You plan to move to the Philippines? Wollen Sie auf den Philippinen leben?

There are REALLY TONS of websites telling us how, why, maybe why not and when you'll be able to move to the Philippines. I only love to tell and explain some things "between the lines". Enjoy reading, be informed, have fun and be entertained too!

Ja, es gibt tonnenweise Webseiten, die Ihnen sagen wie, warum, vielleicht warum nicht und wann Sie am besten auf die Philippinen auswandern könnten. Ich möchte Ihnen in Zukunft "zwischen den Zeilen" einige zusätzlichen Dinge berichten und erzählen. Viel Spass beim Lesen und Gute Unterhaltung!


Visitors of germanexpatinthephilippines/Besucher dieser Webseite.Ich liebe meine Flaggensammlung!

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Showing posts with label How our native trees and fruits will save us someday. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How our native trees and fruits will save us someday. Show all posts

Thursday, June 22, 2023

How our native trees and fruits will save us someday

Little known plants will play a huge part for Philippine agrobiodiversity


AT A GLANCE

  • The Philippines hosts at least 10,107 plant species. Over 57 percent of our plants are endemic.

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MANGO MANIA Pahutan mangoes, native to the Philippines, are harvested from the wild

By Gregg Yan


What are the most familiar Pinoy fruits? Mangoes, bananas, pineapples, and papayas probably come to mind—but did you know that Philippine forests harbor hundreds of lesser-known fruits, nuts, and herbs?
Alupag or the Philippine lychee tastes like the lychees originally imported from China. Saba or native bananas are loved by millions of Pinoys. Kamansi is our local version of langka. Sticky Tibig fruits are produced by our native fig trees. In our mountains sprout sour berries like Alingaro, Bignay, and Sapinit. And though most of the world’s mango trees originally hailed from India, we have our own indigenous mangoes like Pahutan and the fragrant Kuini.
The Philippines has strong agrobiodiversity resources. The pandemic and post-pandemic periods, coupled with intensifying climate change effects, have highlighted the importance of agricultural diversity and biodiversity-friendly agriculture, plus the global rethinking of our agriculture and food systems. These new concepts now form the foundation for economically viable, resilient, and sustainable agriculture.

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BIGNAY, OH MY Bignay is a species of fruit tree commonly found in rainforests and tropical forests

Native trees and plants in UP Diliman
Inside the sprawling UP Diliman Campus in Quezon City lies the UP Institute of Biology and Energy Development Corporation’s (UPIB-EDC) Threatened Species Arboretum. An arboretum is a botanical garden that specializes in trees. Inaugurated in 2014, the one-hectare park features over 70 native tree species and serves two vital functions—as a gene bank for endangered trees in case wild populations drop below sustainable levels and to educate students and the greater public about the country’s native flora.

“We have so many indigenous tree species that very few Pinoys know about,” explains EDC BINHI forester Roniño Gibe. “One of our goals is to popularize the conservation of our native plants, especially our threatened Philippine native trees.”

In general, native plants naturally occur throughout a country, whereas indigenous plants thrive only in particular locales. Endemic plants can only be found in one country, whereas naturalized plants are exotic imports, which have settled into new countries over several centuries.

The Philippines hosts at least 10,107 plant species, as of a 2013 study by Barcelona et al. Over 57 percent of the country’s plants are endemic, as per a 1996 study by Oliver and Heaney. The great majority of plants currently cultivated in Pinoy orchards, farms, and gardens, however, are exotic or naturalized plants originally imported from other countries.

Pineapples, for instance, came from South America, papayas from Mexico, lanzones from Malaysia. The ubiquitous trees found in many abandoned lots, like sampaloc and aratilis, came from Africa and Central America, respectively. Despite being called the Philippine lemon, even the iconic calamansi probably originated from the Himalayas.

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A TASTY TREAT Alupag, or the Philippine lychee, is similar in taste to the lychees originally imported from China

Some native Philippine plants, however, successfully broke through as mainstream products. “The pili nut is a great example of an indigenous tree, which became popular, with a following both in the Bicol Region and abroad,” explains botanist David Ples.
Abaca, which is made from the fibrous stalks of a native Philippine banana, is another indigenous cash crop. “The key is to recognize these plants’ value and create useful, viable products,” adds David. As pili trees and abaca plants have become economically valuable, their survival over the next generations is assured. The same cannot be said for other Philippine tree species.

Philippine Agrobiodiversity resources
As per the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), biodiversity provides primary medicine for four billion people while agrobiodiversity improves the lives of one billion undernourished people.

“Our indigenous fruits, herbs, nuts, and other products can provide vital nourishment for Pinoys, who might not have ready access to mainstream food. Indigenous plants also have important vitamins and minerals that are sometimes deficient in the typical Pinoy diet,” explains Department of Science and Technology Food and Nutrition Research Institute (DOST-FNRI) senior science researcher Charina Javier. “But many of our indigenous flora are neglected and underused, so their potential to provide us with nutrients is not fully utilized.”

The Philippine government has been working on the promotion of agrobiodiversity since 2015 and continues to achieve its agrobiodiversity targets under the Philippine Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan (PBSAP). Its targets include maintaining and conserving the genetic diversity of cultivated plants and farmed and domesticated animals and wild relatives, increasing agricultural areas devoted to all types of biodiversity-friendly agricultural practices, the formulation and adoption of enhanced Comprehensive Land Use Plans (CLUP) using the revised Housing Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB) framework, which incorporates ecologically-sound agricultural land use plans and increasing  the number of recognized nationally-important agricultural heritage systems (NIAHS).

In some protected areas, the encroachment of agricultural lands has become so evident that the Department of Agriculture (DA) and the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) signed Joint Administrative Order (JAO) 2021-01 or Mainstreaming Biodiversity-friendly Agricultural Practices (BDFAP) in and around protected areas and promoting the same in wider agricultural landscapes.

The United Nations Development Program’s Biodiversity Finance Initiative (DENR-UNDP BIOFIN) is currently assisting the two national agencies to enable the implementation of the JAO through by developing an agrobiodiversity framework for the country.

“We should do all we can to strengthen local agrobiodiversity, such as promoting our native fruits,” says DENR-UNDP BIOFIN national project manager Anabelle Plantilla. “Native and even naturalized plants can be used for a host of purposes. Alupidan and pandan leaves can be used to garnish dishes, batuan fruits for flavoring, and rattan vines to make furniture.”

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ABACA KADABRA Abaca fiber is often used to hand-loom various Indigenous textiles in the country

According to the Forest Foundation Philippines, the promotion of native trees is beneficial for threatened native flora and fauna species as they help recover and expand forest habitats, protect watershed and freshwater resources, secure the livelihood of local people, and link protected areas with natural forests.

Food forests, where various combinations of cash-crops are planted in a natural setting, instead of the endless monocrop rows, which dominate large-scale agriculture, are slowly taking root.

At the Subic Bay Jungle Environment Survival Training (JEST) Camp, where participants learn to survive in a tropical rainforest, campers are taught how to make “jungle coffee” from Kupang seeds, how to use Gugo vines as “jungle soap,” how to fashion survival implements from bamboo, and which leaves one can chew on to help stave off hunger.

In the uplands of Sibalom in Panay, locals seasonally harvest the leaves and stems of bakan, balud, banban, and nito to make tourist souvenirs while locally grown tobacco leaves are ground and inserted into dried duhat leaves to make native cigarettes called Lomboy or Likit. Local knowledge is already boosting forest productivity.

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KUINI SO TASTY Kuini fruits are known to have a sour or sweet taste when eaten

“The United Nations Development Programme promotes ethical, natural ways not just to produce food and other vital resources, but to find alternative livelihood opportunities for communities living in or near forestlands, and that are supportive of the UN Sustainable Development Goals,” adds UNDP resident representative to the Philippines Dr. Selva Ramachandran.

Established in 2012 and with a network comprising 41 countries in Africa, Europe, South and Central America, plus the Asia Pacific Region, DENR-UNDP-BIOFIN helps raise funds for smart agriculture to boost the productivity of ecosystems, while repurposing potentially harmful agricultural subsidies into effective conservation measures.

“Our forests serve many key functions. They provide habitats for wildlife, generate the oxygen we breathe, even offering us places to spiritually recharge,” concludes Anabelle. “We can make them worth more than logs or farmland by seeing them as our First-Nations people have for generations—as a pharmacy, a grocery, and an extension of our home.”

Visitors interested in learning more about native Philippine trees, fruits, nuts, and herbs can schedule a visit to the UPIB-EDC Arboretum in UP Diliman, where donations for upkeep and maintenance are appreciated.