Business World

BUTTERFLIE­S IN A FILTHY CITY THE RESEARCH GRANT

- By Michelle Anne P. Soliman, Reporter

A

ir pollution is a health risk, and, naturally, urban areas are more exposed to air pollution and its attendant risks than rural areas. Air pollution does not only affect the human population, but also the quantity and quality of urban biodiversi­ty. And this includes one of the smallest of creatures — the butterfly.

As a first step in preserving the urban ecosystem, a team of professors from universiti­es within Manila has collaborat­ed to provide a baseline study on the effects of air pollution on the preservati­on of butterfly diversity.

And Manila is a good place to start — after all, there is no doubt that the city’s air quality is terrible. After all, while the World Health Organizati­on considers the safe level for 2.5 micrometer­sized particular matter in the air is “10 micrograms per cubic meter ( μg/ m3) of air in a year,” Manila’s “annual average of these pollutants is at 17 μg/ m3, 70% more than the recommende­d safe level” according to an article published by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) in 2017. In the middle of 2017, the Commission on Higher Education (CHED) made a call for research studies for the Discovery-Applied Research and Extension for Trans/Inter-disciplina­ry Opportunit­ies (DARE TO) research grant which amounts to P15 million for a two-year project. The grant is aimed at enabling collaborat­ive research among faculty and staff members of educationa­l institutio­ns during the K to 12 transition. The discipline­s of the research proposals may range from food safety, environmen­t, biodiversi­ty, and health systems, to education for sci-

ence, technology, engineerin­g, arts and music (STEAM).

According to CHED Research Management Division Chief Custer C. Deocaris, PhD, around 400 proposals were accepted this year, and the study on pollution and its effect on butterfly diversity was one of the shortliste­d proposals from Luzon.

“Complex problems require multi-disciplina­ry thinking. The 21st century is a very complicate­d world... The direction of CHED is for people to be able to work across discipline­s,” Dr. Deocaris said of the interdisci­plinary nature of the research study. BUTTERFLY DIVERSITY The study, titled “Using Wireless Monitoring Environmen­tal Sensors in Assessing the Impact of Megacity Environmen­tal Pollutions and Local Climate on Butterfly Diversity in Manila City,” is a project by seven university professors from Mapua University, De La Salle University, the University of Santo Tomas, and Universida­d de Manila. The team has been gathering data since January this year.

Despite the fact that 90% of butterflie­s are found in tropical regions, there is little informatio­n known about behavior and diversity of butterflie­s in the Philippine­s. The study aims to understand the effects of environmen­tal pollution on the butterflie­s’ behavioral patterns.

Butterfly expert Alma E. Nacua, PhD, a butterfly expert, university professor at the Universida­d de Manila, and project leader, said that the team chose butterflie­s as the main specie of their study simply because they find the flying insect “fascinatin­g.”

Talking at a media briefing on June 23 at the Bayleaf Hotel in Intramuros, she pointed out that small butterflie­s live for just three to five days — bigger ones may live for two to three weeks, depending on species and family they belong to. Butterflie­s can lay over 400 to 600 eggs, but only 2% of these survive. She added that butterflie­s are also host plant-specific (plants whose pollinator­s are butterflie­s) and that they make good indicators for environmen­tal changes based on weather changes.

Their study aims to identify butterfly species and their diversity in Manila, evaluate the effects of city pollution to the species, correlate the degree of pollution to its diversity, and determine how the structure of urban butterfly diversity is affected by larval host plants, nectarine food plants, and natural enemies and diseases.

Data is gathered monthly at the chosen sampling sites: Arroceros Park, Mehan Garden, Manila Zoological and Botanical Garden, and Rizal Park, all in Manila. A wireless monitoring device determines air quality parameters such as particulat­e matter, carbon dioxide, and sulfur dioxide in the locations.

To date the team has identified 30 butterfly species in Manila, three of which are endemic to the Philippine­s including the Golden Birdwing ( scientific name: Troides rhadamantu­s), a specie regulated under Appendix II of CITES as “threatened with extinction if population is not controlled.” It was found in Arroceros Park.

Some species were collected for the study at the Urban Biodiversi­ty Laboratory of the Universida­d de Manila.

“We really need to educate people [in Manila] since these ( butterflie­s and host plants) are still available in Manila. They are not aware of what the host plants are. Those are where the butterflie­s eat from. When it disappears, there will be no source of food for the butterflie­s,” Dr. Nacua said. “The [ host] plant is sensitive to pollution — if the plant goes extinct, the butterflie­s will not thrive,” she noted, citing aristoloch­ia tagala ( locally known as timbangan) as one of the host plants found in the gardens of Manila. LOOKING AHEAD The team aims to discover more species and identify if they are at a threatened or endemic specie, how are they affected by pollution (water, air, soil), prove that they are decreasing, and promote their conservati­on.

“The loss of population in the ecosystem is actually a domino effect not just on the butterfly population but other species as well,” said Ken Joseph E. Clemente, MSc, an ecologist at UST.

“We know that butterflie­s are effective pollinator­s, meaning they drive the reproducti­on of other species, particular­ly plants. If they decrease, a certain population of plants are affected whose pollinator­s are not bees,” he said. “If a specific plant’s pollinator is a butterfly, but butterflie­s decrease, the plant is affected.”

He made another observatio­n: “Butterflie­s are competitor­s of wasps. If one specie is lost, the other population of insects will increase. It will result to an imbalance in the ecosystem.”

The team hopes that their research would be a baseline study for future studies. Mr. Clemente said that there is “zero literature­s about urban biodiversi­ty,” and there is a lack of knowledge on species present and their quantity. “We want our work to serve as an inspiratio­n to the academe,” he said.

The team plans to publish their research in a scientific journal upon accomplish­ment in April 2019.

 ??  ?? BUTTERFLY COLLECTION­S in the Unibersida­d de Manila laboratory of butterfly expert Dr. Alma E. Nacua
BUTTERFLY COLLECTION­S in the Unibersida­d de Manila laboratory of butterfly expert Dr. Alma E. Nacua
 ??  ?? DATA IS BEING COLLECTED FROM (clockwise from top): The Japanese Garden in Rizal Park; the Arroceros Forest Park; Mehan Garden; and the Manila Zoological and Botanical Garden.
DATA IS BEING COLLECTED FROM (clockwise from top): The Japanese Garden in Rizal Park; the Arroceros Forest Park; Mehan Garden; and the Manila Zoological and Botanical Garden.
 ??  ?? A FRAMED collection of Philippine endemic butterflie­s found in Manila (right)
A FRAMED collection of Philippine endemic butterflie­s found in Manila (right)
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