Mount Kitanglad

Mount Kitanglad is an inactive volcano located in the Kitanglad Mountain Range in Bukidnon province on Mindanao island.

It is the fourth highest mountain in the Philippines and has an approximate height of 2,899 metres (9,511 ft). It is located between Malaybalay City and the municipalities of Lantapan, Impasugong, Sumilao, and Libona. It is home to one of the Philippines' few remaining rainforests.

Mount Kitanglad
Mount Kitanglad
Mt. Kitanglad viewed from Impasug-ong, Bukidnon
Highest point
Elevation2,899 m (9,511 ft)
Prominence350 m (1,150 ft)
ListingPhilippines highest peaks 4th
Coordinates8°8′34″N 124°54′45″E / 8.14278°N 124.91250°E / 8.14278; 124.91250
Geography
Mount Kitanglad is located in Mindanao
Mount Kitanglad
Mount Kitanglad
Mount Kitanglad is located in Philippines
Mount Kitanglad
Mount Kitanglad
CountryPhilippines
ProvinceBukidnon
RegionNorthern Mindanao
Parent rangeKitanglad Mountain Range
Climbing
Easiest routeIntavas, La Fortuna, Impasug-ong, Bukidnon

The name "Kitanglad" was derived from a legend that there was once a great flood that submerged the native lands of Bukidnon and only the tip of the mountain, the size of a "tanglad" (lemon grass), remained visible ("kita" in Visayan). It is considered as an ancestral domain of several old cultural communities like the Bukidnons, Higaonons and Talaandigs.

Mount Kitanglad was proclaimed a protected area under the natural park category through Presidential Proclamation 896 dated October 24, 1996. On November 9, 2000, Mount Kitanglad finally became a full-fledged protected area when Congress approved Republic Act 8978 also known as the "Mt. Kitanglad Range Protected Area Act of 2000."

In 2009, Mount Kitanglad Range Natural Park (MKRNP) was declared as an ASEAN Heritage Park.

Mount Kitanglad is recognized for its cultural and biological diversity. It is part of the ancestral domain of three major Indigenous groups: the Talaandig, Higaonon, and Bukidnon peoples.

Mount Kitanglad hosts over 600 rare and endemic species, including the Philippine tarsier and the Rafflesia schadenbergiana, the world's second largest flower. It is a nesting place for the critically endangered Philippine eagle. Other endemic species that are found here are the pygmy fruit bat Alionycteris paucidentata and two native mice, Katanglad shrew-mouse and Gray-bellied mountain rat.

Indigenous communities are working to have Mount Kitanglad recognized as Indigenous peoples' and community conserved territories and areas to enforce Indigenous customary rules on the mountain range.

Due to its high elevation, several communications and broadcasting companies constructed relay stations at the summit.

See also

Notes

References

Further reading

Tags:

Mount Kitanglad Further readingMount Kitanglad

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