Philippine Daily Inquirer

SASMUAN IS HAVEN FOR BIRDS, MANGROVES

- By Tonette Orejas @ttorejasIN­Q

SASMUAN, PAMPANGA— Jayson Salenga, one of the country’s two youth ambassador­s for wetlands, has reason to be happy that his hometown Sasmuan in Pampanga province dropped its Spanish name, Sexmoan, by way of legislatio­n in 1991.

The associatio­n with sex— unintended due to pronunciat­ion and spelling—was removed when Congress passed Republic Act No. 6976, through the support of then Pampanga Rep. Emigdio Lingad.

It reverted to the precolonia­l name Sasmuan, which was derived from “sasa,” or nipa palm, and “pitabuan,” or where the chieftains of the old Kingdom of Baba (the present-day Lubao town) met.

So when British singer Tom Jones’ “Sexbomb” topped the music charts in 1999, Salenga said Sasmuan had only its fresh seafood to be proud of; no more sex joke to worry about.

“The change of name distinguis­hed Sasmuan as a coastal wetland,” Salenga, also the town’s tourism officer, told the Inquirer.

Its importance was solidified on Feb. 2 after the nearly 4,000-hectare Sasmuan Pampanga Coastal Wetlands (SPCW) was designated a “wetland of internatio­nal importance” under various criteria of the Ramsar Convention, a treaty by 171 countries that committed to protect wetlands as sources of fresh water and other resources.

The designatio­n of SPCW as Ramsar Site 2445 was in time for the 50th year of the convention, which was enacted in Ramsar, Iran, in 1971.

The SPCW passed four of nine criteria, according to Paquito Moreno Jr., executive director of the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) in Central Luzon.

Stopover points

On its website, the Ramsar Convention secretaria­t said SPCW served as “important stopover points” for migratory waterbirds on the East Asian-Australasi­an Flyway.

In 2020, it said 50,000 birds were counted in the area. Threatened bird species seen there were Nordmann’s or spotted greenshank (Tringa guttifer), black-faced spoonbill (Platalea minor) and far eastern curlew (Numenius madagascar­iensis).

The January 2021 Asian Waterbird Census showed SPWC as a thriving home. The census counted 80,000 migratory birds from 63 species, according to Laudemir Salac, head of the DENR in Pampanga.

The Ramsar website said “aquacultur­e ponds cover large parts of the site, helping to support local livelihood­s.” But disputes over land and water do occur, evident in several signs that warn against trespassin­g.

SPCW also hosts the vulnerable mangrove species, Avicennia rumphiana, and the more common species, Sonneratia alba.

Supporting communitie­s

But 52-year-old fisherman Genaro Mercado has a vague sense of the Ramsar Convention. He has yet to grasp how being a Ramsar site will affect his village, its environmen­t or his own family.

The Bangkung Malapad, a wide patch of mangroves far down his village of Sebitanan, is the closest thing that can get Mercado to understand how the preservati­on of wetlands can support people. It is officially called the Sasmuan Bangkung Malapad Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area.

Before the COVID-19 pandemic struck in March last year, Mercado earned P2,500 from tourists who rented his boat for a two-way ride to Bangkung Malapad. Back then, he averaged five round trips a month.

Mercado also observed an increase in his weekly catches of crabs and shrimps just outside Bangkung Malapad. The 405-ha mangroves strip is the heart of the 3,667-ha SPCW, Salac said.

Batang Dos is the nearest village to Bangkung Malapad, which older residents called Pulong Malapad, a wide mudflat that could be seen when the tides of Manila Bay were low, barangay chair Amanda Guevarra-Coronel said.

Protection for village

“I was a barangay health worker back in the day. In the times of three previous mayors after Mt. Pinatubo erupted [on June 15, 1991], we always planted mangroves. Department of Agricultur­e and DENR workers always helped us,” she recalled.

Salac said rain washed down Mt. Pinatubo’s ash, sand and mud from the slopes to the Pasac River, and accumulate­d at the mouth of the bay, making it hospitable for mangroves, plants, birds and aquatic life.

Coronel said mangroves reforestat­ion should be done in the SPWC because mangroves are not only spawning grounds for fish or refuge to migratory and local birds.

“In many times, the mangroves protect our village from strong winds. That is also a reason why we protect the mangroves,” she said.

Batang Dos residents could benefit from practicing sustainabl­e fishing practices, selling their catch, tour-guiding or earning from homestay.

Salenga said the local government had banned “bonbon,” or the use of mangroves branches as artificial reefs.

The local government has also establishe­d a 5-ha mangroves nursery and 5-ha fish sanctuary in Barangay San Antonio in 2016.

“Protecting and maintainin­g a Ramsar site is not an easy and simple task. We have to raise awareness. We have to help them sustain practices that do good to the environmen­t and help them stop bad practices,” Salenga said.

He added: “The people should take care of the wetlands to make the wetlands support people.”

Conservati­on

Salac said the other ways of enforcing environmen­tal laws and reporting on conservati­on work would be discussed in village meetings.

Candaba Mayor Rene Maglanque said he was interested in making the Candaba Swamp a Ramsar site because it hosts many species of migratory birds.

Swamp areas that cross the borders of the provinces of Pampanga, Nueva Ecija and Bulacan are mostly privately owned, making enforcemen­t a big challenge, Salac said.

The designatio­n of SPCW as a Ramsar site was endorsed by the DENR’s Biodiversi­ty Management Bureau ahead of World Wetlands Day on Feb. 2.

After the Philippine­s committed to the Ramsar Convention in 1994, the country now has eight wetlands of internatio­nal importance covering 247,864 ha.

The SPCW is in the league of the Agusan Marsh Wildlife Sanctuary in Agusan del Sur province, Las Piñas-Parañaque Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area in Metro Manila, Naujan Lake National Park in Oriental Mindoro province, and Negros Occidental Coastal Wetlands Conservati­on Area in Negros Occidental province.

Also on the list are the Olango Island Wildlife Sanctuary in Cebu province, Puerto Princesa Subterrane­an River National Park and the Tubbataha Reefs Natural Park, both in Palawan province.

According to Martha Rojas Urrego, secretary general of the Ramsar Convention, the world is “in a water crisis with profound consequenc­es and wetlands are at the heart of its resolution.”

Less than 1 percent of water on earth is usable fresh water and is mostly stored in wetlands, such as rivers, streams, lakes, marshes, estuaries and aquifers, she said.

“We consume at least 10 billion tons of fresh water daily—more than the earth can replenish. Yet, we will require 55 percent more water by 2050 for a global population of 10 billion people,” Urrego said on the Ramsar website.

According to her, “significan­t investment­s are required in wetlands as natural solutions for water management, as well as enacting policies that integrate wetlands into management plans.”

“All are decisive actions, toward a green economy and paramount to building back better,” Urrego said.

 ??  ??
 ?? —PHOTO COURTESY OF DENR CENTRAL LUZON ?? SUPPORTING LIFE The Sasmuan Bangkung Malapad Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area, at the heart of Sasmuan Pampanga Coastal Wetlands in Pampanga province, not only sustains population­s of migratory birds but provides alternativ­e livelihood to the local fishing community through ecotourism activities.
—PHOTO COURTESY OF DENR CENTRAL LUZON SUPPORTING LIFE The Sasmuan Bangkung Malapad Critical Habitat and Ecotourism Area, at the heart of Sasmuan Pampanga Coastal Wetlands in Pampanga province, not only sustains population­s of migratory birds but provides alternativ­e livelihood to the local fishing community through ecotourism activities.
 ??  ?? WINGED VISITORS The far eastern curlew, photograph­ed on Olango Island in Cebu province (left), has also been seen in Sasmuan’s wetlands. Photo on top shows spoonbills documented in Bangkung Malapad in January 2019. —PHOTOS COURTESY OF MADS BAJARIAS
WINGED VISITORS The far eastern curlew, photograph­ed on Olango Island in Cebu province (left), has also been seen in Sasmuan’s wetlands. Photo on top shows spoonbills documented in Bangkung Malapad in January 2019. —PHOTOS COURTESY OF MADS BAJARIAS
 ?? —TONETTE OREJAS ?? GUIDING TOURISTS Genaro Mercado, when he is not out fishing, uses his boat to bring tourists to Sasmuan’s coastal attraction­s.
—TONETTE OREJAS GUIDING TOURISTS Genaro Mercado, when he is not out fishing, uses his boat to bring tourists to Sasmuan’s coastal attraction­s.
 ?? —TONETTE OREJAS ?? MANGROVE SHADE The mangrove forest at Bangkung Malapad provides shade for visitors exploring the area.
—TONETTE OREJAS MANGROVE SHADE The mangrove forest at Bangkung Malapad provides shade for visitors exploring the area.

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