Babuyan Islands (original) (raw)
This article is about the group of islands. For the island within Babuyan Islands, see Babuyan Island.
Island group in the Philippines
Babuyan Islands
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Geography | |
Location | Luzon Strait |
Coordinates | 19°15′N 121°40′E / 19.250°N 121.667°E / 19.250; 121.667 |
Adjacent to | Babuyan ChannelBalintang Channel |
Total islands | 24 |
Major islands | Babuyan IslandCalayan IslandCamiguin IslandDalupiri IslandFuga Island |
Area | 600 km2 (230 sq mi)[1] |
Administration | |
Philippines | |
Region | Cagayan Valley |
Province | Cagayan |
Municipality | AparriCalayan |
Demographics | |
Population | 19,349 (2020)[2] |
Pop. density | 32.2/km2 (83.4/sq mi) |
The Babuyan Islands ( bah-bə-YAHN), also known as the Babuyan Group of Islands, is an archipelago in the Philippines, located in the Luzon Strait north of the main island of Luzon and south of Taiwan. The archipelago consists of five major islands and their surrounding smaller islands. These main islands are, counterclockwise starting from northeast, Babuyan, Calayan, Dalupiri, Fuga, and Camiguin. The Babuyan Islands are separated from Luzon by the Babuyan Channel, and from the province of Batanes to the north by the Balintang Channel.
The archipelago, comprising 24 volcanic-coralline islands, has a total area of about 590 km2 (230 sq mi).[1] The largest of these is Calayan with an area of 196 km2 (76 sq mi), while the highest peak in the island group is Mount Pangasun (1,108 metres, 3,635 ft) on Babuyan Claro.[3]
The table below shows the islands of Babuyan and their adjoining islets and rocks,[4] along with land areas and highest elevation:
Major island | Adjacent islets | Area[3] | Highest elevation[3] |
---|---|---|---|
Babuyan Claro | Pan de Azucar Island | 100 km239 sq mi | 1,108 m3,635 ft |
Calayan Island | Panuitan Island Wyllie Rocks | 196 km276 sq mi | 499 m1,637 ft |
Camiguin | Guinapac Rocks Pamoctan Island(area: 0.7 km2, 0.27 sq mielevation: 202 m, 663 ft) Pinon Island | 166 km264 sq mi | 828 m2,717 ft |
Dalupiri Island | Irao Islet | 50 km219 sq mi | 297 m974 ft |
Fuga Island | Barit Island Mabag Island | 70 km227 sq mi | 208 m682 ft |
Didicas Island | 0.7 km20.27 sq mi | 244 m801 ft | |
Balintang Islands |
Babuyan Islands satellite image captured by Sentinel-2 in 2016
Smith Volcano on Babuyan Island
The eastern islands of the archipelago are part of the Luzon Volcanic Arc. Three volcanoes from two of the islands have erupted in historical times - Camiguin de Babuyanes on Camiguin Island,[5] Babuyan Claro Volcano and Smith Volcano (also known as Mount Babuyan) on Babuyan Island.[6]
Another small volcanic island located just 22 km (14 mi) NE of Camiguin Island, Didicas Volcano on Didicas Island, became a permanent island only after emerging and rising to over 200 metres (656 ft) above sea level in 1952.[7][8]
All of the islands within the island group are classified by the Haribon Foundation and BirdLife International as key biodiversity areas, or sites with outstanding universal value due to their geographic and biological importance. All of the islands within the island group have never been part of any large landmass, and thus have unique flora and fauna, most of which are found nowhere else. Research conducted by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources has found at least five faunal regions in the area, one of the highest densities of separate faunal regions in the world.
The islands are also home to the most critically endangered snake species in the Philippines, the Ross' wolf snake (found only on the small island of Dalupiri), and the most critically endangered bird species in the Philippines, the Calayan rail (found only on the small island of Calayan). The Babuyan archipelago, along with the nearby Batanes islands, have been designated an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because they support significant populations of resident Taiwan green pigeons, Ryukyu scops-owls and short-crested monarchs, Chinese egrets on passage, and wintering yellow buntings.[9]
The island group is also one of the few congregation sites for endangered humpback whales in Southeast Asia. Due to its value to the natural world and Philippine biological diversity, various scientific and conservation groups have been lobbying for its declaration as a national park and its inclusion in the UNESCO World Heritage List. Humpback whales have re-colonized the area and the Babuyan Group of Islands has become the only wintering ground for the species in the Philippines[10][11] although historical records from the Babuyan Islands have not been confirmed.[12]
List of islands by population (as of 2020):[2]
- Calayan Island - 9,648
- Camiguin Island - 5,231
- Fuga Island - 1,939
- Babuyan Island - 1,910
- Dalupiri Island - 621
- Barit Island - 14 [_citation needed_]
The whole archipelago is administered under the province of Cagayan, with Babuyan, Calayan, Camiguin, and Dalupiri comprising the municipality of Calayan[13] while Fuga is under the jurisdiction of Aparri.[14]
Babuyan and Dalupiri are themselves individual barangays in Calayan municipality, respectively named Babuyan Claro and Dalupiri, while Fuga Island is also an individual barangay, also named Fuga Island, in Aparri.
- ^ a b "Babuyan Islands - island group, Philippines". www.britannica.com. Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ a b Census of Population (2020). "Region II (Cagayan Valley)". Total Population by Province, City, Municipality and Barangay. Philippine Statistics Authority. Retrieved 8 July 2021.
- ^ a b c Genevieve Broad; Carl Oliveros. "Biodiversity and conservation priority setting in the Babuyan Islands, Philippines" (PDF). The Technical Journal of Philippine Ecosystems and Natural Resources. 15 (1–2): 1–30. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey (1919). "United States Coast Pilot, Philippine Islands, Part 1", pp. 41–44. Government Printing Office, Washington
- ^ "Camiguin de Babuyanes". Global Volcanism Program. Retrieved on 2013-04-01.
- ^ "Babuyan Claro". Global Volcanism Program. Retrieved on 2013-04-01.
- ^ "Didicas". Global Volcanism Program. Retrieved on 2013-04-01.
- ^ Gideon Lasco. "From 7,107 to 7,641". Retrieved 18 October 2019.
- ^ "Batanes Islands". BirdLife Data Zone. BirdLife International. 2024. Retrieved 2024-10-16.
- ^ The BALYENA.ORG. humpback whale research in the babuyan islands – research, education and conservation. Retrieved on December 25. 2014
- ^ The Center for Rural Empowerment and the Environment. Humpback Whales – Philippines – Babuyan Islands humpback whales project Archived 2014-12-25 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved on December 25, 2014
- ^ Acebes V.M.J., 2009, A history of Whaling in Philippines Archived 2013-12-24 at the Wayback Machine, Historical Perspectives of Fisheries Exploitation in the Indo-Pacific, Asia Research Centre, Murdoch University
- ^ "Calayan" Archived 2014-07-12 at the Wayback Machine. Official Website of the Provincial Government of Cagayan. Retrieved on 2013-04-01.
- ^ "Aparri" Archived 2016-03-05 at the Wayback Machine. Official Website of the Provincial Government of Cagayan. Retrieved on 2013-04-01.