Title: Innovations and Georgia Aquaculture
1Innovations and Georgia Aquaculture
- Gary J. Burtle
- Animal Dairy Science
- The University of Georgia
- www.cpes.peachnet.edu/aquaculture
2Hybrid Catfish Project
- Interest in Hybrid Catfish is gaining ground in
the Southeast U.S. - Selling for 1.25 to 3.0 cents per inch depending
on state and quantity - Highest prices in Alabama
- Limited by fingerling availability
3Spawning Hybrids
- Need 5 yr old blue males, 4-5 year old channel
females - Check females each week during spawning season
and inject with carp pituitary - Inject male blue catfish with carp pituitary and
dissect testes for in vitro fertilization after
female is stripped of eggs, 3-5 females per male - Expect 3,000 to 4,000 fry per female
4Hybridization Trial Results
- 50 of females will produce eggs by stripping
after hormone injection - Male blue catfish can be stimulated with urine
from female blue catfish - Harvest testes within 24 hours of stimulation,
urine or hormone - Maintain 78 degree water for best results
5Hybrid Stocking
- Obtain hybrid fingerlings from hatcheries with
disease control programs - Have fingerlings inspected for disease prior to
purchase - Apply chelated copper rather than copper sulfate
for hybrid ponds - Stock 6,000 to 10,000 per acre
- 0.05 to 1.5 pounds in 5 months
6Vietnamese Catfish
- Basa, Pangasius bacurti
- Grown in cages on rice bran and dried fish
- Sold as frozen fillets
- From 7 million pounds in 2000 to over 20 million
pounds in 2001 - Illegal label until October 2001
7Basa
8Cage Culture of Basa
9National Bill Sets Label Law
- Introduced in House in early 2001 passed Senate
in October - Requires catfish to be from the family
Ictaluridae and excludes Siluridae or
Pangasiidae
10Status of Imported Catfish Label
- Basa fish sold as catfish perceived as illegal
- July 2001, Vietnam orders all basa labelled as
product of Vietnam, Mekon catfish, basa catfish,
or pangas catfish. - October 2001, US Senate passes label law to
require proper catfish labeling
11Impact of Vietnamese Catfish
- 20 million pounds of fillets in 2001
- 23 of farm raised catfish fillet market
- 3 of US catfish market
- Competition at time of US economic recession
- Pond bank price below 50 cents per pound in
Mississippi, 53 cents in Georgia
12Fish Imports (1,000 lb)
Sept 2000 Sept 2001 Jan-Sep 2000 Jan-Sep 2001
Catfish Fillet 615 1,401 5,174 12,175
Tilapia Products 7,499 5,552 40,787 50,007
13Cold Storage Holdings (1,000 lb) Down 8 to 13
since 2000
10-31-00 10-31-01 9-31-01
Catfish 12,906 11,873 13,337
Saltwater Total 278,085 240,879 240,713
14Fresh Fish Prices at Fulton Market (Nov 30, 2001)
Catfish Fillet 2.75 /lb
Cod Fillet 4.00 /lb (2.00 frozen)
Tilapia Fillet 3.90 /lb
Hybrid Striped Bass Fillet 2.75 /lb
15Tilapia Culture
- Several Recirculating Systems in Georgia
- Some small hydroponics systems also in Georgia
- Processing in North Carolina by Southern States
Cooperative - Systems are in a 45-50 mile radius of Valdosta
16Economics of Tilapia Culture
- Based on capital provided by others
- Must have land and positive net worth
- Must be identifiable as a farmer
- Approximately 20,000 net per year per system as
a goal - Only available through Southern States Cooperative
17Freshwater Prawns
- Machrobrachium rosenbergii
- An exotic shrimp from Malaysia
- Tropical
- Lives in freshwater for part of its life-cycle
18U. S. Prawn Culture
- Of interest for over 25 years
- Limited by the availability of seed stock
- Cultured in Texas, Kentucky, Mississippi, South
Carolina, Tennessee, recently in Georgia - Average production 500 to 800 pounds per acre.
- Maximum production about 2,500 lb/A.
19Prawn Production in Ponds
- Prepare pond for stocking
- Stock 10,000 to 30,000 juveniles per acre
- Fertilize for first 30 60 days
- Feed a sinking feed during months 2-4
- Monitor and control oxygen and pH
- Use narrow ponds less than 2 acres in size
- Harvest before water falls below 60 degrees
20Proper Sized Juvenile Prawns
- 60 day old, 95/oz
- 28-35 day old, 250 to 280 per oz
- Uniform size very important
- Careful handling and stocking are essential to
juvenile survival - Avoid overcrowding
21Feeding Prawns
- Start with cottonseed meal and N-P-K
- Use sinking catfish feed for 500 to 800 lb/A
- Use shrimp diet for higher yields
- Monitor zooplankton with net during first month
- Feed over entire pond area
- Estimate feed rate based on prawn samples
22Water Quality in Prawn Ponds
- Aerate continuously
- Keep oxygen above 3.0 ppm
- Monitor pH twice each day
- Flush with water to keep below 9.0 (Use pond
water of low pH if possible) - Add gypsum to lower pH, 1,000 to 2,000 lb/Acre
added as needed
23Harvest Procedure
- Seine most of prawns with water at 1/2 depth
- Use 1/2 inch mesh seine, grade with bar grader,
62/64 width - Consider partial harvest one month before end of
season - Final harvest requires pond draining
24Economic Sketch
- Breakeven at 1,000 lb/A is about 5.00 per pound
- Juveniles cost 1,500 to 3,000 per acre
- Feed costs 300 to 550 per acre
- Aeration costs 200 to 400 per acre
- Labor cost 800 to 1,200 per acre
- Variable cost total2,800 to 5,100 per acre
25Litopenaeus vannamei
26Conditions for Culture
- 0.5 to 2.0 parts per thousand salinity
- Recirculated water or small, aerated ponds
- Establish bacterial food source as well as
feeding an adequate sinking pellet - Warm water temperatures would require indoor
culture in Georgia - Indoor culture may prevent disease outbreak
27Current Status of Perry Project
- Contact William MacGrath 478-988-0590
- Georgia Marine Shrimp Project
- Looking for Cooperating Farmers for Phase 2 of
project - Economics available in next 12 to 24 months