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TIMOR LESTE - SUPPORTING COASTAL COMMUNITIES

Despite its wealth of resources and rich marine ecosystems, independence has yet to bring economic prosperity to Timor-Leste...but the potential is there.

by Freya Paterson, May 13, 2012
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The morning sun and the low tide are this boy’s best friend as he searches for small fish off the coast of Nino Konis Santana National Park, Timor-Leste. Located in the heart of the Coral Triangle region, Timor-Leste’s coastline boasts some of the most valuable marine ecosystems in the world, all of which are currently threatened by overfishing, rapid development and climate change
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
Two brothers rinse their fishing nets waste-clogged urban canal in Central Dili, Timor-Leste which is located in the heart of the Coral Triangle. Rapid development, unsustainable fishing practices and climate change all threaten the valuable marine ecosystems surrounding Timor-Leste, posing serious challenges to the ongoing food security for the small nation
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
A young girl uses the low tide to search for small fish in Nino Konis Santana National Park, Timor-Leste. The people and Government of Timor-Leste are working together to protect the precious reef which supports the livelihoods of over thousands of people in this remote part of the country
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
Ernesto De La Cruz, 65, leaps from his friend’s boat in search of sea cucumbers, which are a popular food throughout the Coral Triangle, including his town of Com, which is located on the coast alongside Timor-Leste’s only protected marine area
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
Ernesto De La Cruz, 65, dives in search of sea cucumbers off the coast of Com, a town located within Timor-Leste’s first and only National Park
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
Rui Pinto, a CTSP staff member, runs through a set of presentation posters which will be used for a reef monitoring training workshop with local fishermen in Com, a village in Nino Konis Santana Marine National Park (NKS), Timor-Leste
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
Fishermen from within Timor-Leste’s first and only National Park work on a presentation for the local fisheries authority as part of a reef monitoring workshop in Timor-Leste, funded by USAID
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
A sign warns against littering at Valu Beach, a remote and pristine spot at the easternmost tip of Timor-Leste. The Government of Timor-Leste now draws upon the knowledge of local communities to measure the health and condition of the globally significant marine habitats, including Valu
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
Local fishermen launch their boat at Valu Beach, in Nino Konis Santana National Park and set out for neighboring Jaco Island, which boasts astoundingly abundant aquatic life and remains uninhabited by humans as part of the government’s efforts to safeguard the precious coastal resources in the region
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
The caretaker at Valu Beach in his home in the easternmost tip of Timor-Leste. His son, pictured in the background makes a modest living taking tourists to neighboring Jaco Island
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP
Ernesto de la Cruz (with microphone) and fellow fishermen from Com in Timor-Leste, discuss reef monitoring techniques which they learned as part of CTSP-led workshops (www.usctsp.org).
Photo by Matthew Abbott/CTSP

Timor-Leste lies right at the heart of The Coral Triangle, an area of 648 million hectares which holds the world’s highest diversity of marine life and is also home to some of the world’s poorest people.  Although small compared to other countries in the Coral Triangle, Timor-Leste boasts rich and relatively pristine marine areas as well as huge unfulfilled economic potential in marine and coastal ecotourism.

Today, over half of the people in Timor-Leste live on less than $2 a day and around 90 percent depend on natural resources to survive. Rapid development, unsustainable fishing practices and climate change all threaten the valuable marine ecosystems surrounding Timor-Leste, posing serious challenges to the ongoing food security for this small nation.

Through the Coral Triangle Support Partnership (CTSP), USAID works with the government and coastal communities of Timor-Leste to improve the skills of the people who are instrumental in maintaining their precious marine areas.  Since 2009, CTSP has trained hundreds of fishermen to better manage their coastline, and has helped the Ministry of Fisheries to develop polices which use conservation, sustainable fisheries, and Climate Change Adaptation to protect their most vulnerable coastal communities.

 www.usctsp.org

 

 

Keywords:
conservation
featured
fishing
marine life