The Coastal Lagoon
The Coastal Lagoon in Manila Bay is in danger of dying out. It's really kind of a big thing. The Coastal Lagoon is one of the places we have left (in this country) where migratory birds can stay and rest. Back in 1970, the place used to boast of 28,000 birds residing in the lagoons. Now we count 5,000. Among these birds are the globally threatened Philippine duck and the Chinese egret.
Former President Gloria Arroyo declared the area as a critical habitat and ecotourism area. She banned activities that would impede its ecologically vital role as a bird sanctuary.
A lot of you may not realize how we need this land to be untouched. Metro Manila is slowly losing its natural spaces. The Coastal Lagoon is one of its last stands. The area provides a buffer from storm surges, nurseries for fish and other wildlife and a permeable surface to absorb and process toxins from both sea and land (all for free). It's also a great rest spot for migrating birds.
The thing is, the Philippine government is planning on reclaiming 635 hectares of land on the coast. They say that we shouldn't worry because they're not really building over the lagoons. Just... y'know, around it.
Building around the mangroves will only cut the circulation of the seawater. The entire bird sanctuary will be cut off from the bay and soon the saltwater may dry up.
The Department of Environment and Natural Resources issued that the reclamation project follow their recommendations if they are to 'reclaim' the land.
That there must be a channel between the reclamation area and the sanctuary to allow water from Manila Bay to flow so that the sanctuary won't die.
there is no other recommendation
So they build a channel to keep the water circulating. That definitely answers the problem of the mangroves dying out but what happens to the birds in the end?
What is it like for you to live in the middle of the business district surrounded by traffic and casinos and everything else? What more if you were a bird?
They don't understand what it is that makes a critical habitat. The value of the area lies in it being untouched and undisturbed.
Sadly this isn't the only problem the coastal lagoon bird population is facing. NAIA airs is complaining about bird strikes (when birds hit the planes). It's a very significant threat... for people.
The NAIA General Manager, Jose Angel Honrado, blames the birdstrikes on the coastal lagoons. They actually want the lagoons gone or at least... 'relocated'. I say, change their flight paths.
But that's probably too inconvenient for them.
The emergence of this NAIA issue with the reclamation project going on... it feels too convenient for me. It's rather sketchy don't you think?









