Mar Menor

Designations
Designated4 October 1994
Reference no.706[1]
Mar Menor as seen from space
El Barón Island [es]

Mar Menor (Spanish pronunciation: [ˌmaɾ meˈnoɾ], "minor/smaller sea") is a coastal saltwater lagoon in the Iberian Peninsula located south-east of the Autonomous Community of Murcia, Spain, near Cartagena. Its name is the opposite of the Mediterranean, which is the Mar Mayor (greater/larger sea) of the region.

Four municipalities border the Mar Menor: Cartagena, Los Alcázares, San Javier and San Pedro del Pinatar. With a surface area of 135 km2, a coastal length of 70 km, and warm and clear water no more than 7 metres in depth, it is the largest lagoon in Spain.

The lagoon is separated from the Mediterranean Sea by La Manga ("the sleeve"), a sandbar 22 km in length whose width ranges from 100 to 1,200 metres, with Cape Palos in its south-eastern vertex making for the lagoon's roughly triangular shape. There are five islets located within the lagoon: Perdiguera islet, Mayor or El Barón islet, Ciervo islet, Redonda islet and del Sujeto islet.

Its relatively high salinity (which aids flotation), low waves, and remarkable sporting infrastructures makes it a popular place for a wide variety of water sports.

Ecological importance

At the northern end there are salt flats, which include a wetland of international importance.[2] This area is preserved as a natural park administered by the regional government: the Salinas y Arenales de San Pedro del Pinatar [es] (‘San Pedro del Pinatar salt flats and sand beaches’). The microbes that live in this coastal lagoon have been recently described.[3]

The islets and the few coastal places without permanent human constructions are a protected landscape: the Espacios abiertos e islas del Mar Menor [es] (‘Mar Menor open areas and islands’).

In 1994 the Mar Menor was included on the Ramsar Convention list for the conservation and sustainable utilisation of wetlands. The Mar Menor is also part of a Specially Protected Area of Mediterranean Importance and is a Special Protection Area (ZEPA in Spanish) for bird life.

In July 2016 pollution was reportedly so severe as to render the area close to ecological collapse, following 18 years of neglected warnings. The public prosecutor's office is investigating allegations of negligence against the relevant authorities, which are governed by the conservative People's Party[4]

In May 2017 all beaches of the Mar Menor were stripped of their Blue Flag status as a result of the polluted condition of the Mar Menor in 2016.[5]

In October 2019 the pollution entering after floods in September led to thousands of dead fish lining the beaches, having suffocated due to a lack of oxygen. Intensive farming in surrounding areas leads to high levels of nitrates, ammonium and phosphates from fertilizers being washed into the lagoon, causing eutrophication, an excessive growth of algae and bacteria that deprives the water of oxygen.[6]

A similar event occurred in August 2021, with four to five tons of dead fish being removed from the lagoon within a week. Shortly thereafter, a large demonstration took place, with 70,000 people surrounding the entire lagoon on August 28, 2021.[7]

Legal status

Beginning in 2018 in response to the recurring hypoxic events, activists from civil society have lobbied under the name of "ILP (Iniciativa Legisativa Popular) Mar Menor"[8] for a law that would recognize the right of the Mar Menor ecosystem to exist, treating it as a "legal person"[9] following the legal paradigm of rights of nature. In October 2022, Spanish lawmakers granted these rights, making the Mar Menor the first case of an ecosystem protected by rights of nature in Europe. [10] The Mar Menor is now legally represented by a group of citizens, scientists and officials; furthermore, anyone can bring legal action on behalf of Mar Menor, without first having to prove legal standing.[11]

Panoramic view of Mar Menor and La Manga

Panoramic view of Mar Menor and the 22-kilometre La Manga on its eastern horizon

Notes

  1. ^ "Mar Menor". Ramsar Sites Information Service. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Pàgina no trobada ~ IRTA" (PDF). www.irta.es. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 August 2021. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
  3. ^ Ghai R, Hernandez CM, Picazo A, et al. (2012). "Metagenomes of Mediterranean Coastal Lagoons". Scientific Reports. 2: 490. Bibcode:2012NatSR...2E.490G. doi:10.1038/srep00490. PMC 3391805. PMID 22778901.
  4. ^ El Mar Menor, al borde del colapso
  5. ^ Economia, Murcia. "El Mar Menor pierde 19 banderas azules". Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  6. ^ Sánchez, Esther (24 October 2019). "Why did thousands of dead fish wash up on Spain's Mar Menor?". El País. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  7. ^ Howells, Ron (2021-08-28). "Environmental disaster human-chain protest spans 73 kilometres of Mar Menor coastline". Euro Weekly News Spain. Retrieved 2021-08-28.
  8. ^ "ILP Mar Menor".
  9. ^ Perez-Solero, Ricardo (2020-11-18). "Can Spain fix its worst ecological crisis by making a lagoon a legal person?". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2023-04-02.
  10. ^ Fuchs, Marie-Christine (2023-02-24). "Rights of Nature Reach Europe: The Mar Menor Case in Spain in the Light of Latin American Precedents". Verfassungsblog. doi:10.17176/20230224-185211-0. Retrieved 2023-08-01.
  11. ^ "Saltwater lagoon granted legal personhood". Grist. 2022-10-20. Archived from the original on 2023-04-02. Retrieved 2023-04-02.

External links

  • Mar Menor Tourism Site
  • Unofficial La Manga del Mar Menor Tourism guide
  • Mar Menor Activities
  • Minder, Raphael (2021-10-17). "How a Stunning Lagoon in Spain Turned Into 'Green Soup'". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-10-18.

37°46′N 00°50′W / 37.767°N 0.833°W / 37.767; -0.833

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