sitemap DAILY STAR: Top Stories
Daily Star logoTop Stories
Bacolod City, Philippines Monday, April 20, 2009
Front Page
Negros Oriental
Star Business
Opinion
Sports
Police Beat
Star Life
People & Events
Species never
known found in NNNP
BY CARLA GOMEZ

A team of environmentalists from the United Kingdom and the Philippines who conducted a two-week biological expedition into the interior of the North Negros Natural Park are excited about their finds, which they have never seen before in other rainforests of the world.

Expedition leader James Sawyer said yesterday that their finds can make Filipinos proud that a globally important area is right at their doorstep.

Sawyer is a veteran of many similar expeditions to 25 countries including five years managing the Negros Rainforest Conservation Project.

The team found numerous plants and frog species never seen before, and droppings and palm trees very recently eaten by the Visayan spotted deer that proves that area has critical biological worth, Sawyer said.

The presence of the Visayan spotted deer is an important find as it is the rarest deer in the world, he pointed out.

There has been no evidence of the Visayan spotted deer being alive in the wild for 10 years, he said.

“We believe there are two distinct populations of the spotted deer in the NNNP interior and we only covered about one percent,   which is great news,” Sawyer said.

“We brought droppings of the deer back with us for the Negros Forests and Ecological Foundation Inc. and Silliman University to analyze to learn more about their diets to help those in captivity,” he said.

NFEFI based in Bacolod City and SU in Dumaguete City have been breeding the Visayan spotted deer in captivity.

In addition we believe that we have found new species of frogs but a full report of the expedition will be made after analysis of our finds, Sawyer said.

“Although it (the NNNP) may not be the biggest patch of forest it is one of the most important pieces of forest anywhere in the world,” Sawyer said.

The current size of the park is 80,454 hectares with only 16,487 hectares of forest remaining.

Dr. Craig Turner, an environmental management expert, said he and Sawyer have worked in tropical rainforests all over the world and have never seen anything quite like what they saw in the NNNP interior, it is “very exciting”.

“This is definitely a unique environment, the centre of this park in the most pristine rainforest that we have seen anywhere in the world,” he said.

On the expedition, Sawyer said, were six British, one Irish and five Filipino members.

It took the expedition five days to get to the interior of the park, after long hard trekking, he said.

“The geography of interior is very steep and in a way that’s what protects the area,” he added.

“We found a cloud forest, a very different type of rainforest, with much greater diversity of plant and animal life. There were lots of very strange looking insects and frogs. A lot of the amphibians we found we could not identify using the standards species guides, which means we need to go to specialists and show them the photos we took and see  what they  think,” he said.

“Our feeling is there are lots of new species in the interior, which makes it a critically important area to protect,” he said.

The expedition was partnered by the NFEFI that undertook biodiversity surveys between 1999 and 2006 with Coral Cay Conversation in parts of the NNNP covering Talisay, Murcia and Silay – all part of the watershed of Bacolod City.

Sawyer lauded NFEFI work at protecting the NNNP despite limited funds.

To prove that the rare species they saw exists, specimens have to be taken out of the forest that they have not done yet because their two week expedition was only to conduct a rapid biodiversity assessment, he said

They would like to go back in 18 to 24 months with more scientists to prove that there are new species in the NNNP, Sawyer added.

“Much work has to be done, we see our initial findings as a start,” he added.

Sawyer said it is important to credit the Filipino members of their team because, without them, the expedition would not have succeeded.*CPG

 

 

 

back to top

Google
 
Web www.visayandailystar.com
Front Page | Opinion | Negros Oriental | Business | Sports
Star Life | People & Events| Archives | Advertise
Top Stories
ButtonCost of gov’t center reasonable – COA
ButtonSpecies never known found in NNNP
ButtonRoxas gives 7 has. for GK in Bacolod
ButtonDurano backs Negros tourism
ButtonBailes de Luces Panaad winner
ButtonTeodoro to run on Cha-cha platform, Legarda, Villar oppose changes now
ButtonKorina at Araneta reunion fuels wedding speculations
ButtonAct in consumers’ interest, Golez tells Ceneco officials
ButtonStable power needed with automated polls
ButtonExtension of Ibrado term up to GMA
Button3-day trek to NNNP kicks off