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Aquaculture of Marine Shrimp

Aquaculture of Marine Shrimp. Ana Paula Pego Marine Aquaculture - DISL Dr. Hugh Hammer – Summer 2012. Cultured Marine Shrimp/Taxonomy. Pacific whiteleg shrimp (Pacific white shrimp) Litop enaeus vannamei ( Formally known as Penaeus vannamei ). Cultured Marine Shrimp/Taxonomy.

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Aquaculture of Marine Shrimp

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  1. Aquaculture of Marine Shrimp Ana Paula Pego Marine Aquaculture - DISL Dr. Hugh Hammer – Summer 2012

  2. Cultured Marine Shrimp/Taxonomy Pacific whiteleg shrimp (Pacific white shrimp) Litopenaeusvannamei (Formally known as Penaeusvannamei)

  3. Cultured Marine Shrimp/Taxonomy Pacific tiger shrimp (giant tiger prawn) Penaeus monodon

  4. Biology/Habitat • Benthic feeders: detritus, bivalves, worms, crustaceans • Preferred temperature: Above 20 °C • Preferred salinity: Between 15-25 ppt • Maturity: Male 20g, Female 28g (8-10 months app.) Penaeus vannamei Penaeus monodon

  5. WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY? WHY?WHY? WHY? WHY? NOT ME!!!

  6. Economic Importance • Worldwide production: 5.0million metric tons per year • US$ 9 billion/year • The United States import 500,000 tons that account for US$ 3 billion.

  7. Price $$$ United States Import: • 2000 – US$ 5.00/ lbs. • 2005 – US$ 3-3.50/ lbs. Store: • Small ≈ US$ 5.00 / 12 oz. • Large ≈ US$ 8.00 • Europe 2000 – US$8.50/kg small shrimp • Japan 2000 – US$8.00/kg large shrimp

  8. Main Markets • United States • Europe Union • Japan These three sites consume more than one third of the consumption of shrimp in the world.

  9. Main Countries of Production SE Asia account for more than 75% of the world’s production (China and Thailand mainly) In the USA, mainly Texas and South Carolina <1% global Latin American account for about 20%

  10. Invasive Species Pacific white shrimp is an invasive species on the Gulf of Mexico. Production in ponds in all coastal states, but it is hypothesized that Texas’ ponds are responsible for the addition of the species in the GOM.

  11. Life Cycle/Larvae Reach maturity at about 10 months Adults live and spawn in open ocean Postlarvae migrate inshore - estuaries, mangroves – and they stay there as juveniles until they reach maturity to go to open ocean Larvae: nauplii - survive off yolk reserves Protozoe - planktivore Mysis – planktivore Early post larvae - planktivore Postlarvae – benthic feeder

  12. Reproduction in Captivity • Capture shrimp from ocean – if mature adult add to spawning tanks in hatchery, if juvenile, add to maturity tank for a few months; Eggs are taken into hatching tanks until they form the first stage of larvae, nauplius.

  13. Production Methods

  14. Hatchery • Once an adult shrimp has spawn, eggs are transferred to hatching tanks until they become nauplius, the first stage larvae, which takes about 2-4 days. • Systems vary from sophisticated/ environmental controlled structures to simple flat, V shape tanks. • No need to feed since nauplii live off of yolk sac

  15. Nursery • The next stages larvae are zoea (4-5 days) and mysis (3-4 days). • Systems vary from separate concrete nursery tanks or ponds, and may include cages within the ponds. • Both larvae stages are planktivores, but food is also added into the system.

  16. Grow-out Grow-Out • Extensive Aquaculture (mainly Latin America) • Add postlarvae at minimal tide – mangroves, ponds • No water pump/aeration • It takes about 4-6 months to become sub adult • Intensive Aquaculture (Southeast Asia) • Add postlarvae to small earth ponds (common) • Heavily aerated, recirculating, use liners to enhance water quality, feed daily • Use bacterial floc system to diminish feed

  17. Harvest sub adult 10-25g Intensive Aquaculture Shrimp is fed daily, but it also feeds on natural foods, heterotrophic bacteria, detritus. Integrated systems: Low or no feed. • Hatchery: No feeding, feed on yolk sac • Nursery: Fed once a day Extensive Aquaculture: • Shrimp is fed daily feeding with low protein diet (decrease deamination)

  18. Water Chemistry/Environmental Requirements in Culture • SALINITY: 15-25 ppt • Tolerate wide fluctuation, 5-40 ppt (Higher salinity may retard growth) • TEMPERATURE: 25-30°C • rate of chemical and biological reactions is said to double every 10°C increase in temperature • pH: 7.5-9 • below 5 retards growth – can add lime to neutralize • ALKALINITY: pH levels must be below 9.5 (retard shrimp growth) • AMMONIA: 0.45mg/L (4.5ppm) can reduce growth by 50% • DO: above 5 ppm • Exchange water, improve aeration, avoid trees, larger ponds allow more O₂ diffusion

  19. Marine Shrimp • ADVANTAGES • Intensive aquaculture • High density, successful, tolerance to variability • Very profitable • Most consumed seafood in the US, fast growth • Easy to maintain and harvest • Less destructive than trawiling • Natural food/No complete feed • DISADVANTAGES • Greenpeace Red List: Unsustainable fisheries that destroy mangroves, overfish juvenile shrimp and suffer significant human rights abuse • Ponds • Land space • Water use • Difficult treat

  20. Works Cited • Culture of Marine Shrimp - Leonard Lovshin. Department of Fisheries and Allied Aquaculture. Auburn University, AL. • Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations. www.fao.org • World Wildlife Fund

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