Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Advanced Aquaculture of Carps and Tilapia – Ponds and Cages Kevin Fitzsimmons, John Woiwode, R.S.N. Janjua ASA SoyPak Multan, Punjab, Pakistan 14 March.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Advanced Aquaculture of Carps and Tilapia – Ponds and Cages Kevin Fitzsimmons, John Woiwode, R.S.N. Janjua ASA SoyPak Multan, Punjab, Pakistan 14 March."— Presentation transcript:

1 Advanced Aquaculture of Carps and Tilapia – Ponds and Cages Kevin Fitzsimmons, John Woiwode, R.S.N. Janjua ASA SoyPak Multan, Punjab, Pakistan 14 March 2012

2 Carp and Tilapia Carps are most important farmed food fish and tilapia are second. Global demand, variety of production systems and geographic regions, some vertically integrated Environmentally sustainable – “Green Aquaculture” (no fish meal required in the diet, no antibiotics, many farms use effluents for crops)

3 Subsistence and Export Commodity Tilapia is unique in its role as a small livestock animal grown by subsistence farmers in developing countries around the world….. And It is widely grown and exported to high value markets to be served in expensive restaurants and grocery stores Commodity or specialty crop - BOTH, like chicken

4

5 US Tilapia consumption (imports and domestic) 368,295 mt of live weight (equivalent) – 2006 437,000 mt of live weight (equivalent) - 2007 453,264 mt of live weight (equivalent) – 2008 465,953 mt of live weight (equivalent – 2009) 579,443 mt of live weight (equivalent – 2010)

6 Genetic improvements in tilapia (From: Mair, G., 2002)

7 Selective breeding and genetic improvements Excellent breeding programs - G.I.F.T. - Malaysia - Genomar - Brazil and Norway - Chitralada – Thailand - TabTim – Thailand (CP Group) - GIFT Excell – Philippines - Molobicus - Philippines - GIFT Bangladesh Several in Mexico YY Supermale - Philippines and Swansea, Egypt and Indonesia

8 Carp and tilapia in ponds F Extensive ponds

9 Semi-intensive ponds

10 Multiple small cages Taal Lake, Philippines Irrigation Reservoir, Arizona Paulo Afonso Reservoir, Brasil

11 Other small cages Nile Delta, Egypt All tilapia farms have dogs, even cage farms Shrimp Pond, Philippines Shrimp Pond, Thailand

12 Large cage farms

13

14 Pond culture to cotton irrigation

15 Fish and citrus in Hainan, China

16 Integration of aquaculture and agriculture F Water pH reduced from 8.3 to 8.0 F Added 19.7 kg/ha N to 45 kg/ha used in standard fertilization schedule of cotton.

17 Results - Integration of aquaculture and agriculture F Contributed 2.6 kg/ha P to cotton crop.

18 Plant height with Fish Effluent, Standard Fertilizer and Well Water

19 Fish Nutrition and Feeds

20 Contents F Nutrition F Pond Fertilization and Natural Feeds F Ingredients and Formulations F Manufacture and Preparation F Storage, Handling, and Feeding Methods

21 Nutrition and feeding behaviours F Tilapia are omnivores (eat lots of things) F Carps are more specialized F Both capable of consuming decaying vegetable matter F Long intestines F Filter feeders (algae, bacteria, plankton) when young F Need protein and balanced nutrition for rapid growth F Maybe more cost effective to settle for moderate growth

22 Feeding strategy F Juvenile fish are especially good at filter feeding phytoplankton. F Many hatcheries utilize greenwater culture F Juveniles also filter feed on small zooplankters (especially crustaceans) F Save money on juvenile feeds by partial nutrition from natural feed in juvenile ponds and tanks

23 Nutrition decisions F Natural herbivores and detritivores. F Opportunistic feeders grazing on algae and bacteria in production system. F Fry and fingerlings need high protein (50-40%) diet F Growout needs lower protein (32-28%) diet F “Organic” diets may be needed for “organic” buyers F Compare FCR to decide most efficient diet

24 Minimize fish meal in diet F Use more soybean meal F Utilize other grains treated with phytase F Increase use of other by-product meals (meat and bone, blood, feather, poultry by- product, brewers waste, etc.) F Examine other locally available ingredients (rice bran, cotton cake, canola, sunflower seed meal, etc)

25

26

27 F Long convoluted intestine. F Digests complex organic matter F Fry are filter feeders F Adults are grazers Carp and Tilapia Biology

28 Proteins F Need balanced set of amino acids. Basic building blocks of proteins (and muscles) F Ten essential amino acids (required) several more are supplemental

29 Lipids F Lipids are basically fats. F Fish need a variety of long chain hydrocarbon fatty acids for proper growth F Will also bio-accumulate lipids from consumed algae

30 Carbohydrates F Needed for metabolic energy F Carbohydrates are polymers of sugar. F Common ingredients are corn, sorghum, rice F Molasses is mostly sugar and water. Does not supply as much energy as equal mass of lipid (fat)

31 Fiber F Less digestible material to help move material though the intestines. F Helps with micronutrients

32 Vitamins and minerals F Commonly supplied in “premix” F Often available in natural production of ponds. F Not critical for most semi-intensive fish farm operations. F Very critical in cage systems

33 Ingredients and formulations F Normally need high protein diets for young F 40-50% F Protein requirements drop as fish reach reproductive age. Lipid demand might increase with egg formation. 30-32% F Growout diets only need 25% protein

34

35

36 Manufacturing and preparations

37 Pellet mill

38 Compression pellet mill F Feed mixed with water to dough consistency F Moistened feed put into hopper, pushed down to auger screw F Auger forces feed through the die head. F Holes in die determine pellet width F Knife blade cuts pellets to desired length

39 Extruders F Floating feeds F Feed mixes with steam in barrel of extruder F Cooks ingredients, improves palatability F Gelatinizes starches F Steam expansion and auger forces feed out of barrel with rapid expansion. F Traps air in pellet, allows to float

40 Meat grinders and pasta mills

41

42 Storage F Always keep feed as dry and cool as possible F Avoids spoilage and rancidity of fats in diet F Bags should be on pallets, off floor to allow air to circulate and slow pests (mice, rats, roaches, ants, from getting to bags F Large amount can be stored in bulk in silos.

43 Handling F Reduce rough handling F Crushed pellets form fines which are not consumed by fish. F Fed by hand, blower, belts

44 Bangladesh tilapia aquaculture

45 Future global tilapia aquaculture

46 Conclusions F Tilapia are omnivores F But eating anything will not make you grow fast and strong F Tilapia need balanced nutrition for rapid growth just like human children

47 Buy TILAPIA Thank you! Questions and discussion?


Download ppt "Advanced Aquaculture of Carps and Tilapia – Ponds and Cages Kevin Fitzsimmons, John Woiwode, R.S.N. Janjua ASA SoyPak Multan, Punjab, Pakistan 14 March."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google