Abstract

Indonesia is an archipelagic country of more than 17,504 islands (28 big islands and 17,475 small islands) with the length of coastline estimated at 95,181 km, which bears mangroves from several meters to several kilometers. They are estimated at 3.2 million hectares growing extensively in the five big islands (Java, Sumatra, Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Papua) with various community types comprising of about 157 species (52 species of trees, 21 species of shrubs, 13 species of lyana, seven species of palms, 14 species of grasses, eight species of herbs, three species of parasites, 36 species of epiphytes, three species of ferns). The mangroves resources in Indonesia involve the flora, fauna, and land resources which are needed for supporting many kinds of human needs, especially for local community living in surrounding mangroves. For centuries, the Indonesian people have traditionally utilized mangroves. The most significant value of mangrove utilization is the gathering of forest products, classified into timber and non-timber products. The timber refers to poles and firewood, charcoal, and construction materials (e.g. housing material and fishing gears); the latter include tannin, medicines, dye, nypa thatch and shingles, nypa sap for vinegar and winemaking, and food drinks. Traditional uses of mangrove forest products are mainly the direct utilization of the products, usually in small scale. Beside of those, local community are used to utilizing associated mangrove aquatic fauna for supporting their daily life as well as utilizing mangrove habitat for multipurpose uses through agroforestry techniques (silvofishery, agrosilvofishery, agrosilvopastoralfishery systems). So that, the good mangrove ecosystem serves luxurious both flora and fauna species (biodiversity) as well as their abundance for signicantly supporting the welfare of coastal community

Highlights

  • Mangrove is a group of plants growing along tropical to sub-tropical coastline that develop specialization to suit its environmental condition such as salinity and anaerobic soil (Snedaker, 1978)

  • Indonesian mangroves have been utilized under economic exploitation, especially for forestry and fisheries

  • The most significant value of mangrove utilization is the gathering of forest products, classified into timber and non-timber products

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Summary

Introduction

Mangrove is a group of plants growing along tropical to sub-tropical coastline that develop specialization to suit its environmental condition such as salinity and anaerobic soil (Snedaker, 1978). It consists of true mangrove plants and associated species numbering at different species sites by sites in the country (van Steenis, 1958). Out of the total 202 species, 43 species are true mangroves and the rest are associate mangrove

Uses of Mangroves Products
Forest Product
Foliage 8 Extractives
Timber and wood products
Non-Timber Forest Products
Indirect Products
Agriculture
Brackish WaterFish-Pond
Salt-Beds
Settlements
Ecotourism
Potential Uses
Mangroves Conservation Area
Findings
Mitigation
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