This article has been reviewed by the following Topic Editor: Mark McGinley
Introduction
Mt. Kataglad, Mindanao, Philippines (Photograph by Tom Brooks)
This ecoregion features the montane forests on the island of Mindanao. This disjunct ecoregion harbors Philippine warty pigs, Philippine deer, and some of the last strongholds of the charismatic Philippine eagle. Because most of the lowland forest on Mindanao has been cleared, the remaining montane forests are some of the last vestiges of wild Mindanao.
Location and General Description
The climate of the ecoregion is tropical wet, with temperature and rainfall modified by the elevation, which reaches up to 2,700 meters (m). There are extensive, disjunct areas of the island above 1,000 m. Mindanao generally is south of the typhoon track of the storms that usually hit the northern Philippines from July to November.
Mindanao and the Visayas have been transported across the western Pacific to their present location during the last 25 million years. Most of these islands have been uplifted above water only in the last 15 million years. During much of the Pleistocene, Mindanao and the Eastern Visayas (Samar, Leyte, and Bohol) were all one island, Greater Mindanao, but the higher elevations of this larger island generally were limited to what is now Mindanao.
Mt. Kataglad, Mindanao, Philippines (Photograph by Tom Brooks)
Vegetation types in the montane forests of Mindanao consist of hill dipterocarp forests, lower and upper montane forest, elfin woodland (mossy forest), and summit grasslands. The dominant forest type in Mindanao and the rest of the Philippines was dipterocarp forest. Whereas upper hill dipterocarp forest is found at elevations of 650-1,000 m, individual dipterocarps occur to 1,500 m, and on Mt. Apo, primary dipterocarp forest occurs from 1,000 to 1,600 m. Upper hill dipterocarp forest on Mt. Apo is dominated by the dipterocarps Hopea plagata, Shorea guiso, and Dipterocarpus grandiflorus and species of Cinnamomum, Lithocarpus, Homalanthus, and Musa. There are many epiphytes, mostly ferns and orchids. Tree ferns (Cyathea) and palms (Areca) are also found in the understory.
The transition zone between dipterocarp forest and montane forest includes increasing numbers of tree ferns, pandans, rattans, and Angiopteris; the dipterocarps Shorea almon, S. polysperma, and Lithocarpus spp., and Agathis philippensis.
On Mt. Apo, montane forest occurs above approximately 2,000 m. Dominant genera include Lithocarpus, Cinnamomum, Melastoma, Caryota, Calamus, Ficus, Agathis, and numerous Lauraceae. The mossy upper montane forest generally is found at elevations from 1,200 m to 1,500 m, where humidity is constantly high. This stunted, single-story, moss- and epiphyte-covered forest contains tree ferns up to 10 m high. All surfaces are covered or draped with lichens, bryophytes, begonias, orchids, aroids, Selaginella, and Nephrolepis ferns.
Biodiversity Features
Mindanao and its neighbor, Basilan, situated adjacent to the Sulu Archipelago, have been influenced by animal dispersal from Borneo although in recent millennia movement has been primarily in the other direction. Over the course of the most recent ice ages, the Mindanao faunal region has developed its own unique fauna, with a number of endemic vertebrates.
There is also variation within the island of Mindanao. Thirty-one bird species are polytypic on the island. Sixteen of these variations are based on differences between isolated mountain ranges, and seven species have races associated with the Zamboanga Peninsula and Basilan Island. There are three species that vary between the uplands and lowlands.
Table 1. Endemic and Near-Endemic Mammal Species.
Family
Species
Erinaceidae
Podogymnura truei*
Soricidae
Crocidura beatus
Soricidae
Crocidura grandis*
Tupaiidae
Urogale everetti
Pteropodidae
Alionycteris paucidentata*
Sciuridae
Petinomys crinitus*
Sciuridae
Sundasciurus philippinensis
Sciuridae
Exilisciurus concinnus
Muridae
Bullimus bagobus
Muridae
Limnomys sibuanus*
Muridae
Tarsomys apoensis*
Muridae
Batomys salomonseni
Muridae
Crunomys suncoides*
Muridae
Limnomys sp. B*
An asterisk signifies that the species' range is limited to this ecoregion.
Approximately 80 percent of Greater Mindanao's nonvolant mammal species are found nowhere else in the world. Although flying lemurs, tree shrews, tree squirrels, and tarsiers are found on the islands of Greater Mindanao, they are not found on the other large Philippine island of Luzon, just 25 kilometers (km) away from the northern tip of Samar. More than 30 percent of nonvolant mammals in the ecoregion are endemic to Mindanao only, but the other islands share their species with Mindanao. However, tiny Camiguin and Dinagat islands, located north of Mindanao, contain two and three, respectively, of their own endemic mammals. Fourteen mammal species are endemic or near endemic to the ecoregion (Table 1).
An endemic subspecies of Philippine deer (Cervus mariannus nigricans) is limited to Mindanao. Philippine deer are widespread (though distributed patchily) in the Philippines, being found on Luzon, Mindoro, Samar, Leyte, Mindanao, and the Basilan Islands. The subspecies (and species) is threatened by habitat loss and hunting.
The Philippine tree shrew (Urogale everetti), which is found on Mindanao, Dinagat, and Siargao islands, represents an endemic, monotypic genus. There are sixteen species of tree shrews, a diurnal animal that resembles a squirrel but whose dentition, circulatory system, and large braincase are more like those of primates. This species is considered vulnerable.
The ecoregion also supports a population of the Philippine warty pig (Sus philippensis), which the World Conservation Union (IUCN) considers rare and declining. The Philippine warty pig is widely distributed in the still-forested areas of Luzon, Mindoro, Samar, Leyte, Mindanao, and some of the smaller satellite islands. Many of these forested areas are found in existing national parks. The Philippine warty pig is closely related to Sus barbatus of the Greater Sundas and was once thought to be a subspecies, analogous to the Palawan bearded pig (Sus barbatus ahoenobarbus). The Philippine warty pig is still threatened by hunting and habitat loss.
Table 2. Endemic and Near-Endemic Bird Species.
Family
Common Name
Species
Columbidae
Mindanao brown-dove
Phapitreron brunneiceps
Psittacidae
Mindanao racquet-tail
Prioniturus waterstradti*
Loriidae
Mindanao lorikeet
Trichoglossus johnstoniae*
Strigidae
Mindanao scops-owl
Otus mirus*
Strigidae
Mindanao eagle-owl
Mimizuku gurneyi
Apodidae
Whitehead's swiftlet
Aerodramus whiteheadi
Apodidae
Philippine needletail
Mearnsia picina
Alcedinidae
Blue-capped kingfisher
Actenoides hombroni
Bucconidae
Mindanao hornbill
Penelopides affinis
Bucconidae
Writhed hornbill
Aceros leucocephalus
Rhipiduridae
Black-and-cinnamon fantail
Rhipidura nigrocinnamomea*
Campephagidae
McGregor's cuckoo-shrike
Coracina mcgregori*
Sturnidae
Apo myna
Basilornis miranda*
Muscicapidae
Mindanao jungle-flycatcher
Rhinomyias goodfellowi*
Muscicapidae
Cryptic flycatcher
Ficedula crypta
Laniidae
Mountain shrike
Lanius valdirostris
Zosteropidae
Mindanao white-eye
Lophozosterops goodfellowi*
Zosteropidae
Cinnamon white-eye
Hypocryptadius cinnamomeus*
Sylviidae
Long-tailed bush-warbler
Bradypterus caudatus
Sylviidae
Rufous-headed tailorbird
Orthotomus heterolaemus
Timaliidae
Bagobo babbler
Trichastoma woodi*
Timaliidae
Pygmy babbler
Stachyris plateni
Timaliidae
Rusty-crowned babbler
Stachyris capitalis
Timaliidae
Brown tit-babbler
Macronous striaticeps
Timaliidae
Miniature tit-babbler
Micromacronus leytensis
Estrildidae
Red-eared parrotfinch
Erythrura coloria*
Dicaeidae
Whiskered flowerpecker
Dicaeum proprium
Dicaeidae
Olive-capped flowerpecker
Dicaeum nigrilore
Dicaeidae
Flame-crowned flowerpecker
Dicaeum anthonyi
Nectariniidae
Grey-hooded sunbird
Aethopyga primigenius*
Nectariniidae
Mt. Apo sunbird
Aethopyga boltoni*
Nectariniidae
Linas sunbird
Aethopyga linaraborae*
Fringillidae
Mountain serin
Serinus estherae
Fringillidae
White-cheeked bullfinch
Pyrrhula leucogenis
An asterisk signifies that the species' range is limited to this ecoregion.
Greater Mindanao also supports an endemic genus of Erinaceidae, Podogymura. There are two moonrat species in this genus, both of which are found in Greater Mindanao and one of which is found in the montane regions of Mindanao. The exclusively montane species P. truei, or Mindanao moonrat, is common in montane and mossy forest at elevations from 1,400 m to 2,800 m. Contrary to the IUCN listing, it is not threatened.
Montane Mindanao is also home to the endangered Greater Mindanao shrew (Crocidura grandis) and the widespread (within the Philippines) but endangered golden-crowned fruit bat (Acerodon jubatus).
This ecoregion overlaps with the Mindanao and the Eastern Visayas Endemic Bird Area (EBA), but only the montane portions of it. The EBA contains fifty-one restricted-range birds, twenty-six (or possibly twenty-seven) of which are montane and mossy forest specialists and are thus resident in this ecoregion. All of the restricted-range birds are forest species. There are thirty-four endemic or near-endemic bird species in the ecoregion. Only one of these species is considered threatened: the vulnerable blue-capped kingfisher (Actenoides hombroni). This situation should be contrasted with the adjacent lowland Mindanao and Eastern Visayas rain forests. Although it supports fewer restricted range species, the lowland ecoregion contains nine threatened species.
In addition to the restricted-range species, the critically endangered Philippine eagle (Pithecophaga jeffreyi) and vulnerable spotted imperial-pigeon (Ducula carola) are found in the ecoregion.
Mt. Apo on Mindanao is considered a Centre of Plant Diversity. This spectacular mountain in the southern portion of the Central Cordillera contains primary lowland forest and lower montane forests as well as montane forests found in the Mindanao Montane Rain Forests ecoregion. Much of the lowland forest below 1,000 m has been cleared, but dipterocarp forest is found from 1,000 to 1,600 m.
Current Status
Although the remaining forest is found in isolated patches, most forest remaining on the island of Mindanao is contained in this upland ecoregion. This is in contrast to the largely deforested lowlands of Mindanao and the Eastern Visayas. The conservation status of restricted-range birds is illustrative in this respect: although the upland ecoregion contains more restricted-range species than the lowlands, only one of the upland species is considered threatened, compared with nine threatened species in the lowlands.
Table 3. WCMC (1997) Protected Areas That Overlap with the Ecoregion.
Protected Area
Area (km2)
IUCN Category
Sacred Mountain
10
III
Rungkunan
10
V
Pantuwaraya Lake
8
V
Salikata
10
V
Lake Dapao
20
V
Mt. Kitanglad
250
II
Mt. Apo
420
II
Mainit Hot Spring
30
PRO
Mt. Malindang
300
II
Total
1,058
By 1988, approximately 29 percent of Mindanao's forest, including both primary and secondary forests, remained. There is less today. The Zamboanga Peninsula on southwest Mindanao contains a number of isolated fragments, the largest of which is found in the watershed of Zamboanga City. The remaining patches are scattered in hill and montane areas around the peninsula. These patches contained evidence of recent logging in 1992. In southern Mindanao, some large areas of forest remain in hill and montane areas. Political instability, lack of access, and poor commercial values have helped protect some of these areas. Ironically, some of the areas, which had been under now-suspended timber license agreements, are threatened by encroaching agriculture and fire. There are other large blocks of forest in the rest of Mindanao, but they are similarly limited to hill and montane areas.
Varying levels of protection have been accorded to the protected areas in the ecoregion; by 1988, approximately 50 percent of Mt. Apo National Park had been deforested. In addition to the classic sequence of logging, invasion by kaingineros, and associated hunting and burning, the park is administered by more than one Bureau of Forest Development office and is sometimes occupied by rebel groups. Table 3 details the existing protected areas in the ecoregion.
Types and Severity of Threats
Habitatdestruction is the main threat to biodiversity in the Philippines. Logging and shifting cultivation (kaingin) are cited as the primary forces of habitat conversion. Logging takes many forms, from industrial scale to smaller-scale operations that use water buffalo to haul logs out of the forest.
Both the Philippine warty pig and Philippine deer suffer from intense hunting pressure and fragmentation of their remaining habitats. The pigs are in an especially poor situation because they tend to raid crops and are regarded as pests; consequently, there are no effective protections in place for them.
Justification of Ecoregion Delineation
MacKinnon identified seven subunits in the Philippines and the Philippine Biodiversity Action Plan demarcated fifteen biogeographic units. Udvardy identified the Philippines as a single biogeographic province. We delineated nine ecoregions in the Philippine islands, including Palawan. We deviated from Udvardy, MacKinnon, Stattersfield et al., and the Philippine BAP to varying degrees and based our delineation of the Philippine ecoregions on Heaney.
The islands of Leyte, Samar, Dinagat, and Bohol were combined with the lowland rain forests of Mindanao Island to form the Mindanao-Eastern Visayas Rain Forests. We also included the Basilan Islands off the southwest peninsula of Mindanao in this ecoregion, based on Heaney. In Mindanao we used the 1,000-m contour from the DEM to delineate the montane forests from the lowland forests. The montane forests of Mindanao were placed into their own ecoregion, the Mindanao Montane Rain Forests. In our delineation of the Mindanao-Eastern Visayas Rain Forests and Mindanao Montane Rain Forests ecoregions, we deviated from MacKinnon. MacKinnon placed both of Mindanao's lowland and montane forests in a single subunit (26c). The Basilan Islands were part of subunit 26d, and the islands of Leyte and Samar made up subunit 26e.
Additional Information on this Ecoregion
For a shorter summary of this entry, see the WWF WildWorld profile of this ecoregion.
To see the species that live in this ecoregion, including images and threat levels, see the WWF Wildfinder description of this ecoregion.
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World Wildlife Fund (Lead Author);Mark McGinley (Topic Editor) "Mindanao montane rain forests". In: Encyclopedia of Earth. Eds. Cutler J. Cleveland (Washington, D.C.: Environmental Information Coalition, National Council for Science and the Environment). [First published in the Encyclopedia of Earth April 19, 2007; Last revised Date April 19, 2007; Retrieved May 26, 2012 <http://www.eoearth.org/article/Mindanao_montane_rain_forests>
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Introduction
Mt. Kataglad, Mindanao, Philippines (Photograph by Tom Brooks)
This ecoregion features the montane forests on the island of Mindanao. This disjunct ecoregion harbors Philippine warty pigs, Philippine deer, and some of the last strongholds of the charismatic Philippine eagle. Because most of the lowland forest on Mindanao has been cleared, the remaining montane forests are some of the last vestiges of wild Mindanao.
Location and General Description
The climate of the ecoregion is tropical wet, with temperature and rainfall modified by the elevation, which reaches up to 2,700 meters (m). There are extensive, disjunct areas of the island above 1,000 m. Mindanao generally is south of the typhoon track of the storms that usually hit the northern Philippines from July to November.
Mindanao and the Visayas have been transported across the western Pacific to their present location during the last 25 million years. Most of these islands have been uplifted above water only in the last 15 million years. During much of the Pleistocene, Mindanao and the Eastern Visayas (Samar, Leyte, and Bohol) were all one island, Greater Mindanao, but the higher elevations of this larger island generally were limited to what is now Mindanao.
Mt. Kataglad, Mindanao, Philippines (Photograph by Tom Brooks)
Vegetation types in the montane forests of Mindanao consist of hill dipterocarp forests, lower and upper montane forest, elfin woodland (mossy forest), and summit grasslands. The dominant forest type in Mindanao and the rest of the Philippines was dipterocarp forest. Whereas upper hill dipterocarp forest is found at elevations of 650-1,000 m, individual dipterocarps occur to 1,500 m, and on Mt. Apo, primary dipterocarp forest occurs from 1,000 to 1,600 m. Upper hill dipterocarp forest on Mt. Apo is dominated by the dipterocarps Hopea plagata, Shorea guiso, and Dipterocarpus grandiflorus and species of Cinnamomum, Lithocarpus, Homalanthus, and Musa. There are many epiphytes, mostly ferns and orchids. Tree ferns (Cyathea) and palms (Areca) are also found in the understory.
The transition zone between dipterocarp forest and montane forest includes increasing numbers of tree ferns, pandans, rattans, and Angiopteris; the dipterocarps Shorea almon, S. polysperma, and Lithocarpus spp., and Agathis philippensis.
On Mt. Apo, montane forest occurs above approximately 2,000 m. Dominant genera include Lithocarpus, Cinnamomum, Melastoma, Caryota, Calamus, Ficus, Agathis, and numerous Lauraceae. The mossy upper montane forest generally is found at elevations from 1,200 m to 1,500 m, where humidity is constantly high. This stunted, single-story, moss- and epiphyte-covered forest contains tree ferns up to 10 m high. All surfaces are covered or draped with lichens, bryophytes, begonias, orchids, aroids, Selaginella, and Nephrolepis ferns.
Biodiversity Features
Mindanao and its neighbor, Basilan, situated adjacent to the Sulu Archipelago, have been influenced by animal dispersal from Borneo although in recent millennia movement has been primarily in the other direction. Over the course of the most recent ice ages, the Mindanao faunal region has developed its own unique fauna, with a number of endemic vertebrates.
There is also variation within the island of Mindanao. Thirty-one bird species are polytypic on the island. Sixteen of these variations are based on differences between isolated mountain ranges, and seven species have races associated with the Zamboanga Peninsula and Basilan Island. There are three species that vary between the uplands and lowlands.
Table 1. Endemic and Near-Endemic Mammal Species.
Family
Species
Erinaceidae
Podogymnura truei*
Soricidae
Crocidura beatus
Soricidae
Crocidura grandis*
Tupaiidae
Urogale everetti
Pteropodidae
Alionycteris paucidentata*
Sciuridae
Petinomys crinitus*
Sciuridae
Sundasciurus philippinensis
Sciuridae
Exilisciurus concinnus
Muridae
Bullimus bagobus
Muridae
Limnomys sibuanus*
Muridae
Tarsomys apoensis*
Muridae
Batomys salomonseni
Muridae
Crunomys suncoides*
Muridae
Limnomys sp. B*
An asterisk signifies that the species' range is limited to this ecoregion.
Approximately 80 percent of Greater Mindanao's nonvolant mammal species are found nowhere else in the world. Although flying lemurs, tree shrews, tree squirrels, and tarsiers are found on the islands of Greater Mindanao, they are not found on the other large Philippine island of Luzon, just 25 kilometers (km) away from the northern tip of Samar. More than 30 percent of nonvolant mammals in the ecoregion are endemic to Mindanao only, but the other islands share their species with Mindanao. However, tiny Camiguin and Dinagat islands, located north of Mindanao, contain two and three, respectively, of their own endemic mammals. Fourteen mammal species are endemic or near endemic to the ecoregion (Table 1).
An endemic subspecies of Philippine deer (Cervus mariannus nigricans) is limited to Mindanao. Philippine deer are widespread (though distributed patchily) in the Philippines, being found on Luzon, Mindoro, Samar, Leyte, Mindanao, and the Basilan Islands. The subspecies (and species) is threatened by habitat loss and hunting.
The Philippine tree shrew (Urogale everetti), which is found on Mindanao, Dinagat, and Siargao islands, represents an endemic, monotypic genus. There are sixteen species of tree shrews, a diurnal animal that resembles a squirrel but whose dentition, circulatory system, and large braincase are more like those of primates. This species is considered vulnerable.
The ecoregion also supports a population of the Philippine warty pig (Sus philippensis), which the World Conservation Union (IUCN) considers rare and declining. The Philippine warty pig is widely distributed in the still-forested areas of Luzon, Mindoro, Samar, Leyte, Mindanao, and some of the smaller satellite islands. Many of these forested areas are found in existing national parks. The Philippine warty pig is closely related to Sus barbatus of the Greater Sundas and was once thought to be a subspecies, analogous to the Palawan bearded pig (Sus barbatus ahoenobarbus). The Philippine warty pig is still threatened by hunting and habitat loss.
Table 2. Endemic and Near-Endemic Bird Species.
Family
Common Name
Species
Columbidae
Mindanao brown-dove
Phapitreron brunneiceps
Psittacidae
Mindanao racquet-tail
Prioniturus waterstradti*
Loriidae
Mindanao lorikeet
Trichoglossus johnstoniae*
Strigidae
Mindanao scops-owl
Otus mirus*
Strigidae
Mindanao eagle-owl
Mimizuku gurneyi
Apodidae
Whitehead's swiftlet
Aerodramus whiteheadi
Apodidae
Philippine needletail
Mearnsia picina
Alcedinidae
Blue-capped kingfisher
Actenoides hombroni
Bucconidae
Mindanao hornbill
Penelopides affinis
Bucconidae
Writhed hornbill
Aceros leucocephalus
Rhipiduridae
Black-and-cinnamon fantail
Rhipidura nigrocinnamomea*
Campephagidae
McGregor's cuckoo-shrike
Coracina mcgregori*
Sturnidae
Apo myna
Basilornis miranda*
Muscicapidae
Mindanao jungle-flycatcher
Rhinomyias goodfellowi*
Muscicapidae
Cryptic flycatcher
Ficedula crypta
Laniidae
Mountain shrike
Lanius valdirostris
Zosteropidae
Mindanao white-eye
Lophozosterops goodfellowi*
Zosteropidae
Cinnamon white-eye
Hypocryptadius cinnamomeus*
Sylviidae
Long-tailed bush-warbler
Bradypterus caudatus
Sylviidae
Rufous-headed tailorbird
Orthotomus heterolaemus
Timaliidae
Bagobo babbler
Trichastoma woodi*
Timaliidae
Pygmy babbler
Stachyris plateni
Timaliidae
Rusty-crowned babbler
Stachyris capitalis
Timaliidae
Brown tit-babbler
Macronous striaticeps
Timaliidae
Miniature tit-babbler
Micromacronus leytensis
Estrildidae
Red-eared parrotfinch
Erythrura coloria*
Dicaeidae
Whiskered flowerpecker
Dicaeum proprium
Dicaeidae
Olive-capped flowerpecker
Dicaeum nigrilore
Dicaeidae
Flame-crowned flowerpecker
Dicaeum anthonyi
Nectariniidae
Grey-hooded sunbird
Aethopyga primigenius*
Nectariniidae
Mt. Apo sunbird
Aethopyga boltoni*
Nectariniidae
Linas sunbird
Aethopyga linaraborae*
Fringillidae
Mountain serin
Serinus estherae
Fringillidae
White-cheeked bullfinch
Pyrrhula leucogenis
An asterisk signifies that the species' range is limited to this ecoregion.
Greater Mindanao also supports an endemic genus of Erinaceidae, Podogymura. There are two moonrat species in this genus, both of which are found in Greater Mindanao and one of which is found in the montane regions of Mindanao. The exclusively montane species P. truei, or Mindanao moonrat, is common in montane and mossy forest at elevations from 1,400 m to 2,800 m. Contrary to the IUCN listing, it is not threatened.
Montane Mindanao is also home to the endangered Greater Mindanao shrew (Crocidura grandis) and the widespread (within the Philippines) but endangered golden-crowned fruit bat (Acerodon jubatus).
This ecoregion overlaps with the Mindanao and the Eastern Visayas Endemic Bird Area (EBA), but only the montane portions of it. The EBA contains fifty-one restricted-range birds, twenty-six (or possibly twenty-seven) of which are montane and mossy forest specialists and are thus resident in this ecoregion. All of the restricted-range birds are forest species. There are thirty-four endemic or near-endemic bird species in the ecoregion. Only one of these species is considered threatened: the vulnerable blue-capped kingfisher (Actenoides hombroni). This situation should be contrasted with the adjacent lowland Mindanao and Eastern Visayas rain forests. Although it supports fewer restricted range species, the lowland ecoregion contains nine threatened species.
In addition to the restricted-range species, the critically endangered Philippine eagle (Pithecophaga jeffreyi) and vulnerable spotted imperial-pigeon (Ducula carola) are found in the ecoregion.
Mt. Apo on Mindanao is considered a Centre of Plant Diversity. This spectacular mountain in the southern portion of the Central Cordillera contains primary lowland forest and lower montane forests as well as montane forests found in the Mindanao Montane Rain Forests ecoregion. Much of the lowland forest below 1,000 m has been cleared, but dipterocarp forest is found from 1,000 to 1,600 m.
Current Status
Although the remaining forest is found in isolated patches, most forest remaining on the island of Mindanao is contained in this upland ecoregion. This is in contrast to the largely deforested lowlands of Mindanao and the Eastern Visayas. The conservation status of restricted-range birds is illustrative in this respect: although the upland ecoregion contains more restricted-range species than the lowlands, only one of the upland species is considered threatened, compared with nine threatened species in the lowlands.
Table 3. WCMC (1997) Protected Areas That Overlap with the Ecoregion.
Protected Area
Area (km2)
IUCN Category
Sacred Mountain
10
III
Rungkunan
10
V
Pantuwaraya Lake
8
V
Salikata
10
V
Lake Dapao
20
V
Mt. Kitanglad
250
II
Mt. Apo
420
II
Mainit Hot Spring
30
PRO
Mt. Malindang
300
II
Total
1,058
By 1988, approximately 29 percent of Mindanao's forest, including both primary and secondary forests, remained. There is less today. The Zamboanga Peninsula on southwest Mindanao contains a number of isolated fragments, the largest of which is found in the watershed of Zamboanga City. The remaining patches are scattered in hill and montane areas around the peninsula. These patches contained evidence of recent logging in 1992. In southern Mindanao, some large areas of forest remain in hill and montane areas. Political instability, lack of access, and poor commercial values have helped protect some of these areas. Ironically, some of the areas, which had been under now-suspended timber license agreements, are threatened by encroaching agriculture and fire. There are other large blocks of forest in the rest of Mindanao, but they are similarly limited to hill and montane areas.
Varying levels of protection have been accorded to the protected areas in the ecoregion; by 1988, approximately 50 percent of Mt. Apo National Park had been deforested. In addition to the classic sequence of logging, invasion by kaingineros, and associated hunting and burning, the park is administered by more than one Bureau of Forest Development office and is sometimes occupied by rebel groups. Table 3 details the existing protected areas in the ecoregion.
Types and Severity of Threats
Habitatdestruction is the main threat to biodiversity in the Philippines. Logging and shifting cultivation (kaingin) are cited as the primary forces of habitat conversion. Logging takes many forms, from industrial scale to smaller-scale operations that use water buffalo to haul logs out of the forest.
Both the Philippine warty pig and Philippine deer suffer from intense hunting pressure and fragmentation of their remaining habitats. The pigs are in an especially poor situation because they tend to raid crops and are regarded as pests; consequently, there are no effective protections in place for them.
Justification of Ecoregion Delineation
MacKinnon identified seven subunits in the Philippines and the Philippine Biodiversity Action Plan demarcated fifteen biogeographic units. Udvardy identified the Philippines as a single biogeographic province. We delineated nine ecoregions in the Philippine islands, including Palawan. We deviated from Udvardy, MacKinnon, Stattersfield et al., and the Philippine BAP to varying degrees and based our delineation of the Philippine ecoregions on Heaney.
The islands of Leyte, Samar, Dinagat, and Bohol were combined with the lowland rain forests of Mindanao Island to form the Mindanao-Eastern Visayas Rain Forests. We also included the Basilan Islands off the southwest peninsula of Mindanao in this ecoregion, based on Heaney. In Mindanao we used the 1,000-m contour from the DEM to delineate the montane forests from the lowland forests. The montane forests of Mindanao were placed into their own ecoregion, the Mindanao Montane Rain Forests. In our delineation of the Mindanao-Eastern Visayas Rain Forests and Mindanao Montane Rain Forests ecoregions, we deviated from MacKinnon. MacKinnon placed both of Mindanao's lowland and montane forests in a single subunit (26c). The Basilan Islands were part of subunit 26d, and the islands of Leyte and Samar made up subunit 26e.
Additional Information on this Ecoregion
For a shorter summary of this entry, see the WWF WildWorld profile of this ecoregion.
To see the species that live in this ecoregion, including images and threat levels, see the WWF Wildfinder description of this ecoregion.
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