00. Ocean Decade - Philippines
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The UNACOM Online and Digital Enabling Library and Index is developed to support the alignment of research, investments, and community initiatives toward contributing to a well-functioning, productive, resilient, sustainable, and inspiring ocean. The goal is to enable the government, partner agencies, and UNESCO to develop more robust Science-Informed Policies and facilitate a stronger Science-Policy Interface through the gathered data, information, and knowledge related to the Ocean Decade in the Philippines.
Particularly, it aims to:
Particularly, it aims to:
- Gather and index all publications, reports, policies, laws, legislations, articles, and other documents of the Philippine National Committee on Marine Sciences (NCMS) related to the Ocean Decade.
- Disseminate and promote these publications, reports, policies, and other documents on the initiatives and actions to address the Ocean Decade challenges.
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- Fisheries Administrative Order No. 192: Series of 1997. Strengthening of the Fisheries Quarantine Service (FQS) in the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources and in the Department of Agriculture Regional Field Units, and prescribing rules, regulations, and procedures thereof.(Department of Agriculture, 1997-02-18)
- Petrology and geochemistry of Camiguin Island, southern Philippines: insights to the source of adakites and other lavas in a complex arc settingCastillo, Paterno R.; Janney, Philip E.; Solidum, Renato Jr. U. (Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1999-01-21)Camiguin is a small volcanic island located 12 km north of Mindanao Island in southern Philippines. The island consists of four volcanic centers which have erupted basaltic to rhyolitic calcalkaline lavas during the last ∼400 ka. Major element, trace element and Sr, Nd and Pb isotopic data indicate that the volcanic centers have produced a single lava series from a common mantle source. Modeling results indicate that Camiguin lavas were produced by periodic injection of a parental magma into shallow magma chambers allowing assimilation and fractional crystallization (AFC) processes to take place. The chemical and isotopic composition of Camiguin lavas bears strong resemblance to the majority of lavas from the central Mindanao volcanic field confirming that Camiguin is an extension of the tectonically complex Central Mindanao Arc (CMA). The most likely source of Camiguin and most CMA magmas is the mantle wedge metasomatized by fluids dehydrated from a subducted slab. Some Camiguin high-silica lavas are similar to high-silica lavas from Mindanao, which have been identified as “adakites” derived from direct melting of a subducted basaltic crust. More detailed comparison of Camiguin and Mindanao adakites with silicic slab-derived melts and magnesian andesites from the western Aleutians, southernmost Chile and Batan Island in northern Philippines indicates that the Mindanao adakites are not pure slab melts. Rather, the CMA adakites are similar to Camiguin high-silica lavas which are products of an AFC process and have negligible connection to melting of subducted basaltic crust.
- Feeding ecology and trophic role of sea urchins in a tropical seagrass communityKlumpp, David W.; Salita-Espinosa, J. T.; Fortes, M. D. (Elsevier BV, 1993-04)The grazing impact of urchins on seagrass and algal resources, and the relative importance of this to the lower-level trophic flux of a tropical seagrass community were investigated. Thalassia hemprichii (Ehrenb.) Aschers. accounted for 80–93% of seagrass frond biomass at Bolinao in the Philippines. Growth rate of seagrass was 6.6 mm per shoot day−1, or 2.3 mg AFDW per shoot day−1. Production of seagrass fronds per unit area of seagrass bed varied with location from 870 to 1850 mg AFDW m−2 day−1. Urchin density ranged from 0.9 to 4.2 m−2, with Tripneustes gratilla (L.) and Salmacis sphaeroides (L.) being the most common species. Tripneustes gratilla fed mostly on attached seagrass fronds (77–89% of diet), especially Thalassia hemprichii, whereas S. sphaeroides was a generalist, consuming Thalassia hemprichii fronds (13–65%), detached seagrass debris (5–39%), the red alga Amphiroa fragilissima (L.) Lamour. (0–30%), algal-coated sediment and rubble (0–51%) in proportions that varied with the availability of preferred food types. Live Thalassia hemprichii fronds were clearly preferred over macroalgae or dead seagrass fronds by Tripneustes gratilla, but S. sphaeroides consumed all three food types without preference. Both urchins avoided the common brown alga, Sargassum crassifolium J. Agardh. Urchins absorbed 73–76% of organic matter in seagrass fronds with epiphytes (75% of DW), and 55% of that in epiphyte-free fronds. Seagrass debris and the macroalgae A. fragilissima were of lower food quality as they were lower in organic matter, and this matter was absorbed less efficiently by urchins. Rates of ingestion (IR in g WW per urchin day−1) were proportional to body weight (W in g WW) according to the functions: IR = 0.56W0.34 (T. gratilla) and IR = 0.17W0.53 (Salmacis sphaeroides). Predicted grazing impact of urchins on seagrass resources varied spatially and temporally. Estimated annual grazing rate at the main study site was 158 g AFDW m−2, equivalent to 24% of annual seagrass production, but owing to large changes in urchin population structure and density, grazing impact is expected to vary from < 5% to > 100% at different times of year. A synthesis of knowledge on the lower-level trophic pathways in this system indicates that seagrass-urchin and periphyton-epifauna grazing interactions are both important in their contribution to overall trophic flux.
- Trends in growth and mortality of three coral species (Anthozoa: Scleractinia), including effects of transplantationYap, H. T.; Alino, P. M.; Gomez, E. D. (Inter-Research Science Center, 1992)Three ecologically dominant coral species in a northern Philippine reef were compared in terms of growth and mortality and responses to transplantation. The purpose of this study was to examine the feasibility of using the species concerned in establishing new coral populations through deliberate fragmentation. The species, Acropora hyacinthus, Pocillopora damicornis and Pavona frondifera, displayed distinct differences which could be related to their respective life-history strategies. A. hyacinthus showed tendencies towards an r-mode, with rapid linear growth but also high mortality rates. Response to transplantation was poor. Pocillopora damicornis had intermediate linear growth rates and relatively high mortality. Transplants fared poorly in the initial part of the experiment though they showed successful adaptation after a year. Mortality rates of both A. hyacinthus and P. damicornis were increased by high temperatures during certain times of the year. Pavona frondifera had the highest linear growth rates and no mortality, tending towards a K-mode of life history strategy. It showed the best response to transplantation This species is thus a suitable candidate for large-scale reef restoration.
- Macroinfaunal biomass and energy flow in a shallow reef flat of the northwestern PhilippinesNacorda, Hildie Maria E.; Yap, Helen T. (Springer, 1996-12)Macrofaunal biomass of the Lucero reef flat in the northwestern Philippines accounted for 9 to 52% of total sediment organic matter, and did not exhibit any significant temporal trend. The polychaetes and crustaceans consistently alternated as biomass dominants; the latter group showed monthly and seasonal variations along with the chaetognaths, molluscs, chordates, and chelicerates, among the major groups (p<0.05). Faunal abundance correlated significantly with biomass. Salinity, mean sediment grain size, sediment heterogeneity, and total organic matter were found to significantly influence faunal biomass. The sandy substrate community was characteristically heterotrophic throughout the monitoring period, i.e., P/R<1. Hourly rates of net primary production (p n ) did not exhibit any significant diurnal pattern. Monthly comparisons yielded significant differences for estimates of daily gross primary production, P, and respiration, R. Values of P were relatively low, and ranged from 2240 (± 1526 S.D.) to 4890 (± 1377) mg O2 m−2 d−1 while R ranged from 3744 (± 1504) to 6879 (± 903) mg O2 m−2 d−1. R was lower during the dry warm months than the wet months. Multiple regression analyses indicate that primary production was a positive function of light intensity and temperature, and a negative correlate of salinity (adjusted R 2 = 0.2444, p< 0.05). Respiration (r) did not appear to relate with any environmental variable, with total macroinfaunal abundance nor with biomass. Results of the study suggest that other heterotrophic components of the sand community were probably responsible for most of the energy consumption, and that these may be dependent on external sources of organic matter.
- Topoisomerase II-Mediated DNA cleavage by adocia- and xestoquinones from the Philippine sponge Xestospongia sp.Concepcion, Gisela; Foderaro, Tommaso A.; Eldredge, Glenn S.; Lobkovsky, Emil; Clardy, Jon; Barrows, Louis R.; Ireland, Chris M. (American Chemical Society (ACS), 1995-10)Investigation of an orange Xestospongia sp. sponge collected at Cape Bolinao in northern Luzon, Philippines, yielded the known compounds adociaquinones A and B (1, 2) and six new metabolites, secoadociaquinones A and B (3, 4), 14-methoxyxestoquinone (5), 15-methoxyxestoquinone (6), 15-chloro-14-hydroxyxestoquinone (7), and 14-chloro-15-hydroxyxestoquinone (8). All compounds showed inhibition of topoisomerase II in catalytic DNA unwinding and/or decatenation assays. Furthermore, adociaquinone B showed activity in a KSDS assay, suggesting it inhibits the enzyme by freezing the enzyme-DNA cleavable complex. Interestingly, adociaquinone B did not displace ethidium bromide from DNA or unwind supercoiled DNA, implying it does not intercalate DNA.
- Wound healing in cultured Eucheuma alvareziivar. tambalang DotyAzanza-Corrales, R.; Dawes, C. J. (Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 1989)Wound healing in segments of Eucheuma alvarezii var. tambalang grown in enriched media in the laboratory can be divided into four stages based on histological and cytological changes. During the first stage, approximately 2—4 days after wounding, proteinaceous and phenolic substances concentrate on pit plugs of cells adjacent to the wounded surface. In the second stage, about the sixth day, cellular extensions are produced from the pits of medullary and cortical cells of sub-wound layer. During the third stage, about the 8th day, the cellular extensions divide several times and elongate towards the surface. A new cortical or wound tissue is formed during the fourth stage beginning on the 12th day. The wound tissue is continuous with the old cortex within 3 weeks.
- A review of the status of Philippine reefsGomez, E. D.; Aliño, P. M.; Yap, H. T.; Licuanan, W. Y. (Elsevier BV, 1994-01)Since 1979, the status of Philippine reefs has been periodically updated. While conditions of the reefs during the early surveys were assessed in terms of live coral cover per se, the ‘coral mortality index’ was applied to the sets of data collected during the past 7 yr which may be a better gauge in determining the health of the reefs. Generally, most reefs surveyed are in fair condition. Major destructive factors described are sedimentation and siltation from coastal development and activities inland, illegal and destructive methods of fishing, and overfishing. If the reefs are to continue to provide for the present and future users, the ecological processes that render them productive must be maintained through integrated approaches of coastal area management.
- Laboratory and field growth studies of commercial strains of Eucheuma denticulatum and Kappaphycus alvarezii in the PhilippinesDawes, Clinton J.; Lluisma, A. O.; Trono, G. C. (Springer, 1994-02)Daily growth rates of 0.1 to 8.4% d-1 for the brown form and 0.2 to 6.3% d-1 of the green form were measured for 3 to 5-cm long branches of the tropical red seaweed Kappaphycus alvarezii cultured in the laboratory. Highest growth rates were found using inexpensive enrichments such as soil water and coconut water supplemented with 0.7 mM N and 13 µM P and with a liquid fertilizer, Algafer, produced from seaweeds in the Philippines. Laboratory grown branches of both K. alvarezii and Eucheuma denticulatum transplanted to rafts in the field showed daily growth rates of 4.4 to 8.9% d-1, as high or higher than other reported growth rates. The studies, carried out in the Philippines, demonstrate the viability and high yield of laboratory cultivars and methods to keep laboratory culture costs low.
- Differences in biomass production and carrageenan yields among four strains of farmed carrageenophytes in Northern Bohol, PhilippinesTrono, Gavino C.; Lluisma, Arturo O. (Springer, 1992-11)Comparative studies on the biomass and carrageenan production of two strains of Eucheuma denticulatum and two strains of Kappaphycus alvarezii were made to assess the seasonality in their production capacities. The high and similar refined carrageenan (RC) yields (43–53% of dry wt.) of the four strains in the first cropping season (June–October) coincided with their high biomass production with plants averaging from 1.1 to 1.8 kg each at harvest. The poor RC yields (21–33%) recorded in the second cropping (October–February) coincided with their season of low biomass (av. wt: 0.34 to 1.0 kg). The four strains, however, recorded contrasting performance in the third cropping season (February–July) with the two E. denticulatum strains recording high RC yields (43 and 42.5%) together with high biomass (av. wt: 1.5 and 1.6 kg) in contrast to the low RC yields (30 and 39%) and low biomass (av. wt. 0.21 and 0.28 kg) of the two K. alvarezii strains. Records for semi-refined carrageenan (SRC) yields in the second and third cropping seasons were quite consistent and similar for the four strains (42–55%), except in the second cropping where the two K. alvarezii strains recorded low SRC. These differences in production potentials highlight the need for cropping management of the four strains to improve their cropping performance.