The clearance of mangrove forests and nearby seasonally dry forests to open land for shrimp farming and agriculture has an enormous impact on local ecosystems. Shrimp farms also capture and grow larva of local shrimp species from the mangrove forests with help of local inhabitants. These farms and agricultural lands also pollute the area with industrial waste and agricultural runoff. Illegal extraction of edible crustaceans and bivalves; conflicts over land use rights with nearby villages and litter and wastewater discharge from nearby towns into the mangrove forest canals are also environmental issues affecting the sanctuary. Introduced plant species like
Tephrosia purpurea, Dactyloctenium aegyptium, Eragrostis cilianensis and
Brachiaria mutica are found growing inside this protected area. The
American crocodile is no longer present in the area, rendering this species as one of the most threatened in the country. == References ==