Our Endangered PH

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A growing atlas of Philippine endangered species to celebrate and promote the conservation of Philippine wildlife through research, storytelling, and photography.

In commemoration of International Day of Biodiversity 2026. This year’s theme is “acting locally for global impact.”With...
27/05/2026

In commemoration of International Day of Biodiversity 2026. This year’s theme is “acting locally for global impact.”

Within this photo are eleven species that Our Endangered has photographed, namely (top left to bottom right): The Philippine Crocodile, The Giant Golden-Crowned Flying Fox, The Blue-Naped Parrot, The Palawan Hornbill, The Saltwater Crocodile, The Philippine Crested Serpent Eagle, The Philippine Long-Tailed Macaque, The Rufous Hornbill, The Philippine-Hawk Eagle, The Palawan Bearcat, and The Philippine Eagle.

These individual species all hold stories interwoven into our universe, yet are still struggling to be heard.

This International Day of Biodiversity, may we remember that part of what it means to be human is to extend our compassion and to translate that into actionable love.

Happy IDB 2026! 🌏❤️

Design by .tropical
Words by M. Racoma

May 15th was National Endangered Animal Day!The truth is, endangered animals aren’t “disappearing”… they’re being pushed...
27/05/2026

May 15th was National Endangered Animal Day!

The truth is, endangered animals aren’t “disappearing”… they’re being pushed out.

When forests are cleared, oceans are polluted, and roads cut through habitats, wildlife loses food, shelter, and safety. Our convenience becomes their crisis. Let’s shrink our footprint, protect habitats, and hold industries accountable, because survival shouldn’t be a privilege!

Northern Luzon Cloud Rat (Phloeomys pallidus)High in the cool forests of Luzon, the Northern Luzon Cloud Rat moves like ...
23/01/2026

Northern Luzon Cloud Rat (Phloeomys pallidus)

High in the cool forests of Luzon, the Northern Luzon Cloud Rat moves like a shadow among ancient trees. As a large herbivore, it helps disperse seeds and shape the forest floor part of the mountains’ natural rhythm.

Vulnerable but still holding on, it reminds us that the mist-covered mountains of the north are worth fighting for. 🌲

SaveLuzonWildlife

Silent and swift, the Philippine Hawk-Eagle (Nisaetus philippensis) slices through forest canopies with unmatched precis...
31/12/2025

Silent and swift, the Philippine Hawk-Eagle (Nisaetus philippensis) slices through forest canopies with unmatched precision. Its sharp talons and keen vision make it a formidable hunter of birds, snakes, and small mammals.

Endangered and losing its forest home, its fading presence warns us: when predators disappear, entire ecosystems unravel. 🦅

Mysterious and slow-moving, the Palawan Bearcat (Arctictis binturong) drifts through rainforest branches with its prehen...
29/12/2025

Mysterious and slow-moving, the Palawan Bearcat (Arctictis binturong) drifts through rainforest branches with its prehensile tail and musky, sweet scent a smell often compared to buttered popcorn. It spreads seeds as it moves, helping Palawan’s forests regenerate.

Vulnerable and declining, it depends on untouched forests to survive. Saving Palawan’s wilderness means keeping this unique creature alive. 🌿

Words by OE volunteer .tropical

Once roaming Luzon during the Pleistocene, the Dwarf Stegodon (Stegodon Luzonensis) was an elephant-like giant shaped by...
30/10/2025

Once roaming Luzon during the Pleistocene, the Dwarf Stegodon (Stegodon Luzonensis) was an elephant-like giant shaped by island life and ancient landscapes.

Although it vanished long ago, its bones still speak of a time when biodiversity was wild and abundant. 🌿 Fossils of this dwarf proboscidean remind us to protect the wildlife that remains and to never take the ecosystems that support them for granted.

Deep in the ancient soils of Cagayan, traces of Cagayan Valley Pig (Celebochoerus Cagayanensis) tell of a time when wild...
27/10/2025

Deep in the ancient soils of Cagayan, traces of Cagayan Valley Pig (Celebochoerus Cagayanensis) tell of a time when wild pigs the size of legends roamed free.

This extinct giant, once part of Luzon’s lost wilderness, speaks through its bones reminding us that evolution writes its stories in the earth itself. 🐗 Fossils like these are echoes of resilience, urging us to safeguard the living biodiversity that continues the tale.

A flash of green once brightened Cebu’s forests, the Cebu Hanging Parrot (Loriculus Philippensis Chrysonotus), a tiny je...
24/10/2025

A flash of green once brightened Cebu’s forests, the Cebu Hanging Parrot (Loriculus Philippensis Chrysonotus), a tiny jewel of the canopy. 🍃

Long believed extinct, it was glimpsed only once after 1993, leaving its fate wrapped in silence and leaves. Whether gone or simply unseen, it reminds us how fragile island life can be and how hope, like birdsong, endures in the trees we protect.

Declared extinct in 1996, the Philippine Bare-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia Chapmani) defied fate when it was rediscovered ...
20/10/2025

Declared extinct in 1996, the Philippine Bare-backed Fruit Bat (Dobsonia Chapmani) defied fate when it was rediscovered just four years later, a rare second chance for a vanishing species.

Now clinging to survival in a few quiet caves of Negros and Cebu, it reminds us that even in the dark, hope can still take wing. Protecting what remains means keeping this comeback story alive. 🌙

Once soaring above the lakes and wetlands of Luzon, the Spot-billed Pelican (Pelecanus Philippensis) was a symbol of cal...
17/10/2025

Once soaring above the lakes and wetlands of Luzon, the Spot-billed Pelican (Pelecanus Philippensis) was a symbol of calm waters and thriving ecosystems.

By the 1960s, its wings fell silent over the Philippines, a victim of lost habitats and changing landscapes. 🕊️ Though gone from our shores, its memory urges us to protect the wetlands that still shelter life today.

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