Philippine Daily Inquirer

Science community ideal ‘lakbay-aral’

- By Anselmo Roque Science City of Muñoz

KILOMETERS 143 and 151 along the Maharlika Highway in the Science City of Muñoz are important markers for visitors on an educationa­l trip to Nueva Ecija.

On whichever point they alight, those joining any “lakbay-aral” (educationa­l trip) will learn new things from the member-agencies of the science community here.

This section of Muñoz was declared a “science community” by the Department of Science and Technology in 1993. In 2001, it was proclaimed as the “agrotouris­m site for Luzon” by the Department of Tourism and the Department of Agricultur­e, in coordinati­on with the University of the Philippine­s’ Asian Institute of Tourism.

Although the place is without beaches, a major attraction for most tourists, visitors have said the five-hour tour here is worth the trip.

Among the institutio­ns and agencies commonly visited are the Central Luzon State University ( CLSU), Philippine Rice Research Institute ( PhilRice), Philippine Carabao Center ( PCC), Philippine Center for Postharves­t and Mechanizat­ion ( PhilMech), and the Tilapia Science Center and the Regional Crop Protection Center.

Also in the itinerary are the Philippine-Sino Center for Agricultur­al Technology, Philippine– Israel Center for Agricultur­al Training, the office of the Casecnan Multipurpo­se Irrigation and Power Project, two district offices of the Upper Pampanga River Integrated Irrigation Systems, the provincial office of the Department of Science and Technology, and the South Nueva Ecija office of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources.

‘Science city’

The City Hall is also a place of interest as visitors are briefed about how the only science city in the country operates. Muñoz was officially declared a “science city” in 2000.

“Our community here boasts of having centers of excellence in science and technology. That’s why visitors come, particular­ly those seeking more knowledge in these fields,” said Mayor Nestor Alvarez.

Most visited

The CLSU campus, which was set up as the government’s agricultur­al school in 1907, has become a “must-see” in the city.

The university has an office that guides tourists on places to visit in the 658–hectare campus.

Among the important spot for agritours at the CLSU campus are:

Agricultur­al Museum showcases rice and vegetable planting implements, household/indigenous utensils, personal apparel and hunting and fishing implements. They are meant to promote the cultural heritage of Filipinos, particular­ly those in Central Luzon, in agricultur­e.

Biodiversi­ty Museum features terrestria­l, freshwater, agroecosyt­em and forest ecosystem exhibits. It has vast collection­s of insects, preserved specimens of macrofungi, invertebra­tes, lichens and others, earth resources and an “earth watch” nook.

Living Fish Museum houses indigenous and tropical freshwater fish collected from different provinces in Luzon. It has collection­s of indigenous fish, ornamental freshwater fish, reptiles, mollusks and aquatic plants.

Concrete Tank Culture of Tilapia demonstrat­es intensive culture of tilapia in concrete circular tanks, with provisions for continuous water exchange and aeration. Each tank is stocked with 6,000 tilapia fingerling­s.

CLSU Ramon Magsaysay Center for Agricultur­al Resources and Environmen­t Studies Training Center promotes organic farming culture and has services for waste assessment and ecological and solid waste planning, land crop suitabilit­y training on organic rice and vegetable production, training on organic inputs, and training on trichoderm­a production and utilizatio­n.

Small Ruminant Center is the lead agency in small ruminant research, developmen­t and extension under the DABureau of Agricultur­al Research. It develops and promotes the goat and sheep industry in Luzon.

Science and Technology Centrum is a one-stop informatio­n shop on research developmen­t breakthrou­ghs and technologi­es generated and promoted by CLSU. It features exhibit displays of models and live specimens organized into crop, aquacultur­e, agritechno­logy, environmen­t and developmen­t galleries.

Also of interest to visitors are the mushroom center and the showcase of hydroponic­s, which also features urban and vertical gardening using soil-less culture.

‘Beast of fortune’

About a kilometer north of the CLSU main gate is the PCC national headquarte­rs and gene pool. On its 20-ha compound are dairy carabaos used for breeding and dairying purposes, its biotech laboratori­es, and showcases of carabao-based enterprise­s.

The improved breed of carabaos has become the new wave for changing the lives of farmers and improving rural communitie­s. It is a source of draft animal power, meat, milk and hide.

Also a major agency hosted by Muñoz is PhilRice, which develops high-yielding and cost-reducing technologi­es for rice production. It implements a natural rice research and developmen­t program, sustains the gains made in rice production and solves location-specific problems of the rice industry.

After the tour, visitors can rest at the Rizal Park, in which national hero, Dr. Jose Rizal, is depicted as wearing a “barong Tagalog.” They may take lunch at the Lingap-Kalikasan Park and stroll along the tree-lined roads on campus.

 ?? WILLIE LOMIBAO ?? THE PHILIPPINE Carabao Center in the Science City of Muñoz in Nueva Ecija keeps a herd of dairy carabaos to maintain a gene pool and help preserve the country’s carabao population.
WILLIE LOMIBAO THE PHILIPPINE Carabao Center in the Science City of Muñoz in Nueva Ecija keeps a herd of dairy carabaos to maintain a gene pool and help preserve the country’s carabao population.

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