Philippine Daily Inquirer

Fisheries breakthrou­gh: Breeding ‘maya-maya’

- Gabriel Cardinoza, Inquirer Northern Luzon

DAGUPAN CITY—Aquacultur­e experts here announced on Friday the successful breeding in captivity of the high-value fish maya-maya (red snapper). “This is a breakthrou­gh for the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) and we are happy that for the first time, we were able to make our breeders spawn,” said Westly Rosario, chief of BFAR’s National Integrated Fisheries Technology Developmen­t Center (NIFTDC) here.

Rosario said maya-maya were caught only in the wild, making them difficult to find in fish markets.

“[The maya-maya] is expensive, costing about P300 a kilogram,” he said.

“What we want is a diversific­ation of species [in the food production trade] because I think we are the only Asian country which is familiar with only two species for aquacultur­e—Tilapia and bangus (milkfish),” he said.

“If we have other species [being cultured for the market], we have not been able to elevate them to the industrial level,” said Rosario.

“We have not been able to export because we always end up with a more expensive produce due to high production costs compared to other countries,” he said.

Because of the breakthrou­gh, hatcheries would soon be producing maya-maya fry to ensure regular production, Rosario said.

He said the maya-maya breeders at the NIFTDC came from the Lingayen Gulf and were caught near the mouth of a river.

“We grew them for more than four years, moving them from one pond to another. Their sexual maturity is supposed to be only two years. But [our mayamaya] spawned only on June 18, during the new moon,” he said.

He said that his office would be producing the fry in semicommer­cial quantity and sell these to aquacultur­e farmers. “This can also be replicated in other places. And we can teach them,” he said.

 ?? RAY ZAMBRANO/INQUIRER NORTHERN LUZON ?? A WORKER at the National Integrated Fisheries Technology Developmen­t Center in Dagupan City shows one of the red snapper breeders, which aquacultur­e experts have successful­ly made to spawn in captivity.
RAY ZAMBRANO/INQUIRER NORTHERN LUZON A WORKER at the National Integrated Fisheries Technology Developmen­t Center in Dagupan City shows one of the red snapper breeders, which aquacultur­e experts have successful­ly made to spawn in captivity.

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