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Palau

Ngardmau Waterfall

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Conservation benefit: Support of conserving the 1,512-acre Taki Conservation Area in perpetuity

Community benefit: Construction of a 280-foot boardwalk

Date Approved: 03.2010

Ecotourism

This project supports a local conservation-based tourism initiative.

Forest

This project protects forest, preventing the release of greenhouse gases and reducing erosion that damages coastal and ocean ecosystems.

Ngardmau Waterfall, on Palau’s main island of Babeldaob, is Palau’s tallest waterfall. It’s also one of the country’s most visited tourist sites, receiving busloads of tourists every day. The waterfall is called the “Taki” Conservation Area. The conservation area includes a variety of terrestrial habitats, with upland old-growth forest, savanna, river, swamp forest, and secondary forest. The conservation area is part of the Middle Ridge Important Bird Area. The endangered Micronesian megapode has been observed there, in addition to other endemic birds.

There is increasing local concern about the safety and stability of the trail to the waterfall. To reach the waterfall, visitors must walk down a series of steep stairs cut into the hillside, follow a muddy path through the forest, and ford a stream. The constant foot traffic on the dirt trail has substantially increased erosion and sedimentation into the river. This threatens the community water source, river fauna, and marine flora and fauna at the river mouth.

In collaboration with the Palau Conservation Society, Seacology will fund one of the most urgent restoration tasks: design and construction of a 280-foot boardwalk through low-lying forest.

Project Updates

July 2015

Micronesia Field Representative Simon Ellis and Program Manager Mary Randolph visited the waterfall in July, and found the boardwalk, which goes along the river up to the falls, in very good shape. The forest area also looks to be well preserved.

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June 2011

The plastic lumber arrived in February and was transported to the top of the Taki trail. A monorail is being built that will run from the top of the Taki trail to the bottom. As soon as the rail is finished, it will be used to move the lumber down the hill. A member of the Reserve Board at Lake Ngardok has been assisting Ngardmau State personnel decide where the lumber will go and where to build the boardwalk.
Palau Conservation Society (PCS) worked with its partner at PICRC to monitor sediment in the Diongradid River. They collected data in February and March, including during some high rain events. After the boardwalk is installed, they will replace the monitors in the river and collect more data to judge the impacts of management. Working with a community-based planning team, PCS has almost finished a management plan for Ngardmau. The plan includes activities to ensure that all of Ngardmau’s protected areas have enhanced surveillance and enforcement and to reduce sedimentation.

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