Fifty-six-year-old Seema Adgaonkar glided through swampy mangroves in ankle-deep muck.

The fragrance of Avicennia marina – the grey mangrove – the most widely-spread mangrove species in Mumbai, made the trail pleasant despite the 36 degree Celsius hot-and-humid conditions.

Adgaonkar relished the scent as she walked in a single file with a forest guard and two helpers, towards one of the mangrove nurseries they set up on the city’s coastline. She gave the team instructions on where to plant saplings along the course and shared tips to identify some of the species with their regional and scientific names.

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“You’ve to know everything that is associated with your job to do it well,” said Adgaonkar, about her erstwhile role as a Range Forest Officer, which included mangrove plantation and guarding the ecosystem that borders Mumbai.

In some parts of the city’s tangled mangroves, she and her team members carry ropes and hooks to pull themselves to safety. They have also learned from crab catchers the technique of using a wooden plank to wade through the dark muck in mangroves and mudflats. Adgaonkar can navigate boats, big and small, through the creeks and estuaries of the coastal city.

Until recently, she was one of the four range forest officers at the Mumbai Mangrove Conservation Unit, a 36-member body, solely dedicated to protecting the city’s mangrove forests. With a recent promotion, Adgaonkar is on to using her skills and experience to train the next generation of guardians of Maharashtra’s forests.

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The Mumbai Mangrove Conservation Unit falls under the Maharashtra forest department’s Mangrove Cell, the only unit in India that specialises in mangrove protection and conservation. The cell was established in 2012 following a 2005 Bombay High Court order to declare all mangroves under government land as protected forests.

Seema Adgaonkar stands next to mangrove saplings planted by her team. Credit: Kartik Chandramouli/Mongabay

The clearing of mangroves in many areas of the city, particularly along the 18-km-long Mithi river, was cited as one of the main reasons for the unprecedented flooding in 2005. Mangroves act as natural buffers against flood surges by absorbing impact and breaking the flow of water. Their absence leaves the land vulnerable to flooding.

The peninsular city facing the Arabian Sea is densely populated with 18.41 million people according to the 2011 Census and is one of the cities most vulnerable to rising sea levels. Erratic rainfall and sea-level rise due to climate change can increase the frequency of coastal flooding in the city. Experts warn that the likelihood of a 2005-like flood in Mumbai could more than double and the losses could triple by 2080.

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Bill Laurance, a distinguished research professor at James Cook University, Australia, and a tropical ecologist said, “Mangroves play a vital role in stabilising coastlines and protecting inland areas and populations from the worst effects of severe storm and flooding events.”

Protecting the existing mangrove cover and regeneration of mangroves thus becomes a natural mitigation mechanism for climate change.

Mangroves form natural barriers against sea rise and coastal flooding. They also act as nurseries for fish and support livelihoods. Credit: Kartik Chandramouli/Mongabay

“They also store large amounts of carbon, are habitats for many wildlife species, and provide crucial nursery areas for young fish and crustaceans that are vital for fisheries,” he added. A 2013 study estimated a conservative valuation of the mangrove ecosystem in Mumbai at $7.73 million per year, factoring a range of services it provides.

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The landmark judgement by the Bombay High Court in 2005 banned the destruction of mangrove forests and construction work within 50 metres of mangrove areas in Maharashtra.

According to the Forest Survey of India, the government organisation that conducts surveys and assessment of forest resources in the country, the mangrove cover in Mumbai increased from 42 sq km in 2005 to 66 sq km in 2017. But a rapid surge in urbanisation and population continue to threaten these crucial ecosystems.

Speaking about some of the patterns in which offenders clear a patch of mangroves, N Vasudevan, Additional Principal Chief Conservator of Forest, Mangrove Cell, said, “People block the tidal flow, dump construction debris, make it a parking spot or erect a shrine. A dedicated unit was very important to manage a complex city like Mumbai. We started Mumbai Mangrove Conservation Unit in 2013, with its own Divisional Forest Officer, Assistant Conservator of Forest, Range Forest Officers and guards who kept a strong vigil and ensured that there are no new encroachments. But it still happens in places.”

The total cover of mangroves in Mumbai is 66 sq km, according to Forest Survey of India’s 2017 report. These vital coastal ecosystems are squeezed between a rising sea level and coastal development projects. Credit: Kartik Chandramouli/Mongabay

The woman protector

“We serve the forest,” said Adgaonkar, who was the only female officer among the four Range Forest Officers managing four distinct divisions in Mumbai when Mongabay interviewed her.

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“It’s primarily a field job,” she said. “We keep a vigil on boundaries, perform natural and artificial mangrove regeneration, catch offenders and bring them to court. We are bound to the duty 24×7. It is equivalent to the Senior Police Inspector in the police force.”

Back amidst the nursery and plantation, Adgaonkar was delighted by the different root patterns, buds, and flowers developed by the saplings planted by Mumbai Mangrove Conservation Unit over the years. In the unit, she was known for her expertise in mangrove plantation. Despite having a background in terrestrial afforestation, she agreed that mangroves are a different ballgame due to the nature of the habitat and tidal behaviour.

Initially, it was a personal challenge too. Hailing from a drier and interior region of Maharashtra, she said her idea of mangroves, mudflats, creeks, tides were all theoretical before she saw mangroves for the first time in Mumbai. After the training provided by the Mangrove Cell, many discussions with mangrove experts, consulting field guides, especially books by regional authors and a few rounds of failed attempts at plantations, she finally gained confidence.

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“Last year, we [the Mangrove Cell] planted around 2 million seedlings across the coast of Maharashtra. In 2019, we will plant 4 million seedlings,” said Vasudevan, who leads the cell.

Garbage and debris dumped in the mangroves are choking the ecosystem said Adgaonkar. “Pneumatophores [aerial roots of mangroves specialised for gaseous exchange] get suffocated by plastic,” she said. “The water flow also gets obstructed, eventually killing the trees.” Government-citizen partnership cleaning drives are attempting to turn the tide. One such drive that spanned from 2015 to 2018 gathered 25,000 volunteers and cleared 8,000 tonnes of garbage from mangrove areas in Mumbai.

“It’s a perfect example of swarth (selfish objective) and parmarth (greater good),” explained Adgaonkar. “Swarth because we get the mangroves cleaned this way and parmarth because there’s awareness in the hearts of the people and the environment is protected.”

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A degree in botany and a national level athlete, she always dreamt of working in a field where women were under-represented. That led her to choose forestry and to be part of the first batch of female field officers in the Maharashtra forest department in 1984.

“A woman officer faces a lot of neglect and demotivation,” she said. “But my experience in social forestry before joining the Mumbai Mangrove Conservation Unit showed that it was easier for me, as a woman, to talk to women in rural areas. I could enter their kitchens and talk to them about forest protection since they enter the forest the maximum to collect resources. If a government scheme has to be implemented in any area, especially rural, the role of men and women officers is equally important.”

Adgaonkar and Vasudevan agreed that one of the most challenging tasks to safeguard mangroves is the removal of illegal encroachments and slums. “It’s very difficult to demolish illegal structures and slums encroaching mangrove areas,” admitted Adgaonkar. “There are social and political pressures from all sides on us.” But it’s a duty that she has to carry regardless of the risks involved.

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“She is a very bold lady,” said Vasudevan. “She does a lot of plantation activities, but she leads many encroachment removal activities as well.”

Seema Adgaonkar amidst mangrove roots. Credit: Kartik Chandramouli/Mongabay

‘Coastal squeeze’

Mangroves are spread across 150,000 sq km across the globe in the tropical and subtropical regions. India contains nearly 3.3% of this mangrove cover.

“Mangroves are particularly sensitive to the rising sea level,” said Laurance, addressing the global threats to mangroves. “A big worry is that mangroves are getting crushed in the middle, squeezed by land-use development on the land side and by rising sea levels on the other. Given their critical biological and social benefits, it seems almost crazy that people are currently destroying mangroves so quickly – often for coastal development.”

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In India too, the natural defenders of the coastline are under pressure from human development.

Environment activist Debi Goenka said, “Government projects along the coast of Mumbai in fact pose the biggest threat to the mangroves.” He fears that since climate change is not part of any decision-making process yet, the city might end up back in its original form, as seven independent islands.

But Adgaonkar remains hopeful and believes that the government, environmental groups and citizen awareness together can help protect the environment. She’s sure that the fate of the mangroves and the city are intertwined.

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“If mangroves are saved, Mumbai will be saved,” she said. “Else these big towers will fall like leaves.”

An early morning scene along the mangroves in Mumbai. Credit: Kartik Chandramouli/Mongabay

This article first appeared on Mongabay.