Your Mail

ÚÑÈí

 

Counseling:

Ask the Scholar

|

Ask About Islam

|

Hajj & `Umrah

|

Cyber Counselor

|

Parenting Counselor

 

Search »

Advanced Search »

 


The Philippines’ Marine Sanctuaries

By Manuel S. Satorre Jr.
Philippines

22/05/2003

Blue coral off Sumilon Island

Some environmentalists are still skeptical over the prospect of reviving the world's degraded reef areas with the establishment of "marine sanctuaries" or "marine reserves." But marine biologists in the Philippines, and now, some countries in the world, are insisting that such an initiative has been proven to be successful in experiments conducted since the early 1980s.

No-Fishing Zones

Dr. Angel C. Alcala, a known marine biologist who used to head the Marine Biology Department of Silliman University (SU) in Dumaguete City, Negros Oriental in Central Philippines who later became the school's president and Secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) under former President Fidel V. Ramos, insists that the scheme works.

He started the experiment in 1985 when Silliman University established a marine sanctuary in Sumilon Island in Oslob town in the southern part of the neighboring island-province of Cebu separated from Negros Island by the Tanon Strait.

Before the sanctuary was established covering only a small area in the seas off Sumilon Island, fishermen had complained of declining fish catches. The reason is that the area had been overfished and the coral reefs had been damaged by blast fishing and other illegal fishing methods.

Masaplod marine sanctuary off Negros Island

Dr. Alcala described the sanctuary as a "no fishing zone" which is to be protected both by the fishermen and municipal authorities including the marine biologists. Outside the area however, fishing is allowed.

According to Acala, although fish catches had declined before the sanctuary was established, in a matter of years or even months, fish suddenly became abundant outside the sanctuary where fishing was allowed.

The reason is that since the reef area was protected, fish and other aquatic animals that had abandoned the area after it was degraded soon returned. Many drift outside the protected area and fishermen were able to catch them.

Apo Island

With the success of the Sumilon project, and its subsequent handing over to the municipal government of the town of Oslob, Silliman also established another marine sanctuary in Apo Island in Dauin, Negros Oriental, a place nearer Dumaguete city where Silliman is located.

An area in the coastal zone of the island was also established as a protected area.

Pleased Villagers

Domingo Pascubillo, 37, village chief of Apo Island, recalls that before the sanctuary was set up, the island's fishermen had complained of declining fish catches. Apparently, this was the result of similar problems encountered in Sumilon Island. The reef areas were degraded because of overfishing, blast fishing and other illegal fishing methods.

Today, however, after several years of having the sanctuary, Apo Island fishermen were enjoying better fish catches.

Because of the successes in the Sumilon and Apo Island experiments, marine sanctuaries or reserves were soon established in the towns of Negros and Cebu islands and even in other provinces in the Philippines.

The concept was also adopted in the Caribbean and other Pacific islands.

Coral Reef Hotspots

Apo Island reef

The International Coral Reef Action Network (ICRAN) based in Cambridge, United Kingdom and supported by the Nairobi-based United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), has also batted for the establishment of more marine sanctuaries or reserves to protect the world's reef areas.

As UNEP focused attention on reef preservation, it identified in a study 10 coral reef hotspots, ranked according to the degree of threat.

These are:

  1. The Philippines.

  2. Gulf of Guinea.

  3. Sunda Islands.

  4. Southern Mascarene Islands.

  5. Eastern South Africa.

  6. Northern Indian Ocean.

  7. Southern Japan, Taiwan and China.

  8. Cape Verde Islands.

  9. Western Caribbean.

  10. Red Sea and Gulf of Aden.

The UNEP study said the 10 hotspots contain just 24 percent of the world's coral reefs, or 0.017 percent of the oceans, but claim 34 percent of restricted-range species. The study identified a total of 18 areas with the greatest concentrations of species found nowhere else, and determined the hotspots category based on threats.

Dr. Sylvia Earle, Executive Director for Marine Programs of the Washington DC-based Conservation International said, "the oceans have long been considered limitless places where we have little impact on species survival."

"But the richest of the shallow tropical marine habitats are at risk of disappearing at an incredibly fast rate," she warned.

The study said eight of the 10 coral reef hotspots are adjacent to a terrestrial biodiversity hotspot, those regions of the world that harbor the highest concentrations of species on land and are also at the greatest risk.

Vital Significance of Coral Reefs

The value of coral reefs has been stressed in an ICRAN report.

It described coral reefs as one of the most spectacular and productive underwater environments benefiting people and the natural world far beyond their boundaries.

They occupy less than 1 percent of the ocean floor and support over 25 percent of all marine fish species, the report said.

They safeguard lives, economies and cultures, generate jobs, create safe harbors and protection against erosion, provide 10 percent of the world's fishing harvest and hold the key to future scientific and medical advances.

Yet, the report lamented that 60 percent of reefs are either severely damaged or threatened with immediate damage unless action is taken now.

According to the report, an estimated one billion people currently depend on fish for their food, income and livelihood. At least 85 percent of those rely principally on fish as their major source of protein, it said.

Most of these live in coastal communities within developing countries including small island states, it added.

The report said healthy coral reefs are critical to sustaining people; one square kilometer of healthy coral reef can produce 15 tons of food per year, enough to feed 1,000 people.

Yet pollution, destructive fishing methods, land reclamation, coral mining and global threats such as climate change are taking their toll on coral reefs and the people who depend on them, the report said.

That is why all initiatives are being taken to protect coral reef areas of the world and conserve their biodiversity.

With the success of experiments in the establishment of marine sanctuaries or reserves, this could be the way not only to protect the reef areas of the world, but also to revive degraded ones.

This initiative should be pursued because it works despite the skepticism of some environmentalists, declared Dr. Alcala.

Sources:

  • Status of Philippine Coral Reef Fisheries by A.C. Alcala and G.R. Russ, Published in Asian Fisheries Science 15 (2002)-177-192

  • ICRAN, International Coral Reef Action Network publication, People and Reefs: A Partnership for Prosperity, May 2002 issue.

  • Hotspots Study Sounds Alarm for extinctions in the Ocean, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Press Release Feb. 14, 2002.

  • Reef stories published in Tierra, a publication of the Philippine Environmental Journalists Inc. (PEJI) dated January 2003 issue.

  • Reefs at Risk Southeast Asia publication by Lauretta Burke, Elizabeth Selig, and Mark Spalding dated 2002.


Manuel S. Satorre Jr. is President of the Philippine Environmental Journalists Inc. (PEJI) and Vice Chairman of the World Water Forum of Journalists (WWFJ). He previously chaired the Asia-Pacific Forum of Environmental Journalists (APFEJ) in addition to being the former secretary general of the International Forum of Environmental Journalists. You can reach him at: msatorre@pacific.net.ph 

 

Health & Science

Please feel free to contact the Health & Science editor at:
ScienceTech@islam-online.net


Science News | Health and Alternative Medicine  
Faith and Science/Medicine | Institutions and Scientists
Environment |
Computers and Communications | Genetics| Technology
Natural Sciences | Muslim Heritage

back

Send Mail

News | Shari`ah | Health & Science | Muslim Affairs | Reading Islam | Family | Culture | Youth | Euro-Muslims

About Us | Speech of Sheikh Qaradawi | Contact Us | Advertise | Support IOL | Site Map