Science › Science     ›   21 May 2020

Our Solutions Are In Nature: Ghana Must Protect, Promote And Respect Its Natural Areas

Background

This year’s International Day for Biological Diversity theme ‘Our solutions are in nature’ refers to the

fact that problems that generate interest to humankind have solutions in nature. This literally means that nature, which includes both animate and inanimate structures which interacts to heal itself, has solutions to all the myriad of environmental, social and economic challenges that are facing mankind. It is like the Biblical text in Proverbs 6: 6-11 which, to wit enjoins one who needs knowledge to go to the ant to study its ways and be wise,

The Covid-19 Pandemic

The theme is quite appropriate to be considered at this period of the global pandemic of Covid-19 whose source is yet to be unravelled but has had suggestions ranging from visits to wet markets where live animals are displayed for sale, for consumption or kept as pets, on one hand and to another in reference to a lab test on the corona virus that went awry in the Chinese City of Wuhan and started to infect people. Whatever the source which the global community may or may never know, the one thing that is clear and not in doubt is that a novel virus has been let loose and has become uncontrollable. I have decided to refer to a sub-theme ‘Ghana must protect, promote and respect its wilderness areas’ in an effort to bring attention to the various nature or wilderness areas from where the solutions are waiting to be picked and used.

What is nature?

When we talk of nature, we are talking about biodiversity. Nature as biodiversity comprises all the natural or wilderness areas, the components of living organisms in them, the interactions they have with themselves and the surrounding environment, and finally the genetic identities that are unique to each individual member.

Areas of natural environment are diverse and include grasslands, forests, mountains and rivers, coastal areas and the oceans, some of which have been set aside for conservation purposes. Each natural ecosystem is endowed with peculiar species of animals, plants and microbes that freely interact with each other and their surrounding physical environment. For example Grasslands in Ghana are of various types including the coastal, Guinea and Sudan savannas; Forests in Ghana are of various kinds including the wet evergreen, dry deciduous and semi-deciduous, upland evergreen as found in Atewa mountains, riparian woodlands and costal dry forests; Mountains or hills whose peaks range up to 700 meters with rocky surfaces and some form of vegetation which is basically tropical as found at Afadjato; Rivers of various lengths and breadths, draining different kinds of valleys with different soil types, whose waters may run swiftly or slowly, carrying various forms of sediment loads and hosting various kinds of fresh water organisms; Coastal areas in Ghana are of various kinds which may be sea shores, with or without rocks and sometimes estuarine areas including lagoons, mudflats and with various kinds of vegetation such as mangroves, strand, wetlands, lagoons. These coastal areas limit the oceans whose areas have the benthic and the pelagic provinces. The benthic which is the bottom habitats located below varied columns of water of different heights ranges from littoral, sub-littoral, bathyal, abyssal and hadal. The pelagic ranges from epipelagic, mesopelagic, bachpelagic, abyssalpelagic and hadalpelagic. Light penetration is only to 100 meters deep and it is in this column that demersal organisms and the colony of planktons, phytoplanktons and zooplanktons occupying the upper 1 – 5 meters of the ocean surface exist. Pelagic fish are common at this zone while demersal fish are on or near the benthos.

Some verifiable solutions from nature

All the different ecosystem types support a huge biological diversity of living things that humans depend on. This diversity means nature can take care of the many difficulties faced by humankind. There is evidence of nature taking care of such events as disease outbreaks before they become Pandemics. Some of the situations in which nature has provided solutions are detailed below.

When one considers the range of contributions and the many others not captured here that nature provides for human well-being, one would have to feel blessed to have such resources in wilderness areas in one’s own territory or country. This is what has been bequeathed to Ghanaians and which must be cherished as a museum, a library, a learning place, a store house, a resource, a place for succor, and a place for spiritual and cultural upliftment.

The challenge to Ghana

It has been established (IPBES 2019) that rampant deforestation, uncontrolled expansion of agriculture, intensive farming, mining, and urban infrastructure development, as well as the exploitation of wild species, have created a ‘perfect storm’ for the spillover of diseases from wildlife to people, now sadly evidenced in the current COVID-19 pandemic. It has also been established in the IPBES (2019) study that human actions have significantly impacted more than three quarters of the Earth’s land surface, destroyed more than 85% of wetlands and dedicated more than a third of all land and almost 75% of available freshwater to crops and livestock production.

It is obvious that there are lessons to take onboard. Ghana should learn fast from other nations that are respecting their natural and wilderness areas. Such areas that have an international stamp on them and recognized as Globally Significant Biodiversity Areas (GSBA) or Key Biodiversity Areas (KBA) should be left alone to continue their ecosystem development and create the conditions for sustained ecosystem services that support human life. The Atewa Range Forest Reserve is in this category and must be promoted, protected and respected for the benefit of present and future generations.

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