
When I was three years old, I made my first trip to the Philippines where my family is from and still resides today. The geometrically stunning rice terraces and lakeside volcanoes paint a landscape bound to awe anyone who's lucky enough to get a glimpse of it. But for me it's always been the sea, that great expanse of water and marine life surrounding the islands, which even twenty years after my first visit, still bears a spellbinding magnificence unmatched by anything else I've encountered in my travels. So when Philippine President Gloria Arroyo visited National Geographic headquarters last week to discuss the
Coral Triangle Initiative, it alarmed me to think that this natural beauty could ever be in jeopardy.
The 2.3 million square miles of the Coral Triangle, which includes the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, and Timor-Leste, is home to more than 75% of the world's known species of coral, 3,000 species of fish, six of the world's seven species of sea turtle, as well as whales, dolphins and coelacanths, a fish believed to predate dinosaurs. But the vanishing reefs could face peril if we fail to sustain them.
About This Blog