BFAR imposes 3-month ban on ‘ludong’ catching
>> Thursday, December 19, 2013
BAYOMBONG, Nueva
Vizcaya – The Bureau and Fisheries and Aquatic Resources (BFAR) has banned for
three months the catching of ludong, a pricey fish species whose population has
dwindled in rivers in Abra and Cagayan Valley.
The ban, according to
BFAR, took effect last month and would last until January next year, when the
fish species would migrate from its freshwater habitats to the mouth of the
Cagayan River in Aparri town to spawn.
It is this annual
journey of the ludong – also known as President’s fish or Pacific salmon – that
fisherfolk take advantage of to catch the fish even before they could reach
their destination, preventing them from laying their eggs and reproducing, said
BFAR regional director JovitaAyson.
The ludong, which BFAR
said has been on the brink of extinction, only thrives in the headwaters of
Cagayan Valley as well as in Abra and Ilocos.
A catadromous fish,
which means it thrives in freshwater but migrates to seawater to spawn, ludong
is being sold at least P5,000 per kilogram, making it the country’s most
expensive fish species.
The ludong is listed
as one of the world’s most endangered freshwater fish species.
The three-month ban to
catch ludong is covered by BFAR Fisheries Order No. 31, which prohibits “any
person, association or corporation to catch… purchase, sell… transport, export
or have in possession of the fish.”
“This is to give
assurance that the ludong will be given the chance to lay their eggs and
reproduce,” Ayson said.
Violators of the ban
face a jail term of six months to eight years and a fine of P6,000 to
P80,000.
BFAR, which launched
“Sagip Ludong” two years ago, called on the public, especially residents in the
region’s headwaters, “to cease from catching ludong and for consumers to suppress
their appetite in order to provide the much needed respite for the fish.”
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