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    Saving biodiversity at Verde Island Passage

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    Date
    October 21, 2018
    Author
    Cinco, Maricar
    Metadata
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    Classification code
    PD20181021_A18
    Excerpt
    Casting a fishing line with a coral sinker and a plastic-bottle reel, children as young as 8 years old catch their next meal from the pebbled shore of Barangay San Andres here. Most of the women are at home, raising hogs or weaving “buli” (palm) mats, while the men are out at sea to fish for food or collect aquarium fish to sell in Metro Manila. Their houses dot a hillslope, built to withstand the frequent storms. Drinking water comes from deep wells while electricity is supplied by several solar panels. Life is simple and slow in San Andres, a small, poor community on Verde Island along the Verde Island Passage (VIP), a marine and terrestrial zone of rich biological diversity spanning almost 2 hectares and more than 100 kilometers south of Manila. Biologists have discovered a thriving marine ecosystem (1.14 million ha) along the passage in what most people called the “richest place on earth.”
    Citation
    Cinco, M. (2018, October, 21). Saving biodiversity at Verde Island Passage. Philippine Daily Inquirer, p. A18.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12174/4944
    Associated content
    Online version
    Corporate Names
    Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) Old Dominion University Smithsonian Institution Conservation International-Philippines University of the Philippines Marine Science Institute (UPMSI) Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR)
    Personal Names
    Mitra, Titon Macapagal-Arroyo, Gloria Briton, Arnold Carpenter, Kent Springer, Victor Montebon, Augustus Rex Briton, Arnold Hilomen, Vincent Cimatu, Roy Mandanas, Hermilando
    Geographic Names
    Batangas Oriental Mindoro Occidental Mindoro Marinduque Romblon
    Subject
    biodiversity illegal fishing ecosystems marine environment biologists fishing grounds nature conservation overfishing industrial pollution Climatic changes aquaria fishers marine parks Ornamental fish livelihoods
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