It is important that a summary Philippine report on the
biological resources be made at this time because of the shift of the JOMSRE
program to another phase beginning this year with the participation of the third
country, China. As Chief Scientist of JOMSRE-SCS III and IV, I am making this
report for public consumption. The Marine Biology results are being prepared for
publication within this year.
In this column, I give a summary of the main findings on the
seagrasses algae, the corals, the reef fishes, the large invertebrates, and the
fish plankton based mainly on the available data from the North Danger Reef, the
Jackson Atoll, the Trident Shoal, and the marine waters separating these reef
systems. The original sampling design of JOMSRE III and IV included the survey
of two atolls and two shoals, but the weather conditions in April 2007 did not
permit field sampling on the second shoal.
The coral reefs in the Spratlys are shoals and atolls with
their associated sand cays and islands. Nowhere in the country can one find
atolls of the kind found in the Spratlys. Coral reefs are either exposed to wave
action or sheltered in lagoons of atolls, and some have developed on slopes or
drop-offs, providing varied microhabitats for various marine species. Live coral
cover is moderate to high with little evidence of blasting but with a moderate
density of crown of thorns starfish. Data I 2007 indicate the presence of about
200 species of reef-building corals belonging to about 45 genera and 16
Families, and some of the species are probably new records.
The 2005 and 2007 expeditions failed to observe top
carnivorous species such as sharks, dolphins and whales. There were no marine
turtles and sea snakes even in lagoons where they were expected. No mangrove
species were observed in the study areas.
Firmly documented were the sparse growth and patchy
distribution of only three seagrass species, in contrast to the five species
reported during the first JOMSRE. This discrepancy could be due to species
misidentification. About 69 species of algae (seaweeds) were reported during the
first JOMSRE in 1996, but about 84 algal taxa dominated by the reds (some of
which could be new species) were identified in 2007. Algae and seagrasses were
not abundant in the areas studied, and primary productivity in the Spratlys is
assumed to be primarily due to phytoplankton.
Few giant clams and sea cucumbers were seen. Only four
species of giant clams were observed in 2007. Five species of sea cucumbers were
reported in 2005, but only two of these were seen in 2007. The reason is clearly
over-harvesting. In 2005, groups of fishers from Palawan were reported
collecting fishes, clams and sea cucumbers, and one of them was not allowed to
harvest sea cucumbers and fish in the lagoon of the North Danger Reef.
The 1996 JOMSRE reported ca 200 species of fish in three
reefs of the Spratlys other than the North Danger Reef. About 292 fish species
were reported from the Kalayaan Group in 1998 and about 218 species from the
North Danger Reef in the 2007 JOMSRE. These two reports also stated that the
densities were low. The 2005 JOMSRE report showed small sizes of fish
(juveniles), an indication that they may have come from other areas of the
Spratlys. The 2007 JOMSRE initial report for the North Danger Reef and the
Jackson Atoll was a total of 287 species distributed in 38 Families. The target
(food) fishes in the North Danger Reef and Jackson Atoll (all unprotected reefs)
had biomasses smaller than, or at most equal biomasses were much lower than
those in Dauin (Negros Oriental) reefs protected for 10-20 years. The fish
plankton survey in 2005 also showed that the reef-associated fish larvae caught
in the vicinity of the North Danger Reef were absent in the deeper waters
between the Spratlys and the Philippines. The foregoing discussion suggests that
because the current target fish biomasses in the Spratlys are low, they are most
likely not sufficient to produce propagules (fish larvae) for western Philippine
marine waters, contrary to the early suggestions of some marine biologists.
For fish larvae to be exported from the Spratlys to the Philippines, thus
maintaining the fisheries, larger target fish biomasses must be developed on the
Spratlys coral reefs. This is one reason why urgent protection of these reefs is
needed right now.