BINI Becomes First Female Group To Headline Both Days Of Aurora Music Festival 2025

Blooms, get ready for an unforgettable weekend as BINI leads the lineup of Aurora Music Festival 2025.

BFAR Breaks Ground On Multispecies Hatchery In Surigao Del Sur

Ang bagong multispecies hatchery sa Surigao del Sur ay isang hakbang pasulong sa pagpapalakas ng sektor ng pangingisda.

Zamboanga City Distributes PHP19 Million Tractors To Boost Farming

Nagbigay ng suporta ang Zamboanga City sa mga magsasaka sa pamamagitan ng mga Japan-made na traktora.

Mati Airport Gets Additional PHP700 Million For Runway, Site Development

Karagdagang pondo na PHP700 milyon magpapalakas sa pagpapagaang ng runway at site development ng Mati Airport.

Reef Balls Enhance Marine Life In Masbate Village

The municipal government of Masbate rehabilitates coral reefs that were destroyed due to dynamite fishing and other illegal fishing activities in the province.
By The Mindanao Life

Reef Balls Enhance Marine Life In Masbate Village

3
3

How do you feel about this story?

Like
Love
Haha
Wow
Sad
Angry

Various species of fish, some turtles, lobsters, and other sea creatures have been observed thriving in the Marine Protected Area (MPA) of Colorada Point in Barangay Tigbao, Aroroy, Masbate.

This was attributed to the deployment of 2,203 reef balls and the planting of 29,273 coral fragments by the Philippine Gold Processing & Refining Corporation (PGPRC) starting in 2017.

In a statement on Monday, Marione Molintas, spokesperson of Filminera Resources Corp. (FRC) and PGPRC, which is its sister company, said the two firms partnered with the municipal government of Aroroy in undertaking the project to rehabilitate coral reefs that were destroyed due to dynamite fishing and other illegal fishing activities.

“A reef ball is an artificial reef designed to mimic the function of a natural reef. It was developed by US-based Reef Ball Foundation to restore ailing or destroyed coral reefs and create new fishing and scuba diving sites,” the statement read.

Molintas noted that reef restoration is critical for the long-term sustainability of the marine ecosystem and the future of local fishermen.

PGPRC hired fisherfolk in the community to become wardens of the MPA and assistants in coral planting and propagation works.

The firm also implemented a goat dispersal project as part of its livelihood support program to the local fishers’ organization.

PGPRC is wholly owned by Vancouver-based gold producer B2Gold. (PNA)