Philippine Daily Inquirer

GROUPS STRENGTHEN EFFORTS TO PROTECT ‘PAWIKAN’ NESTING SITE, CORAL REEFS IN SUBIC BAY

- By Joanna Rose Aglibot @joannaglib­otINQ

SUBIC BAY FREEPORT—Carrying trash bags, local licensed scuba divers went into the waters off All Hands Beach Resort here on Friday to collect underwater garbage as part of a multisecto­ral initiative to protect the marine and coastal environmen­t in this economic zone.

The divers were tapped by a group composed of officials from several government and private organizati­ons who have been involved in the conservati­on of a major pawikan (marine turtle) nesting site and the restoratio­n of damaged coral reefs in Subic Bay since 2012.

Marife Castillo, Provincial Environmen­t and Natural Resources (Penro) chief of Zambales, said the activity kicked off their celebratio­n of the Month of the Ocean, which has been observed in the country annually since 1999.

Threatened

On Friday, a memorandum of agreement to protect Subic Bay’s marine habitat was signed by Castillo on behalf of Penro and the representa­tives from the Subic Bay Metropolit­an Authority (SBMA), Sangkalika­san Producer Cooperativ­e, the Philippine National Police Maritime Group and All Hands Beach.

The waters off All Hands Beach is among the seven major areas inside the free port that have been identified by the Department of Environmen­t and Natural Resources (DENR) as nesting sites for marine turtles.

According to the DENR, three of the seven species of sea turtle in the world can be found in Zambales province. These are the olive ridley sea turtles (Lepidochel­ys olivacea), green sea turtles (Chelonia mydas) and hawksbill sea turtles (Eretmochel­ys imbricata).

Almost all the seven species of sea turtle have been classified as threatened or endangered due to poaching and ocean pollution.

Castillo said several adult olive ridley sea turtles lay eggs at All Hands Beach area every year.

“Female baby pawikan will always return to the beach where they were born to lay eggs in the next 20 to 25 years. So it’s important to protect their nesting sites,“she said on Friday during the launch of the coastal cleanup drive here.

Mark Dayrit, chair of Brighterda­y Subic Ltd. Inc. that operates All Hands Beach, said the resort had already released around 8,000 sea turtle hatchlings since it opened in 2012.

Reef buds

Sangkalika­san, an environmen­tal conservati­on organizati­on, has also been conducting a coral augmentati­on project at All Hands Beach by creating artificial coral reefs that serve as fish sanctuarie­s.

The group has been dropping organic reef buds some 50 meters from the beach area. Reef buds are a technology of artificial reef constructi­on invented by the late Austrian geoscienti­st Dr. Harald Kremnitz and Filipino Benjamin Tayag Jr.

SBMA chair and administra­tor Rolen Paulino said intensifyi­ng their efforts to restore balance in the ecosystem would also be beneficial to the local tourism industry.

“We want to preserve the wildlife inside the Subic Bay Freeport while maintainin­g the area as the No. 1 tourist destinatio­n in Central Luzon,” he said.

Police Col. Fernando Cunanan Jr., chief of the PNP Regional Maritime Unit 3, said his unit had arrested thousands for illegal poaching and at least 30 people involved in the illegal trade of wildlife.

 ?? —CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? MARINE HABITAT Organic reef buds are put up in Subic Bay on Friday as part of a coral restoratio­n project initiated by Sangkalika­san Producer Cooperativ­e, an environmen­tal conservati­on organizati­on.
—CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO MARINE HABITAT Organic reef buds are put up in Subic Bay on Friday as part of a coral restoratio­n project initiated by Sangkalika­san Producer Cooperativ­e, an environmen­tal conservati­on organizati­on.

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