Now showing items 21-28 of 28

    • Reviving the Philippines' seas, shorelines, the 'Shore It Up!' way 

      Simon, Rajid (Philippine Daily Inquirer, March 18, 2018, on page B4)
      All over the country are quaint coastal towns, unknown to many people in Metro Manila, despite their rich biodiversity and exceptional beauty. Now on it's tenth-year, the Metro Pacific Investments Foundation(MPIF), the ...
    • RP in global effort to save the seahorse 

      Fernandez, Rudy A. (The Philippine Star, September 11, 2000, on page B-3)
      The government-hosted, Tigbauan, Iloilo-based Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center Aquaculture Department (SEAFDEC AQD) has also been conducting research on the seahorse. Started in 1996, the SEAFDEC AQD ornamental ...
    • Saving nature is saving our future 

      Amante, Kitty (The Manila Times, December 8, 2016, on page B5)
      In the next 15 to 25 years, our children may only learn about the once staple Philippine fish talakitok and maya-maya in science books, or perhaps in museums. These fish species, along with at least 10 others in the ...
    • Study: Philippines' largest lake under threat 

      (Visayan Daily Headlines, March 5, 2008, on page 5)
      Pollution, slums and an invasion of foreign fish species are threatening the Philippines' largest lake, one of the nation's major fish farming regions, according to a study published Tuesday. Laguna de Bay on the outskirts ...
    • Trip to Balinsasayao Twin Lake, an environmental advocacy 

      Grande, Jennie H. (Panay News, February 1, 2020, on page B2)
      Several locations in our country have been named natural parks and ecotourism sites to promote the conservation of the natural environment, economic prosperity for the majority of stakeholders and community development. ...
    • Turtle breed menace to fish farms 

      Orejas, Tonette; Malig, Jun (Philippine Daily Inquirer, February 7, 2013, on page A9)
      Chinese softshell turtles (Pelodiscus sinensis) have found their way in the waters of Pampanga, Bulacan, and Bataan, preying on bangus (milkfish) and tilapia fingerlings in fishponds there, an environment official said on ...
    • Where have our native fish gone? 

      Yan, Gregg (DailyGuardian, August 19, 2021, on page 8-10)
      According to the ASEAN Biodiversity Outlook 2, ASEAN member states have identified 112 invasive alien species affecting forests, agriculture and aquatic ecosystems. “Given that we have all these introduced species already ...
    • Where have our native fish gone? 

      Yan, Gregg (Philippine Daily Inquirer, August 30, 2021, on page B5)
      According to the Asean Biodiversity Outlook 2, Asean member states have identified 112 invasive alien species affecting forests, agriculture and aquatic ecosystems. “Given that we have all these introduced species already ...