REGROWING FORESTS AND REVIVING WILDLIFE
REGROWING FORESTS AND REVIVING WILDLIFE
The Philippines is actively regrowing forests and reviving wildlife through new reforestation campaigns and upgraded forest policies. That much is clear. What is not clear is whether the agencies in charge of these programs are actually talking to each other.
On one hand, we have the Forest Management Bureau (FMB) of the DENR, mandated to regrow forests—through the National Greening Program, Forest Land Use Plans, and the new “Forests for Life” initiative aiming to plant millions of trees by 2028. On the other hand, we have the Biodiversity Management Bureau (BMB), which is in charge of wildlife conservation and protected areas.
But here is my question: Are FMB and BMB talking to each other? Really talking to each other?
Because we all know one basic ecological truth: when certain trees come back, certain wildlife come back. The two are inseparable. Wildlife do not survive in PowerPoint presentations or policy memos. They survive in habitats. They live in trees. They eat the fruits. They hunt in forest canopies. And if the wrong trees are planted—or if monocultures replace diverse forests—we should not expect wildlife revival to happen automatically.
Let’s take one of our most iconic species: the Philippine eagle. It does not nest in just any random tree planted under a reforestation banner. It needs primary dipterocarp forests—the towering lauan, apitong, and bagtikan species that form dense, old-growth canopies. Without these trees, the eagle has nowhere to live, hunt, or reproduce. No amount of ceremonial tree planting can change that.
Mangroves are another obvious example. When mangrove trees return, fish, crabs, shrimp, and marine life return almost immediately. Nature knows what to do—if we plant the right species in the right place.
So why don’t we have a matching database—a national ecological matrix that tells us which trees support which species? Which reforestation areas can restore which wildlife? Which sites can be optimized for biodiversity, not just for photo ops?
Who in the government is responsible for compiling this list? Should this be a joint project of FMB and BMB? Should DENR tap PhilSA, NAMRIA, and even NASA or USGS datasets to build a nationwide ecological restoration map? We have more digital tools today than at any point in our history. So why are we not using them?
Another issue is greenwashing—the practice of making a project look “environmental” even when its actual impact is questionable. Planting millions of seedlings is meaningless if they are monocultures, if they die after one dry season, or if they are planted in the wrong ecosystem. Real forests are not linear rows of seedlings; they are complex, diverse, living systems.
We also cannot forget Indigenous communities—some of the best forest stewards in the country. Many of the areas targeted for restoration or new tenure contracts overlap with ancestral domains. Any national reforestation policy that ignores Indigenous rights risks repeating old mistakes.
Still, I believe this moment offers an opportunity. The DENR is opening more than a million hectares for restoration and conservation investments. The FAO is supporting forest and landscape restoration programs. Local communities and barangays can now be partners in wildlife revival, not passive beneficiaries.
If the Philippines wants to revive both forests and wildlife, the solution is simple but long overdue: plant the right trees, in the right places, for the right species—then monitor it with real science, not slogans.
The forest will take care of the wildlife, and the wildlife will take care of the forest. But only if our agencies take care of the data, and take care of each other.
RAMON IKE V. SENERES
www.facebook.com/ike.seneres iseneres@yahoo.com senseneres.blogspot.com 09088877282/07-17-2026
