HATCHERY SETUP IN LOCAL FISH FARMING

Hatcheries used in producing catfish are simple facilities that use flow-through tanks holding about 90 to 100 gallons of water for egg incubation and fry rearing. The most critical factor for a successful hatchery is a dependable supply of high-quality water. Egg hatching tanks are equipped with a series of paddles spaced along the length of the tank to allow wire-mesh baskets to fit  between them. One or two egg masses are placed in each basket and the paddles gently rotate through the water to provide water circulation and aeration. The incubation time varies from 5 to 8 days depending upon water temperature. At hatching, the fry (called sac-fry at this point) fall or swim through the wire-mesh
basket and school in tight groups.


Sac-fry are siphoned into a bucket and transferred to a fry rearing tank. Aeration in fry rearing tanks is provided by surface agitators or by air bubbled through airstones. Initially, sac-fry are not fed because they derive nourishment from the attached yolk sac. Over a 3- to 5-day period after hatching they absorb the yolk sac and turn black. At that time fry (now called swim-up fry) swim to the water surface seeking food. Swim-up fry must be fed 6 to 12 times a day for good survival and growth. Fry are fed nutritionally complete feed for 2 to 7 days before they are transferred to a nursery pond. Fingerling Production Culture practices for fingerling production are relatively standardized across the industry, especially when compared to the wide variety of production strategies used to grow food-sized catfish. Fry grow faster when stocked at lower densities but more space is required to grow larger fingerlings at lower densities.

Stocking rate is therefore a compromise between benefits of producing large fingerlings for food fish growout and the economics of producing more small fingerlings in less space. Fish are fed a manufactured feed and grown to fingerling size (3 to 8 inches long) over a 5 to 10 month period. Fish are either allowed to continue growing in their original nursery ponds or are harvested and transferred to other ponds for growout to stocker-sized fish of 0.1 to 0.25 pounds or to food-sized fish of 1.2 to 2.5 pounds. It is important to fertilize nursery ponds so that they contain abundant natural foods to promote growth until the fry are large enough to switch to manufactured feeds. A finely ground feed should be offered once or twice daily to train fish to accept the feed.

As the fish grow, feed particle size is increased. A month or so after stocking, the fish (now called fingerlings) are fed once or twice daily to satiation, using a small floating pellet with 45 to 65 percent crude protein. Because fingerling populations are particularly susceptible to infectious diseases, disease management takes on added importance in this stage of production. Survival of catfish fry to fingerlings varies greatly from pond-to-pond depending on the initial condition of the nursery pond, losses to bird predation, and the incidence of infectious diseases. Average survival from fry stocking to fingerling harvest in excess of 60 percent across all ponds on the farm is considered to be very good.

FOR ULTRA MODERN HATCHERY SETUP, FISH FARMING SETUP, FEED PRODUCTION AND FEASIBILITY STUDY 



OTHER POSTS ON AGRICULTURE

Click on the related links below and read more. 
We can keep you updated on this information, please Subscribe for Free by entering your email address in the space provided.

Follows us on Google Plus Facebook & Twitter

Call for help and consultancy on 07030722911

READ RECENT UPDATES HERE