April 1, 2023

Small-scale Fishers Rewarded for Reporting Catch Data

  • small scale Fishers Rewarded for Reporting Catch Data
    A fisher from San Miguel Island shows his logbook of recorded catches. Through the Catch to Cash project, fishers turn in their catch data in exchange for additional cash. Photograph © WWF-Philippines
  • Small-scale Fishers Rewarded for Reporting Catch Data
    WWF-Philippines staff work with their community partners as they record catch data. Collected catch data can be used to guide the management of the yellowfin tuna fisheries of the Lagonoy Gulf. Photograph © WWF-Philippines
  • Small-scale Fishers Rewarded for Reporting Catch Data
    A fisher holds up cash he received in exchange for catch data. The cash fishers earn through participating in the Catch to Cash project can help fund their different livelihood needs. Photograph © WWF-Philippines

Fishers from the Lagonoy Gulf received cash benefits this March, in exchange for properly collecting catch data during their fishing trips.

The rewards were given out as part of the Catch to Cash Project, an effort piloted by the World Wide Fund for Nature Philippines (WWF-Philippines) to encourage small-scale yellowfin tuna fishers to properly record catch data.

Catch data is important to fishery management as it allows authorities to understand where fish is being caught and whether seafood is being sustainably sourced.

Around 13,500 kilograms of tuna were properly recorded last March, with a total of over 40,000 pesos being rewarded to participating fishers.

“I can use these funds to buy paint. I have a lot of expenses I need to make to maintain my boat, so this cashout is helpful for me.” shared Ruel Buella, a fisher from the community of Sagurong, Tabaco City, Albay.

“This is also useful for when I have to pay for renewing my fishing license,” added Josephine Buiza, also a resident of Sagurong.

WWF-Philippines has worked with the fisheries of the Lagonoy since 2011. The conservation organization seeks to uplift the livelihoods of small-scale fishers, while encouraging them to adopt sustainable fishing practices.

Over the past decade the conservation organization has pursued a range of activities to support the livelihood of small-scale fishers in the Lagonoy Gulf and Mindoro Strait while developing local fisheries toward being more sustainable.

Catch to Cash looks to both improve traceability efforts among small-scale fishers while supporting their livelihood needs.

“Our work is rooted in conservation, but in everything we do, we make sure it goes back to our partner fishers. This has been our learning over the past decade of our program,” shared STP 2 Program Manager Joann Binondo.

For more information, please contact:

  • Ms. Joann Binondo

    Overall Project Manager

    Sustainable Tuna Partnership (STP)

    jbinondo@wwf.org.ph

  • Ms. Chezka Guevarra

    Assistant Manager | External Communications and Ambassador Programs

    cguevarra@wwf.org.ph

About WWF

WWF is one of the world’s largest and most respected independent conservation organizations, with over 5 million supporters and a global network active in over 100 countries. WWF’s mission is to stop the degradation of the Earth’s natural environment and to build a future in which humans live in harmony with nature, by conserving the world’s biological diversity, ensuring that the use of renewable natural resources is sustainable, and promoting the reduction of pollution and wasteful consumption.

WWF-Philippines has been successfully implementing various conservation projects to help protect some of the most biologically-significant ecosystems in Asia since its establishment as the 26th national organization of the WWF network in 1997.

About Sustainable Tuna Partnership

Sustainable Tuna Project 2, more commonly known as STP 2, is a WWF project that succeeds the efforts of STP 1 and the Partnership Program Toward Sustainable Tuna.

Its efforts are aimed to promote tuna sustainability by empowering small-scale yellowfin tuna fishers and improving tuna fisheries management in Bicol and Occidental Mindoro. Learn more about the key outcomes of STP 2 here.