Agriculture

Mamburao, Occidental Mindoro: Emerging as the new ‘Tuna Capital of the Philippine­s’

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THE NAME MAMBURAO, the capital of Western Mindoro, came from “May bulao!”, an expression of the Mangyan, the indigenous inhabitant­s of the island of Mindoro, which means “There’s gold!”

These aborigines usually exclaimed this phrase in the olden days whenever they found gold nuggets on the sandy riverbank near their settlement at the edge of a mighty river. Lowlanders from mainland Luzon and the Visayas who first settled at the edge of the Maybulao River also called their village by that name. Years later, the name became Mamburao.

Now, the golden name of the ancient Mangyan village near the Oceans. mouth of the river along the Mindoro Strait has been replaced by another yellow color – the yellow fin tuna—that abounds along the fish-rich channel.

The placid Mindoro Strait is one of the narrow channels connecting the West Philippine Sea with Sulu Sea in the Deep South. The 420meter deep (1,378 feet) waterway is part of an alternate route for cargo ships passing between the Indian and Pacific

For artisanal (hand line) fishermen of Occidental Mindoro though, the strait serves as an underwater freeway for a much sought after premium marine delicacy. Just below the lumbering cargo vessels is Western Philippine­s’ “tuna highway,” a migratory pelagic pathway of yellow fin tuna ( Thunnus albacores) where this hefty, torpedo-shape passes by from the cold waters of the North to the warm waters of the South and make a stopover on the Strait to spawn and forage off the coast of Occidental Mindoro.

This warm-bloodied fish, which makes its warm muscles extremely strong, could outpace the lagging freighters above them at a top speed of 60 kilometers per hour (32 knots). The yellow fin tuna, which has dark, metallic blue back and silver belly, has bright yellow second dorsal fin, thus its name. It is the top predator in the marine food chain, thus maintainin­g a balance in the ocean environmen­t.

Tuna, which could grow up to more than 100 kilograms, often travel in schools of similarly-sized companions. Aside from galunggong (round scad) and squid, which abound in the Strait, they feed in large number so fishermen catch them easily and brought back to shore in a matter of hours.

Catching YFT in Occidental Mindoro is done by hand line ( kawil) using a single hook-and-line method and involves the use of drop-stone technique. A single, baited hook is attached to a stone by a self-releasing knot and then released into the depth of the sea. Once the bait reaches the targeted fishing zone of 100200 meters deep, the stone is detached from the line with a strong

pull by the fisherman, releasing the baited hook that attracts tuna.

Peak season for YFT fishing is November, April, and then October where spic-and-span tuna landing stations, called a casa, in Mamburao and Sablayan, another major tuna fishing town two hours south of Mamburao, are busy processing freshly caught tuna. At the sanitized casa, each fish, after its rinsing, is stabbed at the back by a thin, 18-inch sashebo stainless steel tube to grade its quality. Only those with pinkish, translucen­t meat are exported. The big fish are then loaded in frigid reefer vans and loaded to a roll on-roll off ferry bound for Batangas, from there they are brought to tuna exporters in Parañaque.

After weighing the tuna at the casa and its meat classified, the fish temperatur­e is taken by a digital probe thermomete­r that is stuck on its back. The fish’s temperatur­e must not exceed 4 degrees Celsius. Prior to storing the tuna in a 30-fish capacity chilling tank with a 0-degree Celsius temperatur­e, a plastic color-coded traceabili­ty tag is tagged for accountabi­lity. The traceabili­ty tag and fish control certificat­ion assure consumers from “sea-to-cook” that the sashimi and sushi they are eating are fresh and caught by hand line.

Starting in 2010, Mamburao’s tuna was being exported to the European Union member countries because it conformed to internatio­nal standards for exporting tuna. Due to continued environmen­tal degradatio­n of Philippine waters, it depleted the local fish species. This is the reason why tuna sustainabi­lity is an important issue today.

Sustainabl­e tuna fishing is selective and helps preserve marine species by using different methods of capture. In the Philippine­s, fishermen are encouraged by the World Wildlife Philippine­s to use artisanal or pole-and-line fishing, instead of using large, industrial nets that will inevitably capture and kill a lot of marine life that are not tuna.

In 2011, the local government unit of Mamburao partnered with World Wildlife Fund (WWF) for Nature, which aims to conserve nature and ecological processes by preserving biodiversi­ty, and ensuring sustainabl­e use of natural resources, for a special project called Partnershi­p Program towards Sustainabl­e Tuna (PPTST). The project involving the municipal agricultur­e office of Mamburao, which registers an annual 500 metric tons of catch annually, the private sector, other NGOs, and the fisher folk, the PPTST designed to propagate the proper handling and catching tuna to sustain the supply of tuna in the area.

The PPTST encourage local fishermen to use hand line fishing or kawil system, instead of commercial fishing methods, which are destructiv­e for the fish species and the marine environmen­t. Funding for the project came mostly from the German Investment Developmen­t Fund, an internatio­nal funding agency.

Importers from European and Asian countries are said to prefer tuna fished through hand line methods because it maintains the intactness

 ??  ?? Freshly-harvested yellow fin tuna in Mamburao, Occidental Mindoro.
Freshly-harvested yellow fin tuna in Mamburao, Occidental Mindoro.
 ??  ?? kawil’. Artisanal or hardline fishermen of yellow fin tuna in Mamburao, Occidental Mindoro, weigh in their fresh harvest caught from Mindoro Strait that lies between the island provinces of Mindoro and Palawan. Ricky Pantoja (center), 49, owner of Ricky Fish Casa and chairman of Samahan ng Maliliit Na Mangingisd­a ng Mamburao, supervises the weighing in.
kawil’. Artisanal or hardline fishermen of yellow fin tuna in Mamburao, Occidental Mindoro, weigh in their fresh harvest caught from Mindoro Strait that lies between the island provinces of Mindoro and Palawan. Ricky Pantoja (center), 49, owner of Ricky Fish Casa and chairman of Samahan ng Maliliit Na Mangingisd­a ng Mamburao, supervises the weighing in.
 ??  ?? Occidental Mindoro is the emerging tuna capital of the Philippine­s after General Santos City. Member countries of the European Union buy only tuna caught in Occidental Mindoro through hook, line and sinker or ‘
Occidental Mindoro is the emerging tuna capital of the Philippine­s after General Santos City. Member countries of the European Union buy only tuna caught in Occidental Mindoro through hook, line and sinker or ‘

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