Team Out of Town Blog Hub (Outoftownblog.com) – After being sidelined for two years due to the Covid-19 pandemic, Sarangani Bay (SarBay) Festival made a soft come back albeit in a toned-down environmental initiative to help preserve the bay’s fragile ecosystem.

Crown of Thorns collection at Sarangani Bay
Crown of Thorns collection at Sarangani Bay

Regarded as the biggest beach party in the archipelago with various sporting and wellness events and over 100,000 visitors, the fest highlighted the underwater collection of crown of thorns (COT), which prey on the coral reefs in Sarangani Bay, one of the country’s most biodiversity-rich protected seascapes.

Volunteers scuba divers from the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), local government units of Sarangani Province, and the Philippine National Police led the four-day environmental effort, where they were able to collect some 47,000 COTs in the beach resort towns of Maasim and Glan in Sarangani.

Crown of Thorns collection at Sarangani Bay
Crown of Thorns collection at Sarangani Bay

Dubbed as Wake Up Sarbay, the scaled-down festivities also featured the SarBay Sea-kad Bike and Plant ride where cyclists pedaled from the provincial capitol complex in Alabel town to the mangrove forest in Malapatan and Mt Sabrina Resort in Glan.

Moreover, the Department of Tourism Region 12 also launched its Dive Sox program to promote the Soccsksargen Region as an alternative dive spot in southern Mindanao. The current dive haven in the region is Maasim town because of the presence of the Lemlunay Resort, the only dive center in Sarangani.

Bike and Plant participants at Provincial Capitol
Bike and Plant participants at Provincial Capitol

The DOT dive program aims to expand the dive areas to Glan, which launched its own program last year, and to the coastal municipalities of Sultan Kudarat province.

Wake Up Sarbay drew to a close with a Touch Mobile-sponsored evening concert at the famed Gumasa white beach featuring Daybreak band and Kakang of Virgu.

Counting collected Crown of Thorns
Counting collected Crown of Thorns

Named in 1996 by Presidential Proclamation 756 as a Protected Seascape, Sarangani Bay’s coral resources cover more than 2,293 hectares spread over 20 areas with about 60 important live hard coral genera, 411 reef species in 46 families. Its seagrass cover is placed at 912 hectares, with 11 species.

Diver injecting Crown of Thorns
Diver injecting Crown of Thorns

Marine mammal species, which include spinner dolphins, risso’s dolphins, and dugong or sea cow, are often sighted which attests to the bay’s healthy marine life.

The bay has been experiencing occasional outbreaks of COTs over the past few years due to the loss of its natural predators such as the Triton trumpet, Napoleon wrasse, white-spotted pufferfish, and titan triggerfish which keep its population in check.

Mangrove planting in Malapatan
Mangrove planting in Malapatan

The rise in sea surface temperature due to climate change and deterioration of water quality also contribute to the growth of COTs across various bodies of water across the country.

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Read: Sarangani Bay: A Haven Of Marine Mammals

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