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Mount Data

Coordinates: 16°53′0″N 120°50′48″E / 16.88333°N 120.84667°E / 16.88333; 120.84667
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Mount Data
Mount Data is located in Luzon
Mount Data
Mount Data
Location within the Philippines
Mount Data is located in Philippines
Mount Data
Mount Data
Mount Data (Philippines)
Highest point
Elevation2,310 m (7,580 ft)
Coordinates16°53′0″N 120°50′48″E / 16.88333°N 120.84667°E / 16.88333; 120.84667
Geography
LocationLuzon
CountryPhilippines
RegionCordillera Administrative Region
Provinces
Parent rangeCordillera Central

Mount Data is a mountain located in the Cordillera Central mountain range rising to a height of 2,310 metres (7,580 ft) in the north of Luzon Island, Philippines.[1] It is about 50 kilometres (31 mi) north of Baguio on the borders of the provinces of Benguet and Mountain Province along the Halsema Highway. The mountain and surrounding area has been declared a National Park since 1936. In 1940 the park was expanded to 5,512 hectares (13,620 acres). The slopes of the mountain used to be covered with pine forests and mossy oak forests.

Fauna

Mount Data is formerly known for its great biological diversity and is a place that has long been in the attention of biologists. In 1895, the Englishman John Whitehead gathered a vast collection of mammals and birds from the mountain. This mammal collection was then donated to the British Museum. A research by renowned zoologist Oldfield Thomas showed that many unknown species inhabit the area. Half a century later, a large collection of small mammals was collected by an expedition led by the Filipino biologist Dioscoro S. Rabor.[2] Some of these mammals are Carpomys melanurus (short-footed Luzon tree rat) and Carpomys phaeurus (white-bellied Luzon tree rat). In addition to several rare species of mammals, there are also some bird species like the Collocalia whiteheadi (Whitehead's swiftlet) which was only known then from a specimen that was caught during the expedition of John Whitehead on the mountain.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Mount Data | Protected Planet". Protected Planet. Retrieved 2018-04-22.
  2. ^ Losing Diversity and Courting Disaster: The Mammals of Mt. Data National Park door Lawrence R. Heaney, Danilo S. Balete, Joel Sarmiento, en Phillip Alviola, Haribon.org Retrieved 13 June 2007