November 11, 2025

New Era Newspapers

Nigerias Breaking News

HYPREP says in talks with UniPort on Wetland Research as it celebrates World Polycaete Day

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By Chris Ochayi

The Project Coordinator of Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP) Professor Nenibarini Zabbey, has said the benthic study will help establish the link between the possible prevalence of different species of polycaetes at the Bomu Shoreline, biodiversity recovery and HYPREP’s shoreline remediation and mangrove restoration efforts in Ogoni land.

This is just as HYPREP celebrated this year’s International Polycaete Day with a monitoring exercise of polycaetes (Marine worms) in the creek of Bomu, Gokana Local Government Area of Rivers State .

The celebration was part of its programme to ascertain the level of biodiversity recovery following the ongoing shoreline remediation and mangroves restoration ongoing in the area.

The International Polycaete Day is celebrated on July 1st, dedicated to the celebration and study of polychaetes also known as bristle worms, and in honour of the birthday of Dr. Kristian Fauchald, a renowned polychaete scientist. They are a diverse group of marine worms found in various marine environments.

Prof. Zabbey, while speaking at the Bomu Creek, noted that the marine organisms are not only indicator species but they also play important roles in marine food webs and ecosystems. He explained that the study will enable HYPREP track improvement in the ecosystem.

He said, ”In monitoring the improvement in the environment, our best bet are the marine worms. These guys (marine worms) are permanently here. They are always very adaptive. Increase in their diversities or species richness will indicate improvement in the ecosystem we are working on.

“We are not using one indicator like the presence of fishes. Fishes are important to the livelihood of the people. But these marine worms form the base of food chains in the ecosystem. They serve as food to the fishes, If they are not there, the fishes will have nothing to eat.”

He noted further that the monitoring will be done quarterly and holds some prospect for undergraduate and graduate interns on the Project to bud their horns in environmental science research. He disclosed that HYPREP is partnering with local institutions to further advance environmental research and is in talks with the University of Port Harcourt to establish a Chair in Wetland Research, with focus on restored mangrove areas to continue monitoring post restoration, describing it as an intergenerational monitoring programme.

In company of the Project Coordinator was Professor Scott Pegg, Professor of Political Science at the Indiana University, Indianapolis who planted a symbolic mangrove at the Bomu Creek and commended HYPREP for its efforts in restoring oil-degraded mangrove areas in Ogoni. Over the years, Professor Pegg has carried out some humanitarian and community intervention programmes in Ogoni.

It would be recalled that HYPREP had just last week, commenced the second phase of fish stock assessment to track improvement of biodiversity in rehabilitated mangrove areas in the Bomu Creek.

This is to correlate the relationship between mangrove restoration and fish stock improvement.

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