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Regenerating Mangroves and Seagrass Through Coastal Stewardship in the Philippines
The Philippines is one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, where millions of people depend on healthy coastal ecosystems for food, protection, livelihoods, and cultural identity. Yet across many coastal communities, mangroves have been converted into abandoned fishponds, seagrass meadows are increasingly degraded, and younger generations are growing disconnected from the ecosystems that once sustained their communities.
For decades, restoration efforts have often focused on short-term planting activities without addressing long-term stewardship, ecological suitability, or community ownership. In many cases, communities are invited to participate in conservation only temporarily, rather than being empowered as long-term guardians of their coastlines.
Blue Roots Program was created to help shift this narrative.
Led by Oceanus Conservation, Blue Roots Program is a community-led initiative that works alongside fisherfolk, women’s groups, youth leaders, communities, and local governments to regenerate coastal ecosystems through stewardship, education, citizen science, and locally rooted conservation practices.
The program focuses on protecting and restoring mangrove and seagrass ecosystems across vulnerable coastal landscapes in the Philippines. These blue carbon ecosystems are essential nurseries for marine biodiversity, natural barriers against storms and coastal erosion, and critical carbon sinks that help mitigate climate change. They also support fisheries and livelihoods for communities living along the coast.
Rather than treating restoration as simply planting trees, Blue Roots Program approaches regeneration as the rebuilding of relationships — between people and the ocean, science and local knowledge, and communities and their future.
Through participatory biodiversity monitoring, community trainings, youth ocean education, habitat mapping, citizen science, and stewardship activities, local communities are empowered to become active caretakers of their ecosystems. The program creates opportunities for communities to monitor mangrove and seagrass health, document biodiversity, support protection efforts, and participate in long-term decision-making for their coastal areas.
Blue Roots also creates pathways for regenerative livelihoods and experiential learning opportunities that strengthen community resilience while fostering deeper connections with nature. By combining conservation with education, storytelling, and local leadership, the program aims to create a culture of stewardship that extends across generations.
Our work takes place in coastal ecosystems that are home to migratory birds, reef fish, mangrove species, seagrass habitats, and endangered marine wildlife such as dugongs. These ecosystems are deeply interconnected — and so are the communities who depend on them.
At its heart, Blue Roots Program is about hope: restoring ecosystems while helping coastal communities reclaim agency, resilience, and belonging in the face of climate and environmental challenges.
Our Mission
Oceanus Conservation believes that healthy coastlines begin with empowered communities. We work to regenerate mangrove and seagrass ecosystems through locally led stewardship, community science, environmental education, and long-term partnerships with coastal communities for social and behavior change among Filipino communities.
By supporting people as guardians of their own ecosystems, we aim to create regenerative coastal futures where biodiversity, livelihoods, and local knowledge thrive together.
Background & Problem Statement
The Philippines has lost significant mangrove cover with approximately 50% since the 1920s due to coastal development, aquaculture conversion, unsustainable practices, and poorly planned rehabilitation efforts. Seagrass ecosystems — despite supporting fisheries, marine biodiversity, and carbon storage — remain among the country’s most overlooked and underprotected habitats.
Many restoration programs focus primarily on short-term planting targets without ensuring ecological suitability, biodiversity recovery, or long-term stewardship. In some areas, monoculture planting and restoration in unsuitable sites have led to low survival rates and limited ecosystem recovery.
At the same time, coastal communities increasingly face stronger typhoons, declining fisheries, biodiversity loss, and economic vulnerability linked to climate change and environmental degradation.
Youth and local communities are often excluded from long-term conservation planning despite possessing valuable ecological knowledge and lived experience.
Without community ownership and sustained stewardship, ecosystem restoration efforts struggle to create lasting impact.
Solution
Blue Roots Program strengthens coastal stewardship by supporting community-led conservation and regeneration of mangrove and seagrass ecosystems.
The program combines:
Instead of implementing restoration for communities, Blue Roots works with communities to build long-term systems of care, stewardship, and ecological resilience.
By integrating local knowledge with science-based approaches, the program supports healthier ecosystems while strengthening local capacity to protect and sustain them.
Our Experience
Oceanus Conservation is a women-led environmental organization in the Philippines working to conserve, restore, and steward blue carbon ecosystems.
Since 2020, Oceanus has worked alongside coastal communities, local governments, scientists, and youth leaders across multiple regions in the Philippines to support mangrove and seagrass conservation initiatives.
Our work includes biodiversity hotspot mapping, citizen science initiatives, community-based ecological mangrove restoration, ocean literacy programs, habitat monitoring, and regenerative coastal stewardship activities.
Oceanus has engaged hundreds of local community members and youth through trainings, conservation activities, ecosystem monitoring, and educational initiatives focused on building long-term stewardship for coastal ecosystems. We have also rehabilitate 28ha of abandoned and degraded fishponds, with about ~400 ha of mangroves and seagrass conservation agreements with local governments.
The organization has also collaborated with national and international partners on projects related to blue carbon ecosystems, biodiversity conservation, climate resilience, and community-led environmental action.
Check our impact reports here: https://www.oceanusconservation.org/our-impact/
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