BusinessMirror February 18, 2024

Page 1

ROTARY CLUB OF MANILA JOURNALISM AWARDS

2006 National Newspaper of the Year 2011 National Newspaper of the Year 2013 Business Newspaper of the Year 2017 Business Newspaper of the Year 2019 Business Newspaper of the Year 2021 Pro Patria Award PHILIPPINE STATISTICS AUTHORITY 2018 Data Champion

EJAP JOURNALISM AWARDS

BUSINESS NEWS SOURCE OF THE YEAR

(2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021) DEPARTMENT OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

2018 BANTOG MEDIA AWARDS

www.businessmirror.com.ph

A broader look at today’s business n

Sunday, February 18, 2024 Vol. 19 No. 126

P25.00 nationwide | 2 sections 12 pages | 7 DAYS A WEEK

A PHOTO captured moments before the rescue of two-yearold Philippine Eagle Lipadas on January 2, 2024. Lipadas required rescue due to the loss of his right eye, which experts later determined was caused by a gunshot when the eagle was still barely able to fly. Lipadas is among the seven Philippine Eagles scheduled for transfer to the National Bird Breeding Sanctuary in Barangay Eden, Davao City, on February 13, from the old breeding facility at the Philippine Eagle Center in Malagos. ERWIN M. MASCARIÑAS

TO LIVE, PHL EAGLES MOVE TO NEW SPACE

A home away from disease, injury, noise offers a better chance for the Philippine Eagle to survive and reproduce

D

Defense from emerging threats to eagles

By Erwin M. Mascariñas

AVAO CITY—There’s hope in the air after scientists and conservationists pulled through this week a successful, albeit difficult, operation: transferring the first batch of seven critically endangered Philippine Eagles (Pithecophaga jefferyi) to a new breeding facility here, a place more remote but at lower risk from disease, noise, injury and human encroachments. The move, scientists said, will give the birds more protection, a better home to thrive, and a better chance to successfully produce more offspring that can be released in the wild. The new facility, named the National Bird Breeding Sanctuary (NBBS), marks a milestone for the Philippine Eagle Foundation (PEF), which celebrated its 37 years in eagle research and conservation on February 13, 2024—the same day seven Philippine Eagles were transferred from their old breeding facility. In a statement, PEF explained that the move from the Philippine Eagle Center (PEC) in Malagos to the new breeding facility in Eden, Toril, Davao City, is the only recourse against two main threats: the Avian Flu and the changing crowded landscape around the PEC. The NBBS facility will be offlimits to tourists, with access granted only to researchers, selected PEF personnel, and animal keepers. “The new facility will be the first of its kind and we are hopeful that this will hasten our breeding program with more success. The fa-

A VETERINARIAN volunteer from the Czech Republic carefully handles a Philippine Eagle, while personnel from the Philippine Eagle Center (PEC) apply tape to the eagle’s large beak to prevent accidents and injuries to the handler. The bird is being prepared for a check-up before its transfer to the new facility. ERWIN M. MASCARIÑAS

DENNIS I. SALVADOR, Philippine Eagle Foundation Executive Director, is optimistic that the new facility will significantly enhance the breeding program’s success rate. ERWIN M. MASCARIÑAS

THE new breeding chamber where Philippine Eagles MVP Matatag and Ariela will be transferred is located in the National Bird Breeding Sanctuary in Barangay Eden, Davao City. ERWIN M. MASCARIÑAS

cility with a better buffer zone will help in securing the eagles to guard against bird flu. As you know, that particular viral disease can wipe out entire populations of captive birds. That has been the case in many areas, in many countries,” said Dennis I. Salvador, Executive Director of PEF who had been lob-

bying for the project for more than a decade. Salvador added that the facility will help isolate all the captivebreeding stock away from potential sources of diseases and environmental pollutants. It will also help PEF explore and experiment with other breeding and rearing techniques to

bolster future reintroduction and restocking trials, including experimental chick-rearing by natural eagle pairs. “This project has been in the works for a long time; we’ve submitted the proposal to the city government for the Risk Management Master Plan in 2009. In 2019, when

we loaned a couple of eagles to Singapore in a breeding loan agreement, and with the advent of bird flu in Mindanao, we had to accelerate the move to relocate the breeding birds elsewhere because, in consultation with the Davao City government, they cannot control development in Malagos,” said Salvador.

DR. JAYSON IBAÑEZ, PEF Director of Operations, clarified that the current center in Malagos lacks a buffer against noise, causing stress for the breeding birds, and is susceptible to diseases that could potentially contaminate all birds in the PEC. “We are quite excited about the transfer of the first batch of eagles because the new facility is a huge leap from our existing breeding facility in Malagos, which is surrounded by farmlands, cornlands, and banana plantations, that’s on the half side of the facility. These make the facility vulnerable to threats such as the Avian Flu, other exotic diseases, noises that stress the birds, encroachments, and even harmful pesticides that are being used in those farms,” said Ibañez. Ibañez said PEF tried to negotiate for the buffer, i.e., for the local government unit of Davao to install the buffer through a policy, specifically to reclassify the zoning for that particular area. Unfortunately, the LGU couldn’t implement and impose such since those are private properties and the land classification for that area is commercial agriculture. The PEF also identified problems emerging from noise coming from neighboring houses and even resorts that create stressful environments for the breeding pairs, making them unable to mate. “Aside from the threat of Avian Flu, we also have other diseases such as Newcastle’s disease from chickens. We also have a case before where one of our eagles died from trichomoniasis, which is common with feral pigeons and doves, and then you also have aspergillosis, which is a devastating respiratory disease affecting raptors from fungal spores,” said Ibañez. Ibañez pointed out that with the new center far from communiContinued on A2

PESO EXCHANGE RATES n US 56.0000 n JAPAN 0.3736 n UK 70.5656 n HK 7.1618 n CHINA 7.7810 n SINGAPORE 41.6171 n AUSTRALIA 36.5344 n EU 60.3400 n KOREA 0.0422 n SAUDI ARABIA 14.9325 Source: BSP (February 16, 2024)


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.