PAGADIAN CITY, ZAMBOSUR - The richness of the
country’s coral reefs is the main focal point of the observance of the Month of
the Ocean (MOO) this May, Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Ramon J.
P. Paje announced today.
He said the iconic species of MOO 2013 is the thresher shark (Alopiaspelagicus) that can be regularly seen in Monad Shoal in Cebu’s Malapascua Island. “Classified as a vulnerable species, this predator’s presence is an indicator of the reef ecosystem’s good health,” Paje said.
Paje said the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR) has lined up various activities for this year’s celebration,
which falls under the theme “AngBahura ay
KagubatansaKaragatan, AtingPangalagaan!” (The Coral Reefs are the Forests
of the Seas, Let Us Protect Them).
“The focus on coral reefs highlights the premium
that we put on our coral reefs, which protect our coastlines naturally and give
tremendous economic benefits to millions of Filipinos particularly through
fisheries and tourism,” said Paje, who represented the Philippines at the Sustainable
Ocean Summit held in Washington, D.C. from April 22 to 24.
He said the iconic species of MOO 2013 is the thresher shark (Alopiaspelagicus) that can be regularly seen in Monad Shoal in Cebu’s Malapascua Island. “Classified as a vulnerable species, this predator’s presence is an indicator of the reef ecosystem’s good health,” Paje said.
The Philippines is home to Palawan’s Tubbataha
Reefs Natural Park, which was declared as a World Heritage Site by the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and a
Wetland of International Importance by the Ramsar Convention.
The country is also home to the Apo Reef Natural
Park in Occidental Mindoro, considered the second largest contiguous coral reef
system in the world, next to Australia’s Great Barrier Reef.
These two world-renowned reefs, along with the
other coral reefs in the country’s 240 million hectares of water, and the
biodiversity that thrives within them, provide food security to Filipinos, who
source 80 percent of their protein requirement from the oceans.
One of the highlights of the month-long celebration
will be the launch of the DENR’s Sustainable Coral Reef Ecosystem Management
Program (SCREMP) on May 20.
The SCREMP is a national program where the
protection and rehabilitation of the coral reef ecosystems will be conducted
with a strategic, sustainable and ecosystem-based approach.
The program includes the awarding of winners of a
photo competition featuring the underwater beauty of the Philippines’ coral
reef ecosystem.
The Coastal Law Enforcement Manual, a
guidebook for multisectoral groups enforcing laws to protect the country’s
coastal and marine resources, will also be launched.
A memorandum of agreement (MOA) for the promotion
of responsible diving will be signed between the DENR and the Reef-World
Foundation during the SCREMP launch. A separate MOA, with the local government
of Boracay as additional signatory, will be signed on May 30 to launch the implementation
of the foundation’s Green Fins project on the island.
The MOO will also see diving enthusiasts and coral
reef advocates participate in the “LinisBahura: SisidparasaKalikasan 2013,”
where they will collect crown of thorns starfish (Acanthasterplanci) from the
coral reefs along the Verde Island Passage in Pagkilatan, Batangas. This kind
of starfish is known to destroy entire coral reef populations by feeding on
live coral tissues.
Information materials on the richness of coral reef
ecosystems, their economic importance, and the various ways to conserve and
sustain them will be displayed or posted at all MRT-3 stations along EDSA for
the whole month of May.
A group of artists from the Dolphins Love Freedom
group will restore the year-old Biodiversity Mural Wall of the Ninoy Aquino
Parks and Wildlife Center (NAPWC) in Quezon City. The Wall was painted last
year during the celebration of MOO 2012.
For one month starting May 15, an interactive
walking tour promoting 22 ecotourism sites established under the DENR’s
Integrated Coastal Resources Management Project (ICRMP) will be exhibited at
the NAPWC.
On May 19, coral reef advocates will hold a bike
parade from Quezon City to Roxas Boulevard to drum up awareness on the state of
the country’s coral reefs.
Finally, on May 29-30, the Sulu-Sulawesi Marine
Ecoregion (SSME) Sub-committee on Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) will hold a
meeting on initiatives on establishment and management of MPAs within the
region.
The meeting will also see the launch of the State
of the Coral Triangle Report, detailing the state of coral reef ecosystems and
resources within the Coral Triangle.
The Philippines is an active member of the
six-country Coral Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs, Fisheries and Food Security.
The Coral Triangle is known to contain 40 percent of the world’s coral reef
fish species and 75 percent of the world’s coral species, 53 percent of these
were found to be resilient to climate change.
MOO was first observed in 1999 by virtue of Presidential
Proclamation No. 57. (PR RPAO)
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