GENERAL SANTOS CITY—Environment personnel have limited the entry of visitors to a declared tarsier sanctuary on Mount Matutum in South Cotabato province, in a bid to protect the critical primate and its habitat.
Forester Gabriel Baute, area superintendent of the Mount Matutum Protected Landscape (MMPL), said recently they stopped accommodating walk-in visitors at the sanctuary in Barangay Linan, Tupi town, starting the holiday season as part of their enhanced conservation and protection program.
He said the influx of visitors might disturb the tarsiers, dubbed the world’s smallest primate, and threaten their natural habitat.
Baute cited that tarsiers are nocturnal animals, normally sleeping during the day and active only during the night, like owls.
“Hence, visitors are enjoined to avoid disturbing these animals in their natural habitat or when visiting the tarsier sanctuary,” he said in a statement.
Baute said like other wildlife species, tarsiers are best left in their natural habitat rather than capturing and caging them as pets.
Tarsiers are known to commit suicide when in captivity and exposed to stressors like camera flash, human touch, and other forms of disturbance, he said.
It is listed under “near threatened species” by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.
In response to the move, the municipal government of Tupi has adopted a program, dubbed “voluntourism,” which mainly raises awareness on the need to protect the tarsiers and their sanctuary.
Visits to the site are currently allowed through prearranged schedules with the municipal environment and natural resources office (Menro).
Rolando Visaya, Tupi Menro chief, said the program promotes the principles of volunteerism and responsible tourism.
Through the program, he said they tap visitors to help plant trees at the site and its immediate environs.
The primary targets of the program are individuals with high regard and motivation for the protection and conservation of biodiversity, especially the tarsiers, he said.
“This gives our visitors the opportunity to see the tarsiers in their natural habitat and at the same time take part in protecting them,” he said.
Mount Matutum is a known sanctuary of tarsiers, which are called “mal” by Blaan and T’boli tribal residents in the area.
The area is part of the 13,947-hectare MMPL, which covers the municipalities of Tupi, Tampakan and Polomolok in South Cotabato, and Malungon in Sarangani province.
The Department of Environment and Natural Resources declared parts of Barangay Linan, Tupi, as a tarsier sanctuary by virtue of Proclamation 1030 signed by former President Fidel Ramos on June 23, 1997.
Image credits: PAMO-MMPL