Mount Apo Natural Park On May 9, 1936, Mount Apo was declared a
National Park with
Proclamation No. 59 by President
Manuel L. Quezon followed by
Proclamation No. 35 of May 8, 1966, then
Proclamation No. 882 of September 24, 1996. On February 3, 2004,
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo approved
Republic Act No. 9237, which established Mount Apo as a protected area under the category of
Natural Park with an area of ; with two peripheral areas of and as buffer zones, provided for its management and for other purposes.
UNESCO World Heritage list designation. In 1987, the
National Geographic Society based in Washington, DC in the
United States, published a book entitled, ''"Our World's Heritage"'', where Mount Apo was noted as a 'site of World Heritage caliber'. The cover of the book also featured Mount Apo's iconic
Philippine eagle, along with three other heritage sites which have already been designated as "UNESCO World Heritage Sites". The
Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) submitted Mount Apo on December 12, 2009, for inclusion in the
UNESCO world heritage list. The mountain is considered by the DENR as the center of
endemism in
Mindanao. It has one of the highest land-based biological diversity in terms of flora and fauna per unit area. It has three distinct forest formations, from lowland
tropical rainforest, to mid-mountain forests, and finally to high mountain forests. In March 2015, Mount Apo was taken out from the UNESCO List of Tentative Sites due to the dramatic changes (such as logging, intrusion of companies and urban and agricultural landscape, exploitation, and poaching, among others) it experienced which does not constitute the UNESCO documents that describe the park. Better conservation and a change in the content of documents was recommended by UNESCO. ==Hiking activity==