Dr. Deogracias V. Villadolid: Father of Fisheries Education in the Philippines
By
Melchor F. Cichon
Otolith, January-March 1996, p. 13
Many
UPV constituents were surprised when former Chancellor Francisco
Nemenzo approved the naming of the present Administration Building of
the College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences, University of the
Philippines in the Visayas, in Miag-ao, Iloilo to DR. DEOGRACIAS V.
VILLADOLID HALL. They were surprised because it was the first time that
they ever heard about this man.
Who is Dr. Deogracias V. Villadolid? Why honor him?
Villadolid
is not known among non-fisheries graduates. However, those who have
been trained in fisheries know him especially in relation to the early
beginnings of fishery science and fisheries education in the
Philippines.
It was Villadolid who introduced tilapia in the
Philippines in 1950 when he was Director of the Bureau of Fisheries. He
also initiated fisheries education in the country. For this reason, he
is known as the Father of Fisheries Education in the Philippines.
From
his humble beginnings in Nasugbu, Batangas, Villadolid rose to become
the most respected Filipino fisheries scientists in his time. In fact,
he is also known as the Dean of Philippine fisheries. He studied
agriculture at the U.P. College of Agriculture (UPCA), now the College
of Agriculture, University of the Philippines at Los Baños, Laguna. He
earned three degrees from UPCA: Bachelor of Agriculture in 1919,
Bachelor of Science in Agriculture in 1923, and Master of Science in
Agriculture in 1923.
From UPCA, he proceeded to Stanford
University in Palo Alto, California in the United States of America
where he obtained a Doctor of Philosophy degree, major in marine biology
and minor in aquatic botany in 1927.
Upon his return to the
Philippines, he taught at the UPCA. It was there where he designed a
course of instruction on limnology, biology of aquatic fauna and flora,
particularly fishes, phycology and a general fisheries program. This
course was incorporated in the College of Agriculture program. It was
also at this time when Villadolid trained UPCA students on the mechanics
of fishery science.
From UPCA, he transferred to the newly
organized Fish and Game Administration of the Department of Agriculture
where he worked with the world famous ichthyologist, Dr. Albert Herre.
(the latter was the man who discovered the smallest fish in the world,
Pandaca pygmea, which was then found at the Dagat-Dagatan lagoon in
Malabon, Metro Manila. Thanks to the development projects of our
government and to the pollution contributed by our people so that the
lagoon and this Philippine pride are now gone. But you can still see the
preserved form of this very rare species at the UPV Museum of Natural
Science in Miag-ao, Iloilo)
Villadolid then served as Director of
the Bureau of Fisheries and continued to do so even during the Japanese
occupation. After the war, he spearheaded the establishment of the
first fisheries school in the Philippines, the Philippine Institute of
Fisheries Technology (PIFT) in 1946. The school, then located in
Navotas, Port Area, Manila, attracted students not only from the
Philippines but also from Thailand, Burma, Indonesia, Vietnam, India and
Pakistan. The said Institute was transferred from the Bureau of
Fisheries, Department of Agriculture and Natural Resources in January
1957 to the University of the Philippines through Republic Act 997 or
the Reorganization Act. This law was approved by the Philippine
President Ramon Magsaysay. (It was in this school where Dr. Rogelio O.
Juliano, the former Chancellor of the UPV received his Certificate in
Fisheries in 1952). This school stayed in Port area, Manila until 1962.
On April 10, 1958, the PIFT was reorganized by the UP Board of Regents
and became the UP College of Fisheries. This pioneering school became
the forerunner of more than 50 fisheries schools in the country today.
It
was during his stint in the Bureau of Fisheries where Villadolid
produced about 150 articles on fisheries research, most of which are
pioneering researches on Philippine fisheries. In fact, the proceedings
of the D.V. Villadolid symposium held on March 22, 1966 and sponsored by
the National Research Council of the Philippines, the Philippines
Fisheries Commission and the U.P. College of Fisheries, listed 146 works
authored by Villadolid which also included those done in collaboration
with other Filipino fisheries scientists.
During his term as
Director of the Bureau of Fisheries, he succeeded in sending 125
Filipino fisheries pensionadores to the United States of America to
train on deep-sea fishing. He also contributed to fisheries development
in the country by declaring a Fish Conservation week which until today
is being observed every October throughout the country.
Villadolid
was a well-traveled person. He had gone to several countries like
Washington, D.C. in the U.S.A., Japan and Denmark as a Philippine
delegate to many international conferences and meetings or a
vice-chairman and later as chairman of the Indo-Pacific Fisheries
Council (IPFC). He was also a member of several professional and honor
societies like Phi Kappa Phi, Sigma XI, and the National Research
Council of the Philippines.
For his distinguished achievements
and services for the development of fisheries in the Philippines and in
the region, Villadolid received awards from local and international
organizations. Two of these awards were the Distinguished Science Star
medal and Diploma of Honor as a Philippine Presidential Awardee in
Science in 1954. He also received the Dr. Shinkishi Hatai Medal in
Tokyo, Japan when he was a special Guest of the 11th Pacific Science
Congress in Tokyo, Japan. This award is bestowed to scientists with the
most remarkable contributions to marine biology in the Pacific area.
Villadolid was the first Filipino to receive such an honor.
He
retired from government service on March 22, 1961 on his 65th birthday.
During his retirement, he served as the Vice-President of Araneta
University and as Dean of the Institute of Graduate Studies and Applied
Research in the same university until his 70th birthday in 1966.
Indeed,
Dr. Deogracias Villamin Villadolid served as a guiding star to numerous
Filipino fisheries scientists for many years and even long after he
died at the age of 80 in 1976.
Dr. Juan Salcedo, Jr., then
Chairman of the National Research Council of the Philippines, describes
the Father of Philippine Fisheries Education as: “One of the country’s
outstanding biologists, Dr. Deogracias V. Villadolid devoted the last
years of his life to the advancement of research in fisheries in the
Philippines and in the Indo-Pacific area. He contributed a great deal to
the sustained study and interest in the biology of fishes, especially
cultivation and conservation as well as to the promotion of the fishery
industry.”
I have great respect and admiration to Dr Deogracias Villadolid; he was my critic in graduate research at Araneta U and immediate supervisor at the Lyceum of the Philippines as a professor. His achievements in biology particularly in fisheries can never be equaled - because he set the very foundation of this field in the Philippines as well as in other countries. A review of Dr Villadolid's works would be a very good idea, I'm very sure many are as relevant as they were then, when this great man was still alive. - Dr Abe V Rotor [avrotor.blogspot.com]. .
ReplyDeleteArtemio Galvez, July 23, 2019
ReplyDeleteI was the Jr.author and Dr Villadolid was the Senior author of the laboratory manual and guide in Gen. Zoology used by Araneta University Student from 1956 to 1962, and Dr.Villadolid was the Dean of the Institute of Science and faculty of the graduate school of Araneta University. I was the Jr.author and laboratory instructor in general zoology. I left Araneta University in 1962 to joined Phil.Sugar Institute.