Note: This photo-essay appeared in the 14-20 Mar 2014 issue of the weekly FilAm Star in San Francisco, CA with the title: "Celebrating inaugural World Wildlife Day 2014 / Going wild for sea turtles in Zambales, Bataan, Batangas". The author is the Special News/Photo Correspondent-Philippines of the said paper.
Our non-government organization (NGO) chairperson asked me if I am joining the trip home during the weekend to release baby turtles (they’re called hatchlings) on Monday, 03 March, and she said a representative of the Biodiversity Management Bureau (BMB) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) would be coming with us.
Our Katimpuyog
Zambales, Inc., together with eighteen volunteer fisherfolks who call
themselves La Paz Rangers organized our town-based PawiCare San Narciso, a
pawikan (sea turtle) protection and conservation program. PawiCare stands for pawikan care that would involve
a diligent sea turtle watch by the rangers: monitoring sea turtles nesting
onshore, tagging them before they return to the sea, protecting the eggs by
transferring them to the hatchery we built, and releasing hatchlings to the sea,
all these to help conserve the marine species and thereby helping maintain
ecological balance in the fishing grounds.
The rangers went on patrol from nightfall until the wee
hours of the morning, scouring the four-kilometer coastal stretch for adult sea
turtles who come to nest, measuring and tagging them before they’re released
back to the West Philippine Sea, recovering the eggs with extreme care and
re-nesting them at the hatchery. They
tell about the night when four pawikans landed. Two patrols had to deal with
four simultaneous nestings, and they could not assist each other because the
nests were so far apart!
In the past, eggs were hunted for the market and the
dining table. Poaching has now ended in
our town, thanks to these volunteers and the support of the barangay council
and the town government.
The nesting season
is from October to March. We thought the
season has ended with the release of the last batch of hatchlings on 03 March. Two days later, however, the rangers found a
nester with 90 eggs, which they will care for at the hatchery until hatchlings
emerge from their sand nest in 45 to 70 days.
During the season, especially when the eggs started
hatching, friends and visitors flocked to the hatchery to see how baby turtles look
like. If they came early morning or
around sunset, they possibly had a chance to release hatchlings to the sea. It’s from them that PawiCare depended partly for
material and financial support.
All in all, there were 53 adult sea turtles that laid 3,490 eggs from which 3,384 hatchlings
emerged. This was part of around 23,000 hatchlings
released to the sea that DENR-EMB reported in their annual report for 2013.
Our La Paz coastal
area is the favorite nesting ground of the Olive ridley sea turtles (Lepidochelys
olivacea). There are four other species that nest in
other places in the country, one is critically endangered, the Hawksbill (Eretmochelys imbricata) , and the others
including the Olive ridley are endangered: Green turtle (Chelonia mydas), the Loggerhead (Caretta caretta) and the Leatherback (Dermochelys coriacea).
On that Sunday
trip to Zambales, I was told that the next day’s fun-filled event at our La Paz
hatchery area was part of the inaugural World Wildlife Day celebration around
the globe, in the 179 countries signatory to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna
and Flora (CITES).
The Philippines
would have celebrations also in three other coastal areas. Hatchlings
would be released at our site and at the pawikan center in Nagbalayong, Morong,
Bataan. Juvenile and sub-adult species
would be released at Tali Beach in Nasugbu and in Anilao, both in Batangas
province. San Juan, La Union could have been another site, but the season is
really over and there were more hatchlings to release.
As an aside: Nagbalayong had their 13th Pawikan
Festival on 30 November, while our La Paz group held our 1st Pawikan
Festival on 28 December, in 2013.
The chairman of
an inland barangay of our town came with his family to join our coastal event. They brought a juvenile Olive ridley that they
had kept as a pet for four years. This long domesticity had made the turtle disoriented,
and it was obvious when it was brought to the sea, and it had become too
friendly with people. We thought it
better to bring it to the Ocean Adventure in Subic for rehabilitation. The attending veterinarian said it may take
quite some time for it to learn how to get familiar with the deep sea and how
to hunt for food before it could be liberated at sea.
In Tali Beach,
Nasugbu, three Green sea turtles were released, one of them a rescued
sub-adult, and two were juveniles turned over by concerned citizens and
rehabbed at the Manila Ocean Park (MOP) since August. In Anilao, two juveniles were released, a Green
and a Hawksbill from MOP.
All these coastal
events were conducted jointly by the local community, friends of sea turtles,
and representatives of DENR-BMB, the national leader for the inaugural
celebration, which carried the theme “Everybody has a role in wildlife
conservation.”
At the Ninoy Aquino Park and Wildlife Center in Quezon
City, the day’s programme organized by the DENR-BMB included a forum on wildlife
research development focusing on the state of Philippine birds, herpetology, mammal
research, barcoding of life, and Philippine flora.
These were our country’s response to the call of United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to “go wild for wildlife, protect diversity,
halt trafficking,” in his first World Wildlife Day message. He
reminded that “[f]or millennia,people
and cultures have relied on nature’s rich diversity of wild plants and animals
for food, clothing, medicine and spiritual sustenance. Wildlife remains
integral to our future through its essential role in science, technology and
recreation, as well as its place in our continued heritage.”
The UN General
Assembly proclaimed 03 March as World Wildlife Day on 20 December 2013 during
its 68th Session. It’s now a
special day in the UN calendar. That also marked the day the CITES was signed
41 years ago in 1973.
The inaugural celebration gave the international
community opportunity to “celebrate the many beautiful and varied forms of wild
fauna and flora; raise awareness of the multitude of benefits that wildlife
provides to people, and of the urgent need to step up the fight against
wildlife crime, which has wide-ranging economic, environmental and social
impacts.”
While John E.
Scanlon, CITES Secretary General, invited everyone to the celebration,
he reminded also that wildlife today suffers from habitat loss and is gravely
threatened by illegal trade. He spoke of
“collective responsibility - as citizens and consumers - to bring the illegal
wildlife trade to an end.”
Netizens worldwide were mobilized under the hash tag
#WorldWildlifeDay and the slogan “let’s go wild for wildlife.” People heeded the call, and special events
were organized in the 179 CITES signatory countries.
China was reported to have started mobilizing their first
Word Wildlife Day celebrations as early as January 2014 in schools, zoos and
nature parks, and in public and private venues.
There’s an interesting account about the launch of a campaign in
Liaoning Province to have restaurants there take away the names of exotic
animals from their menus. In the CITES news updates, former NBA star Yao Ming,
a member of Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, was reported to
have proposed that China should make ivory sales illegal.
Thailand promoted public awareness programs on wildlife
conservation in the non-hunting area of Chonburi Province to protect endangered
species and restore forest areas. In
India, they held several village-level awareness programs about wildlife in
tiger reserves to stop wildlife crime.
The main event in Zimbabwe was held at the Hwange
National Park, its largest protected area, with the theme “Wildlife Protection
for Community Empowerment and National Economic Development”. They could not forget that last year, 115
elephants were lost in Hwange and vicinities due to wildlife cyanide poisoning.
Kenya had “Our
Wildlife, My responsibility, My Heritage” as theme, and their focus was to stop
illegal wildlife crime. Last year, they
lost 50 rhinos and 300 elephants to poachers.
Peru launched the national campaign on illegal wildlife
trafficking. The country is one of 12
mega-diverse countries in the world with more than 25,000 flora species, about 10
percent of the world’s diversity. Some 400 species including the huge Andean
condor are facing extinction.
“Everybody has a role,” our DENR-BMB strongly reminds,
“in conservation.” The agency has listed
threatened Philippine flora and fauna, which can be critically endangered
species (like the popular tamaraw, dugong, Philippine eagle, Hawksbill turtle,
Philippine crocodile, among others), endangered (like the four other sea
turtles), vulnerable (like the Philippine eagle-owl); other threatened species
like the Philippine tarsier; and other wildlife species, non-threatened but may
become threatened due to causes like predation or loss of habitat.
The CITES list contains all the threatened species of
wildlife in the world. “While the threats to wildlife are great,” Ban
ki-Moon said, “we can reduce them through our collective efforts. ... I urge
all sectors of society to end illegal wildlife trafficking and commit to
trading and using wild plants and animals sustainably and equitably. Let us
work for a future where people and wildlife coexist in harmony. Let’s go wild
for wildlife!”
How can I contact the La Paz rangers/Pawicare for help and support? Thank you :)
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