Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Puerto-Princesa Subterranean River National Park' has mentioned 'Forest' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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The park has a range of forest formations, the thirteen forest types found in tropical Asia, namely forest over ultramafic soils, forest over limestone soils, montane forest, freshwater swamp forest, lowland evergreen tropical rainforest, riverine forest, beach forest, and mangrove forest. | WIKI |
In the lowland forest, large trees including the dao (Dracontomelon dao), ipil (Intsia bijuga), dita (Alstonia scholaris), amugis (Koordersiodendron pinnatum), and apitong (Dipterocarpus gracilis) are common. | WIKI |
Beach forest species include bitaog (Calophyllum inophyllum), Pongamia pinnata, and Erynthia orientalis. | WIKI |
[6] Most often observed in the forest canopy and along the shoreline feeding during low tide is the long-tailed macaque (Macaca fascicularis), the only primate found in the area. | WIKI |
It includes a full mountain-to-sea ecosystem, protecting the most significant forest area within the Palawan Biogeographic Province. | UNESCO |
There are eight intact forest formations: forest on ultramafic soil, forest on limestone soil, montane forest, freshwater swamp forest, lowland evergreen tropical rainforest, riverine forest, beach forest, and mangrove forest, included in the property. | UNESCO |
It contains outstanding biodiversity with the Palawan Moist Forest recognized by the WWFxe2x80x99s Global Report as containing the richest tree flora, with high levels of regional and local endemism and as being the largest and most valuable limestone forest in Asia. | UNESCO |
The uniqueness of the mangrove forests in the Bay along with the flora and fauna they harbour, and the bioecological connection with the caves and surrounding forest is protected within the core area of the property ensuring the local key inter-related and inter-dependant elements of their natural relationships are protected. | UNESCO |
Threats to the property are mainly from adverse activities in adjacent catchment areas, primarily forest clearing and agricultural activities. | UNESCO |
Its key directive is to conserve the underground river and the forest ecosystem in their most natural state possible. | UNESCO |
Threats from activities such as forest clearing and agriculture also need to be addressed in the Management Plan. | UNESCO |