MONDAY |SEPTEMBER 15, 2008 | PHILIPPINES

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'Adopt-a-species' bill
hurdles first reading


Help is on the way for nearly 500 threatened species of plants and animals. A bill addressing the need to prevent extinction of these species and the degradation of their habitats effectively in the was recently approved on first reading by the House of Representatives.

Aiming to conserve and protect biological diversity and promote ecologically sustainable development, House Bill No. 3590 or the "Adopt-A-Wildlife Species Act of 2008" filed by Albay Rep. Edcel Lagman early this year sets its sights on overcoming the setbacks in species conservation work.

Identified as one of the world's biologically rich countries, the is also one of the most endangered areas and among the priority hotspots for global conservation.

Conservation International based in Washington, D.C. states that the tropical location and once extensive areas of rainforests resulted in high species diversity and a very high level of endemism. But, conservationists fear that the country will soon face an extinction crisis.

The butanding (whale shark), the tamaraw, the Philippine eagle, and marine turtles, among other endangered species, continue to decline in number, despite various conservation efforts including the Wildlife Resources and Conservation Act (RA 9147) and the National Integrated Protected Areas System Act (RA 7586).

With the active participation, involvement and assistance of local government units, non-government organizations, people's organizations, civil society groups, and the private sector, the Adopt-A-Species Program strongly endorsed in the bill will address major inhibiting factors to greater private sector participation in conservation.

 


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