CLICK THE PICTURE TO VOTE! Project 01: N7W Phil” is Team Philippines’ current main focus and goal. We join the many Filipino people pushing and supporting our candidates so that we may be part of the New 7 Wonders of Nature! Go Philippines!
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
New Candidate? Coral Triangle?
As we were checking the various candidates that made it in the next round, boy, were we surprised to see ANOTHER candidate from the Philippines...well not completely. You see we share it with other ASEAN neighobors. I wonder how this will affect the Philippines in n7w. Right now, it has NO supporting committee.
INDONESIA/ MALAYSIA/ PAPUA NEW GUINEA/ PHILIPPINES/ SOLOMON ISLANDS/ TIMOR-LESTE
The Coral Triangle is a geographical term referring to the waters of Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Solomon Islands and Timor-Leste with an abundance of coral reef. It is listed by World Wildlife Fund as one of the top priority for conservancy of marine life and the focus of its WWF Coral Triangle Program launched in 2007. The Coral Triangle has been identified as covering more than 1,600,000,000 acres (6,500,000 km2), with over 600 reef-building coral species which encompasses 75 percent of all species known in the world. More than 3,000 species of fish live in the Coral Triangle, including the largest fish - the whale shark, and the living fossil coelacanths.
INDONESIA/ MALAYSIA/ PAPUA NEW GUINEA/ PHILIPPINES/ SOLOMON ISLANDS/ TIMOR-LESTE
The Coral Triangle is a geographical term referring to the waters of Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Solomon Islands and Timor-Leste with an abundance of coral reef. It is listed by World Wildlife Fund as one of the top priority for conservancy of marine life and the focus of its WWF Coral Triangle Program launched in 2007. The Coral Triangle has been identified as covering more than 1,600,000,000 acres (6,500,000 km2), with over 600 reef-building coral species which encompasses 75 percent of all species known in the world. More than 3,000 species of fish live in the Coral Triangle, including the largest fish - the whale shark, and the living fossil coelacanths.
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