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News / Nation & World

Philippines trying to bring back fish vital to rural diet

Sardines and round scad are key protein sources in islands

By Associated Press
Published: April 8, 2023, 2:43pm
3 Photos
Joey Bullard, left, and Garnet Armbrister prepare fresh conch meat to bring to a fish market Saturday, Dec. 3, 2022, in West End, Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas. The conch are often cracked open with a hammer on the beach soon after they're harvested, the meat swiftly removed and the shells discarded.
Joey Bullard, left, and Garnet Armbrister prepare fresh conch meat to bring to a fish market Saturday, Dec. 3, 2022, in West End, Grand Bahama Island, Bahamas. The conch are often cracked open with a hammer on the beach soon after they're harvested, the meat swiftly removed and the shells discarded. (AP Photo/David Goldman) (aaron favila/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

TANAUAN, Leyte, Philippines — The Philippines, a nation of thousands of islands, is home to about 1.6 million people who work in fisheries, and the majority of those fishers are small-scale harvesters who collectively catch almost half of the nation’s fish.

Years of market pressures, lack of fisheries management and unchecked overfishing from larger commercial fishers have led to a decline in small fish such as sardines that rural coastal communities in the country of about 110 million people depend on. Data is not available on the state of many fish stocks, but the conservation group Oceana has said more than 75 percent of the nation’s fishing grounds are depleted.

The problem of overfishing is especially detrimental to the country’s poorest people, many of whom earn their livings by fishing, said Ruperto Aleroza, an anti-poverty activist who has spent decades harvesting small fish like sardines and round scad from the waters around the archipelago. The small fish are important to the diet in parts of the Philippines where other sources of protein are not available, he said. The fish are used in traditional dishes such as kinilaw, a raw-fish dish similar to ceviche.

“We fisherfolk are the second to the poorest in our country” behind only farmers, Aleroza said.

The challenge overfishing poses to people who earn their living from the sea and who count on fish for protein in their diet is being experienced throughout the world. As overfishing is impacting kinilaw in the Philippines, it’s effecting traditional dishes and ways of life in places such as the Bahamas, where scientists and government officials worry that the commercial fishing of conch, a marine snail central to the diet and identity of the island nation, may soon no longer be feasible. And in Senegal, overfishing has largely wiped out white grouper, long the basis for the national dish of thieboudienne.

Aleroza blames years of poor fishing management and unsustainable fishing practices for taking away both a way of life and a key source of protein for some of his nation’s poorest people.

“It is threatening the local food source. We can’t feed our family. And it’s worsening poverty of artisanal fishers,” he said. “The overfishing worsens economic depression among us.”

Recently, the country has begun to make strides in rebuilding fisheries with spawning closures, said Mudjekeewis Santos, a scientist with the Philippines Department of Agriculture’s National Fisheries Research and Development Institute.

“And the communities are happy that happened, because their catch increased,” he said. “Fish don’t care about jurisdiction, and they’re being decimated.”

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