Search
Now showing items 1-10 of 17
Sustainable tilapia farming: a challenge to rural development
(Secretariat, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 2008)
The availability of improved Nile tilapia strains is a major factor that has opened up new avenues for renewed growth in the tilapia industry especially in the rural sector. This was hailed as a positive development in the ...
Seaweed production: Farming Kappaphycus in the Philippines
(Global Aquaculture Alliance, 2002)
Seed production of the crucifix crab Charybdis feriatus
(Network of Aquaculture Centers, 2002)
Tropical abalone culture in Philippines
(Global Aquaculture Alliance, 2001)
Seed production of mud crab Scylla spp.
(Network of Aquaculture Centers, 2002)
Mud crab farming is an important source of income for fish farmers in the Philippines. The expanding export market for mud crab as an alternative for shrimp has led to intensified collection of wild seed for grow-out and ...
Breeding and seed production of the mangrove red snapper
(Network of Aquaculture Centers, 2002)
Retaining our mangrove greenbelt: Integrating mangroves and aquaculture
(Secretariat, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 2004)
Although multilateral agencies in Southeast Asia have long been promoting that mangroves, and other wetlands, are wastelands to be put into better use, such as conversion to ponds. However, there is a need for Mangrove ...
Towards sustainable aquaculture in the ASEAN region
(Secretariat, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 2007)
SEAFDEC AQD: Facilities and activities
(World Aquaculture Society, 2002)
As an R & D complex in aquaculture that can conduct replicated studies in marine waters, brackish water and freshwater, be it in aquaria, large tanks, earthen ponds or cages, there are not that many institutions in the ...
The filter net [tangab] fishery in Iloilo Strait, Philippines: Food and livelihood for coastal communities in the midst of waste of non-target fishery resources
(Secretariat, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 2008)
The Philippines is home to a mixed of blessings: an enormous marine biodiversity, a tremendous variety of fishery enterprises, and about 50 million coastal residents who mostly fish and eat fish. So many animals and so ...