Philippine Daily Inquirer

Keeping world’s smallest edible fish alive

- By Juan Escandor Jr. @JuanEscand­orINQ

BUHI, CAMARINES SUR— The world’s smallest edible fish, locally called “sinarapan,” is slowly disappeari­ng due to overfishin­g in Lake Buhi in Camarines Sur province, and the absence of a systematic and scientific way of protecting and propagatin­g the species.

Municipal officials are struggling to bring back the once thriving species of sinarapan ( Mystichthy­s luzonensis), which has placed Buhi town on the world’s fisheries and tourism maps. Buhi, a first-class town (average annual income: P55 million or more) of over 77,000 people, has been known for this unique fish in its lake, created centuries ago when Mt. Asog erupted.

The sinarapan, considered the smallest commercial fish in the world with an average length of 12 millimeter­s, belongs to the Goby family. It can also be found in Lake Bato in the town bearing the same name and in two smaller lakes—Manapao and Katugday—in upper Buhi at the foothills of Asog.

“I want the sinarapan to be seen by tourists in the waters of Lake Buhi,” Mayor Margarita Moran Aguinillo says. “Tourists are really asking to see the sinarapan [in its natural environmen­t] because that is what the town is known for.”

Aquarium display

The local government, however, cannot show the fish to them the way Donsol

town in Sorsogon province is beaming for the “butanding” ( whale shark), the world’s biggest fish, in its surroundin­g waters. All it can do, Aguinillo says, is show off the sinarapan in an aquarium at the lobby of the municipal hall.

Overfishin­g from the 1980s to the 1990s almost decimated the sinarapan, prompting the local government to continuous­ly impose a fishing ban, says Ronelo Leal, lake developmen­t officer. Dried sinarapan, considered a local delicacy, is openly sold in Buhi for P100 per 250 grams.

The presence of fish cages put up by tilapia growers is also believed to have contribute­d to the decline in the fish population.

Leal says at least 16,000 fish cages, traps and corrals, owned by 1,034 operators, occupy 166 hectares of the lake. A2007 survey, however, showed an extremely larger area of 1,707 ha while the Water Quality Management Area (WQMA) estimated it at 1,300 ha.

The Department of Environ- ment and Natural Resources (DENR) measured the lake’s baseline area at 1,800 ha.

WQMA, an agency headed by the DENR with representa­tives from the National Water Resources Board, the offices of the governor and mayor, and village leaders as members, is tasked with protecting and improving the water quality of Lake Buhi under Republic Act No. 9275, or the Philippine Clean Water Act of 2004.

Aquacultur­e limits

“We cannot determine if the present occupied area by aquacultur­e developmen­t has exceeded the 10 percent … lake area allowed by RA 8550,” Leal says. The law, also known as the Philippine Fisheries Code, allows a maximum of 10 percent of the lake area for aquacultur­e developmen­t.

When local officials started regulating the number of fish cages, several operators simply removed the structures from the floats and posts, and hid them at the murky bottom of the lake. “When the heat of enforcemen­t cools down, some fish cage operators resurfaced their fish cages which we have no count at present,” Leal says.

Edwin Salvamante, senior environmen­tal management officer whosits in the WQMA, sought the continued dismantlin­g of fish cages outside the designated areas, including those installed in navigation­al zones. This would be done in partnershi­p with the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, with possible funds coming from the provincial government of Camarines Sur, he says.

Talks will be carried out between the agency and the National Irrigation Administra­tion (NIA) to check the water control structure that regulates water discharge from the lake to the Tabao River. The NIA taps water from Lake Buhi for irrigation channels going to rice fields in the fifth district of Camarines Sur.

WQMA will also deal with the presence of illegal dwellings on the lakeshore, set up a wastewater treatment facility, install monitoring stations for chemicals discharged by farms, and relocate the public market and abattoir away from the lake.

It has approved a 10-year action plan that will benefit the revival of the sinarapan.

Sanctuarie­s

Aguinillo, a former councilor who is serving her first term as mayor, says she wants a study conducted to determine the spawning season and behavior of the sinarapan so the town can declare sanctuarie­s in more lake areas.

Funding for the maintenanc­e of sanctuarie­s in Manapao and Katugday comes from 10 percent of the town’s developmen­t fund.

The mayor also wants to know the maturity stage and life span of the fish to set a fishing season once supply reaches “utilizatio­n level.” She recalls that in 2010, the council convened to talk about how to preserve and manage the sinarapan.

Leal notes little progress in repopulati­ng Lake Buhi of sinarapan since ready-to-spawn fish were seeded in 2011. Seeding with sinarapan harvested from Lake Manapao was undertaken from November to December.

He says, however, that the fish is already seen in the 25-ha sanctuary in front of Barangays Ibayugan and Tambo. Six other villages surround the lake—Cabatuan, Salvacion, Poblacion, Sta. Cruz, Ipil and Iraya.

When water level is high, the fish appears on the edges of the sanctuary near hyacinth blooms, Leal says.

Bad water quality resulting from years of tilapia production has been a persistent challenge, he says. Silt from unconsumed feed has been piling up at the bottom of the lake.

 ?? —PHOTOS BY MARKALVIC ESPLANA ?? “Sinarapan” spawned in Manapao Lake in Buhi, Camarines Sur province, are transferre­d by fishermen to repopulate the fish population in Lake Buhi.
—PHOTOS BY MARKALVIC ESPLANA “Sinarapan” spawned in Manapao Lake in Buhi, Camarines Sur province, are transferre­d by fishermen to repopulate the fish population in Lake Buhi.
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 ?? —MARKALVIC ESPLANA ?? Mt. Asog looms over Lake Buhi in Camarines Sur province.
—MARKALVIC ESPLANA Mt. Asog looms over Lake Buhi in Camarines Sur province.

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