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Tuesday, October 30, 2012

DENR designates Forest-Pest-Watch


By Jocelyn P. Alvarez

PAGADIAN CITY, Oct. 30 (PIA) - - The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) will be designating forest-pest- watch officers per DENR Administrative Order (DAO) 2012-05 issued by Environment Secretary Ramon J.P Paje.

DENR 9 Regional Public Affairs office Chief Roservirico Tan said DAO 2012-06 stipulates the designation of a Forest Surveillance and Monitoring Officer (FPSMO) in every Community Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) with forests under its jurisdiction. 

Noting in order, Tan said the FPSMO is task to perform regular forest inspection activities in his/ her area of jurisdiction and coordinate with the forest tenure holders, private plantation owners, protected area supervisors, or indigenous peoples (IP) groups, and local communities.

The active information chief said this preparation is in consonance with the department’s implementation of a Forest Pest Surveillance System, a system that will monitor/detect malevolent signs of forest fungi and insect, or collectively known as forest pests that can damage forests.

In the process of implementation, the department will need more forest guards to carry out the said system, so hiring of more forest guards is included in the plan, Tan said.

Tan however clarified that the forest-pest-watch duties of the forest guards forms part of the CENRO’s regular forest protection activities “with or without infestation.” 

Tan said the administrative order likewise provides for a set of guidelines to carry out a forest pest response mechanism that will include the preparation of a blueprint of action “to totally eliminate the pest and prevent similar incidence” in case of an outbreak of forest pest infestation.

“Also covered in the order is the pest surveillance of forest within ancestral domains where indigenous people’s leaders are to be coordinated closely with by the concerned CENRO,” Tan was quoted as saying.

Tan recalled “in 1985,  a forest pest  called “jumping lice” (Leucaena psyllids), wrought havoc in ipil-ipil tree (Leucaena  Leucocephala)  plantations in the uplands covered by the DENR’s Community-Based Forestry Program (CBFM) to the point that a moratorium in the planting of the species was recommended,  except for research, until seeds of resistant varieties   became available.”   

Tan enumerated that the beehole borer that attack the acacia, yemane and gmelina arborea; the six-spined engraver beetle or ipis beetle which feed on the  Benguet pine; shoot Borer on Mahogany; varicose borer on  bagras;  and teak defoliator  and teak skeletonizer on  teak are other forest pests that have been recorded to have infected trees thriving in the Philippine forests. (JPA/PIA9)