Yahoo – AFP, Shannon Teoh, 19 Aug 2014
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Fish
listener Harun Muhammad clings onto his fishing boat at sea near
Setiu lagoons
on June 8, 2014 (AFP Photo/Manan Vatsyayana)
|
One hand
clinging to his boat's gunwale, Harun Muhammad submerges himself, eyes and ears
wide open underwater as he "listens" for fish sounds emanating from
the blue depths.
Harun is
one of Malaysia's last "fish listeners," and he and his apprentice
son Zuraini are believed to be the only active practitioners of this mysterious
and dying local art.
"When
you listen, it is like through a looking glass -- you can see mackerel, sardine,"
said Harun, 68, who has fished the Setiu lagoons on Malaysia's rural east coast
his whole life.
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Fish
listener Harun Muhammad clings onto
his fishing boat at sea near Setiu lagoons
on June 8, 2014 (AFP Photo/Manan
Vatsyayana)
|
Other fish
listeners have passed away, retired or turned to modern fish-detection
technology as the traditional practice has retreated in the face of dwindling
catches and proliferating undersea noise.
Studies
show Malaysian waters lost 92 percent of fishery resources between 1971 to 2007
due to overfishing.
"You
can't copy our technique. You must gain the skill and learn the lay of the
waters," said Harun.
"The
wholesalers tell me, 'if you're gone, there will be no more gelama',"
which fetches up to 10 times the price of similarly sized fish.
Sounds
fishy
"Pak
Harun", as he is known locally -- "Pak" is a Malay honorific
similar to "Uncle" -- finds it hard to describe exactly how fish
sound, but likens it to pebbles being dropped into water.
"They
have a voice. This sound is this fish, that sound is another. When someone is new,
they can't tell one fish song from another."
Harun and
his crew of a dozen can go nearly a week without hearing gelama -- which
invites scepticism about the claimed fish-listening ability.
But experts
in sonifery (fish sounds) say sailors have long heard sounds of whales and fish
through boat hulls.
"Scuba
divers often do not hear anything because their breathing and bubble exhaust
makes so much noise. However free divers, or divers using quiet re-breathers,
can hear much better," said US-based marine ecologist Rodney Rountree.
Former fish
listeners describe a range of techniques. Some claim they can feel changes in
water temperature.
![]() |
Fish
listener Harun Muhammad (L) mans his fishing boat at sea near Setiu
lagoons
with his son Zuraini on June 8, 2014 (AFP Photo/Manan Vatsyayana)
|
For Harun,
it is a multi-sensory experience requiring eyes wide open.
"After
a while, it is as if you can see. Even though the fish is very far, you can
sense it in that direction and you go there. Only when you get close, you can
hear the fish clearly," he said.
Though he
sports a slight paunch on his sun-darkened frame under a spiky white head of
hair, Harun remains sprightly despite his years, deftly clambering in and out
of his boat in search of fish sounds.
Once he
pinpoints a school of gelama, his crew -- who have hung back with engines off
-- motor forward, drop their nets and strike the sides of their boats to spook
the fish into the mesh trap.
"You
think it's just stupid fish but they can see you coming. When they hear the
sound of the boat, they run. The fish cry or shout and then their friends swim
away," he said.
Listening
in vain
Landing a
rich catch was easy when stocks were abundant, Harun said.
But after
decades of overfishing, he now "listens" up to several dozen times
under the scorching equatorial sun before catching a snippet of gelama song.
Modernisation,
including sand dredging, aquaculture, factories and fishing trawlers have
transformed the Setiu wetlands, a rich but threatened coastal ecosystem
centering on a 14-kilometre (9 mile) long lagoon along the South China Sea.
The state
of Terengganu is seeking to make it a protected park.
But Harun's
catch is increasingly unpredictable, averaging about $2,000 per week gross,
leaving little left over after all crew are paid, and fuel, maintenance, and
other costs are deducted.
![]() |
Fish
listener Harun Muhammad (L) mans
his fishing boat at sea near Setiu lagoons
with his son Zuraini on June 8, 2014 (AFP
Photo/Manan Vatsyayana)
|
Malaysia
ranks among the top consumers of seafood in the world.
Intergovernmental
industry researchers Infofish say Malaysians eat an average of 56.5 kilogrammes
of seafood per person annually, more even than Japanese.
The global
average is 20 kilos.
WWF-Malaysia
chief Dionysius Sharma said overfishing threatens to leave Malaysian waters
"vast and barren".
The
organisation warns Malaysia's waters could run out of seafood by 2048.
Despite the
long odds, Zuraini, 44, said someday he will train one of his own sons.
"I
don't want to see this practice die off," he said.




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