THE mangrove eco-park in Leganes, Iloilo. (Iloilo Capitol PIO)
ILOILO CITY – An abandoned fishpond in Leganes town, Iloilo province has been transformed into an eco-park that prioritizes the conservation of the “katunggan,” the native term for mangroves.
Gov. Arthur “Toto” Defensor Jr. led the launching of the Provincial Katunggan Ecological and Economic Park (ProKEEP) in Barangay Nabitasan on Tuesday, June 2.
As the provincial government’s central site for mangrove and marine biodiversity conservation, ProKEEP is an expansion of a project undertaken by the Iloilo Provincial Government Environment and Natural Resources Office (Iloilo PGENRO).
ProKEEP started in 2016 as “Katunggan: Coastal Greenbelt for BioCoCo Protection Project.”
With a minimal budget, residents were hired to plant and propagate 100,000 mangrove seedlings. From two initial mangrove species 10 years ago, the eco-park now has a total of 10 distinct mangrove species. Since then, Iloilo PGENRO recorded sightings of the annual migratory birds in the area.
“This is the heart of mangrove stewardship in the region,” said Dr. Jurgenne Primavera, the country’s leading mangrove expert and one of Time magazine’s Heroes of the Environment in 2008.
To make the area mangrove eco-park accessible, Palm Concepcion Power Corp. (PCPC) built a 37.5-meter elevated concrete pathway for P2.4 million, the share of the Iloilo provincial government as stipulated by the Department of Energy (DOE).
Also present during the launching were Leganes Mayor Vicente “Jun-Jun” Jaen II, Regional Director Raul Lorilla of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources Office-6, Provincial Administrator Raul Banias, Iloilo PGENRO chief Cesar Emmanuelle Buyco Jr., PGENRO Supervising Environmental Management Specialist Mitzi Peñaflorida, Chief Information Officer Nereo Lujan, and Barangay Captain Juan Penetrante.