TACLOBAN
CITY, Sept. 8 (PNA) –- Artificial bamboo reefs have been bringing marine life
back to life in Padre Burgos, Southern Leyte.
This was
revealed through the recent documentation dive more than a year after 76
modules of artificial reef were launched off Poblacion village, said Rio E.
Cahambing, provincial consultant on marine tourism.
“The bamboo
artificial reefs have become rich haven of fish, corals, invertebrates, and
many other marine organisms,” Cahambing said.
“The
transformation testifies to the fact that artificial reefs need not be so
expensive and sophisticated, and that locally-available and eco-friendly
materials, such as bamboos, can become productive and useful in propagating
marine life in the most natural way possible,” the official added.
The concept
echoes the vision of Scaph Pro Philippines, a French-based non-government
organization, recently established in Padre Burgos town, with Michael Levett as
president and Jean-Francois Marailhac as vice president and technical director.
The Southern
Leyte provincial government supported the program by extending technical advice
and support.
The group is
now implementing its second year of Operation Green Reef, an effort to
rehabilitate or re-establish marine ecosystems using artificial reefs.
Additional
24 modules were recently launched, making a total of 100 modules for the same
site. Several new modules are also being launched in the adjacent Cantutang
village.
As of the
last assessment made late last year, 146 fish species and 124 species of
invertebrates were identified in the site.
The recent
documentation dives done this late July, shows that the number of species had
risen as soft and hard corals, as well as fish and invertebrates continue to
colonize and congregate within the artificial reefs.
Noticeable
increases in schooling pelagic fish intrusions were also observed. Pelagic fish
includes forage fish such as anchovies, sardines, shad, and menhaden and the
predatory fish.
Schools of
fusiliers, long-nosed emperors, jacks, spade fishes, mackerels, and other reef
predators are now becoming frequent sights.
“This is an
indication that the whole artificial reef site is fast becoming a productive
marine ecosystem,” Cahambing added.
Scaph Pro
Philippines is willing to consult with other local government units interested
to undertake similar projects in their respective areas in Southern Leyte.
In February,
the group learned that there were two villages hit by massive coral destruction
caused by the damaging fishing method called "cerosca" similar to
muro-ami.
These
villages, Poblacion and Cantutang, where all corals are virtually destroyed
because of cerosca done many years ago, and only a small percentage of the
corals managed to recover.
Wikipedia,
an online encyclopedia, described cerosca as a method that uses an encircling
net together with pounding devices. These devices usually comprise large stones
fitted on ropes that are pounded into the coral reefs. It is repeatedly and
violently lowered into the area encircled by the net, literally smashing the
corals in that area into small fragments in order to scare the fish out of
their refuge.
Cahambing
added that restoring reefs in Southern Leyte province not only has big impact
on tourism, but also has economic impact for the locals. Southern Leyte is
known as the diving capital of Eastern Visayas.
“The reefs
of Padre Burgos are generally healthy. In fact there are world class dive sites
in the area, teeming with fish and amazing marine life,” he said.
Padre Burgos
is a small fishing town in the province of Southern Leyte, famous for its white
sand beaches and also the jump-off point to the historic island town of
Limasawa. (PNA)
LAP/SQM/ROEL T. AMAZONA/EGR
LAP/SQM/ROEL T. AMAZONA/EGR
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