Skip navigation.

exploreopera

| Help

Sign up | Help

Penguin Stumblings

Here There Everywhere and Back to Nowhere...

Posts tagged with "Philippines"

Typhoon Chanchu toll hits 32 in Philippines

,

By Dolly Aglay

MANILA (Reuters) - The death toll from Typhoon Chanchu rose to 32 in the Philippines on Sunday, after more bodies were found from a capsized boat, and officials said the storm had affected or displaced more than 42,000 people.

The National Disaster Coordinating Council said eight people, most of them fishermen, were still missing.

Most of those killed were from a boat that capsized off Masbate island in the south of Luzon region early on Friday, the council said.

It raised the toll from the Mae Ann 5 capsizing, to 25 after more bodies were found offshore Masbate. Officials said 18 survived the accident and two were missing.

Seven other people were killed elsewhere, including three hit by falling coconut trees, the disaster council said.

"There were bridges that were washed out and landslide areas that we need to clear," disaster council administrator Glenn Rabonza said on local radio.

The disaster council said 608 houses were destroyed while 3,542 were partially damaged.

Damages to agriculture -- including coconut plantations, rice and corn -- have yet to be determined, the disaster council said. The Philippine capital remained cloudy on Sunday with strong wind gusts. Residents in some areas complained of power outages due to toppled billboards and snapped tree branches that had yet to be cleared.

Some areas in the Bicol region were without electricity for a fourth day on Sunday, Rhadz Barcia, a resident of Legazpi City in Albay, told Reuters by phone.

A two-day meeting of Southeast Asian trade ministers at the Boracay resort in the central Philippines has been moved to Manila, said Ramon Kabigting, director of the Bureau of International Trade Relations.

The meeting was scheduled to begin on Monday.

The Philippine weather bureau said Chanchu, with winds gusting up to 150 kph (93 mph), was moving westward away from the Southeast Asian country..

"The typhoon is now in the South China Sea and moving away from the country, but rains and gusty winds will prevail over southwestern Luzon today and tomorrow," Ludy Alviar, a government meteorologist told Reuters.

About 20 typhoons hit the Philippine archipelago each year, seven of which cross the country, mostly during the rainy season that lasts from mid-May until September.

Source: http://news.scotsman.com/latest.cfm?id=720582006

Filipino Fishermen Having a Blast, Scaring Whales, Destroying Coral

, , , ...

by Underwatertimes.com News Service

Babuyan Islands, The Philippines (Mar 19, 2006 19:04 EST) FISHERMEN in the once tranquil Babuyan Islands in Cagayan province are literally having a blast.

Local fishermen, citing poor catch in recent months, have resorted to dynamite blasting to salvage metal from shipwrecks surrounding the islands, according to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF)-Philippines.

It is said to be the newest and most environmentally damaging source of livelihood in the islands, said the WWF, which conducts an annual on-site monitoring of the Babuyan Islands for its Humpback Whale Research and Development Project.

The blasting is scaring away the Pacific humpback whales that come to the Philippines to breed this time of the year, it said.

The dynamite blasts are also inevitably destroying the coral reefs in the Camiguin Island, where the blasts have been monitored.

The WWF records an average of 100 sightings in the Babuyan Islands annually but fears that this would be reduced due to the dynamite blasts.

"We will continue to monitor the whales to see if the blasting has a direct impact on the whales ... although definitely there must be permanent damage to the coral reefs in the area," WWF consultant Jomarie Acebes said in a phone interview.

Located about 50 km north of the Luzon mainland, the Babuyan Islands has the highest known cetacean species diversity in the Philippines, hosting 14 of the 25 known cetacean species in the world including the humpback whale, sperm whale and bottle-nosed dolphin.

The WWF team that arrived in Camiguin Island north of Cagayan province on Feb. 17 has recorded up to six blasts per hour almost everyday. On March 18, just days after the Calayan police arrived in Camiguin, four blasts were recorded again.

"The blasts are really loud. You can hear it even up to eight kilometers from the shore. That's very loud considering that the dynamites explode under water," Acebes said.

The locals themselves have admitted that those who go out for blasting use about a gallon of dynamite for every trip, she said. They dive to plant the dynamites in the shipwrecks and then recover the steel that comes loose due to the explosion.

The scrap metals are sold in the island for about P4 per kilo. The dealer from the island then sells the scrap in Aparri or Cagayan for about P10 per kilo, Acebes said.

There are at least five known shipwrecks surrounding Camiguin Island, all of which are in the breeding ground of humpback whales that travel to the Babuyan Islands before proceeding to Alaska and Russia to feed.

The shipwrecks, which are more than 20 years old, have become artificial reefs that serve as refuge and breeding ground for fish.

Acebes said the locals have been salvaging metal from the shipwrecks for about two years now, but they used to dive and use acetylene to recover the loose scraps.

The locals have only started to use dynamites these past few months because they wanted to get bigger pieces of metal, she said.

The Cagayan provincial government passed an ordinance in 2003 declaring the humpback whales as protected species within the territorial jurisdiction of the province.

The WWF has written Calayan Mayor Joseph Llopis to inform him of the blasting. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources have also been informed of the illegal activity.

The Calayan police have also visited Camiguin and apprehended the locals for the blasting but the WWF revealed that no police report has been filed in Calayan about the blasts.

Pressures such as illegal hunting and overfishing have threatened the global population of cetaceans. Humpbacks are listed as endangered under the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and the US Endangered Species Act.

Babuyan Islands, The Philippines (Mar 19, 2006 19:04 EST) FISHERMEN in the once tranquil Babuyan Islands in Cagayan province are literally having a blast.

Local fishermen, citing poor catch in recent months, have resorted to dynamite blasting to salvage metal from shipwrecks surrounding the islands, according to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF)-Philippines.

It is said to be the newest and most environmentally damaging source of livelihood in the islands, said the WWF, which conducts an annual on-site monitoring of the Babuyan Islands for its Humpback Whale Research and Development Project.

The blasting is scaring away the Pacific humpback whales that come to the Philippines to breed this time of the year, it said.

The dynamite blasts are also inevitably destroying the coral reefs in the Camiguin Island, where the blasts have been monitored.

The WWF records an average of 100 sightings in the Babuyan Islands annually but fears that this would be reduced due to the dynamite blasts.

"We will continue to monitor the whales to see if the blasting has a direct impact on the whales ... although definitely there must be permanent damage to the coral reefs in the area," WWF consultant Jomarie Acebes said in a phone interview.

Located about 50 km north of the Luzon mainland, the Babuyan Islands has the highest known cetacean species diversity in the Philippines, hosting 14 of the 25 known cetacean species in the world including the humpback whale, sperm whale and bottle-nosed dolphin.

The WWF team that arrived in Camiguin Island north of Cagayan province on Feb. 17 has recorded up to six blasts per hour almost everyday. On March 18, just days after the Calayan police arrived in Camiguin, four blasts were recorded again.

"The blasts are really loud. You can hear it even up to eight kilometers from the shore. That's very loud considering that the dynamites explode under water," Acebes said.

The locals themselves have admitted that those who go out for blasting use about a gallon of dynamite for every trip, she said. They dive to plant the dynamites in the shipwrecks and then recover the steel that comes loose due to the explosion.

The scrap metals are sold in the island for about P4 per kilo. The dealer from the island then sells the scrap in Aparri or Cagayan for about P10 per kilo, Acebes said.

There are at least five known shipwrecks surrounding Camiguin Island, all of which are in the breeding ground of humpback whales that travel to the Babuyan Islands before proceeding to Alaska and Russia to feed.

The shipwrecks, which are more than 20 years old, have become artificial reefs that serve as refuge and breeding ground for fish.

Acebes said the locals have been salvaging metal from the shipwrecks for about two years now, but they used to dive and use acetylene to recover the loose scraps.

The locals have only started to use dynamites these past few months because they wanted to get bigger pieces of metal, she said.

The Cagayan provincial government passed an ordinance in 2003 declaring the humpback whales as protected species within the territorial jurisdiction of the province.

The WWF has written Calayan Mayor Joseph Llopis to inform him of the blasting. The Department of Environment and Natural Resources and the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources have also been informed of the illegal activity.

The Calayan police have also visited Camiguin and apprehended the locals for the blasting but the WWF revealed that no police report has been filed in Calayan about the blasts.

Pressures such as illegal hunting and overfishing have threatened the global population of cetaceans. Humpbacks are listed as endangered under the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and the US Endangered Species Act.

Source: http://news.inq7.net/

Anilao Dive

, , ,


Went Scuba Diving the other weekend again. This time we went to Ligpo Point. We've never dove there before. Was nice cept' the visiblitly was torrid. And the water was oh so cold! You'd wonder how the water could be so cold in a tropical country...lol. Sad part was that there seemed to be a lot of Crown Of Thorns about. Lot of corals were dying and white. Think we are going again on Monday. Wonder where we are going to end up...lol.

We went here...

, , , ...

We went here...

El Nido
Had a wonderful time..
Camera of course decided to act up... :frown:
Oh well the land shots were ok.
Still waiting on my one roll of film that I took...
Will post again with the link to the photos...

Can we tell we are not in a blogging mood...?

In the Philippines

, ,

Fun Stuff

, , , ...


Oceanic Integrated Diver Display Mask
Straight out of the U.S. Navy's R&D labs comes a dive mask that delivers depth, remaining airtime and other data on a head-up display. Information travels via radio frequency from your tank to the mask, where it's presented on an LCD. A simple glance to the right yields all the vitals.

Things to do...
Virtual Voodoo - Just as good as the real thing
Virtual Voodoo Online
Instant Voodoo.com Flash required, but interactive.
Pinstruck.com Send an anonymous curse.

Ouija Online - Artificial Intelligence Ouija Board
Build Your Own E-Scene

Fun Downloads...
Mouse Gestures
Finally, a breakthrough in website navigation!
MouseGestures are motions you make with the mouse button held down. The motion is a new type of shortcut for common commands.
StrokeIt
In short, it's a nifty little program that lets you easily control programs by drawing symbols with your mouse.


News from the Philippines...
Philippines' cardinal steps down
Church clashes with gays in Philippines
Strong Earthquake in Central Philippines
Biggest growth in tourist arrivals noted in October
Arroyo issues shoot order for kidnappers
Record 1,070 kilos of shabu seized in raid
TRAVELLING LIGHT: A thrilla in Manila

In science...
Oil group buries greenhouse gas under sea
SLEIPNER PLATFORM, Norwegian North Sea (Reuters) -- Norway's biggest company reckons it has found the key to a green and profitable future by burying greenhouse gases underground.
Good or bad?

In Philippines: Department of Environment...

, ,

On Philippines:

Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR)
Conservation International (CI)
Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR)
Bantay Dagat Program

Conservation Region Asia-Pacific: Philippines
The Philippines has been described as the "hottest" of the biodiversity hotspots. It comprises more than 7,000 islands and has a total land area of about 122,000 square miles (300,782 square km). With only 3 percent of its original vegetation remaining, the Philippines has some of the most unique flora and fauna in aquatic, marine and terrestrial ecosystems...

The Ocean's Top 10 Coral Reef Hotspots Identified For First Time

Study Sounds Alarm for Extinctions of Marine Species
Philippines...

Davao, Batangas:Thousands clean up shores
Around 8,000 people cleaned up Davao’s coasts during the 18th International Coastal Cleanup Day last September...

BFAR vows to strictly enforce ban on manta ray hunting...

OneOcean: Coastal Alert
OVER SEAS ONLINE NEWS October, 2003 Issue

FishWeb
Forum on the development of the philippine marine capture fisheries profile.
May 2008
SMTWTFS
April 2008June 2008
123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031