Pages

Monday, February 4, 2013

Pawikan hatchlings found in Dipolog shore

By Mary May A. Abellon

DIPOLOG CITY, Feb. 4 (PIA) - - Some seventy five hatchlings of sea turtles or locally known as “pawikan” were found along the shore of Surf, Barangay Miputak  in this city Dipolog City recently. 
Children swimming in said beach reportedly saw these baby turtles and told a certain resident trained on handling endangered species about the hatchlings that were creeping along the beach.   

Fish Warden Teresa Sañado pointed out that these hatchlings were believed to be two days old. 

Sañado also believed that there are more sea turtles around the bay of Dipolog City that would go ashore to lay eggs. 

After mating at sea, adult female sea turtles go to land to lay eggs at night. The mature nesting female hauls herself onto the beach and finds suitable sand on which to create a nest. After the hole is dug, the female then starts filling the nest with eggs and re-filling the nest with sand until it is relatively undetectable visually. She then returns to the ocean, leaving the eggs untended. 

Pawikan is one of the endangered species our government and the international community sought to protect and preserved.

Philippine laws governing the protection and preservation of wildlife including “pawikan” are Executive Order No. 542, which created the “Task Force Pawikan,” and RA NO. 9147, an act providing for the conservation and protection of wildlife resources and their habitats. 

Sañado said that her office is preparing for the release of the hatchlings in due time.

For her part, City Mayor Evelyn T. Uy was grateful to the residents for their apt and positive response to fishery laws as well as those regulations implemented by the Department of Natural Resources more specially the law on the protection of endangered species. (FPG/MAA/PIA-ZamboNorte)