Aliwagwag Protected Landscape Explained

Aliwagwag Protected Landscape
Alt Name:Aliwagwag Falls
Iucn Category:V
Map:Philippines
Relief:1
Map Width:220
Location:Davao de Oro and Davao Oriental, Philippines
Nearest City:Bislig
Coordinates:7.7431°N 126.2989°W
Established:April 5, 2011
Governing Body:Department of Environment and Natural Resources

The Aliwagwag Protected Landscape is a protected area that preserves a major drainage catchment in the southern Philippine island of Mindanao in the Davao Region. It contains the headwaters of the Cateel River in the southern Diuata Mountain Range which provides the water source and irrigation for surrounding rice fields and communities in Davao de Oro and Davao Oriental provinces. It was named after the remote rural village in the municipality of Cateel where Aliwagwag Falls, the country's highest waterfall, is located.[1]

The protected landscape is part of the Philippines' National Integrated Protected Areas System and was established in 2011 through Proclamation No. 139 issued by President Benigno Aquino III.[2] It was initially a component of the 1927400ha Agusan–Davao–Surigao Forest Reserve declared in 1931 through Proclamation No. 369 by Governor-General Dwight F. Davis which underwent several amendments over the years to open up a few areas in the mineral rich watershed to mining.[3] [4]

Description

Aliwagwag is situated in the Eastern Mindanao Biodiversity Corridor which contains one of the largest remaining blocks of tropical lowland rainforest in the Philippines.[5] It covers an area of and a buffer zone of in the hydrologically rich mountainous interior of the municipalities of Cateel and Boston in Davao Oriental as well as a portion of the municipality of Compostela in Davao de Oro.[2] A tributary of the Cateel River which includes the Aliwagwag Falls flows through the park from the 1660m (5,450feet) high Mount Agtuuganon in the Diuata Range or Mindanao Pacific Cordillera. This multi-tiered waterfall with 84 steps ranging from NaNfeet has a combined height of 1110feet.[1] To the south of the park lie the foothills of the 1416m (4,646feet) high Mount Pasian with the Cateel River running between the mountains and into the Cateel Bay which opens to the Philippine Sea and the Pacific Ocean.

The protected landscape is composed of lowland forests, with some areas of montane and mossy forests around the peaks of the mountains. A small Mandaya community who practice slash-and-burn agriculture and plantation farming can also be found in the park's lower slopes.[6] Near the park's eastern edge are irrigation canals leading to the Cateel Dam in the village of Aragon which provides irrigation to over of rice fields in 11 villages in Cateel.

Aliwagwag is accessible via the new Compostela–Cateel Road that runs through the park and near the waterfall connecting northern Davao Oriental with Compostela. It is located just 15miles west from the Cateel Poblacion and some 200miles east of Davao City.

Biodiversity

Aliwagwag occupies an important bird and biodiversity area in the Upper Cateel River Basin of the Agtuuganon–Pasian mountains. Its forest is home to the Philippine eagle as well as several other threatened and endemic bird species such as the Visayan miniature babbler, little slaty flycatcher and Lina's sunbird. The park also hosts the Philippine hawk-eagle, Philippine dwarf kingfisher, spotted imperial pigeon, giant scops owl, and Hombron's kingfisher.[6] It is also home to the tallest trees in the Philippines, the Philippine rosewood, known locally as toog. In the waters of the upper Cateel River, a rare species of fish can be found called sawugnun by locals which is harvested as a delicacy.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Highest Waterfall in the Philippines. USA Today. November 15, 2014.
  2. Web site: Proclamation No. 139, s. 2011. Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. November 15, 2014.
  3. Web site: Administrative Order No. 66. Department of Environment and Natural Resources. November 15, 2014.
  4. Web site: Proclamation No. 583, s. 1959. Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. November 15, 2014.
  5. Web site: Eastern Mindanao Biodiversity Corridor. Conservation International. November 15, 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20130501030819/http://www.conservation.org/global/philippines/where/mindanao/pages/eastern_mindanao_corridor.aspx. May 1, 2013. dead.
  6. Web site: PH087 Mount Agtuuganon and Mount Pasian. BirdLife International. November 15, 2014.