TACLOBAN CITY, Dec. 24 (PNA) – The Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources has been seeing signs of
weakening red tide that plagued several bays in Eastern Visayas this quarter.
BFAR Regional Director Juan D.
Albaladejo said typhoon-induced rains and cooler weather in the past few weeks
have contributed to lower water temperature and salinity, which is not anymore
friendly to the toxic organisms.
“Toxicity level in both shellfish
meat and seawater has been going down, but shellfish ban is still up in
affected bays. Red tide should be consistently negative for three readings
before we can declare that an area is red tide-free,” Albaladejo said in a
mobile phone interview.
Since October this year, Eastern
Visayas region has been threatened by what the BFAR described as the biggest
red tide bloom that has not been seen in more than three decades.
The fisheries bureau blamed the
prolonged dry season this year and sudden downpour as the major factors that
triggered the bloom in eight bays and coastal waters, considered as the
region’s major source of shellfish.
From late November until early
December, the infestation was alarming since the color of water turned to
copper red with a depth of six to nine meters, stretching up to a kilometer
from the shoreline, according to Albaladejo.
The discoloration of seawater is
triggered by massive population growth of few species of a type of algae that
produce toxins.
BFAR has raised a shellfish ban
over Carigara Bay in Carigara, Barugo, San Miguel, Capoocan, and Leyte towns in
Leyte province; Biliran Strait in Naval, Caibiran, Cabucgayan, Culaba, Kawayan,
and Almeria in Biliran province; and coastal waters of Leyte, Leyte.
Red tide alert is also up over
Cambatutay Bay in Tarangnan, Samar; Irong Irong Bay in Catbalogan City, Samar;
Villareal Bay in Villareal, Samar; and Maqueda Bay in Jiabong, Catbalogan City,
Motiong, Paranas, Pinabacdao, Hinabangan, San Sebastian, and Calbiga, Samar.
In the past five weeks, paralytic
shellfish poisoning had killed a seven-year-old boy in Carigara, Leyte and a
62-year-old man in Caibiran, Biliran, according to BFAR. At least 18 people
were hospitalized after eating shellfish with red tide toxins.
BFAR hopes that red tide will
completely dissipate early next year. (PNA)
LAP/SQM
LAP/SQM
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