With
the stated decline in migratory fish species in rivers, Madam Adwoa Paintsil,
Acting Executive Secretary of the Water Resources Commission has called for the
restoration, opening, and maintenance of the habitat for fishes by eliminating
barriers to the fish passage as well as improving in-stream, floodplain and mash
conditions.
She
made the appeal during the recent World Fish Migration Day observed in Wa,
Upper West Region, adding that Migratory Fish needed free migration routes in
order to migrate, reproduce, feed, and complete their life cycle.
“The
more people were aware of the huge challenge fishes faced in the world, the
more opportunities we give them”, she noted, adding that once fishes do not
reach their habitat, they cannot produce and maintain their population.
Madam
Paintsil observed that through the integrated water resources management (IWRM)
approach, WRC provides guidelines for the proper utilisation, conservation,
development, and improvement of water resources which helps protect the fishes
in their natural habitat.
She
stressed that removing barriers to fish passage would help recover threatened
and endangered migratory fish and support the sustainability of economically
important commercial and recreational fish.
Likewise, Mr. Ben Yaw
Ampomah, immediate past Executive Secretary of WRC who chaired the Programme, noted
that between 1970 and 2016 the population of migratory freshwater fish species declined by 76% on average.
He added that the
celebration of the World Fish Migration Day gives attention to fishes and ways to help
protect and preserve our rivers and fishes. It also helps raise the needed
awareness as an essential step to make real change for migratory fish species
and the rivers they rely on.
Dr. Hafiz Ben Salih, Upper West Regional Minister in
a keynote address observed that Migratory fish typically travel through rivers
to complete their life cycle, with some swimming more than 10, 000km, adding
that billions of people around the world depend on them for food, sport and
research.
He bemoaned the fact that many migratory fish
species are critically endangered or threatened. Moreover, illegal mining,
farming, and harvesting of firewood within the riparian buffer zones as well as
crude fishing practices were factors contributing to the degradation of the
Volta Basin’s major water resources, especially the Black Volta River.
To this end, the Upper West Regional Coordinating
Director, Mr. Peter Maala Suglo, who represented the Minister, commended the IUCN
for its pioneering efforts, as well as the Swedish
International Development Cooperation for their support, and called on
stakeholders to forge a closer collaboration that will ensure the protection of
the water resources and the fishes.
As part of the occasion, there was a site
visit to acquaint dignitaries with fish culture in a part of Wa.