Drought spawns fish fears
Tue, 6 October 2015
Khouth Sophak Chakrya and Jamie Elliott
Fish lay in a tray at a market in the capital’s Meanchey district last week. Fishing communities are concerned for their livelihoods as the drought has diminished fish numbers. Pha Lina |
Fishing
communities along two of Cambodia’s principle rivers say their
livelihoods are threatened by droughts that have reduced water levels
and devastated fish numbers.
“The
Tonle Sap is 3 metres lower than last year,” Long Sochhet, president of
the Coalition of Cambodian Fishing Communities, said yesterday. “Less
water means less fish, so it is a dark year for us.”
According
to Sochhet, the low water level meant the Tonle Sap could not flood the
surrounding high ground and forests, which is vital if fish are to
spawn.
“Usually
in August and September, the water in the Tonle Sap rises and fills the
lake, creeks and streams, flooding the forest where the fish breed and
grow,” he said. “But in the past few years, the drought has lasted too
long, and in the rainy season it rarely rains, making the water level
too low for the river to flood.”
Many
fishing communities, like the 400 families in Pursat province’s
Raingtoel commune, where Sochhet lives, are entirely dependent on their
catch, because they live in floating houses and have no land to
cultivate, he added.
Kampong Chhnang provincial fishing communities representative Phat Phalla told a similar story.
“The Tonle Sap is at the lowest level I have seen it for 30 years,” she said.
“Drought has combined with hydroelectric dams in the upper Mekong River
to reduce the flow of water, which, along with illegal fishing, is
slashing fish numbers.”
Phalla
added that as many as 60 per cent of local families had turned to
breeding fish in cages to make up for lost catches, but said the
investment needed was landing many in debt.
On
the Mekong, Chav Chantha, head of Stung Treng’s provincial fishing
community, also blamed a lack of rainfall for falling fish stocks.
“What we see when there is no flood is that fish production is less,” she said.
Fishery Administration deputy director Kaing Khim confirmed the bleak picture painted by the fishing communities.
“Our
concern is about the low level of water this year, and it is not
favourable for the breeding and growing of fish,” she said. “So we can
predict that fish production this year will decrease compared to
previous years.”
News
of the plight of fishing families comes as a report released by the
Ministry of Agriculture on Sunday says rice farmers have also been hit
hard by unusually dry conditions.
“A
lack of rain has affected a total area of 234,695 hectares of rice
seedlings, of which 15,954 hectares have been completely damaged,” the
report says.
In
a Facebook posting on Saturday, Prime Minister Hun Sen acknowledged
river levels were low and called for rice farmers to conserve water.
“I
want to take this occasion to call for farmers to put more effort in
reserving the water in the field, reservoirs and canals in order to
guarantee the growth of the rainy season rice,” he wrote.
Weather
experts have warned that due to the continuing impact of the El Niño
climate event, unseasonably dry weather could continue well into next
year.
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