Combined operatives of the Environmental Protection and Enforcement Task Force (EPETF) of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) and local police stationed at Baliuag in Bulacan recently arrested two suspected illegal wildlife traders of umbrella cockatoos (Cacatua alba) in an entrapment operation .
 
Police Corporal Nino Gabriel, investigator at Baliuag police station identified the suspects as Alvin Santos and Rendel Santos, residents of Barangay Tarcan in Baliuag town, who were arrested for illegal selling of wildlife without necessary permit from the DENR.
 
According to Paquito Moreno, Jr., executive director of DENR regional office, the operation stemmed from online surveillance of an informant, who reported to environment authorities that these arrested individuals have been selling wildlife using multiple accounts on Facebook, a social media platform.
 
“A buy-bust operation was arranged with local police on May 3, where the DENR assets met with the wildlife traders to purchase two heads of umbrella cockatoo worth P85,000,” he explained.
 
Moreno noted that the umbrella cockatoo is an endemic species in Indonesia, and is among the endangered species listed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).
 
According to studies, the population of the umbrella cockatoo has gone a rapid population decline due to hunting, forest loss, and continued pressure from illegal trade.
Moreno urged the public, especially netizens, to refrain from selling and buying wildlife species without necessary permits from the DENR, adding that traders have moved into online platforms to market illegally acquired wildlife, including migratory birds, and the trading, collecting, hunting, or possessing of wildlife and their by-products is illegal and punishable against wildlife law.
 
Dennis Vergara, chief of the DENR-Community Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO) based in Baliuag town, said the DENR has already filed criminal charges against the suspects for violating Section 27 of the Republic Act 9147 or the Wildlife Resources and Conservation and Protection Act of 2001.
 
If found guilty, the suspects may be imprisoned for a maximum of two years and may be fined up to P200,000, he added.
 
The umbrella cockatoos were already turned over to DENR Biodiversity Management Bureau (BMB) for proper care and rehabilitation. (-30-)