Thursday, December 2, 2010

A botanists’ legacy

Rey Enano
Manila Standard Today
December 2, 2010

Leonardo Co, a world-renowned botanist and a reforestation project consultant of Energy Development Corp. until his death, has left a legacy that will immortalize his pioneering work. Co and best friend Daniel Lagunzad had just finished Forest Trees of Palanan, Philippines: A Study in Population Ecology 2006, a coffee table book commissioned by EDC.

Co and Lagunzad identified various flora and fauna in Palanan, Isabela, as part of a biodiversity project.

The same passion drove Co to do research in a forest in Kananga, Leyte, part of the geothermal reservation of EDC. Co, together with forest guard Sofronio Cortez and local farmer Julius Borromeo, were killed on Nov. 15 in an alleged crossfire between the Armed Forces and rebel group New People’s Army.

Co, among his many works, led the discovery of a number of endemic orchid species in Palawan. He reclassified the balayong tree, popularly known in the province as the Palawan cherry, as a legume from the Fabaceae family.

Federico “Piki Lopez, president and chief executive of First Gen Corp., the parent company of EDC, expressed his sadness over Co’s death.

“Leonard’s dedication and enthusiasm for his work is unparalleled. I’ve never seen such passion and dedication. We are deeply saddened by his untimely demise and it’s a tragic loss not only for the academe and scientific community but also for us in the Lopez group and the countless others who share the same goal of protecting and preserving the environment,” Piki said. “Nonetheless, Leonard’s legacy, his timeless works will live on.”

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