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The stilt-like roots of mangroves provide complex habitats for a variety of nearshore species, including fish. Photo by Christian Ziegler/Minden Pictures
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If any single event was a watershed for conservation of the world’s mangrove forests, it was the Indian Ocean tsunami of 2004...In the aftermath of the tsunami, some scientists reported that settlements behind swampy, shoreline mangrove forests often suffered less damage, and fewer casualties, than areas where the forests had been cleared for aquaculture or coastal developments. 

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