Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Aquarium




Narin tang ganingen ang AQUARIUM. Tanira tang manigbakal ta boing yan, ang goy nira buhay-buhay. May main office nira ong Cuyo, oman ipaekel ong Manila. Doro kabarato tang mga barakalen ta, presyong Manila. Animan normal ang itaen mo tang mga tao, maski taga-Villa Fria o Villa Sol, kanya-kanyang bi-bit tang pinamakal nira magalin ong Abagat. Maski ang mga tindan tarin pamakal ta paninda mga anday biyahe ong Cuyo. Na ong buku-buku tang balay da dipunto Tay Piong Laab.

5 comments:

agutaya said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
agutaya said...

"Belago ta eksperto ong marine science, pero ang "live fish" ono, gadep lamang gamit ta sodium cyanide. Aglepengen tang yan, pero, gaulikan ka pag bentang da ong aquarium. After 3 months, ang coral reef ang ginamitan ta sodium ay mapatay da, Indi ra maitaran ta yan. It will take hundreds of years ba-lo si mabuat ta balong coral reef. Ang live fish trade, o buhay-buhay puwedeng magpamanggad ong short-term, pero ang long term effect, maging malised tang talsi. Ang domaton ang henerasyon, anda ray mapangan nirang yan. Anman ong puerto agbawalen tang live fish trading monopa, napag-adalan da nira, na ang long-term effect na ay belag ta masinlo.. Panlangga ong kayamanan ta ong talsi Indio ono puwedeng madep gamit ta "hook" o "bila" tang live fish tengued maigadan tang yan. Mareject ka lamang. Anman, pag minaning nag-live fish, maliag yaning dinep tang yan gamit ta sodium cyanide." - Nibagla

bucao said...

Over-harvested.

Mga naolik ka ong Agutayan ong teled ta dorwang takon ang nagta-lib, maramdaman mo talaga na "over-harvested" da tang mga yan ong yaten. Kaliwag ta tera, labi pa tang yan. Halos pirming Bilan tang gabakal ong Abagat. Bato na yara'y epekto tang mga illegal fishing? Bato ang live fishing pwedeng maaning tang "illegal?"

Pati mga silik, kagege-ley. Naitaw ta mababael-bael ang silik, piro ong lua ra tang sibi, kenay-kenayen da. Ang sikad-sikad halos anda ray masu-sud. Ang butalog ang gagemet ni Lola ang gege-ley ami pa, halos anda ra. Pati latok.

May initaw ang nakapaskin ong barangay ong Bancal, na agbawalan da tang mga taw ang manu-sud medyo si.

Mga isipen, may tabang ka kaman, piro tama si Ate Nibagla, ang long term effect tang isipen ta. Sustainability. Belag lamang ta para ong mandian, piro para ka ong mga domaton pang henerasyon ong yaten.

Payag a ang anda ray matera tang mga kaampoampoan mo ang masabor ang yan?

ANARCHIST said...

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agutaya said...

Nani tang excerpts ong Decision tang Supreme Court ong kasong Tano vs. Socrates:

"The destruction of the coral reefs results in serious, if not irreparable, ecological imbalance, for coral reefs are among the nature’s life-support systems. They collect, retain, and recycle nutrients for adjacent nearshore areas such as mangroves, seagrass beds, and reef flats; provide food for marine plants and animals; and serve as a protective shelter for aquatic organisms. It is said that “[e]cologically, “the reefs are to the oceans what forests are to continents: they are shelter and breeding grounds for fish and plant species that will disappear without them.”

The prohibition against catching live fish stems, in part, from the modern phenomenon of live-fish trade which entails the catching of so-called exotic tropical species of fish not only for aquarium use in the West, but also for “the market for live banquet fish [which] is virtually insatiable in ever more affluent Asia.[37] These exotic species are coral-dwellers, and fishermen catch them by “diving in shallow water with corraline habitats and squirting sodium cyanide poison at passing fish directly or onto coral crevices; once affected the fish are immobilized [merely stunned] and then scooped by hand.”[38] The diver then surfaces and dumps his catch into a submerged net attached to the skiff . Twenty minutes later, the fish can swim normally. Back on shore, they are placed in holding pens, and within a few weeks, they expel the cyanide from their system and are ready to be hauled. Then they are placed in saltwater tanks or packaged in plastic bags filled with seawater for shipment by air freight to major markets for live food fish.[39] While the fish are meant to survive, the opposite holds true for their former home as “[a]fter the fisherman squirts the cyanide, the first thing to perish is the reef algae, on which fish feed. Days later, the living coral starts to expire. Soon the reef loses its function as habitat for the fish, which eat both the algae and invertebrates that cling to the coral. The reef becomes an underwater graveyard, its skeletal remains brittle, bleached of all color and vulnerable to erosion from the pounding of the waves.”[40] It has been found that cyanide fishing kills most hard and soft corals within three months of repeated application.[41]

The nexus then between the activities barred by Ordinance No. 15-92 of the City of Puerto Princesa and the prohibited acts provided in Ordinance No. 2, Series of 1993 of the Province of Palawan, on one hand, and the use of sodium cyanide, on the other, is painfully obvious. In sum, the public purpose and reasonableness of the Ordinances may not then be controverted." -Nibagla