Typhoon risk perception and preparedness after Sendong in Bayug Island

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Research Paper 13/06/2026
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Typhoon risk perception and preparedness after Sendong in Bayug Island

Dinah Millendez*, Lex Rei Brendon Hilario, Jay Rey Alovera, Elizabeth Edan Albiento, Melgie Alas, Peter Suson
J. Biodiv. & Environ. Sci. 28(6), 120-128, June 2026.
Copyright Statement: Copyright 2026; The Author(s).
License: CC BY-NC 4.0

Abstract

This study examines how residents of Bayug Island interpret typhoon-related environmental risk after tropical storm Sendong and how this perception shapes household and community preparedness. Drawing from a focus group discussion with eleven residents and supporting key informant interviews, the study used an interpretive qualitative design to analyze lived disaster experience, coastal and flood exposure, local warning systems, livelihood dependence, and household mobility. Findings show that Sendong recalibrated residents’ environmental risk perception by transforming familiar signs such as rainfall, river rise, and warnings into more immediate signals of danger. Preparedness became practical, anticipatory, and evacuation-oriented through go-bags, warning monitoring, trusted local leadership, household protective actions, and agreed evacuation points. However, preparedness remained uneven because poverty, livelihood assets, caregiving duties, fear of theft, mobility limits, and structural constraints shaped residents’ capacity to act. The study concludes that disaster preparedness in coastal communities is a human-environment process shaped by environmental exposure, memory, local communication, and socioeconomic conditions.

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