Title: Introducing Florida Aquaculture
1(No Transcript)
2Introducing Florida Aquaculture
State Agricultural Response Team
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3Introducing Florida Aquaculture
Kathleen Hartman, D.V.M., Ph.D. Aquaculture
Epidemiologist, USDA-APHIS-VS Denise Petty,
D.V.M. Assistant Professor, LACS, CVM, UF
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State Agricultural Response Team
4Acknowledgements
- Craig Watson
- Tropical Aquaculture Laboratory,
- University of Florida
- Florida Tropical Fish Farms Association
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State Agricultural Response Team
5Learning Objectives
- Describe why aquaculture is a viable industry in
Florida - List and discuss characteristics of Florida
aquaculture relating to water use, farm size,
commodities and commodity value - Discuss United States aquaculture imports,
exports and market flows - Name the collaborating agencies involved with the
national and state aquatic animal health plans
and describe their collaborative roles - Identify key resources that participants can
easily access for more information
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State Agricultural Response Team
6Production and Collection
Freshwater Production Freshwater
Collection Marine Collection
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7Why Florida?
- Resources are
- here!
- Infrastructure
- Climate
- Water
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8Tropical Fish Farms in Florida
Freeze-line
Orlando
Tampa
Above the freeze-line, heating is required
Miami
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9Aquaculture Land Use
- 160 farms with sales
- 7-8 ponds per acre of land
- 131.1 acres of water
- Average 1.2 acres of water per farm
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10Water Use
- Ponds
- Small (100,000-300,000 liters/pond)
- Mostly self-filling, water table pond
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11Water Use
- Recirculating Systems
- Reuse system
- Require filtration
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12Florida Freshwater Ornamental Production
- Produced in tanks and ponds
- Over 800 varieties in production
- Livebearer and egg-layer categories
- Many compete with wild-caught equivalents
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13Florida Saltwater Ornamental Production
Limited to 2 dozen species, all with strong
parental care, and small spawn size
Requires controlled, indoor facilities except for
live rock
Competes head-on with wild caught specimens
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14Ornamental Invertebrate Culture
- Live Rock still dominates
- Value Added Live Rock
- Tank-raised corals (mostly soft)
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15Live Rock and Open Water Sites
- Expanded significantly since ban on wild harvest
- Gulf of Mexico and Florida Keys
- State and federal leases
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16Industry Statistics
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17Industry Statistics
- 2001 farm gate value of 99.5M
- 531 active certified aquafarms in 2001
- 800 varieties of fish
- Largest air freight items are tropical fish and
aquatic plants
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18Industry Statistics
- 2001 Farm Gate Sales of Florida Aquaculture
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19Industry Statistics
7.5
Hybrid striped bass, koi, carp, bream,
large-mouth bass
42.6
18.4
Crayfish, eels, snails, turtles, crabs, frogs,
oysters
21.4
- 2001 Florida Aquaculture Products
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20Import Export StatisticsU.S. Aquaculture
Imports (Selected products)
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21Import Export StatisticsU.S. Aquaculture
Exports (Selected products)
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22Import Export StatisticsU.S. Shrimp Exports
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23Import Export StatisticsU.S. Exports First
Half 2003
- Shrimp, both frozen and fresh/prepared, up
slightly - Oysters, mussels and clams up 19
- Oyster exports up 29
- Mussel exports up 2
- Ornamental fish increased slightly to 4.4M
(second year of rising exports)
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24Industry/Commodity Group
- Crop Groups
- Freshwater and saltwater aquatic ornamental
animals - Bait fish
- Freshwater and saltwater food aquatic animals
- Shrimp and clams
- Sport fish
- Commodity
- Producers/farmers
- Wholesalers
- Retailers
- Hobbyist
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25Worldwide Markets
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26Market Flow Chart for Wild-Caught Fish
Collector
Consolidator
Regional Wholesaler
Wholesaler/Exporter
Importer/Transhipper
Wholesaler/Distributor
Hobbyist
Retailer
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27Market Flow Chart for Farm-Raised Fish
Exporter/Wholesaler
Importer/Transhipper
Wholesaler
Farmer
Retailer
Hobbyist
Domestic-Produced
Foreign-Produced
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28Interagency Collaboration
- Roles of different agencies
- Private stakeholders
- University/college
- State
- Federal
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29Interagency Collaboration
- State
- DACS
- Div. of Animal Industry
- Div. of Aquaculture
- FWC
- Federal
- USDA-APHIS Vet Services, Wildlife Services,
Emergency Programs - NOAA-Fisheries
- FWS
Florida Aquatic Animal Health
- University
- UF/IFAS
- Faculty and Staff
- Diagnostics
- Teaching
- Research
- Extension
- Others HCC, IRCC
- Private
- Veterinarians
- Fish Health Professionals
- Hobbyists
- Industry Stakeholders
- Farmers/Producers
- Wholesalers
- Retailers
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30Private and Stakeholder Role
- Who?
- Farmers/Producers
- Wholesalers
- Retailers
- Advisory committees
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31University-College Role
- University of Florida
- Extension Programs and Diagnostics
- Facilities
- Tropical Aquaculture Laboratory
- Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
- Non-regulatory
- Education-oriented
- Research
- HCC, IRCC
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32State Role
- Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
- Division of Animal Industry
- Division of Aquaculture
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33Division of Animal Industry
- Mission To protect Floridas agriculture,
including aquaculture, industries - Enforce animal health regulations
- Protect the state from animal pests and diseases
- Players
- State veterinarian
- State aquaculture specialist/veterinarian
- Bureau of Diagnostic Laboratories
- Test development
- Perform diagnostic tests
- Bureau of Animal Disease Control
- Provide assistance to farmers to control diseases
of concern
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State Agricultural Response Team
34Division of Aquaculture
- Mission includes
- Enhance the growth of aquaculture while
protecting Florida's environment - Coordinate and assist the development of
aquaculture - Provide a means of communication between the
aquaculture industry and the regulatory agencies
through the Aquaculture Review Council and the
Aquaculture Interagency Coordinating Council - Issue aquaculture certificates that identify
aquaculture producers and aquaculture products
(i.e., BMPs) - State aquaculture plan
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State Agricultural Response Team
35State RoleFlorida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission
- Recreational fisheries
- Commercial fisheries
- Stock enhancement
- Habitat issues
- Wild stock assessment
- Wild fish kill investigations
- Research and education
- Prohibited and restricted
- species list
- And much more...
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36Federal RoleUSDA-APHIS, Wildlife Services
- APHIS - Animal and Plant Health Inspection
Service - Predator control on aquaculture farms
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State Agricultural Response Team
37Federal RoleUSDA-APHIS, Veterinary Services
- Lead agency for aquaculture health in the United
States - International exportation of animals and animal
products - Laboratory approval
- National Aquatic Animal Health Plan
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38The National Aquatic Animal Health Plans Mission
Statement
- Develop and implement a national aquatic animal
health plan (NAAHP) for aquaculture in
partnership and cooperation with industry,
regional organizations, state, local, and tribal
governments, and other stakeholders
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State Agricultural Response Team
39NAAHP Objectives
- Improve the health and productivity of cultured
aquatic animals - Facilitate safe interstate and international
commerce - Ensure availability of diagnostic, inspection,
and certification services - Protect cultured and wild aquatic animals from
foreign diseases - Define the roles and responsibilities of private
industry and government in health management
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State Agricultural Response Team
40Floridas Aquatic Animal Health Plan
- Emphasizes
- Collaboration
- Continuing education
- Training sessions
- Veterinary involvement
Red Rainbow, Glossolepis incisus
Gold Dust Lyretail Molly, Poecilia sphenops X
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41Florida Aquatic Animal Health Plan
- Goals
- Protect, ensure and improve aquatic animal health
- Increase aquatic animal productivity
- Increase profitability
- Harmonize with NAAHP
- Education
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State Agricultural Response Team
42Key Resources
- Florida Department of Community Affairs, Division
of Emergency Managements Emergency Response Team - http//www.floridadisaster.org
- United States Department of Agriculture
- http//www.usda.gov
- Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer
Services - http//www.fdacs.state.fl.us
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State Agricultural Response Team
43Key Resources
- Florida Tropical Fish Farms Association
- http//www.ftffa.com
- Division of Aquaculture
- http//www.floridaaquaculture.com
- Aquaculture Network Information Center
- http//aquanic.org
- USDA APHIS
- http//www.aphis.usda.gov
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State Agricultural Response Team
44Key Resources
- Safety for Fish Farm Workers, a video in English
and Spanish, available from the National Ag
Safety Database (NASD) - http//www.cdc.gov/nasd/videos/v001401-v001500/v
001433.html - Spawn, Spat, and Sprains book by the Alaska Sea
Grant College Program available in entirety via
the following link - http//www.uaf.edu/seagrant/Pubs_Videos/pubs/AN-
17.pdf
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State Agricultural Response Team
45Summary
- Aquaculture is viable in Florida because of
water, infrastructure and climate - Water use, farm size, commodities and commodity
value characteristics of Florida aquaculture - Comparisons between United States aquaculture
imports and exports and the products
destinations - Roles various agencies have in the aquatic animal
health - Resources for further information
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State Agricultural Response Team