#TogetherForTamaraws Campaign Launched to Help Tamaraw Rangers and Wardens

#TogetherforTamaraws asks the public to give gifts to support Mindoro’s tamaraw rangers and wardens. Readers can give gifts that start at PHP500 and can be deposited online via bit.ly/TogetherforTamaraws. (DENR-UNDP BIOFIN)

The campaign was launched to gift tamaraw frontliners with critically-needed field allowances and food so they can continue protecting tamaraw, plus the other endangered flora and fauna of Mindoro.

“We launched this global campaign because we saw local communities and rangers, the frontliners of conservation, being strongly impacted by the loss of income from tourism,” explains Onno van den Heuvel, BIOFIN global project manager. “Exotic places like the Iglit-Baco mountain range might seem distant to most people, but they must be conserved. Rangers and wardens need and deserve our support to keep doing good conservation work.”

A pair of TCP rangers scan a hillside for poachers. The COVID-19 pandemic has left only a dozen rangers to patrol the Mounts Iglit-Baco Natural Park, the last stronghold of the critically-endangered tamaraw. Four rangers and 32 wardens have lost their jobs. “We need to tide our rangers and wardens through the COVID-19 pandemic so they can continue protecting the tamaraw,” explains Anabelle Plantilla, BIOFIN Philippines project manager. (Gregg Yan)

BIOFIN hopes to raise approximately PHP1.149M to help secure allowances and provisions for tamaraw frontliners until the end of the year. Readers can give gifts at any amount online through bit.ly/TogetherforTamaraws.

“When our grandparents were still alive, forests were plentiful and full of wildlife. Over 70% of the country was covered in pristine forest, but only a million hectares are now left,” says Titon Mitra, UNDP Philippines Resident Representative. “We’re losing 200 football fields of forest cover daily and in this fix is the tamaraw, of which only about 600 are left. I hope each of you can make a small contribution. In doing so, you play a big part in securing the livelihoods of our tamaraw wardens and rangers who are doing such an exceptional job in protecting this critically-endangered species.”

TCP rangers and a Taw’buid tribesman watch over a herd of tamaraw inside the Iglit-Baco Mountain Range. Taw’buid tribesmen make excellent scouts and trackers while educating their fellow tribesfolk about the merits of protecting the land. (Gregg Yan / National Geographic Channel)

Since its inception in 2012, BIOFIN has worked with both the public and private sectors across 36 countries to enhance protection for the world’s top biodiversity hotspots by helping secure funds to implement sound biodiversity programs.

The ranger and wardens who were laid-off are members of the Taw’buid, Iraya and Buid tribes, three of Mindoro’s eight Mangyan tribes. They are enforcers and educators for their fellow tribesfolk about the significance of conserving the tamaraw, a traditionally-hunted but highly-revered animal.

Tamaraw (Bubalus mindorensis) are endemic forest buffalo found only on the island of Mindoro in the Philippines. Numbering only about 600, they are considered critically-endangered by the IUCN. At least 480 live inside the forests and grasslands of the Mounts Iglit-Baco Natural Park, with an additional 100 or so holding out in scattered pockets. Shown is a stamping, snorting bull. (Gregg Yan)

“For years, our rangers have been operating without proper patrol gear and equipment. Salaries are often delayed and no one has health or social security benefits,” explains TCP head Neil Anthony Del Mundo. Both MIBNP and TCP rangers regularly ward off poachers, dismantle spring-loaded balatik and deadly silo snare traps and discourage the park’s indigenous tribesfolk from engaging in destructive slash-and-burn farming.

The grassy slopes of Mindoro’s Mounts Iglit-Baco Natural Park (MIBNP) host not just tamaraw, but deer, wild pigs, monkeys and a plethora of birds. It is also home to the Taw’buid, Buhid and Alangan tribes, collectively known as Mangyans by lowlanders. (Gregg Yan)

“This pandemic should bring forth empathy and not drive us to apathy,” says Occidental Mindoro Congresswoman Josephine Ramirez-Sato, who delivered the first tranche of relief gifts to the rangers today. “Let us all help our rangers and wardens in saving the tamaraw. This is the spirit of Bayanihan. Even as we wear masks, stand three feet apart and stay safe in the comfort of our homes, we can and we must do our part. Our contributions will go a long way and will make a difference. Bayanihan is possible amidst one of the greatest challenges of our time. Let’s show our families, our communities and the world that we will be together for the tamaraws!”

TCP rangers attempt to cross a raging river inside MIBNP. Conditions can be severe and dangerous – especially during the rainy season from June to November. Even with low pay and minimal benefits, the dedicated rangers have vowed to keep on patrolling. (Gregg Yan)

Though they need our help, the rangers and wardens have decided to voluntarily continue patrolling despite the dangers. “Lockdown or not, we’ll put our own health on the line to protect our tamaraws,” vows Ed Bata, senior TCP ranger.