S’pore park to house rare Philippine eagles
MANILA: The Philippines is sending to Singapore in June two of the world’s rarest raptors in a move to protect the species from extinction.
The two Philippine eagles will be airlifted to Singapore on June 4, under a wildlife loan agreement which the Department of Environment and Natural Resources signed with Wildlife Reserves Singapore (WRS) yesterday.
The pair – a 15-year-old male named Geothermica and a 17-year-old female named Sambisig – will be housed at the 20ha Jurong Bird Park.
Both were born in captivity at the Philippine Eagle Centre in Davao.
“This serves as an insurance policy for our eagles.
“If something bad happens to their population here, we have a gene pool outside the country that we can rely on to continue propagating them in captivity,” Dennis Salvador, executive director of the Philippine Eagle Foundation said.
With a wing span of 2m and a body length of 1m, the Philippine eagle is considered the largest eagle species.
It is listed as “critically endangered” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
A top predator that feeds on monkeys, lemurs, squirrels and bats, it used to roam in fairly large numbers across the Philippines.
But decades of deforestation and urban sprawl have nearly decimated its territories and its population has rapidly declined.
Only about 800 are left in the wild today. Thirty-two are in breeding centres.
Philippine eagles pair for life, and lay just a single egg every two years.
This is the first time the Philippines is lending this national treasure to another country. — The Straits Times/Asia News Network