Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
PRINCIPLES OF AQUACULTURE (AKU3201) Other aquaculture systems 1 Method of culture • • • • • Ponds Cages Raceway Recirculating Others – tanks, strings, rack, pisciponic 2 3 4 Cages • Floating or submerged units • Placed in open water i.e., lake, reservoir, river, estuary, open ocean • Netting to hold fish • Fed with pellet 5 Floating Cages 6 Cages 7 Frame • Hold net • Stainless steel • Floatation devices 8 Netting • Polyethlyene, polyester wire nylon • Net size < Fish size 9 • • • • Depth: 1 – 2 m Freeboard: 15-30 cm Weightage at every side Metal frame 10 Submerged cages 11 Cages Advantages • Continuous flow of clean/new water • Easy harvesting • Different species in different cages • Waste, excessive feed are not accumulated in the culture system • Stocking rate can be regulated easily 12 Cages Disadvantages • Changes in environmental surroundings & water quality • Noxious algal bloom • Slower species growth compared to pond culture • Frequent net cleaning • Disease problem • Climate problem • Theft 13 Requirement • • • • Non-polluted area Protected/sheltered area Low drastic salinity change Small waves (except cage in deep sea areas) 14 15 16 RAS • RAS= Recirculating aquaculture systems • Water is processed to restore water quality • Recycle back to the culture tank 17 Suitable when: 1) Land or water is limited 2) Natural water is of poor quality 3) Ambient temperatures for cultured spp. are outside the range 18 19 RAS 20 21 22 • Biofilter - Substrate on which aerobic bacteria will grow - Bacteria change the form of nitrogen from toxic to non-toxic form - Toxic = Ammonia (NH3) - NH3 -> NO2 (Nitrosomonas) - NO2 -> NO3 (Nitrobacter) 23 24 25 Flow-through • Water continuously flow 26 Raceway • Water continuously flow 27 Strings • Semi-controlled • Boat & strings/rope • Marine 28 String/line • Bivalve & seaweed 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 Pisciponic 36 Pisciponic • Culture synergy of fish & plant • Maximum use of water, soil, space & increase production & income • Reduce nutrient need 75-100% • Minimum aquaculture waste • Japanese salad, kailan, tomato • Baung, keli, tilapia • Tilapia the best 37 38 39 Stake • Semi controlled & marine • Clams/abalone/oysters 40 Tray/Raft • Semi-controlled & marine • Bivalve (oyster/clams) 41 42 43 Bottom culture Pen (Crab) • Introduced by Jabatan Pertanian Sarawak • Application – SEA & Australia • Cage constructed in mangrove area • Minimum cutting (20%) & sustain forest area • Ketam nipah Scylla serrata, S. olivacea, S. tranquebarica 45 Sea Ranching • Selection of wild broodstock & artificial production of juveniles which are released into the natural environment then harvest • Semi-controlled • Species: Salmon, lobster 46 Seacage cultivator • Combination of raft, line and cage • Facility: – Wave resistant – Ease of handling – Production per area is high • Semi control • Commercial species: abalone, sea cucumber 47 Bioreactor • Culture of microalga for health product and live feed for fish, crustacean and molluscan larvae • Chlorella, Spirullina 48 IMTA • Integrated multi-trophic aquaculture • Integration between seaweed and other aquatic organisms Backyard hatchery 49 50 Backyard hatchery-RAS 51 52 • • • • • Key attributes of a successful aquaculture business include: Fish farming experience (animal husbandry); Market knowledge; Understanding of species site selection requirements; Appropriate system design; and Business management experience.