(First of two parts) MANILA, Philippines — For generations, Filipino fishers measured abundance by instinct: the weight of a net, the distance they had to travel, the hours it took before a boat came home full. Long before scientists put numbers to it, many already knew something was wrong. Now, data is catching up. A new report by international conservation group Oceana found that Philippine capture fisheries have been losing an average of 45,472 metric tons — roughly 45 million kilos — of fish each year since 2010, despite the passage of a stronger fisheries law in 2015. That amounts […]... Keep on reading: Why Philippine fisheries keep losing 45 million kilos of fish a year