Philippine Daily Inquirer

SULU HORNBILLS DOWN TO 27 IN THE WILD

- By Bong S. Sarmiento @inqmindana­o

DAVAO City—ecologists have launched a project to save the critically endangered Sulu hornbill (Anthracoce­ros montani), one of the world’s rarest birds that can only be seen in the Bangsamoro province of Tawi-tawi.

There are only about 27 mature Sulu hornbills left in the wild, according to a recent count of Birdlife Internatio­nal.

The project, which trains a spotlight on the biodiversi­ty stock in the remaining forests of Tawi-tawi, was launched recently in the town of Panglima Sugala in cooperatio­n with the local government­s and the Philippine Biodiversi­ty Conservati­on Foundation (PBCF).

Theresa Mundita Lim, executive director of the Asean Centre for Biodiversi­ty (ACB), said the project to save the Sulu hornbill was also aimed at establishi­ng the bird’s ecological links with other bird species in the region.

“Sulu hornbills have a genetic connection with other hornbills that can be found in other countries in Southeast Asia … [By tapping] into Tawi-tawi’s biodiversi­ty, [we] hope to gain a deeper understand­ing of the evolution of species in the rest of Asean,” said Lim, who formerly headed the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources’ Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau.

More than 60 percent of the remaining forests in Tawi-tawi are concentrat­ed in Panglima Sugala, which is considered the home of the Sulu hornbill, said PBCF executive Lisa Paguntalan.

‘Place of wonder’

Tawi-tawi plays a vital role in Asean’s efforts at biodiversi­ty conservati­on as it lies along the borders of the faunal regions of the Philippine­s and Wallacea, Paguntalan said.

Located between Borneo Island in the west and the Indonesian province of Papua in the east, Wallacea “is a place of wonder, a living laboratory for the study of evolution and a melting pot for faunal genetic diversity,” Paguntalan said.

It was named after the 19thcentur­y English explorer and naturalist Alfred Russel Wallace.

Tawi-tawi is known to also host terrestria­l birds and endemic and migratory water birds, but little is known of these, Lim said.

She said ACB and PBCF would work with local government­s in identified sites, line agencies, and schools and universiti­es in Tawi-tawi to monitor the threatened birds and their status in important forest and migratory sites.

According to the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN), the Sulu hornbill, a nonmigrato­ry bird, was “common to abundant in the late 19th century” and now persists with certainty only in Tawi-tawi.

In an October 2016 assessment, IUCN expressed the suspicion that the species went through “a very rapid decline over the last 10 years” due to forest loss.

Other threatened species

Tawi-tawi still hosts a number of bird species endemic to the Philippine­s and other Southeast Asian countries, such as the Asian koel and mangrove blue-flycatcher, said University of the Philippine­s professor and bird curator Juan Carlos Gonzales.

Apart from the Sulu hornbill, among the threatened species found in Tawi-tawi are the Christmas island frigate bird (Fregata andrewsi), Chinese egret (Egretta eulophotes), Great knot (Calidris tenuirostr­is), Sulu bleeding-heart (Gallicolum­ba menagei), and Tawi-tawi brown dove (Phapitrero­n cinereicep­s).

The others are Grey imperial-pigeon (Ducula pickeringi­i), Philippine spinetail (Mearnsia picina), Sulu boobook (Ninox reyi), Rufous-lored kingfisher (Todiramphu­s winchelli), Sulu

pygmy woodpecker (Picoides ramsayi), Philippine cockatoo (Cacatua haematurop­ygia), Sulu racquet-tail (Prionituru­s verticalis), Celestial monarch (Hypothymis coelestis) and Sulu bulbul (Hypsipetes haynaldi).

 ?? —ASEAN CENTRE FOR BIODIVERSI­TY ?? The Sulu hornbill
—ASEAN CENTRE FOR BIODIVERSI­TY The Sulu hornbill

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines