As we known the world are starting growing
up very fast. Food demanding also increase double in this recently year.
AS Cambodia's population
grows, freshwater fisheries are increasingly under threat, with sustained
over-fishing putting the Kingdom's long-term food security in jeopardy.
The total
freshwater fish catch climbed to over 395,000 tonnes. But a decline in the
average size of fish species on the Tonle Sap lake has scientists worried about
the future of this vital source of protein for millions of the Kingdom's rural
poor.
This is
the one of the most intensely fished freshwater areas in the world a research
scientist at the Phnom Penh office of the World Fish Centre, an international
fisheries research institute.
The 2.6
million tonnes of fish caught annually in the Mekong Basin represent seven
times more than catches of the Northern American inland fisheries sector and
more than 10 times the entire fish catch in Australia.
According
to Baran, sustained population growth is putting too much pressure on the Tonle
Sap's fisheries which are now, approaching their highest sustainable limit.
"Between 1940 and 1995, fish production increased twofold, but population
increased threefold. Cambodia's reliance on fish as a source of affordable
protein makes it particularly vulnerable to a reduction in fish catches.
"[Cambodia] is a country where fish production is three times pig production
and 20 times chicken production. If it loses fisheries, the agriculture sector
will not be able to catch up.
Illegal fishing spikes
A recent
rise in levels of illegal fishing has also added to the strain on the nation's
fisheries, said Chhom Davy, director of the Fisheries Action Coalition Team.
"According to reports from commune chiefs around the Tonle Sap, illegal
fishing is on the rise," she said, noting that the activity is spurred on
by collusion between poachers and local authorities.
Middlemen
pay officials each month so they can use illegal fishing gear in both the
closed season and the open season.
Cambodia's
2006 Fisheries Law bans commercial fishing from June 1 to September 30 north of
Phnom Penh, and from July 1 to October 31 in the south, in order to give fish
populations a chance to reproduce and replenish.
The law was difficult to enforce in a country as fish-dependent as Cambodia.
The law was difficult to enforce in a country as fish-dependent as Cambodia.
Family
fishing is free and open all year round, But the Fisheries Law only allows
families to use very small fishing gear. The problem is that people complain
they cannot survive and use larger gear in the spawning season."
So Nam,
deputy director of the government's Inland Fisheries Research and Development
Institute, agreed that preventing overfishing is tricky as the law says what
sort of [fishing] gear is legal and what is illegal, but we cannot control all
the people using hundreds of types of fishing gear.
Addressing
Overfishing Issue in ASEAN
Reversing
the trend
To combat
illegal fishing and promote sustainable fishing practices, the government is
shifting its decision-making and law enforcement efforts to the local level.
Fisheries
Administration should focusing its efforts on educating fishermen about the
importance of sustainable harvesting.
Education
is very important. One of the aims is to strengthen the community by building
the capacity of the community, teaching people to do their own management, conservation
and planning.
Over 500
"community fisheries" in Cambodia have been established so far,
acting as focal points for law enforcement, conservation and the adoption of
new fish cultivation methods
We should
conduct a lot of training with the local and international authorities to
educate them not to support illegal activities. We call meetings with officials
and provide fuel oil so local workers can help deal with illegal fishing.
One
innovation has been to encourage the cultivation of fish in Cambodia's
extensive rice paddies.
Because
we have a lot of rice fields , farmers can grow fish in them and then harvest
both. And they can do it without any chemical fertilizer.
We should
keeping our catch at the maximum level of 400,000 tonnes per year, and
increasing production by growing fish. Now there are more large-scale
[aquaculture] investments.
Please see more slide about
Overfishing that make you more understanding about it.
Overfishing Issue not only in Cambodia
but all around the world, here are some picture about overfishing around the
world.
Megafish, Cambodia
Fishermen pose with a giant carp caught in the Tonle Sap River in Cambodia. The fish was reeled in, then
released, as part of the National Geographic Society's Megafishes Project—a
three-year effort by National Geographic grantee Zeb Hogan to document the largest species of
freshwater fish. All of Hogan's megafishes are at least 6.5 feet (2 meters) in
length or 220 pounds (100 kilograms). Many of the species he studies are
threatened or endangered due to overfishing, development, and pollution.
Dead guitarfish, rays, and other species are tossed from a shrimp boat in
the Gulf of California, Mexico. Tons of fish are thrown back to sea every year.
International attention to wasteful fishing methods have resulted in relatively
new net and hook designs, which prevent some bycatch. "Overfishing has
been historically [the] oldest and [most] major threat to ocean life
today," says National Geographic fellow Enric Sala.
"And because of the mismanagement [and inefficiencies] of fisheries, the
fishing industry loses $50 billion a year," according to a 2008 World Bank
report, adds Sala.
Fish Market, Tasmania
Marine farming has
rapidly expanded in Tasmania since the 1990s, with Atlantic salmon and rainbow
trout being the most popular stocks. Strict quarantine controls on the
importation of salmonid products help to protect the fish farming industry from
serious diseases.
Carp Farm, Poland
Fishermen catch tons of live carp at a fish farm near Warsaw, Poland.
Farming fish remains a controversial practice, as diseases and parasites that
plague fish raised in confined pens can often infect nearby wild stocks.
However, in a world with limited fish supplies, farms also help to reduce
pressures on natural populations.
Cod Caught in a Net, Gulf of Maine
Tuna Net, Southern Ocean
A purse seiner net is used to haul tuna to coastal feeding pens in what is
sometimes called the Southern, or Antarctic, Ocean. Giant bluefin tuna,
treasured for sushi, can grow to 12 feet (3.7 meters) in length, weigh 1,500
pounds (680 kilograms), and live for 30 years. They once migrated by the
millions throughout the Atlantic Basin and the Mediterranean Sea, but are now
experiencing significant declines. By the mid-1990s, stocks of southern bluefin
tuna had been fished to between 6 and 12 percent of their original numbers in
the South Pacific and Indian Oceans.