The Baía do Iguape Marine Extractive Reserve is a marine extractive reserve in the state of Bahia, Brazil. As of 2002 the reserve supported about 5,000 people engaged in fishing and shellfish collection.
Location
The Baía do Iguape Marine Extractive Reserve is divided between the municipalities of Cachoeira and Maragogipe in the state of Bahia. It covers. It covers the long and narrow Iguape Bay at the mouth of the Paraguaçu River which empties into the Bay of All Saints.
Economy
As of 2002 there were about 900 families with 4,960 people involved in fishing and gathering shellfish in the bay. Fishing is mainly done by men and shellfish collection by women and children. Shrimps, fish, oysters and mussels are harvested, sorted, in some cases smoked, and sold to middlemen who take the product to Salvador. Other economic activities include agriculture, crafts, and more recently fish farming. Earnings are generally well above the minimum wage. As of 1998 only 4% of the population had high school education and 28% were illiterate. As of 2009 the state government had selected the extreme south of the reserve as the site for a naval centre, and was proceeding with implementation. The local communities had not been consulted. The project was justified on the basis of creating jobs, but negative social impacts had not been considered.
History
The Baía do Iguape Marine Extractive Reserve was created by presidential decree on 11 August 2000. When created it had an area of about of which were land and mangroves, and were inland waters. It became part of the Central Atlantic Forest Ecological Corridor, created in 2002. It is classed as IUCN protected area category VI. The objective is to protect an area used by traditional extractive populations whose livelihood is based on extraction, subsistence agriculture and raising small animals, to protect the livelihoods and culture of these populations, and to ensure sustainable use of natural resources. Law 12058 of 13 October 2009 amended the limits, defining an area of about with a perimeter of about. The deliberative council was created by ICMBio on 16 October 2009 with representatives of government agencies and the extractive communities. The reserve was recognised on 14 May 2014 for PRONAF purpose as covering 1,500 extractive families.