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Sunday, November 24, 2024

Iloilo research center finally breeds ‘galunggong’ in captivity

A scientific breakthrough at an Iloilo-based research center might finally be the long-term solution to the perennial shortage of galunggong (round scad) in the Philippines.

In a world’s first, researchers successfully spawned galunggong in captivity last December 2021 at the Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center Aquaculture Department (SEAFDEC/AQD) in Tigbauan, Iloilo, marking a critical milestone toward farming the fish.

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“Our breeders have been spawning continuously since December until this February, and we now have thousands of galunggong in different larval to early juvenile stages at our hatchery which we hope to further grow to market sizes to prove that we can farm galunggong,” SEAFDEC/AQD chief Dan Baliao said.

“Galunggong” is considered a staple dish in the Philippines, however, the catch of local fishers has seen a decline over the years leading to increasing prices, now reaching P250 to P300 a kilo, and controversial moves to import the fish amid closed fishing seasons.

Researcher Ma. Irene Cabanilla-Legaspi said they started collecting wild galunggong breeders off southern Iloilo and Antique in 2020 as part of a Government of Japan-funded project at SEAFDEC/AQD, the same research center responsible for groundbreaking studies on breeding milkfish in the 70s and 80s.

After collecting galunggong breeders onboard commercial fishing vessels and through fish traps, Cabanilla-Legaspi’s team transported them to SEAFDEC/AQD’s headquarters in Tigbauan and stocked them in fish tanks to prepare them for spawning.

It was the breeders they caught in August and October 2021 that began laying eggs in December and, as of writing, continue to produce good eggs. Though still in an early experimental stage, they already have fingerlings in the hatchery that are more than 50 days old.

“We observed that the fish were growing very fast. When they reach 20 days old, they have a very fast growth and we can obtain 2.5-centimeter round scad in 25 days,” Cabanilla-Legaspi said.

Although trials in the hatchery are still few, SEAFDEC/AQD scientist Dr. Leobert de la Peña noted that the galunggong fry also has “very high survival” compared to other marine fish being grown at SEAFDEC/AQD, reaching as much as 20 percent survival 25 days after they hatch.

Meanwhile, the SEAFDEC/AQD team will continue to collect broodstock from the wild for more experimental runs that will also cover studying the fish’s larval development, reproductive development, feeding habits, and the formulation of hatchery, nursery, and grow-out procedures.

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