alarming rate. Spanning 180,000 hectares, the delta is part of “les Rivières du Sud,” an area along the coast of West Africa that is home to one of the largest continuous mangrove forests in the world.
Since the 1970s, the Saloum Delta has lost more than 45,000 hectares of mangroves. Climate change, pollution, expansion of agricultural and aquaculture activities, overharvesting, construction of dams and irrigation systems, and urbanisation have led to widespread degradation of these coastal forests.
Rural coastal communities bear the brunt of this loss. There are direct economic impacts due to loss of wood supply, charcoal production, and fish and oyster supply for household consumption, sale or trade. There are impacts to agricultural systems and food security through increased salinization of soil, loss of soil water content, and soil erosion. There are direct impacts to the provision of water as water supply and quality declines, the provision of energy as biofuel sources are depleted, and an increase in greenhouse gas emissions through loss of carbon sinks. Communities are also threatened by an increased exposure to flooding from storms and sea level rise, leaving vulnerable communities even more exposed to the impacts of climate change.
In order to reverse this trend, the GEF-funded, IFAD-implemented Resilient Food Systems (RFS) programme is working with communities in Senegal to restore mangrove ecosystems and rehabilitate 800 hectares of land within targeted watershed areas. Implemented by the Government of Senegal, with joint support from IFAD and UNIDO, the Agricultural Value Chains Resilience Support Project (PARFA) is one of 12 RFS country projects working to address land degradation and improve food security in the dryland regions of sub-Saharan Africa.