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Integration of aquaculture and mangroves

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Abstract (36.72Kb) Open Access
Downloads: 57
Date
2007
Author
Primavera, Jurgenne ORCID
Page views
1,374
ASFA keyword
aquaculture ASFA
mangroves ASFA
biofilters ASFA
brackishwater aquaculture ASFA
cage culture ASFA
Taxonomic term
Scylla GBIF
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Abstract
Southeast Asia has the highest concentration of mangroves and brackish water aquaculture ponds. This paper describes studies that integrate mangroves as biofilters, and as pen culture sites for mud crab farming. In one study, passing shrimp pond effluents through a natural mangrove stand reduced levels of TSS, sulfide, NH3-N and NO3-N by 18.7%–64.2%. Estimates show that 1.4–6.5 ha of mangroves are needed to assimilate nitrogen wastes from one hectare of shrimp pond. Mangrove biomass increase was 2.5 times greater with effluents compared to a control mangrove, although plant numbers remained similar. Present mud crab Scylla spp. farming still depends on raw (“trash”) fish and wild seed. To lessen such dependence, another study compared the stocking of hatchery vs wild juveniles, and feeding of pellet + raw fish (“trash fish”) vs fish alone. Preliminary results show that low-cost pellets can reduce raw fish requirement, and that hatchery crab juveniles need immediate feeding whereas wild crabs can subsist on natural mangrove productivity for one month. Mud crab pen culture is commercially viable but technological refinements and land tenure issues remain.
Description
Abstract only.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10862/6579
Suggested Citation
Primavera, J. (2007). Integration of aquaculture and mangroves. Bulletin of Marine Science, 80(3), 931. http://hdl.handle.net/10862/6579
Type
Article
ISSN
0007-4977; 1553-6955
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  • Journal Articles [1258]

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