Cuba Participates in Project of Caribbean Biological Corridor
CUBA, December 15, 2009.- Cuban scientists are participating in a regional project of demarcation and setting up of a Caribbean biological corridor to support the study of natural values and their sustainable management in the area.
The director of the Center of Research of Coastal Ecosystems (CIEC) in the central Cuban province of Ciego de Avila, Adan Zuñiga Rios, added that experts from the Dominican Republic and Haiti are also taking part in this initiative to promote social, environmental, economic and cultural actions.
“The CIEC specialists provide information from the coastal-marine area, mainly from the eastern region of Cuba, because of the geological bond of this territory with the two abovementioned countries,” Zuñiga Rios explained.
Some of the works being carried out include the environmental rehabilitation, the
preservation of biodiversity and the creation of protected marine areas, mainly in Haiti.
Likewise, the Cuban experts are giving lectures to the other members of the project on the integral management of coastal areas.
The biodiversity of seas surrounding the countries involved in the project as well as the increasing and excessive demand of natural resources, oblige scientific institutions to find solutions to generate sustainable benefits without damaging the environment.
Another CIEC specialist, Omar Fernandez Perez, announced that they also provide information for the project of the Marine Atlas of the Caribbean, which is directed by the Oceanographic Commission (COI-UNESCO). (Cubaminrex-AIN) |