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Mindoro Oriental Province

Oriental Mindoro
Province
Province of Oriental Mindoro
Flag of Oriental Mindoro
Flag
Official seal of Oriental Mindoro
Seal
Anthem: Martsa ng Silangang Mindoro
Location in the Philippines
Location in the Philippines
Coordinates: 13°00′N 121°25′E / 13°N 121.42°E / 13; 121.42Coordinates: 13°00′N 121°25′E / 13°N 121.42°E / 13; 121.42
Country Philippines
Region Mimaropa (Region IV-B)
Founded 1955
Capital Calapan
Government
 • Type Sangguniang Panlalawigan
 • Governor Alfonso Umali, Jr. (Liberal)
 • Vice Governor Humerlito "Bonz" Dolor (Liberal)
Area
 • Total 4,238.38 km2 (1,636.45 sq mi)
Area rank 28th out of 81
Highest elevation (Mount Halcon) 2,586 m (8,484 ft)
Population (2015 census)
 • Total 844,059
 • Rank 32nd out of 81
 • Density 200/km2 (520/sq mi)
 • Density rank 47th out of 81
Divisions
 • Independent cities 0
 • Component cities
 • Municipalities
 • Barangays 426
 • Districts 1st and 2nd districts of Oriental Mindoro
Time zone PHT (UTC+8)
ZIP code 5200–5214
IDD:area code +63 (0)43
ISO 3166 code PH
Spoken languages
Website www.ormindoro.gov.ph
Map all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap · Google Maps
Download coordinates as: KML · GPX

Oriental Mindoro (Filipino: Silangang Mindoro, Spanish: Mindoro Oriental) is a province in the Philippines located in the island of Mindoro under Mimaropa region in Luzon, about 140 kilometres (87 mi) southwest of Manila. The province is bordered by the Verde Island Passage and the rest of Batangas to the north, by Marinduque, Maestre de Campo (or known as Sibale but official name is Concepcion) Island, Tablas Strait and the rest of Romblon to the east, by Semirara and the rest of Caluya Islands, Antique to the south, and by Occidental Mindoro to the west. Calapan, the only city in the island, is the provincial capital.

Oriental Mindoro is touted as the country's emerging eco-tourism destination. In 2005, the Philippines was found to be the center of marine fish biodiversity and the home of the most diverse marine ecosystem in the world, by American biologists Kent Carpenter and Victor Springer. Most of the endemic species in the Philippines are found in the Verde Island Passage between Mindoro island and the main island of Luzon. The passage houses 2,983 individual species of algae, corals, crustaceans, mollusks, fishes, marine reptiles, and marine mammals, based on a study conducted by Carpenter and Springer in 2005.

UNESCO declared Puerto Galera a biosphere reserve under its Man and the Biosphere Programme in the 1970s. The Verde Island Passage is at the apex of the so-called Coral Triangle – the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia – which has the distinction of being the "center of the center of the world's marine biodiversity" and the "center of the center of marine shorefish biodiversity".


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