Archive for March, 2010

Smelly fish skin once tossed away or sold to street vendors for cheap food has become a highly desirable product used to make designer handbags, shoes and even bikinis. Thai entrepreneurs have developed a way of processing skins of the tropical tilapia fish to make durable leather. “We tried to make something that was worth nothing into something valuable,” said Anchali Chatrakul Na Ayudyha, a businesswoman who sells tilapia skin goods on her Web site, www.angieandpenny.com.

The fish-skin bikini was unveiled at a Bangkok fashion show last month and its makers are hoping for orders from Europe and the United States for the unique product.

“It’s comfortable. The bikini can really breathe,” said Sudarat Sae-lim, modelling the scaly, cobalt-blue two-piece. “I like that it’s waterproof, it means it can dry more easily.”

Fish sellers in Petchaburi, 120 km southwest of Bangkok, used to sell the tilapia skins for just a few cents per kilo to street vendors who would fry them up as a cheap snack.

Now each skin fetches around $1.25, and is dried, treated and dyed to make products from key-rings to couches. One bikini needs 15 fish skins to make, and will go on sale for $75.

Turtles

A Chinese poaching vessel has been apprehended by units of the Philippine Navy, Marines and Coast Guard in the Sulu Archipelago. A routine inspection by the boarding crew revealed rows of sea turtles – dead, gutted and left to dry on deck. The official count was 50 dried, 58 freshly-gutted and 18 still-living turtles, mostly green sea turtles – classified internationally as endangered by the IUCN and one of the flagship species that WWF-Philippines. 19 Chinese fishermen were arrested onboard the craft.

It is believed that the crew had been trying to ditch the carcasses to hide the evidence; the Protected Areas and Wildlife Bureau’s (PAWB) believe that they probably had more than 200 adult turtles and over 10,000 eggs. A pair of live pelagic thresher sharks (Alopias pelagicus), classified by the IUCN as vulnerable, were also found in the vessel’s holding tanks. WWF lauds the efforts of all those who brought these pirates a step closer to justice.Nine surviving turtles, seven male and two female, were released shortly after the boat was detained. The craft, along with its 19 crewmen, are currently detained in Bongao port.

The Chinese crew have now been charged with violating the Philippine Wildlife Conservation and Protection Act – penalties for which can incur a fine of up to one million pesos, coupled with a six-year jail term. Amidst fears that justice might be elusive, WWF, the global conservation organization, is acting as a watchdog to ensure that these charges push through – to bring the accused to justice.