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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, March 12, 2019
Community takes the lead in new Philippines’ marine protected area
A NEW marine protected area (MPA) has been founded in the Philippines
within what are considered some of the most biologically diverse waters
on Earth.
The new MPA, which has been given the name Pirasan, was declared by the
municipality of Tingloy on Maricaban Island in the Philippines’ Batangas
Province. Pirasan encompasses more than 54 acres (about 22 hectares) of
thriving coral reef habitat. The MPA was designed to protect this
pristine reef system and, at the same time, boost an emerging local
ecotourism industry.
The island of Maricaban is located in the Verde Island Passage, a region
that harbors considerable marine biodiversity. The reef ecosystem in
the new MPA is considered to be healthy and resilient, but it is facing
threats from local pollution, sedimentation, coastal development, and
global climate change.
The Tingloy government and local community enthusiastically established
the MPA together with collaborating institutions including the US’s
California Academy of Sciences, the Philippines’ De La Salle
University-Manila, and two local non-profits: Pusod Inc. and the SEA
Institute – VIP.
According to Meg Burke, Director of Science Integration and Operations
for the California Academy of Sciences, a combination of factors made
protecting the area included in the new MPA a priority.
“It was a relatively pristine reef; it was part of a monitoring project;
and the Tingloy municipal government was eager to take a strong
environmental stance,” Burke told Mongabay.
“As an intact, healthy coral reef ecosystem, there is a tremendous
diversity of wildlife within the MPA boundaries including hard corals,
soft corals, crinoids (feather stars), nudibranchs, giant clams, all
sorts of fish.” Pirasan also includes sandy beach habitats where sea
turtles and a variety of other fish species can be found.
SEE ALSO: Tackling climate change on a human level
In a statement,
Burke added that “Tingloy is a community like so many in the
Philippines, and elsewhere in the tropical world, that is trying to
figure out how to feed their families in the face of climate change and
diminishing resources.
It is not always easy to recognise that the short-term sacrifice of
establishing a marine protected area, which limits fishing activity and
may mean your family has less to eat today or tomorrow, is worth it for
the long-term gain of nurturing healthy reef ecosystems. Pirasan is a
symbolic step toward recognising greater future yields, more livelihood
opportunities, and a brighter future.”
“Monitoring helps the local community and the scientific community know
when significant changes occur, and if necessary intervention or
management plans can be enacted more quickly,” Burke told Mongabay.
“For example, monitoring over the last month revealed that there was a
significant increase in the coral-eating Crown-of-Thorns Starfish and
there had been an increase in dead coral. Because there was monitoring,
we knew about the [Crown-of-Thorns Starfish] outbreak sooner, and
several teams of snorkelers and divers undertook a removal campaign last
weekend, removing over 400 [Crown-of-Thorns Starfish] from the reef.”
By Mike Gaworecki. This article originally appeared on Mongabay.com.