Sun.Star Cebu

Corals in 50 marine protected areas killed

Coral damage and destructio­n have been reported in 50 marine protected areas around the province, prompting the call to declare an outbreak

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WITH 50 marine protected areas (MPAs) affected by the ravages of a coral-preying starfish, the Provincial Environmen­t and Natural Resources Office (Penro) has recommende­d the declaratio­n of a crown-of-thorns seastar (Cots) outbreak.

Baltazar Tribunalo, head of the Provincial Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Office (PDRRMO), said they expected more corals to be destroyed with the spread of the large starfish that some scientists believed to be timed with El Niño events.

Penro submitted a budget proposal to help local government units (LGUs) and families affected by the weather phenomenon, including P1 million for the cash-forfood program to pay those involved in getting rid of the predators.

Penro also proposed using P18 million to rehabilita­te decimated coral reefs in MPAs in the next three years, or until 2022.

The 50 MPAs are located in Moalboal (three), Tabogon (two), Camotes Island (eight), Bantayan Island (eight), Cordova (three), Dalaguete (three), Argao (five), Santander (one), Samboan (one), San Remigio (five), Tuburan (four), Oslob (four), Carmen (two) and Talisay City (one).

According to the PDRRMO, the outbreak was first reported in the towns of Tabogon, Poro, Tudela, Tuburan and Moalboal.

The P18 million is part of the P23.5 million that will come from the quick response fund, which was made available after the Provincial Board placed the whole province under a state of calamity as a result of the effects of the El Niño.

Some P3 million will be used to rehabilita­te the water systems in Barangay Arbor in Boljoon and Barangay Sunog in Balamban. The remainder will go to trainings for rainwater catchment and water electrolys­is programs.

“I’m worried that the impact of the El Niño has worsened. The biggest challenge we face right now is the lack of potable water and the crown-of-thorns starfish outbreak,” Tribunalo said in Cebuano.

Seven LGUs have also declared a state of calamity, with Carcar City being the first, followed by the towns of Minglanill­a, Sogod, Bantayan, Ginatilan, Samboan and Toledo City.

In Bantayan Island, damage to 350 hectares of seaweed farms was estimated to be around P28 million.

During the Water Summit in Cebu City last Thursday, April 4, Tribunalo reported that the water level in the rivers around the province has dropped by half.

In San Remigio, the water level in wells of the San Remigio Water Service and Sanitation Cooperativ­e has fallen close to two meters.

The Bogo Water District and the Philippine Spring Water Resources Inc. reported similar problems.

 ?? SUNSTAR FOTO / ALEX BADAYOS ?? DEADLY HEAT. The ice-ice disease has ravaged 350 hectares of seaweed farms in Bantayan Island. The extreme heat brought about by the weather phenomenon El Niño has raised the temperatur­e in shallow waters where seaweeds are grown. According to Wikipedia, this makes them produce a ‘moist organic substance that attracts bacteria in the water that induces the characteri­stic withering and hardening of the seaweed tissues.
SUNSTAR FOTO / ALEX BADAYOS DEADLY HEAT. The ice-ice disease has ravaged 350 hectares of seaweed farms in Bantayan Island. The extreme heat brought about by the weather phenomenon El Niño has raised the temperatur­e in shallow waters where seaweeds are grown. According to Wikipedia, this makes them produce a ‘moist organic substance that attracts bacteria in the water that induces the characteri­stic withering and hardening of the seaweed tissues.

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