Negros Occidental Braces For Thousands At Holy Week Pilgrimage Sites

Para sa mga naghahanap ng kapayapaan at espiritwal na pagninilay, handa ang Negros Occidental ngayong Mahal na Araw.

Sipalay Accommodations 90% Booked For Holy Week Break

Ang mga turista ay masigasig na dumadagsa sa Sipalay dahil sa halos punong mga akomodasyon para sa Holy Week.

PCG Awards Purchase Deal For 40 Patrol Boats To French Firm

Inanunsyo ng PCG ang kasunduan sa OCEA para sa pagbili ng 40 patrol boats. Ito ay isang makabagong hakbang tungo sa mas mahusay na serbisyo sa bayan.

Quezon City Urges Schools To Adopt Sustainable Practices Amid Climate Crisis

Ang Quezon City ay nag-uudyok sa mga paaralan na pagtibayin ang kanilang mga pagsisikap sa kapaligiran para sa mas magandang kinabukasan.

Sea Turtle Rescued, Freed In Pampanga

LOOK: A concerned citizen in Pampanga has turned over to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources provincial office a vulnerable Olive Ridley sea turtle over the weekend.
By The Visayas Journal

Sea Turtle Rescued, Freed In Pampanga

48
48

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

A concerned citizen of Lubao town, this province has turned over to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) provincial office here a vulnerable Olive Ridley sea turtle over the weekend.

In a social media post on Monday, Laudemir Salac, chief of the DENR Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Office (PENRO), said fisherman Nimrod Castro of Barangay San Jose found the turtle caught in his nylon fishing net while sailing along the tributary of Pampanga River, between the boundary of Hermosa, Bataan and Lubao, Pampanga on Saturday.

The turtle was turned over and released back into the water on the same day.

Salac said it had a carapace length of 72 centimeters and width of 67 centimeters and was released without tagging.

“Since the turtle was in good health condition, we immediately released it back to its habitat at the Bangkung Malapad in Sasmuan town,” he said.

Sasmuan Bangkung Malapad was earlier declared by DENR Secretary Roy Cimatu as a critical habitat and ecotourism area.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Olive Ridley turtles are found worldwide but listed under the Endangered Species Act.

Paquito Moreno, executive director of the DENR in Central Luzon, appealed to the public to immediately report to environment authorities any wildlife sighting and encounter to avert potential danger and threat to their population.

“We see this visit of marine turtle in the coastal waters of Pampanga as a good sign that our efforts in cleaning and rehabilitating Manila Bay are making a positive result,” he said.

The 24-kilometer coastline of Pampanga is part of the 190-kilometer long Manila Bay coastline.

Moreno also encouraged the public to be vigilant in monitoring and reporting any illegal trading and online selling of wildlife to penalize perpetrators who destroy biodiversity and the environment. (PNA)