A biodiversity-rich Cleanergy Park in Davao
City owned and managed by the Aboitiz Group continues to attract nearly 100
bird species, 10 to 15 of which are endemic to the Philippines, luring urban
birdwatchers from all over the country.
The Park is an eight-hectare
ecological preserve located in Punta Dumalag, Davao City and is around 46 to 48
minutes or 20 kilometers from the Therma South, Inc. baseload power plant. Known as an urban-based biodiversity
conservation site, it is home to the critically-endangered hawksbill turtle
(Eretmochelys imbricata), endemic and migratory birds, and marine species,
Aboitiz revealed.
Birds thrive and flourish at
the Aboitiz Cleanergy Park due to its rich biodiversity including trees that
serve as ideal bird habitats, Aboitiz noted that around 20 bird species in the
park are considered migratory and a number can be found in other parts of the
Philippines and throughout Southeast Asia. Some of them are vagrant birds that
were only seen once at the site--rare birds.
Simpson, a member of the Wild
Bird Club of the Philippines - Davao who has studied environmental biology has
been a birdwatcher since he was 11. He
considers the Aboitiz Cleanergy Park to be one of Davao del Sur’s top five
birdwatching sites, “which is remarkable considering its relatively urban
location.
Some of the bird species spotted at the Park
include an Asian Emerald Dove with its young and a Pied Imperial Pigeon which
Simpson described as a large and endemic pigeon usually found in forested areas
in Mindanao; a hawksbill turtle or pawikan being taken cared of at the Park. These are just some of the 95 bird species
and counting that have been spotted at Park.
Throughout the Philippines,
there are about 90 birding sites that have reached the milestone of 100 birds
recorded. To be approaching 100 species in a site only a few hectares is
excellent and to be surrounded by an urban environment, is great, Simpson
explained.
This was a far cry from when
he first set foot in the Punta Dumalag area, when the area was still
undeveloped, Simpson said that looking at it now, it tells him that the site is
better for birds than when he visited them seven years ago, when there was almost
no birds at all, he recalled.
The Wild Bird Club of the Philippines, a
nationwide club of birdwatchers interested in the wild birds of the Philippines
has described the country on its website as “both a rewarding and difficult
place to bird-watch.”
In 2019, the Aboitiz Cleanergy Park welcomed 10,735 visitors and has so far released 4,811 pawikan hatchlings. Since 2014, the Park has been home to 40 discovered pawikan nests.
For the early part of 2020, two pawikans have been rescued and are currently under observation due to health conditions. Recent improvements in the park were also done with the installation of a new sustainable fixture that is a playground made out of used log poles. (Photos: Aboitiz Group/Franz de la Fuente)
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