Assistance boosts Antique’s fish production

FISH SUFFICIENCY. A fish vendor at the Sibalom Public Market in Antique attends to her customers. Alette Gayatin, Senior Aquaculturist at the Office of the Provincial Agriculturist, said the province has sufficient fish production, owing to government interventions for the fisherfolk. ANNABEL CONSUELO J. PETINGLAY/PNA
FISH SUFFICIENCY. A fish vendor at the Sibalom Public Market in Antique attends to her customers. Alette Gayatin, Senior Aquaculturist at the Office of the Provincial Agriculturist, said the province has sufficient fish production, owing to government interventions for the fisherfolk. ANNABEL CONSUELO J. PETINGLAY/PNA

SAN JOSE DE BUENAVISTA, Antique – The various forms of assistance provided to fisherfolk in Antique have increased marine production in the province.

Alette Gayatin, Senior Aquaculturist at the Office of the Provincial Agriculturist (OPA), said the province has increased its fish production compared with last year’s, owing to government interventions.

“Through the OPA, there are Lambaklad projects in the six coastal municipalities of Antique that have reported 57.53 metric tons of fish production as of October 2023,” she said.

These coastal towns are Libertad, Pandan, Sebaste, Barbaza, Bugasong and Tibiao.

The Lambaklad project employs the “otoshi-ami” method using fishing gear and nets.

Gayatin added that although she could not ascertain the amount of assistance from the Bureau of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources, but the fishing gear, boats, nets and other equipment have contributed greatly to the fish production.

“Based on our available data, the fish production in Antique for the first quarter of 2023 is already 6,623.82 metric tons,” she said.

Gayatin said they are still waiting for reports from the municipalities so they can update the data on the total fish production for the year.

Antique has a total of 18 towns, 15 are coastal municipalities and three are inland or mountainside towns.

“The fish consumption in Antique is 18-20 kilos per year per person,” Gayatin noted. (PNA)/PN

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