1 / 25

Intro/history of Aquaculture

Intro/history of Aquaculture. Aquaculture The art and science of rearing aquatic organisms ( finfish , shellfish, aquatic reptiles, amphibians, and plants) under controlled conditions. History of Aquaculture First practiced by the Chinese 3,500 to 4,000 years ago

kele
Download Presentation

Intro/history of Aquaculture

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Intro/history of Aquaculture • Aquaculture • The art and science of rearing aquatic organisms (finfish, shellfish, aquatic reptiles, amphibians, and plants) under controlled conditions. • History of Aquaculture • First practiced by the Chinese 3,500 to 4,000 years ago • Oysters were farmed in Japan about 3,000 years ago and by the Romans nearly 2,000 years ago

  2. Intro/history of Aquaculture • United States/North America •  1850s - first attempt at artificial propagation (Dr. Theodatus Garlick) • - Brook trout • Spring fed ponds (Cleveland, Ohio) • 1864 – • 1866 - First public hatchery was built in New York • Atlantic Salmon fry produced for enhancement efforts on the Merrimac River • High profits -

  3. Intro/history of Aquaculture • 1870 - Formation of the “American Fish Cultural Society” • Began to apply the scientific method to aquaculture production • 19th century –

  4. Purpose of Aquaculture • Commercial (foodfish) production • Followed AFS development and used techniques and methods established through government and academic research • Foodfish production worldwide

  5. Purpose of Aquaculture • Important culture species (3 phyla represented) • Mollusca • Arthropoda (crustaceans) • Chordata

  6. Aquaculture • Mollusca • Scallops • Abalone

  7. Aquaculture • Important culture species • Arthropoda (crustaceans) • Lobster

  8. Aquaculture • Important culture species • Chordata • Channel catfish • Atlantic salmon • Tilapia • Carp

  9. Aquaculture • Aquaculture (fish and shellfish) • Global production has doubled in past 15 years • > 220 species of finfish and shellfish are farmed • US (commercial finfish): • Production estimates (1991): 543,770 tons valued at approximately $750,250,000

  10. Aquaculture • Catfish - Dominant species cultured in United States • In late 1950s the methodology for catfish culture in the US was developed • At that time, it was demonstrated that a profit could be made if producers received $1.10/kg • Today:

  11. Aquaculture • Rainbow trout • Important species in the US, Northern Europe, Chile, etc. • Freshwater • Also raised in other regions for food and sport. • Australia (Tasmania) • New Zealand

  12. Aquaculture • Rainbow trout • Idaho is one of the major trout producing region in US/world. • Constant temperature (15oC) spring water year-round • 1980-3,400 tons/yr. 1990s > 10,000 tons/yr.

  13. Aquaculture • Atlantic Salmon • Industry has rapidly expanded in last decade • High tech • Net pen culture (primarily foodfish)

  14. Aquaculture • Other commercial species • Ornamental species • Florida – raise > 100 species • >$100 million/yr (1998) • Value –

  15. Aquaculture • Carp and Tilapia • Important species in Middle East, China, Japan, etc. • Grass Carp (in US) • Aquatic vegetation control • Tilapia • Often used as protein supplement for third world regions

  16. Purpose of Aquaculture • Commercial Fisheries • Goal – increase or sustain commercially important species (other than salmon) • Concept • Being re-considered • Offspring – increased survival • Species • Flounder • Cod • Haddock • Rockfish

  17. Purpose of Aquaculture • Recreational Fisheries • Goal – Stocking for angling public • Put and take • Stock catchable size fish that are available immediately • Chase hatchery trucks • Recreation for the “non” purists • Provides some states alternative experience • Seasons that provide proper environmental conditions • Spring – trout in some states (trout stamp)

  18. Purpose of Aquaculture • Recreational Fisheries • Put-Grow-and take • Stock at small size (fingerlings) allow to grow to large size • Close harvest of small fish (size restrictions) • Ex: • Stock fingerling Northern pike in Midwest • Coho Salmon and SH in Great Lakes (1980s) • Both approaches provide angling opportunities in waters that may not support sustainable populations

  19. Purpose of Aquaculture • Augmentation • Used in waters that can support sustainable populations but where fishing pressure results in unbalanced populations • Ex: • Largemouth bass • Fishing lowers bass pop. even though forage base is good

  20. Purpose of Aquaculture • Mitigation/supplementation • Human activities – destruction or alteration of fish habitat • Ex: • Loss of upstream access by anadromous fishes • Decreased access to spawning habitat • Change from riverine to reservoir habitat • Increased turbidity (Ag and industry runoff)

  21. Purpose of Aquaculture • Mitigation/supplementation • 1938 – Congress passed legislation that mandated for losses of renewable aquatic resources due to reduction of upstream access for migratory salmonids • Results – • “In-kind” mitigation • Impacted species – re-stocked • May also occur if human activities take water body out of production – filling lake for construction

  22. Purpose of Aquaculture • Pacific Salmon (Coho, Chinook, Chum, Pink, Sockeye) • Primarily reared and released for mitigation purposes • Pacific Northwest, Canada (BC), Alaska • Great Lakes (1967) – recreational fisheries

  23. Purpose of Aquaculture • Species Recovery (ESA) • Habitat • Hydro • Hatcheries • One action taken to enhance recovery • Genetic diversity – important • Ex: • Sockeye Salmon – 1990s to present (Redfish Lake) • Lonely Larry • Cryopreserved semen for next season • Offspring survival important

  24. Purpose of Aquaculture • Population assessment • Cultured fish can be marked and used to assess populations in wild • Recapture of tagged/untagged fish used to estimate populations • Examples of marking methods: • External tags • Fin clips • Branding

  25. Purpose of Aquaculture • Research • Many Scientists are increasingly using fish as laboratory animals • Fish may be good models • Fast regeneration times • Ex: • Japanese medaka • Zebrafish • KIllifish, • Goldfish

More Related