Aquatic biodiversity preservation
urged in Laos
Vientiane Times, June 7, 2008
At a workshop on aquatic biodiversity and nutrition in rice-based ecosystems, organised June 4-5 in Vientiane by FAO and the Lao Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, participants discussed the potential role of aquatic biodiversity in the alleviation of malnutrition. This depends on good management practices which combine enhancement of aquatic biodiversity with increased rice production.
Recommendations were made for future activities and immediate steps towards enhancing aquatic biodiversity and increasing rice production. Laos has a rich aquatic biodiversity which has always been tapped for food, barter and income, and numerous studies have shown its importance for the nutrition and livelihood of the Lao people.
Rice-based ecosystems, usually seen as a source of rice only, form part of the intricate system of wetlands found throughout Laos and therefore harbour a highly diverse set of aquatic organisms. The catch from rice fields is usually modest and only sufficient for a single day. For this reason, the fish and other aquatic animals caught from rice-based ecosystems go largely unnoticed - making it an "invisible" fishery. Nevertheless, since many people are involved in this type of fishery day after day, the total amount can be quite significant.
A household survey conducted on 240 households across three provinces from 2006-2007 revealed that about two-thirds of all aquatic organisms consumed by the targeted households originated from ricebased ecosystems. Among the organisms caught and consumed regularly were fish, frogs, snails, shrimps and aquatic insects. The findings once again underlined the importance rice fields as a source of non-rice foods.
The International Rice Commission has acknowledged the importance of aquatic biodiversity and recommended its member countries pay more attention to the nutritional contribution of aquatic organisms in the diets of rural people. The global shortage of rice has led to increased rice production through traditional intensification, namely increased input of chemical fertilisers and pesticides, plus expansion into natural wetlands. This may worsen the overall nutritional situation of rural people by reducing biodiversity, and ways must be found to combine increased rice production with enhanced riceassociated aquatic biodiversity for the benefit of the Lao people.
New law to protect Lao fisheries
Vientiane Times, June 11, 2008
A new fisheries law should protect Lao aquatic resources by ensuring their sustainable use, according to FAO representative Serge Verniau. Mr Verniau made the comments at a workshop with the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry's Department of Livestock and Fisheries in Vientiane.
The workshop was the latest step in a process which began prior to December 2007, when a national workshop agreed there was an urgent need for a new fisheries law. One month later a draft law was presented to the Lao government and FAO was asked to become involved.
"FAO financially supported this process as we consider the country is at risk during a time of massive investment in mining, hydropower and agro-industry," Mr Verniau said. "The new law takes into account the push for increased rice production and the increased input [into waterways] of mineral fertilisers and pesticides that negatively affect aquatic biodiversity."
The workshop was held to resolve issues that must be addressed before the law can be adopted by the government. Mr Verniau said the law must reflect local conditions and take into account the importance of aquatic resources to Lao people. It should detail a new management system for the sector, which can be adapted to changing situations. "The draft law has been the subject of review by provincial stakeholders and experts from the Ministry of Justice," he said. "In only six months, we moved from a mere concept note to a substantive draft law."
"The challenge is to ensure the collective effort invested in drafting the law is not wasted," Mr Verniau said. Following the workshop, the new draft will be sent to the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry for consideration.
Giant catfish population dropping
amid changing eco system
June 24, 2008,
Thai News Agency http://enews.mcot. net/view.php?id=4896
The scene of giant catfish being caught in the Mekong River is now a rare one, as the catfish population has dropped and some fishermen have stopped hunting them, joining the conservation trend to protect the big freshwater fish. Boonrien Chinarat is a founding member of the giant catfish club and the Headman of Had Krai Village in the northern province of Chiang Rai. He used to fish for giant catfish but stopped ten years ago.
He said "People outside of the village did not understand our way of life. They think we harm the fish. Nowadays, most of the giant catfish hunters have stopped due to the reduction of the fish population." Boonrien said the main reason for the reduction in giant catfish numbers was the change in eco systems, caused by rapids blasting and clearing of water channels, the habitat of the fish. The spots where the fish lay eggs are gone. Another reason is the practice of fishing by electric shock and dynamite.
In Chiang Rai's Wiengchai district is a giant catfish farm called wang pla beuk. It is owned by a retired fisheries officer, who set up the farm to help build up the stocks of giant catfish. In 1983, he became the first person in the world to successfully breed giant catfish. "We have cooperation from the fishery department to breed giant catfish for conservation." This farm has been producing over 100,000 fish a year. It has also been helping the Had Krai villagers raise their own fish.
Many markets in Chiang Rai province sell the farmed giant catfish. At Chiang Saen market, this seller says she's been selling the fish for five years at a cost of 170 baht per kg. The farmed fish is famous although some customers say wild giant catfish, which are harder to find and more expensive, are tastier. Cutting catfish for higher export prices June 27, Thanh Nien, http://www.thanhniennews.com/ business/?catid=2&newsid=39680 Pangasius (tra and basa catfish) production, which has grown rapidly recently, needs to be reduced to help loser supply and boost the fish's export value, an industry leader has suggested. Ngo Phuoc Hau, deputy chairman of the Viet Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and Processors, said free breeding had increased the catfish output significantly but farmers had to sell at low prices as supply surpassed demand.
Catfish farmers blamed local businesses for paying them low prices. While this is true, it's also true that local catfish companies are being forced to lower their prices by foreign customers who know about the domestic production surplus, Hau said. The Mekong Delta region is home to 84 catfish processing factories and the region's catfish output has reached over 1.2 million tonnes this year. He suggested supply in the catfish industry, one of the country's most lucrative agricultural industries, should be adjusted to a lower level than demand to help raise catfish prices.
The Southern Institute of Fisheries Economics and Planning said the catfish industry in the Mekong Delta region has yet to be sustainable and is vulnerable to market changes while also potentially detrimental to the environment.
Scientists breed rare Mekong River
fish
5 July, 2008, VNA, http://www.vnagency.com.vn/Home/ EN/tabid/119/itemid/257165/Default.aspx
CUU LONG - Scientists from the National Centre for Freshwater Fish Breeding of Southern Viet Nam have successfully bred several rare species of fish indigenous to the Mekong River, saving them from the threat of extinction.
Dr Pham Van Khanh, director of the centre, which is based in the delta province of Tien Giang, said the centre had successfully bred more than 20 species that either had high commercial value or faced extinction. They included ho (Catlocarpio siamensis) and ca coc (cyclocheilichthys enoplos).
Khanh, who was in charge of a project to breed and raise ca coc said the centre had succeeded in artificially propagating the fish after six years of study. He said the centre's scientists had to go to the Tien and Hau rivers, two Mekong distributaries, to buy rare the species from fishers.
Huynh Huu Ngai, who was in charge of the project breed ho fish, said when the project began in 2003 he and his colleagues had to go to An Giang, Vinh Long and Dong Thap provinces to find ho, also known as giant barb. In June 2005, Ngai and his team successfully hatched the first ho by artificial means, with a success rate of 13%. The rate now tops 40%, he said. Ho live mainly in the lower Mekong basin in Viet Nam and Cambodia, but population has declined sharply due to overfishing. Ngai said since April 2002 he had not heard of anyone catching a ho weighing more than 150 kg in the delta. The fish grow to 300- 400 kg when fully mature.
The centre now has 84 breeding pairs of ho, with the largest weighing 25 kg. The centre has supplied more than 10,000 ho fry to farmers in An Giang and Dong Thap provinces and to an aquaculture company in Ho Chi Minh City. It annually supplies around 20 million breeding fish to farmers, including rare species like ca et moi (Morulius chrysophekadion) and ca chai (Leptobarbus hoevenii).
The centre is also one of the leaders in artificial propagation of catfish like tra and basa, which are now bred in the Delta in large quantities for export. Khanh said the centre was also studying artificial propagation of other rare fish species, including ca lang (Hemibagrus clongatus) and ca ket (Kryptopterus bleekeri).
One million fish released for Wildlife
Conservation Day
July 14, 2008, Vientiane Times
One million fish were released into Houayson Reservoir in Naxaithong district, Vientiane to mark Wildlife Conservation Day yesterday. Vientiane Agriculture and Forestry Department Head Latsanivong Amarathithada said the event was held to educate people about conservation. "In Vientiane we have a lot of rivers and reservoirs, which are home to a range of aquatic life and wildlife," he said. "People need to be aware of the importance of preserving this wildlife and also preserving our natural biodiversity."
Mr Latsanivong said it was necessary for individuals and private and state organisations to make conservation a priority, because it was linked to development, economic growth and the sustainable management of natural resources. This year's slogan is "Don't catch, kill, or sell wildlife". "It is essential to talk to people, such as people at the markets, and give them information about regulations and the law as it's related to the protection of wildlife," he said.
Mr Latsanivong said he hoped releasing fish would become an annual custom to encourage people to think about the survival of threatened species. The department has released more than 12 million fish between 1994 and 2007. Wildlife Conservation Day aims to provide a wake-up call about the devastating loss of wildlife and aquatic life.
Australian scientist lends helping
hand to Asian neighbour
July 15, 2008, ABC, http://www.abc.net.au/news/
stories/2008/07/15/2304058.htm
A Narrandera scientist has returned from Laos, where he helped build trial fishways to revive the Asian nation's declining fish stocks. Research scientist Lee Baumgartner says weirs have severely cut fish numbers in the Mekong Delta.
Mr Baumgartner says on his recent six-week visit to Laos there was great help from locals keen to see their wetlands return to productivity. "Most of the local villagers who actually helped us out with our work were quite excited that up to 70 species of fish will be returning to that wetland sometime next year," he said. "Hopefully once the fishways are built they'll see a big increase in their sustenance fishery upstream of the wetland."
Mr Baumgartner says the research also has potential to help Australian fish stocks. "We learnt quite a bit about the behaviour of their small bodied fish in terms of the actual dimensions of the fishway," he said. "We'll be investigating that for some of our local species. We've also collected a lot of information on fish in the Mekong that are potential invaders over here, so that if they do get released over here we might be able to coordinate a response."
Cambodian freshwater fish resources
under increasing pressure
22 August, 2008, IRIN. http://www.irinnews.org/Report.
aspx?ReportId=79937
PHNOM PENH, - Each year, between July and October, Cambodia's Tonle Sap river, swollen by monsoon rain and excess flow from the nearby Mekong River, reverses its course. As water pours back into Cambodia's Great Lake, swelling its size by over four times, the flood-plain is transformed into a vast breeding ground for over 250 species of fish - a vital source of livelihoods and sustenance for Cambodia's rural poor.
But population growth and economic development in the Mekong basin are threatening fish resources, according to scientists, who say the country's food security could be hanging in the balance. "This is one of the most intensely fished freshwater areas in the world," said Eric Baran, a research scientist at the World Fish Center, an international fisheries research institute. "The 2.6 million tonnes of fish caught annually in the Mekong basin represent seven times more than the catches of the North American inland fisheries sector and more than 10 times the entire [inland] fish catch in Australia."
But population growth and increased fish consumption is straining Great Lake's fish resources. "Between 1940 and 1995, fish production increased twofold, but population increased threefold," he said. "We are close to a maximum level of production, but the population keeps growing," Baran said.
So Nam, deputy director of the Cambodian government's Inland Fisheries Research and Development Institute, told IRIN: "Population growth is the main concern. Although the catch is now 400,000 tonnes per year," he said, "most of the [fish] are small sized." The trend to smaller fish was also observed in River At Risk, a 2004 report by Milton Osborne, who noted the "regular complaints from [Great Lake] fishers about the difficulty of catching their desired quantities of fish."
Cambodia's heavy reliance on freshwater fish as a source of protein makes it particularly vulnerable to fluctuations in production, said Baran. "[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," he said.
A rise in illegal fishing due to collaboration between outlaw anglers and local officials, is also a growing problem. Nao Thuok, director of the Cambodian Fisheries Administration, said the law was difficult to enforce in a country as reliant on fish as Cambodia. "Families can fish year round," he said. "But the [2006] Fisheries Law only enables them to use small-scale fishing gear. The problem is that families complain they cannot survive and are using larger gear in the spawning season." To combat illegal fishing and encourage the long-term sustainability of Cambodia's freshwater fisheries, the government has devolved decision-making powers and enforcement to the local level.
According to So Nam, the central Fisheries Administration is focusing its efforts on educating fishermen about the challenges of sustainable development. "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 management, their conservation and their planning," So Nam told IRIN.
Over 500 "community fisheries" have been established so far throughout the kingdom, which act as focal points for law enforcement, conservation and the adoption of new fish cultivation methods, including aquaculture, according to So Nam.
Generating accurate information for decision-makers is critical, according to Baran. The World Fish Center is experimenting with computer modelling to predict variations in fish levels and guide policy decisions relating to fisheries. One such model, known as BayFish, is bringing together all of the complex variables that impact fisheries - including flood levels, water oxygen levels and rainfall - enabling scientists to predict how changes in one variable will effect overall fish levels. "But it's a work in progress," said Baran. "Our raison d'être is to produce scientific information on fisheries. That's the way to help national governments make informed decisions, he said. Having this scientific information integrated in national and regional policies would be a significant step forward."
Controlling illegal fishing on the
Xekong River
June 8, 2008, http://www.panda.org/about_wwf/where_ we_work/asia_pacific/our_solutions/greatermekong/
index.cfm?uNewsID=136441
The depletion of fish stocks due to illegal and destructive fishing is a growing problem in southern Laos, undermining one of the main sources of food security.
Villages and local authorities working with WWF have successfully established management plans to control illegal and destructive fishing activity in the Xekong Basin. Villages have established fish conservation zones, seasonal restrictions on fishing in spawning grounds, and clear prohibitions against fishing with damaging methods. Village and district authorities have already confiscated fishing gear from and issued fines to people fishing in conservation zones.
"We could never enforce rules to manage our resources without the support of the district authorities," said Somboun, a village leader from Attapeu, "Poachers are often well-connected outsiders that don't have respect for village rules." Through dialogue with all major stakeholders, officially recognised regulation was developed. Thus far, these new arrangements have proven effective in enabling local people to better manage their resources. The project hopes to develop a basin-wide model for participatory aquatic resources management.
For more information, contact: Eric Meusch,
WWF Project Advisor
Tel:+856 30 5390261,
Email: eric.meusch@ wwfgreatermekong.org
Villagers fish for sustainable future
Vientiane Times, June 21, 2008
Fish stocks in Savannakhet province have been replenished following efforts by local people to conserve aquatic resources and protect forest areas over the past five years. Savannakhet Poverty Reduction Fund provincial coordinator, Soubin Luangdouang, said before 2003 many important river intersections were dry and villagers did not see big fish in isolated river pools during the dry season. "We now see a lot of fish in the rivers whenever we visit fish conservation areas in Phin, Nong, Vilabouly and Xepon districts," he said.
In 2005 villagers in these areas experienced a serious drought and had difficulty finding food. Many streams close to villages were dry and locals only saw a small number of fish. It was this drought which made villagers even more aware of the importance of protecting their food sources. According to Mr Soubin, villagers approached PRF officials to ask what could be done to establish conservation areas in local forests and deep pools.
The PRF mobilised local people to achieve this goal, and in the past five years they have established 24 conservation forest areas on 6,200 hectares and 16 fish conservation areas. Fishing and hunting is not allowed in conservation areas because the aim of these areas is to allow fish, animals and plants to increase their populations. Protecting them now will ensure there are sufficient stocks in the future.
"The advantage of preserving the forest is that local people will have a variety of forest products and many important rivers won't be dry," Mr Soubin said. "More fish will be available, and women and children won't have to walk as far to collect water," he said.
A number of fish conservation areas have been so successful they are being held up as models for other districts. These are: Vangkhong fish conservation area in Houyhong village, Vilabouly district, Mettachith fish conservation area in Tathaixe village, Phin district, and Keng fish conservation area in Xepon district. A variety of fish and lots of big fish are available in these areas now.
More and more local people have become involved in protecting their food sources. "Villagers are very happy to have conservation forest areas and fish conservation areas. Every conservation forest area is sustainable and there are plenty of forest products now," Mr Soubin said. "The outcome is that we see rich natural areas in forests and more local people are aware of protecting natural resources."
In addition to establishing these protection areas, the PRF also helped build gravity fed water systems in 11 areas of four villages. This meant women and children could access clean water close by and did not have to walk many kilometres to obtain it. The project also educated rural people in targeted districts about its programmes to help them understand the benefits and importance of establishing these areas.
Fish die after alleged Mekong plant
leak
July 1, 2008, VNS, http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com. vn/showarticle.php?num=01AGR010708
CAN THO - An estimated 400 tonnes of fish raised along the Hau River bank in southern Can Tho Province died last Saturday, causing heavy losses for breeders, according to a local official. Nguyen Minh Toai, deputy chairman of the Thot Not District People's Committee, said the damage occurred mainly in Thoi Thuan Commune's Phung Hamlet and Trung Kien Commune.
Most of the dead fish were white pomfret and tilapia and the loss is estimated to be around VND6 billion (US$361,000). A breeder, Tran Hoang Anh, said 30 tonnes of fish he had been farming in three rafts had died en masse around noon on Saturday. His family had invested over VND700 million ($42,000) and lost it all, he said. Dao Thanh Tung lost 16 tonnes of white pomfret. He said a buyer had even paid him VND14,000 per kg for the fish which he had intended to sell next week. Without money to begin afresh, he was trying to sell his rafts, he added.
The Thot Not District People's Committee has warned aquaculture households in the area not to use water collect water samples for analysis. The Department of Environment and Natural Resource and the Environmental Police are investigating the case. Local residents claimed the fish died due to a leak from a local alcohol manufacturer and the sinking of a boat containing insecticide in the area. But authorities have yet to offer an explanation.
Blackouts put fish business in poorhouse
July 5, 2008, Thanh Nien, http://www.vnagency.com. vn/Home/EN/tabid/119/itemid/257165/Default.aspx
Recurring blackouts have cut production at some Mekong Delta fisheries by over 60% as the country's power shortage continues to hinder development. Nguyen Dinh Huan, deputy general director of the An Giang Fisheries Import and Export Joint Stock Company (Agifish), said production at the company's cold store plants had been halted by power cuts many times over the past several days.
There are days when the company processes nearly 100 tonnes of tra catfish, only a third of its normal daily capacity, he said. Large quantities of fish died before being processed for export, which the company then had to sell on the domestic market at a loss of VND 10,000 per kg, he said.
Other fishery companies at the Tra Noc Industrial Zone in Can Tho City's Binh Thuy District, the region's economic hub, are complaining about the power cuts. Nguyen Phuong, a manager of Thien Ma Company, said outages often lasted the whole day and tonnes of the company's fish had been left to die without the electricity needed to cool their tanks. "Power cuts have forced us to reduce production to 50-60% of our normal capacity," he said. "Thus, we cannot buy enough fish to fulfil our contracts with fish breeders," he said.
Do Ngoc Tai, deputy general director of Kim Anh Seafood Processing Company, said his company in Soc Trang Province had begun running a dynamo generator that consumed some 200 litres of diesel fuel every hour and had driven electricity costs up three times higher than before the power problems.
In a recent proposal to Deputy Prime Minister Hoang Trung Hai, the Viet Nam Association of Seafood Exporters and Producers asked that the government take urgent measures to ensure a sufficient power supply for Mekong Delta fisheries. The Deputy Prime Minister then asked power suppliers to speed up the construction of electricity power plants and facilities to solve the problem.
Lao fish conservation pays off
July 15, 2008, Vientiane Times
Funding is being sought by the World Wide Fund for Nature for phase two of their successful fish conservation project in Borikhamxay province. Project Advisor, Mr Roger Mollot, said the project started in 2005 and was supposed to finish in May 2008, but the Department of Livestock and Fisheries had repeatedly asked them to seek funding for a second phase.
If the project is able to access funding it will focus on the community during the next phase, because they would like to see information exchanged between districts, provinces and river basins. "We would like to exchange knowledge of the successes and failures that villagers along the Xekong River in Xekong province have had, and use this to teach villagers along the Kading River or any other provinces involved with our fish conservation projects," said Mr Mollot. "Social harmony in a village is the key factor for success in conservation."
The project will also concentrate on the experience and knowledge that communities in other parts of the country have, and research the factors that determine successful management of fisheries. They will exchange this information so other parts of the country can improve management of their fisheries. News and achievement of the fish conservation project in Pakkading has spread to neighbouring villages and districts, which have requested district agriculture and forestry officials implement similar local programmes.
The co-management is a partnership between communities and government agencies, but they have different responsibilities. Villagers have authority and responsibility to manage their areas, while government agencies provide technical support. The project is attempting to create a network in the community so villagers can develop their own management plan and regulations for fisheries. Thirteen fish conservation areas have been created in Pakkading and Viengthong districts, which is more than anywhere else in the country.
The project found potential locations on the Kading River because it is one of the largest tributaries of the Mekong River and is a significant fishery. The district had a reputation for having large numbers and varieties of fish but the use of modern equipment and over-fishing has reduced catch numbers.
Deputy District Governor, Mr Langsy Keoviseth, said population increase, high demand on food supplies and a lack of knowledge by villagers were the main factors that caused a decline in fish stocks. "In the past, villagers were able to catch fish only twice a year, but now they can catch fish all year round because the population of fish has increased," he said.
It's basa-and-chips as shoppers choose
sustainable fish
3 August, 2008, Daily Telegraph
LONDON - A catfish from the murky depths of the Mekong Delta in Viet Nam is becoming an unlikely favourite of British diners.
New figures show that sales of the fish - which is known as basa, tra or panga - are increasing at a far faster rate than any other species. Over the last year, Britons have eaten more than 555 tonnes of the fish, 42 times more than over the previous 12 months.
It is one of a series of unusual types of seafood which are growing in popularity, as shoppers and retailers look for alternatives to the threatened stocks of more traditional staples like cod, tuna, haddock and monkfish. Basa is a freshwater fish with a tender, mild flavour, and is farmed in the Mekong delta - an area which saw heavy fighting during the Viet Nam War.
It is sold in the UK as fillets or in processed meals, and has proved popular in restaurants and chip shops. It has featured in recipes from the television chef Anthony Worrall Thompson. Sales last year totalled more than £4 million. The figures, produced for Seafish, the trade body that represents the seafood industry, also show continued increases in sales of pollock (up 144 per cent to 5,511 tonnes), a relative of cod, which is caught in UK waters but also imported from the Pacific; and sea bass (up 27% to 1,628 tonnes), most of which is farmed in the Mediterranean.
Squid sales have also risen sharply, up by 57 per cent to 628 tonnes, as climate change has led to a large increase in the numbers caught in UK waters. Sales of tilapia, a freshwater fish from East Africa, have risen by 55 per cent to 179 tonnes. Although cod remains the most popular fish, with 54,000 tonnes eaten last year, its sales fell by more than 12 per cent. Sales of haddock and tuna also declined, while plaice sales remained largely static. Experts believe consumers are turning away from the traditional species because of concerns over the long-term sustainability of some stocks.
The Marine Conservation Society is expected to publish this month its latest guide of ethical fish to eat. Its Fishonline website currently suggests fish to avoid include Atlantic cod, halibut, wild salmon and turbot from the North Sea. Philip MacMullen, head of environment for Seafish, said: "Choosing alternative species helps to ease the pressure on stocks of more traditional fish. Basa has had a meteoric rise. Our palate tends to appreciate fish that are not strongflavoured, and basa is one those. It has a texture and taste that is quite similar to a white sea fish. "People are becoming more adventurous, partly in response to TV chefs happy to cook different types of fish and partly because retailers and processors are much more focused on sourcing fish responsibly."
Seafood supplier Young's was the first to introduce basa as an alternative species, and now offers a range of products made from the Vietnamese fish. Basa is also sold in restaurants, as well as battered in chip shops. Arthur Parrington, from the National Federation of Fish Friers, said: "People are experimenting with more fish and basa is a very acceptable type of fish. There is no bone and it fries very well."
Viet Nam catfish safe to eat
18 August, 2008, New Straits Times, http://www.
straitstimes.com/Breaking%2BNews/Singapore/Story/ STIStory_268163.html
The Singapore Agri-Food and Veterinary Authority (AVA) has given catfish imported from Viet Nam a clean bill of health following rumours stocks were contaminated with toxic chemicals like arsenic.
The decision, revealed to The Straits Times this week, is a relief for the growing number of shoppers who are opting for the fish, which is much cheaper than staples like cod and saba. Concerns about catfish - also known as pangas or sutchi - were raised in January when an e-mail began making the rounds claiming that they were laced with poisons.
The message said the fish were farmed in the heavily polluted Mekong River and had also been injected with hormones made from urine. The AVA has received about 100 calls from concerned consumers since the e-mail first surfaced. Most were from anxious parents who fed the fish to their children. But tests revealed the fish was clean, according to AVA officials.
Mekong Delta catfish price up as supplies
down
August 31, 2008, Thanh Nien. http://www.
thanhniennews.com/business/?catid=2&newsid=41626
Prices of pangasius, or tra and basa catfish, have jumped some VND1,500 per kg over the past few days in the Mekong Delta as farmers have quit breeding the fish due to price drops earlier this year.
Duong Ngoc Minh, general director of seafood processing firm Hung Vuong Corp., said that tra and basa were selling for VND15,500 (about 94 U.S. cents) per kg. He added that supplies had dwindled since 50% of the region's farmers had stopped raising the fish. Even with a price increase, many farmers will still lose VND1,500 (9 cents) per kg due to higher input expenses, said Minh. Meanwhile, the demand from the European and Central American markets has increased by 20-50% recently, he said.