Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
geography/philippines

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Lake Balinsasayao

Lake in the Philippines

Lake Balinsasayao

Summary

Lake in the Philippines

FieldValue
nameLake Balinsasayao
imageLake Balinsasayao (42012955844).jpg
altAerial view of Lake Balinsasayao
locationNegros Oriental
pushpin_mapVisayas#Philippines
pushpin_label_positionright
pushpin_map_captionLocation within the Philippines
coordinates
typeCrater lake
basin_countriesPhilippines
length1.5 km
width1 km
area76 ha
max-depth90 ft
elevation1000 ft
cities

| date-built = | date-flooded = | max-depth = 90 ft

Lake Balinsasayao is one of three crater lakes rising 1000 ft above sea level located within the Balinsasayao Twin Lakes Natural Park, an 8,016.05 ha protected area covering the municipalities of Valencia, Sibulan, and San Jose in the province of Negros Oriental, Philippines. The ASEAN Centre for Biodiversity (ACB) is now listed The Balinsasayao Twin Lakes Natural Park among new parks to its network of topnotch nature reserves and natural parks in the Southeast Asian region in 2024.

Etymology

The name of Lake Balinsasayao is the Spanish transcription of Cebuano balinsasayaw meaning "swiftlet." The name of its "twin", Lake Danao, is derived from Cebuano danaw meaning "lake."

History

Lake Balinsasayao, Lake Danao, and Kabalin-an pond are part of Balinsasayao Twin Lakes Natural Park, a protected area totaling 8016 ha created on 21 November 2000 by virtue of Proclamation No. 414 signed by former President Joseph Estrada. It lies within the municipalities of Valencia, Sibulan, and San Jose in the province of Negros Oriental.

Geography

Lake Balinsasayao

The lakes are situated northwest of a narrow mountain ridge, in a caldera formed by four mountains: Mount Mahungot to the south, Mount Kalbasan to the north, Mount Balinsasayao to the east and Guintabon Dome to the west. A normal fault separates Lakes Balinsasayao and Danao while and another fault, the Amlan, is about 1,400 m west of Danao. Four geologic faults also intersect the southern edge of Lake Danao, whose water level is lower than that of Balinsasayao.

Flora and fauna

As a protected natural park home to an expansive ecosystem and biodiversity, Balinsasayao Twin Lakes National Park is one of the major tourist attractions in Negros Oriental. The lake has a rich fish fauna and the surrounding dipterocarp forests are rich in bird life. However, invasive fish species such as tilapia, common carp, mudfish, shrimp, mosquito fish and milkfish have been introduced in the lake.

Tourism

The Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) through the Biodiversity Management Bureau (BMB) manages tourist activities in the natural park. The bureau allows, sightseeing, mountain trekking, camping, birdwatching, paddle boating in Lake Balinsasayao. The natural park has a concrete view deck, umbrella cottages, a restaurant, a souvenir shop, restrooms, and a visitor center.

Conservation

Conserving the natural park's flora and fauna is a continuing struggle as surrounding forests are exploited for timber and charcoal production. The uncontrolled cutting of timber by slash-and-burn farmers or kaingineros is reducing the inflow of water to the lakes and causing a fall in water levels. Also, since the lakes are situated near Energy Development Corporation (EDC)'s Southern Negros Geothermal Field in Valencia, the forest surrounding the lakes are under threat from constant geothermal drilling. A co-management plan for geothermal preservation has been drafted by the DENR-PENRO, EDC, and the local governments of Valencia and Sibulan.

References

References

  1. Balilia, Winnievir. (13 January 2009). "Lake Balinsasayao". Society of the Conservation of Philippine Wetlands.
  2. (21 November 2000). "Proclamation No. 414". The Official Gazette.
  3. "Balinsasayao Twin Lakes Natural Park".
  4. (29 November 2019). "The Most Scenic Lakes in the Philippines".
  5. "Balinsasayao Twin Lakes NP". DENR-BMB.
  6. "Negros Oriental: Twin Lakes of Balinsasayao". DumagueteInfo.com.
  7. (20 February 2012). "Negros warned of more landslides, floods; faults intersect twin lakes". Inquirer.net.
  8. Palaubsanon, Mitchelle. (19 June 2012). "DENR-7: Alien species invade nat'l park in Negros Oriental". The Freeman.
  9. (20 June 2012). "DENR-7 identifies invasive alien species in NegOr's nat'l park". Science.ph.
  10. "Balinsasayao Twin Lakes NP". DENR-BMB.
  11. Gallarde, Juancho. (25 September 2014). "Geothermal project of EDC outside of Mt Talinis: exec". Visayan Daily Star.
  12. Aranas, Maricar. (24 June 2011). "New Balinsasayao mgm't pact urged". Visayan Daily Star.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Lake Balinsasayao — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report