Monday, October 17, 2011

Rare turtle rescued in Tayabas Bay

By: Delfin T. Mallari Jr., Inquirer Southern Luzon

A 40-kilo green turtle was found drifting near the shoreline of Tayabas Bay in Sariaya town in Quezon province on Friday and was eventually released back to the sea, an official of an environmentalist group said.

The green turtle was 63 inches long and 61 inches wide, according to Zenaida Bernal, coordinator of Tanggol Kalikasan-Southern Luzon.

It is considered an endangered species by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources and the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.

Bernal said a fisherman named Luisito Diones found the turtle struggling to reach the shore of Barangay San Roque. Diones reported his discovery to village fish wardens.

Before the turtle was released back to the sea on the same day, Mel Camara of the Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Office attached a copper tag “PH 0301” to the right flipper of the turtle for documentation and monitoring, Bernal said by phone on Sunday.

Aside from the coastline of Sariaya, sea turtles are often found and rescued off Alabat and Atimonan towns in Lamon Bay and off Agdangan and Unisan towns in Tayabas Bay, according to Shiela de Leon,

TK-SL executive director.

Late last year, Sariaya officials released 47 Olive Ridley turtle hatchlings back to their habitat at Tayabas Bay.

Once a marine habitat ruined by destructive fishing practices, the Tayabas Bay off Quezon, Marinduque and Batangas is now a sanctuary for endangered sea turtles locally called as “pawikan” after Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala, then a businessman-environmentalist, initiated the bay’s rehabilitation and the “Save the Endangered Species Campaign” in 2003.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

5 Korean, 12 Filipino mountaineers arrested in Mt. Banahaw

An environment official and policemen arrested five South Koreans and 12 Filipino mountaineers inside the prohibited areas of Mount Banahaw in Dolores, Quezon, on Sunday.

Salud Pangan, park superintendent for Banahaw, identified the foreigners as Hak Su Kim, Eob Kyo Lee, Yanug Su Kim, Nak Si Ji and Chang Yong Lee, all of Barangay (village) Iruhin in Tagaytay City. They were members of one of two mountaineer groups found in an area which was still closed to outsiders, she said.

“They claimed that they were not aware that Banahaw is still closed (to the public). But it is impossible for any mountaineer not to know that,” Pangan said by phone.

The Filipino mountaineers with the Koreans were identified as Jeffrey del Rosario, Dave Dela Cruz, Bryan Maglalang, Roderick Perez, Aries Ilocario and John Paul Dulan.

Pangan said she received information on Friday that two groups of mountaineers, including some foreigners, would sneak into the mountain.

“I immediately alerted our forest guards to monitor the entrances, but the trespassers eluded my men when they sneaked very early (morning) and under cover of darkness,” Pangan said.

Police said the first group was composed of five Koreans and six Filipinos, while the second had 17 Filipinos from Metro Manila.

The 17 were identified as Wilson Labrador, Jonorie Boticario, Jaybee Laurel, Feil Gulane, Feves Estacion, Mark Arnold, Vilson Gahoy, Anne Estipona, Ronald Tugade, Dana Alarcon, Jan Ann, Rommel Anthony Britana, Michael Joseph Abalos, Jedeah Mariz Claro, Serlina Surian, Dennis Pensotes and Alfred Lazona.

The climbers were brought to the Dolores police station and were expected to be transferred to Lucena City on Monday. They will be charged with violating Republic Act No. 9847 or the Mounts Banahaw-San Cristobal Protected Landscape (MBSCPL) Act of 2009.

The offense is punishable by a fine of P5,000 to P500,000 or imprisonment of one to six years or both.

Pangan warned mountaineers and religious devotees that they would be arrested if they entered the prohibited mountain spots. They could only go as far as areas identified by billboard signs, she said.

In February, the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) stopped pilgrims and mountaineers from sneaking into the closed areas through the backdoor being offered by several resorts at the foot of Banahaw.

In 2004, the Protected Area Management Board (PAMB) started a a five-year program to resurrect the mountain’s resources which were damaged by slash-and-burn farmers and visitors who littered the place with trash.

With barbed wires, the PAMB sealed off several trails leading to certain areas in the bosom of Banahaw.

In 2009, it extended the closure period by three years to sustain the mountain’s rehabilitation. Delfin Mallari Jr., Inquirer Southern Luzon

Monday, September 19, 2011

BFAR: Overstocking caused fish kill

By MARVYN N. BENANING
June 1, 2011, 3:30pm

MANILA, Philippines — Overstocking of fish in cages caused the fish kill in Taal and Pangasinan.

This was the gist of the report made by the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) on the loss of 700 metric tons (MT) of tilapia in Taal and between 50 MT and 70 MT of milkfish in Bolinao and Anda towns of Pangasinan.

Newly appointed BFAR national director Asis Perez said consumers should not really worry about the scarcity of fish in the National Capital Region (NCR), saying the lost fish account for only 0.015 percent to the total production, which is 5.6 million MT.

Perez said fish kill can have natural or man-made causes, with reduced oxygen that snuffs out fish due to factors like drought, algal bloom, overpopulation or a sustained increase in water temperature and pollution.

In the case of Taal Lake, which also hosts the rumbling Taal Volcano, a natural phenomenon known as water overturn or upwelling occurs as a result of weather or climate changes – from long dry spells to sudden strong rains, among others.

The lack of dissolved oxygen in the water due to natural upwelling complicated the situation in the lake.

Perez said violations of BFAR’s prescribed Code of Practice for Aquaculture and local government ordinances on proper fish cage management also contributed significantly to the fish kill in Taal Lake.

“It was found out that some fish cages had been overstocked and the depth of the fish cage increased from the prescribed 5 meters to 15 meters. These wrong practices exacerbated the fish kills,” the BFAR chief said.

The fish kill in the coastal waters of Bolinao and Anda is due to man-made causes, particularly improper fish cage management and overcrowding of fish in the cages, Perez added.

“For closed water system such as lakes, the prescribed stocking density is 20 fish/cubic meter. For open waters, stocking density could go up to 30 fish per cubic meter or more depending on water circulation among others,” he said.

The farm gate price of fish in affected areas dipped by nearly 50 percent.

Perez said fish cage operators have been told to harvest their fish quickly and bring their fish to nearby fish ports. BFAR will shoulder the cost of cold storage.

The bureau will also provide fish fry and/or fingerlings to affected fish farmers, especially the marginalized ones. A set of criteria has been set out to determine who would be qualified for the assistance.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Green lawyers offer services to help BFAR

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LUCENA CITY—The Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) is gearing up for court battles against environmental criminals with the help of an army of volunteer lawyers from the private sector.

Director Asis Perez said he had received many offers of legal assistance from fellow lawyers in and out of the country following the recent seizures of tons of precious and semiprecious corals in the ports of Manila and Zamboanga

“I was overwhelmed. There were lots of text messages from colleagues, mostly environmental lawyers, all volunteering their help in the prosecution. Some of them are even trying to form an international team of lawyers to help the BFAR,” Perez said in an interview here on Saturday.

Welcome development

This is a welcome development, he said, noting that the bureau did not have enough lawyers to handle the volume of cases that it would file against environmental offenders.

“We have to show these environmental criminals that we really mean business. We need all available legal resources to help in the prosecution,” Perez said.

He said he would distribute all volunteer lawyers to different regions.

Before his current post, Perez, was executive director of Tanggol Kalikasan (TK), a public interest law office with advocacy on environmental protection. He was also a member of the special committee that crafted the new Rules of Procedure for Environmental Cases for the Supreme Court.

His appointment as BFAR head was reported in the website of the US-based Environmental Law Alliance Worldwide (Elaw), which is composed of 300 green lawyers from 70 countries.

Perez said he had also received offers of donations of some six million “bangus” (milkfish) fingerlings from the private sector to replenish the areas affected by the recent fishkills in Batangas and Pangasinan.

“I was informed by Agriculture Secretary (Proceso) Alcala that Manny Pacquiao will also donate fingerlings. My problem now is to find the places where to temporarily keep the fingerling donation,” he said.

He said the fingerlings would be distributed free to the fishermen. “But operators of illegal fish cages will be excluded,” Perez said.

Coral reef preservation

Perez reiterated that his main focus as BFAR chief would still be on educating the people on the importance of preserving the country’s fragile marine resources, particularly coral reefs. He noted that the prohibition on trading of precious and semiprecious corals started in 1998 but the information had yet to reach the general public.

“Villagers in the coastal areas were not aware of the prohibitions. The only thing that they knew is that the corals are saleable items. The illegal traders were the only one aware of the law, though I cannot discount the possibility that some government people in the area are actually tolerating the underground business,” he said.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Incoming fisheries chief vows to stop coral reef destruction

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LUCENA CITY, Philippines—Environmentalist lawyer Asis Perez, the incoming director of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, vowed on Thursday to stop the destruction of coral reefs in the Philippines seas, which he described as rampant.

The coral reef “is the most abused eco-system not only because of the lucrative coral collection trade, but mostly due to actual destruction as result of continuous irresponsible fishing methods like dynamite fishing,” Perez said in a telephone interview.

Perez said he would focus on “educating the citizenry” on the importance of preserving the country’s fragile marine resources, particularly coral reefs.

“Most of our people are not yet aware of the importance of our corals. We have to seriously address that problem. The first step toward the a creation of a balanced environment and the preservation of our precious natural resources is to have an enlightened citizenry,” said Perez, former executive director of Tanggol Kalikasan (Defense of Nature), a public interest environmental law office.

He said most of the people are likely to follow the law if they know, and understand what it is all about.

Perez said the cost of educating the citizens about the importance of the environment was modest “but its impact on the environment would be immeasurable.”

On Tuesday, government authorities reported the confiscation of thousands of black corals which had been taken from a reef complex off Miondanao’s Cotabato area.

Bureau of Customs personnel intercepted the contraband two weeks ago and recovered 21,169 pieces of “sea fan” black corals, and hundreds of “sea whip” black corals.

Perez lamented that coral reef poaching was still rampant in the country, particularly in the seas off the Zamboanga Peninsula and the Cotabato area.

He also noted that in the past corals were used in construction. “Most of our old piers were built with coral foundations,” he said.

Perez said one of his challenges when he assumes the BFAR post is the shortage of personnel to enforce the laws meant to protect the country’s marine eco-system.

“While BFAR has an enforcement function, we lack enforcement personnel,” he said, noting that the bureau has to rely on other law enforcement units to combat coral reef poachers.

He said BFAR was also handicapped in that it had no authority to enforce the law in municipal waters where the coral reefs are often located.

The BFAR, which is under the Department of Agriculture, is responsible for the development, improvement, management and conservation of the country’s fisheries and aquatic resources. It was reconstituted as a line bureau by Republic Act No. 8550 (Philippine Fisheries Code of 1998).

Perez, who was recognized by the Species Survival Network, a global coalition of 82 organizations in more than 30 countries, as a “true protector of wildlife resources,” took his oath of office as BFAR chief last Monday. He will assume office on June 1.

He will replace Gil Adora, the officer in charge appointed after Malcolm Sarmiento retired last month.

Perez said he would push for more police visibility to keep watch on the country’s municipal waters.

“Because even if the people were aware of the law, there are still some of them who would violate it if there’s a chance,” he said.

Citing the experience of Tanggol Kalikasan in the campaign to protect and preserve the Sierra Madre section of Isabela, Perez said that after more than a year of continuous operations against illegal loggers, and educating the people about the importance of preserving the forest, at least 90 percent of local residents expressed approval over what the conservationists were doing.

“But we still have to face the remaining ten percent of the people as potential violators. Educating the people is one thing, police visibility is another because there are still threats from potential violators,” he said.

Monday, May 23, 2011

Green Lawyer Heads BFAR

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Green lawyer heads BFAR, vows to wage war vs illegal fishers

LUCENA CITY—The newly appointed director of the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) has vowed to combat destructive fishing methods and the continuous intrusion of commercial fishers into municipal waters all over the country.

Asis Perez, an environmental lawyer from Tiaong town in Quezon, took his oath of office before Agriculture Secretary Proceso Alcala in Manila on Monday morning and will assume office on June 1.

Perez will replace Gil Adora, BFAR officer in charge who succeeded Malcolm Sarmiento, who retired last month.

“Commercial fishers have permits and licenses issued by the BFAR. We will strictly monitor that the rules surrounding their fishing activities are being followed,” Perez said in a phone interview after being sworn in.

A former executive director of Tanggol Kalikasan (Defense of Nature), a public interest environmental law office, Perez won the 2010 Clark R. Bavin Wildlife Law Enforcement Award. He is the in-country representative of the US Department of the Interior, but will relinquish the post once he takes over the bureau.

Perez also earned the recognition of the Species Survival Network (SSN), a global coalition of 82 organizations from more than 30 countries as “true protectors of wildlife resources.”

As BFAR head, Perez’s top priority will be the strict implementation of fishery laws to protect the country’s remaining marine resources.

The agency “is quite small to meet the task at hand,” he said. To meet the demands of his office, he said he would work to strengthen the capacity of its workers.

The BFAR, which is under the Department of Agriculture, is responsible for the development, improvement, management and conservation of the country’s fisheries and aquatic resources. It was reconstituted as a line bureau by virtue of Republic Act No. 8550 (Philippine Fisheries Code of 1998).

The militant fisherfolk alliance Pambansang Lakas ng Kilusang Mamamalakaya ng Pilipinas (Pamalakaya) has charged that RA 8550 failed to protect the livelihood of fishermen and the marine environment.

It has assailed the blatant intrusion of commercial fishing vessels into the 15-kilometer municipal waters which are reserved for small fishermen. Delfin T. Mallari Jr., Inquirer Southern Luzon