Email
In the island forests of the western Pacific, there’s an otherworldly animal known as the Philippine tarsier.
With bat ears, suction cup–like fingers, and giant golden eyes, the creatures would be easy to mistake for extras on a sci-fi movie set. But in fact, tarsiers are primates and distant relatives of humans.
“They really look like little aliens jumping from tree to tree,” says Gab Mejia, a National Geographic Explorer and photographer based in the Philippines.
The Philippines’ 7,600-plus islands are the cradle for a mind-boggling number of diverse species. According to the Convention on Biological Diversity, 5 percent of the world’s plant species live in the Philippines. And nearly half of the creatures found on these islands exist nowhere else.
Published January 8, 2021, 3:50 PM
SAN MARIANO , Isabela – Twenty-two crocodiles from a reptile sanctuary here have gone missing after floods hit the Cagayan region last month.
The Mabuwaya Foundation is asking people not to harm the reptiles should they chance upon them. (Photo courtesy of Merlijn Van Weerd / MANILA BULLETIN)
But instead of warning the public about the danger that could be posed by the crocodiles, the Mabuwaya Foundation is asking people not to harm the reptiles should they chance upon them.
“The people do pose a threat to the crocodiles. It is our fear that crocodiles are being killed,” Mabuwaya Foundation Chief Operating Officer Marites Gatan-Balbas told the Manila Bulletin.