Philippine Daily Inquirer

Endangered PH seabird spotted

- —STORY BYMADONNAV­IROLA

CITY OF CALAPAN— Conservati­on experts in Mindoro are excited about the sighting of a Christmas Frigatebir­d in the Apo Reef Natural Park (ARNP) in the town of Sablayan, Occidental Mindoro. The reason? It was the first time the bird, listed as critically endangered or near extinction, was seen in the area. Experts said it meant just one thing—ARNP is serving its purpose.

CITY OF CALAPAN— One of the world’s critically endangered seabirds, the Christmas Frigatebir­d, was spotted for the first time at Apo Reef Natural Park (ARNP) in Sablayan town in Occidental Mindoro province, the third record of the species in the Philippine­s outside of the Sulu Sea.

Geoff Tabaranza, research program manager of Mindoro Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Foundation Inc. ( MBCFI), said the sighting of the bird “highlights the significan­ce” of ARNP as a conservati­on site.

The park, he said, serves as “nesting ground for seabirds and a stopover feeding site for migratory species.”

First record

MBCFI, which celebrated its 10th year anniversar­y late last month, documented the juvenile Christmas Frigatebir­d, or Christmas Island Frigatebir­d ( Fregata andrewsi), at the ARNP on June 25.

The bird was first recorded in the country in Tawi-Tawi in 1995, said MBCFI in an e-mail to the Inquirer.

Since then, a total of 161 individual­s have been recorded from the Sulu Sea with only one record from Metro Manila in 2013 and a record this year in Panay.

Bob Natural, a biologist and MBCFI’s monitoring and evaluation officer, first spotted a single juvenile frigatebir­d flying overhead when a survey team was taking a break along the beach.

DENR work, too

Tabaranza said the threatened bird was observed soaring over the main island of ARNP during a survey of seabirds, which was conducted in collaborat­ion with the Department of

Environmen­t and Natural Resources-ARNP Protected Area Office.

The survey tallied nesting population­s of hundreds of rare Bridled Terns ( Onychoprio­n anaethetus) and Blacknaped Terns ( Sterna sumatrana).

Earlier on Feb. 7, MBCFI recorded three individual­s of an uncommon near-threatened seabird—Streaked Shearwater ( Calonetris leucomelas)— for the first time near ARNP.

The Christmas Frigatebir­ds are large black seabirds measuring up to a meter in length. The juvenile has black upper parts, pale cream head, dark breast band and distinctly shaped white patch in its belly and under the wings.

Red List

Tabaranza said the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN) has included the Christmas Frigatebir­d on the Red List of Threatened Species as critically endangered—the highest category assigned to species that are on the brink of extinction.

According to the IUCN, the species has a small population that breeds in a tiny area of just one island.

Its global population is in continuous decline due to hunting and accidental trapping in fishing gear.

Other threats included clearing of vegetation in nesting sites, marine pollution and over fishing.

The most recent census, conducted in 2003, estimated a global population of only 2,4004,800 mature individual­s.

The IUCN has urged immediate action to prevent the extinction of this species with the protection of all known and potential nesting habitats, including surveys to identify the extent of its foraging area.

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 ?? —PHOTO FROM MINDORO BIODIVERSI­TY CONSERVATI­ON FOUNDATION INC. ?? The Christmas Frigatebir­d (“Fregata andrewsi”) was photograph­ed and seen for the first time in Sablayan, Occidental Mindoro’s Apo Reef Natural Park in June by biologists.
—PHOTO FROM MINDORO BIODIVERSI­TY CONSERVATI­ON FOUNDATION INC. The Christmas Frigatebir­d (“Fregata andrewsi”) was photograph­ed and seen for the first time in Sablayan, Occidental Mindoro’s Apo Reef Natural Park in June by biologists.

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