posted November 17, 2016 at 10:55 pm by Manila Standard Business
Integrated energy company Semirara
Mining and Power Corp. has pledged to support the Caluya local government
unit’s campaign to declare two near-shore sites in Semirara Island as marine
reserves or marine protected areas.
MPAs are coastal or marine areas
placed under conservation or protection regimes by communities, local
ordinances or national laws to restrict human activity.
Located in Barangays Alegria and
Tinogboc, the two near-shore sites were also identified as possible MPAs by
Silliman University Angelo King Center for Research and Environmental
Management, a leading marine and terrestrial research organization.
Led by National Scientist Dr. Angel
C. Alcala and with the support of SMPC, SUAKCREM conducted a biological survey
of Semirara Island’s marine environment in 2015.
“Prior to this research, marine
diversity around the island was undocumented. We wanted an independent study to
help resolve concerns and allegations of environmental degradation in Semirara
Island,” said SMPC president and chief operating officer Victor Consunji.
According to the SUAKCREM study,
“Contrary to expectation for mining areas, the reefs surveyed has extensive
coverage of live hard coral cover and relatively high fish biomass and
density.”
However, the research team also
noted that certain sites may have been affected by siltation and fishing
activities but these sites have the potential to recover if “strictly protected
from heavy fishing”.
Following SUAKCREM’s recommendation,
SMPC plans to meet with its host community and the LGU to determine how best to
support their marine conservation campaign.
SMPC is also pledging to restock
giant clams on the two sites once these are legally declared as MPAs. The
company breeds and reseeds giant clams through its Marine Hatchery Laboratory
in Semirara Island.
Of the 160,000 giant clams it has
bred, around 40,000 have been reseeded in Tabunan Marine Sanctuary which is 2
to 4 kilometers away from the company’s Molave and Narra mine sites. Another 75
were also reintroduced in the near-shore sites of Barangay Semirara.
Giant clams promote biodiversity
enhancement where they live as they attract corals, fishes and smaller marine
biota. These giant clams also clean their environment when they sip in seawater
for food and then release clean, clear water back to the sea.
However, overfishing of giant clams
have placed this marine species in the IUCN Red List of Endangered Species.
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