Artículos sobre Buceo  Filipinas y Buceo Palau en medios especializados:

 

SENSACIONES: 

Number 14 May ´08 Batangas (Anilao y Verde Island) y Visayas: Bohol (Panglao, Balicasag, Pamilacan, Cabilao, Siquijor, Apo Island y Dumaguete) y Cebu (Mactan, Malapascua, Moalboal and Pescador).

 

Number 15 June ´08 Boracay and Palawan (Tubbataha, Apo Reef, Cuyo, El Nido, Coron and Dimakya).

 

Number 16 July ´08 Puerto Galera, Donsol, Ticao y extensiones de viaje a Palau.

 

Number 17 Sept '08 "Shokoy" a Filipinas I

 

Number 18 Oct '08 "Shokoy" a Filipinas II

 

Number 19 Nov '08 "Shokoy" a Filipinas III

 

INMERSION:

 

Number 104 August ´08

 

Number 111 March ´09 “Especial Visayas” (Cebu, Panglao, Balicasag, Pamilacan, Cabilao, Siquijor, Apo Island, Dumaguete, Malapascua, Moalboal and Pescador)...

 

Number 135 “Especial Palau

 

Number 136 BuceoFilipinas y Buceo Palau en el Dive Travel Show 2011

 

Number 137 “Especial Coron

 

Number 140 "Especial Lagos de Coron"

 

Number 147 "Welcome to Anilao, Nudi City"

 

X-RAY MAG

 


Más artículos interesantes

 

• Philippines World Center of Marine Treasures by Daily Inquirer

 

• Filipinas por PADI Dive Guides

 

• Cebu I por Revista Aquanet

 

• Cebu II por Revista Aquanet

 

• Cebu por la Revista Inmersión

 

• Cebu por la Revista Diving a Fondo

 

• Tubbataha por la Revista Sensaciones

 

• Puerto Galera by PADI Undersea Journal

 

• Filipinas por Revista X-Ray Mag

 

• Check Personal Experiences section

 

• Check Videos section

 

• Check Links section

 


Philippines 3rd among World’s best dive sites Mayen Jaymalin

 

Thailand, Hawaii and other South Pacific and Caribbean countries are known for their prime scuba sites — but they have nothing on the Philippines, which has officially earned the distinction of being among the world’s top three diving destinations.

 

Philippine Tourism Authority (PTA) general manager Robert Barbers said the country was chosen as one of the top three dive sites in the world during the Dive and Travel Awards for 2006 held in Japan.

 

The best dive site award was a result of a survey conducted by the Marine Diving Fair (MDF), now considered to be Asia’s largest scuba diving and beach resort exhibition that annually attracts over 50,000 travelers.

 

"The Philippines was very fortunate to be given recognition and the honor to be named among the best dive sites in the world next to Maldives and Palau," Barbers said.

 

The Philippines swam past other locations with internationally known diving sites including Thailand, Hawaii and several South Pacific and Caribbean countries.

 

During the award ceremony, Barbers expressed optimism that with this new distinction, more foreign travelers will be encouraged to visit the Philippines and enjoy the many different dive sites around the country.

 

According to Barbers, the tourism market of the world’s diving industry is Very Very Big (Billions of US Dollars), Philippine tourism industry stakeholders must intensify efforts to develop dive resorts around the country in order to attract more tourists.

 

"We have more than 7,000 islands and exploring even a third of these as potential dive sites would surely be a welcome development in our tourism industry. Hopefully in the succeeding years the Philippines could be named as the best dive site in the world," Barbers said.

 

Among the top internationally recognized dive spots in the country are the Tubattaha Reef in the Sulu Sea; Malapascua in Cebu which offers the chance to glimpse rare treasure sharks; Balicasag island off Bohol; Anilao, Batangas; and Puerto Galera in Mindoro for its colorful corals, strong currents and big fishes.

 

Also well known among divers are Apo Island off Dumaguete and the surrounding islands of Palawan.

 


100 scientists declare Philippines as world’s ‘center of marine biodiversity’

 

Katherine Adraneda The Philippine Star 06/08/2006 Some 100 scientists have declared the Philippines as the world’s "center of marine biodiversity" — not the Great Reef Barrier off east Australia — because of its vast species of marine and coastal resources, according to the World Bank.

 

However, the scientists raised the alarm that the country’s marine diversity is under threat of degradation.

 

Based on the WB report, "Philippine Environment Monitor 2005," the Philippines appears to be using its coastal resources "in a very inefficient manner" compared to other Southeast Asian countries.

 

The overall performance of the Philippines in marine and coastal resources conservation "is generally poor or very poor relative to other developing countries," the report added.

 

Elisea Gozun, former environment secretary and WB consultant, said the broad trends affecting the Philippine coastal areas include rapid population growth, widespread poverty, declining fishery productivity, increasing environmental damage and loss of biodiversity, and climate change.

 

"The coastal and marine waters of the Philippines are considered the center of marine biodiversity in the world," Gozun said during the National Forum on Sustainable Development of Coastal and Marine Resources at the Philippine Plaza hotel in Pasay City yesterday.

 

Gozun gave a presentation on the "State of Marine and Coastal Environment in the Philippines."

 

"(But) many of the important marine species in the Philippine marine environment are threatened (mainly by) habitat loss and degradation, pollution, destructive local and commercial fishing activities and rapid growth in Southeast Asian regional market for marine products," she said.

 

Her presentation is part of the Philippine Environment Monitor 2005, which hopefully will be released next month.

 

Gozun said the country’s fishery resources are considered more heavily exploited than elsewhere in the world, and that the country has the most degraded reefs compared to five other Southeast Asian countries, including Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia.

 

"The country’s total fisheries yield per year is estimated to be $2.5 billion, as more than one million people are employed in the fishing industry; 2.3 million tourists generated $1.99 million in tourist receipts in 2004; while 6.2 million are people employed in tourism-related businesses," she said.

 

Gozun said only seven percent of the country’s reefs have been declared as marine-protected areas, which is the lowest among Asian countries, as the mangrove decline in the Philippines is considered "very significant."

 

"But the country has to do more to sustain this, it has to face the challenges (to ensure conservation of marine and coastal resources) for the future," she said.

 

Gozun said the Philippines’ main fish species, such as round scad or galunggong and tuna, are showing "severe signs of overfishing," and that economic loss over fishing is estimated at about P6.5 billion per year in lost fish catches.

 

Increasing pollution of bodies of water resulting in harmful algal blooms or "red tide" had produced yearly losses in fish exports of around P1.6 billion during the 1990s, she added.

 

Gozun said the government should take action to increase the protection of threatened marine and coastal resources, improve local livelihood for communities in coastal areas, and strengthen and simplify institutional arrangements to achieve a sustainable marine and coastal resources.

 

"As it has always been said, we have so many good laws but we lack proper enforcement of these laws," she said.

 

During the same forum, President Arroyo announced that she had signed an executive order adopting the Integrated Coastal Management.

 

Mrs. Arroyo said she had directed Environment Secretary Angelo Reyes to lead the formulation of a national integrated coastal management plan jointly with other concerned government agencies such as the Departments of Agriculture, Interior and Local Government, Foreign Affairs, Tourism, Transportation and Communications, and the National Economic and Development Authority.

 

"We are the second largest archipelago in the world with a fragile island ecosystem," Mrs. Arroyo told guests and participants of the National Forum on Sustainable Development of Coastal and Marine Resources.

 

"To protect our coasts and marine waters, however, we must protect the entire environment — our forests, our lands, our waters, our air — for almost everything that ensues from environmental degradation flows down and impacts negatively on the quality of our seas," she said