Impact of small indigenous species of fish (SIS) on livelihood of local fishing community in two upazilas of Mymensingh


Autoria(s): Hoq, M.E.; Kohinoor, A.H.M.
Data(s)

2005

Resumo

The fisher folk used to catch small indigenous species of fish (SIS) from rivers, canals, wetlands and floodplains at little or no cost for their livelihood. Surplus fish was sold at the local market to generate some little capital for the households. The livelihood and consumption of SIS in fishing community of two upazilas viz. Trisal and Ishwarganj under Mymensingh district were studied for 3 months in 2004. Most of the fisher folk of the study areas belong to resource-poor section of the society living below the poverty level. Majority of them had no cultivable land. As professional fishers they face many problems during lean fishing period from January to April due to little or non-availability of fish. Majority of the fisher households consumed SIS three to four days a week. The fisher households of Trisal upazila consumed more small fish than those of Ishwargonj upazila. More than 50% respondents consumed <20 g SIS/day and 20% consumed >40 g SIS/day in Trisal upazila. On the other hand, in Ishwargonj upzila, most of the fisher households (66%) were found to consume <20 g SIS/day. SIS was mostly available from July-December in rivers, wetlands (beels), and canals, and income from fishing was reported to be good. The dominant SIS was Puntius spp., Mystus spp., Anabas testudineus, catfishes, mola, and small prawns. Non-indigenous species like tilapia was also dominant in Trisal upzila where aquaculture practices were well established.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/18007/1/BJFR9.1_101.pdf

Hoq, M.E. and Kohinoor, A.H.M. (2005) Impact of small indigenous species of fish (SIS) on livelihood of local fishing community in two upazilas of Mymensingh. Bangladesh Journal of Fisheries Research, 9(1), pp. 101-102.

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/18007/

Palavras-Chave #Aquaculture #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

NonPeerReviewed