Jump to content

Pasonanca Natural Park

Coordinates: 7°4′15.96″N 122°4′31.8″E / 7.0711000°N 122.075500°E / 7.0711000; 122.075500
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pasonanca Natural Park
Map showing the location of Pasonanca Natural Park
Map showing the location of Pasonanca Natural Park
Location in the Philippines
LocationZamboanga del Norte and Zamboanga del Sur, Philippines
Nearest cityZamboanga City
Coordinates7°4′15.96″N 122°4′31.8″E / 7.0711000°N 122.075500°E / 7.0711000; 122.075500
Area12,107 hectares (29,920 acres)
EstablishedDecember 17, 1987 (Watershed forest reserve)
July 5, 1999 (Natural park)
Governing bodyDepartment of Environment and Natural Resources

The Pasonanca Natural Park is a protected area that preserves a major watershed in the southern Philippine island of Mindanao in the Zamboanga Peninsula. It contains the headwaters of the Tumaga River in the southern Zamboanga Cordillera mountain range that serves the water requirements of some 800,000 residents in Zamboanga City. It was named after the village of Pasonanca located in the city's northern fringes where the Pasonanca Park, a public eco-park, and the Abong-Abong Park, a pilgrimage site, can also be found.

The natural park is managed as part of the Philippines' National Integrated Protected Areas System. It was initially established in 1987 as the Pasonanca Watershed Forest Reserve encompassing an initial area of 10,560 hectares (26,100 acres) declared through Proclamation No. 199 issued by President Corazon Aquino.[1] In 1999, through Proclamation No. 132 issued by President Joseph Estrada, the park was enlarged and reclassified as a natural park.[2] It has the largest remaining block of old growth lowland dipterocarp forest in Zamboanga.[3]

On May 13, 2024, Secretary Toni Yulo-Loyzaga and Mayor John M. Dalipe led the inauguration ceremony of the Pasonanca Natural Park as the 52nd of ASEAN Heritage Parks in Sitio Canucutan, District I, Barangay Pasonanca, Zamboanga City. The park is the first old-growth dipterocarp forest in the Zamboanga Peninsula. The ASEAN Center for Biodiversity, DENRA unveiled the Park's pyramid-Philippine eagle monument, since it is the national bird's-Mindanao bleeding-heart habitat and Refugia[4][5]

Description

[edit]
Dulian Falls

The Pasonanca Natural Park covers an area of 12,107 hectares (29,920 acres) and a buffer zone of 5,307 hectares (13,110 acres) in the southern end of the Zamboanga Cordillera mountain range that runs north to south serving as the backbone for the peninsula of Zamboanga. It is contained within the local government areas of Pasonanca, Lunzuran, Lumayang Cacao, Lapacan, Lamisan, Bungiao, La Paz, Balurno and Dulian in Zamboanga City and parts of the municipality of Sibuco in Zamboanga del Norte.[1][6] Mount Pulong Bato is a prominent peak located within the park rising to 360 metres (1,180 ft). It is crossed by Tumaga River and its tributaries which serve the bulk of the water supply for the Zamboanga City Water District through a diversion dam.[3] The park also contains several rock formations, springs and waterfalls including the Dulian Falls.

The park is composed of 60% old growth and secondary growth forests with the remaining areas devoted to agricultural lands, coconut plantations, and built up areas.[3] It has a rolling terrain with moderate to steep slopes. Facilities within the park include a clonal nursery, four outposts, an information center and a wildlife rescue center.[6] There are also a few resorts, a hotel, cottages and restaurants near the park's entrance in Pasonanca.

The park is located just 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) north of the Zamboanga City Proper. It is easily accessible from the Zamboanga International Airport via the Pasonanca–Santa Maria Road.

Wildlife

[edit]

The Pasonanca Natural Park provides a habitat to many threatened and restricted-range species of the Mindanao and Eastern Visayas Endemic Bird Area including the Zamboanga bulbul, Mindanao bleeding-heart, Philippine kingfisher, Philippine leafbird and little slaty flycatcher. It also supports the Philippine eagle, Mindanao broadbill, azure-breasted pitta, celestial monarch, southern silvery kingfisher, blue-capped kingfisher, spotted imperial pigeon, giant scops owl, Japanese night heron, Chinese egret, rufous-lored kingfisher, Philippine dwarf kingfisher and Philippine cockatoo.[3]

The park is home to several unique reptile species, including the endemic lizard Eutropis alcalai, known only from specimens collected within its boundaries.[7] Additionally, the park is the sole known location for the two adult specimens of the Zamboanga false gecko.[8] The holotype of Cyrtodactylus jambangan was also discovered here, with this gecko species observed to be common in the park's pristine, low-elevation gallery forests.[9] Other endemic reptiles found in the park include the Mindanao keelback[10] and the Philippine small-disked frog.[11]

The park is also home to endemic flora such as Sonerila mapelo, discovered in 2022 and is one of only three Sonerila species found in the country;[12] and at least 18 Philippine endemic trees including the white lauan, katmon, antipolo, balakat, Celtis luzonica, Hopea acuminata, and Myristica philippensis.[13]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Proclamation No. 199, s. 1987". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  2. ^ "Proclamation No. 132, s. 1999". Official Gazette of the Republic of the Philippines. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d "PH112 Pasonanca Natural Park". BirdLife International. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  4. ^ Jocson, Liza (May 14, 2024). "Pasonanca Natural Park in Zamboanga City declared ASEAN heritage park". Manila Bulletin. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
  5. ^ Moaje, Marita (May 14, 2024). "Pasonanca Park as AHP proof of gov't conservation efforts". Philippine News Agency. Retrieved May 14, 2024.
  6. ^ a b "Region 9 - Ecotourism Sites". Department of Environment and Natural Resources Biodiversity Management Bureau. Archived from the original on 29 November 2014. Retrieved 16 November 2014.
  7. ^ "A new species of Sun Skink (Reptilia: Scincidae: Eutropis) from the Zamboanga Peninsula, southwestern Mindanao Island, Philippines" (PDF). Philippine Journal of Systematic Biology. 14 (2). 2021-04-14. doi:10.26757/pjsb2020b14012.
  8. ^ Siler, Cameron D.; Welton, Luke J.; Davis, Drew R.; Watters, Jessa L.; Davey, Conner S.; Diesmos, Arvin C.; Diesmos, Mae L.; Brown, Rafe M. (2014). "Taxonomic Revision of the Pseudogekko Compresicorpus Complex (reptilia: Squamata: Gekkonidae), with Descriptions of Three New Species". Herpetological Monographs. 28: 110–139. doi:10.1655/HERPMONOGRAPHS-D-14-00005. ISSN 0733-1347. JSTOR 43284055.
  9. ^ Welton, Luke J.; Siler, Cameron D.; Diesmos, Arvin C.; Brown, Rafe M. (2010-03-05). "Phylogeny-based species delimitation of southern Philippines bent-toed geckos and a new species of Cyrtodactylus (Squamata: Gekkonidae) from western Mindanao and the Sulu Archipelago". Zootaxa. 2390 (1): 49–68. doi:10.11646/zootaxa.2390.1.3. ISSN 1175-5334.
  10. ^ Maglangit, Erl Pfian Teves, et al. "Notes on the distribution and natural history of the enigmatic and endangered Opisthotropis alcalai (Brown & Leviton, 1961) on Mindanao Island, Philippines." Herpetology Notes 16 (2023): 527-531.
  11. ^ Lama, Joe Merfurt; Senarillos, Tristan Luap P. (2023-11-22). "Tadpole transport behavior of the Philippine Small-disked Frog, Limnonectes parvus (Taylor 1920), from Western Mindanao, Philippines". Reptiles & Amphibians. 30 (1): e20354. doi:10.17161/randa.v30i1.20354. ISSN 2332-4961.
  12. ^ Mark Arcebal K. NAIVE; J. Peter QUAKENBUSH (2023-09-01). "A new species of Sonerila (Melastomataceae) serendipitously discovered in Pasonanca Natural Park, Zamboanga City, Southwestern Philippines with notes on S. woodii". Taiwania. 68 (3). doi:10.6165/tai.2023.68.318.
  13. ^ Pasion, Bonifacio O.; Barrias, Carolyn DP.; Asuncion, Milagrosa P.; Angadol, Abelardo H.; Pabiling, Robert R.; Pasion, Arsenio; Braulio, Archiles A.; Baysa, Agaton M. (2021-03-01). "Assessing tree diversity and carbon density of a riparian zone within a protected area in southern Philippines". Journal of Asia-Pacific Biodiversity. 14 (1): 78–86. doi:10.1016/j.japb.2020.10.006. ISSN 2287-884X.