Title: culture of milk fish
1A seminar on CULTURE OF MILK FISH
2Contents
- INTRODUCTION
- TAXONOMIC POSITION
- GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION
- DESCRIBTION, HABIT HABITAT
- FRY COLLECTION
- REARING OF FRY
- TYPES OF CULTURE
- GROW-OUT CULTURE
- HARVESTING
- SUMMERY
- CONCLUSION
- REFERENCES.
3Introduction
- Milkfish aquaculture first occurred around 800
years ago in the Philippines and spread in
Indonesia, Taiwan and into the Pacific.
Traditional milkfish aquaculture relied upon
restocking ponds by collecting wild fry. The
milkfish (Chanos chanos) is the sole living
species in the family Chanidae. - Milkfish, being a euryhaline fish, can grow in
any clean water environment salinity is not a
requirement when growing this fish. However,
transferring from saline water to freshwater
should be done gradually in a process of
acclimatization.
4 TAXONOMIC POSITION
- Phylum - Chordata
- Subphylum - Vertebrata
- Class - Osteicthyes
- Order - Gonorhynchiformes
- Family - Chanidae
- Genus - Chanos
- Species - Chanos chanos
5GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION
- Milkfish, Chanos chanos, is one of the two most
important species being cultured in Asia, the
other being carp. - It is distributed throughout the entire tropical
Indo-Pacific Ocean, from 40 E to about 100 W
and 30 to 40 N to 30 to 40 S. - It can tolerate wide ranges of salinity and
temperature fluctuations. - The Philippines, Indonesia and Taiwan are the
center of geographic distribution. - Their distribution coincides with coral reef
areas where the water is warm (more than 20C),
clear and shallow.
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7Description
- Milkfish have a generally symmetrical and
streamlined appearance, with a sizable forked
caudal fin. - They can grow to 1.70Â metres but are most often
about 1Â metre in length. - They have no teeth and generally feed on algae
and invertebrates.
Habit Habitat
Milkfish is a large, long-live species
, and its habitat, behaviour, and food habits
changes with size and stage in the life cycle.
Essentially marine fish of the Indian and
across the Pacific Ocean , tending to school
around coasts and islands with reefs.
8Contd.
- Adult spawn at sea , the young fry live at sea
for two to three weeks and then migrate to
mangrove swamps, estuaries, and sometimes lakes
and return to sea to mature sexually and
reproduce. - Highly euryhaline and can live in fresh to
hyper-saline waters and can tolerate low oxygen
level. - They become sluggish lt 20C and mortality occurs
at 12C.
9Culture system
- Common culture system Brackish water coastal
pond farms. - Farm may include Nurseries, rearing and
wintering ( where fingerlings have to be
over-wintered). - Mono culture Fresh water ponds and reservoirs,
Pen culture in fresh water lakes in Philippines. - Poly culture Brackish water ponds ( tidal),
farming with grey mullets, shrimps and sea bass.
10 FRY COLLECTION
- Wild fry was the major source for milkfish
culture until recent success in natural spawning
and mass larval rearing in several milkfish
farms. - Milk fish dont mature and spawn naturally in
confined waters. They seem to spawn in the sea
near the coast and the small larvae (12-15 mm)
occur periodically along the sandy coasts and
in the estuaries. - The instability of wild-fry supplies is an
obvious problem for the culture of any aquatic
species and milkfish is no exception. - So farmers produce millions of hatchery fry for
culture every year.
11METHOD OF FRY COLLECTION
- Fry collection methods of Southeast Asia carried
out using fishing gear, such as fry barriers in
Indonesia and the Philippines, filter bag nets in
most of the fry-producing countries, seine nets
in Sri Lanka and the Philippines. The selection
of fishing gear is based on the topography of
fishing ground and ocean currents. - It is important to realize that driving the fry
into the net, rather than filtering them through
it, results in higher survival.
12Collection of milkfish fry using a push net
13Seed production (induced breeding)
- Attempts have been made to develop milk fish
hatchery to meet the increasing demands. - Sexes can be distinguished by external
characteristics. Three openings in the
urinogenital (anal) region of mature female
milkfish. - Sexually mature males possess only two openings.
- Mature female collected from sea can be induced
to spawn using gonadotropin-releasing hormone
analogue (GnRH-A). - Fecundity estimates of 0.3 to 1 million eggs per
kg body weight. - Survival rates under experimental condition
varies between 9-47. - A newly-hatched milkfish larvae measures 3.5 mm
total length.
14Rearing of fry
- Fry can be introduced into rearing ponds after a
brief period of acclimatization in small nursery
ponds of about 1000 to 4000 sq mt. - Many farmers have adopted the practice of raising
mainly planktonic organisms as food for milkfish
fry. - Deep ponds are used for better growth of
phytoplankton and zooplankton organisms. - Pond-reared milkfish feed mainly on either lablab
(a complex mat of bluegreen algae, diatoms and
associated invertebrates) or lumut (mainly
filamentous green algae).
Lablab
Lumut
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16 PEN CULTURE
- This system was introduced in the Philippines in
1979 in the Laguna Lake. At that time, the lake
had a very high primary productivity, which met
the nutritional needs of milkfish , because of
the low rate of input and the high rate of
return. - As the primary production of the lake could not
meet this sudden expansion of aquaculture, and
feeding became necessary to meet the nutritional
requirements of the cultured fish, the pen
culture practices developed in lakes later
introduced into inter-tidal areas in the
Philippines river, estuaries as well. - Pen operators stock fingerlings at
30,000-35,000/ha and provide supplemental
commercial diets. However, disease spreads among
culture pens and causes mass mortality.
17CAGE CULTURE
- Fish cages are smaller and more restricted
enclosures that can be staked in shallow waters
or set-up in deep water with appropriate floats
and anchors. - Cage farming of milkfish is commonly carried out
in marine waters along coastal bays. - Stocking rates are quite high, from 5 up to 30/m³
18Pond culture
- Culture of milkfish in ponds may be in shallow or
deep water systems - SHALLOW WATER CULTURE
- Shallow water culture is practiced mainly in
Indonesia and Philippines. - Milkfish are traditionally cultured in shallow
water. - Brackish water ponds in which the growth of
benthic algae is encouraged through inorganic or
organic fertilization.
19 DEEP WATER CULTURE
- Deep water culture was developed in the mid 1970s
in response to the decline of profitability of
shallow water culture, and the limited and
increasing value of land and manpower resources. - Most deep-water milkfish ponds have been created
by converting either shallow water ponds or
freshwater ponds, with a depth of 2-3 m. - They so far have shown less susceptibility to
disease than shallow ponds. - Production from these systems has sharply
increased.
20 PREPARATION OF THE PONDS
- The preparation of the ponds starts about two
months before the fry are introduced. - Construction and setting up of the inner wooden
gates in the catching ponds. - Repairing of the dikes facing the main canal.
- Poisoning of the ponds in order to avoid unwanted
species. - The pond bottom is leveled in such a way that it
slopes gradually towards the deepest portion of
the pond at the sluice gate.
21Contd.
- The pond is then dried and exposed to the sun for
2 or 3 days. - Pests and predators that reduce milkfish
production, are eliminated or controlled either
by- - a) mechanical or b) chemical methods.
- Lime is applied to ponds to make the soil pH
neutral or alkaline.
22PREPARATION OF POND
23Natural food production
- Three types of natural food are produced in
brackish water ponds, namely lablab, lumut and
plankton. - Lablab production
- Lablab is a complex of minute plants and animals
occurring initially on the pond bottom as a
brownish, greenish or yellowish film. - It grows well during the dry months in ponds with
hard bottoms and salinities ranging from 25 to 35
ppt.
24Contd.
- In order to produce lablab, chicken manure is
scattered, at a rate of 2 tonnes per ha, over
previously dried ponds from one to four years old
. - Sufficient water is then admitted to barely cover
the pond bottom. - Fish production in ponds with lablab ranges from
1.5 to 3 tonnes per ha per year.
Lablab
25Lumut production
- Filamentous green algae or lumut of the species
Chaetomorpha linum, Cladophora sp. grow well
during rainy seasons in ponds with soft bottoms.
Since lumut is poorly digested by milkfish fry
and fingerlings it is usually allowed to
decompose or dry before it is fed to milkfish. - Lumut is produced in the same manner as lablab
but the water depth ranges from 40 to 60 cm.
Excessive growth of lumut is undesirable because
it competes with milkfish for living space. Fish
production in ponds with lumut ranges from 0.2 to
0.5 tonnes per ha per year.
26 PLANKTON PRODUCTION
- To produce plankton, 70 to 100 cm of water is
admitted to a previously drained and well
prepared pond. - Fertilizer is added while or after admitting
water to the pond. Plankton blooms, characterized
by the greening of pond water, occur within one
or two weeks. When plankton blooms, the Secchi
disc visibility is from 15 to 40 cm. - Fish production in ponds with plankton ranges
from 1.5 to 3 tonnes per ha per year.
27 STOCKING PRACTICES
- In the traditional pond system
- a) Nursery ponds with abundant lablab are
stocked _at_ 30 to 50 fry per m2 - b) In transition ponds _at_ 10 to 15 fingerlings
per m2. - c) Rearing ponds with lablab, fry stocked _at_
1,500 to 3,000 fingerlings per ha and - d) Ponds with plankton, fingerlings are
stocked _at_ 3,000 to 5,000 per ha.
28 GROW-OUT CULTURE
- There are three cropping systems practiced in the
Philippines the straight culture, the
progression and the modular methods. - In the straight culture method, the fingerlings
are stocked and reared to marketable size in one
rearing pond for two to four months. - In the progression method, fingerlings are reared
to marketable size in two different ponds
fingerlings to post-fingerlings in one pond and
post-fingerlings to marketable size in another.
29Contd.
- An improvement of the progression method is the
modular method. The fish are reared successively
in three different ponds connected to one another
and with progressively increasing areas in a
124 or 139 ratio. - The stock is reared for 45 days in the first pond
and subsequently transferred to the second and
third ponds. The vacated pond is immediately
prepared for the next stock.
30Production cycle
31 HARVEST
- The most commonly used method for harvesting
milkfish that have reached marketable size is the
water current method. - This method takes advantage of the tendency of
the fish to swim against the current. - The method is carried out by draining water in
the pond to induce fish to swim through the gate.
- The gate is then closed when all the fish have
been compounded. - Harvesting can also be done by the use of seine
nets and gill net.
32Harvesting of milkfish using a seine
33Milk Fish Culture flow chart
34Global aquaculture production of Chanos chanos
- Global annual aquaculture production of milkfish
has increased every year since 1997 by 2005 it
had risen to nearly 5,95000 tonnes. The most
important producers at this time were the
Philippines (289Â 000 tonnes), Indonesia (254 000
tonnes) and Taiwan Province of China (50Â 000
tonnes).
35Summery
- Milkfish (Chanos chanos) is one of the most
important food fish species in the world. In
Indonesia, Taiwan and the Philippines, more than
a quarter of a million tonnes of milkfish are
harvested annually in brackish water ponds
contributing roughly 60 of the total fish
production from aquaculture in South-East Asia. - Milk fish fry is collected from wild source until
recent success in natural spawning and mass
larval rearing in several milkfish farms. Milk
fish culture is done in mainly three culture
method pen culture , cage culture and pond
culture. After becoming table size the fishes are
harvested using water current method and also
seine net , gill net. - The demand of milk fish is increased day by day
due to its high market value and high production
rate.
36CONCLUSION
- Milkfish farming in Indonesia, Taiwan and the
Philippines started about 4-6 centuries ago.
Culture methods in a variety of enclosures are
constantly being improved upon. - But even in the present days the culture of milk
fish in India is based on traditional extensive
culture whereas in the other countries it is far
advanced. - Fish farmers also faces the problems of disease
and fry feeding. - In recent years the possibility of using
milkfish juveniles as bait for tuna long lining
has started to be investigated, opening up new
markets for fry hatcheries.
37References
- www.fao.org
- www.wikipedia.com
- www.fishbase.org
- Aquaculture principles and practices T.V.R
Pillay M.N. Kutty
38THANK YOU