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Carp aquaculture originated in ancient China
Oracle bones – 1,500 B.C.
First aquaculture text – Fan Lee – “treatise of pisculture”
Carp species diversity
-Carp form the largest family (cyprinidae) of all fish
-Carp species vary in size > 6 ft., to < 1” in length
-Many of the smaller cyprinids, i.e. “goldfish” (domestic
strains of carassius auratus) are important as ornamentals
- The common carp (Cyprinus carpio) is he most popular for
culture and is farmed throughout the world where the temperature is appropriate
Koi (domesticated carp in Japan)
-Koi (domestic carp) is the most popular fish in Japan
because of its gorgeous, magnificent, and colorful style.
-In Japanese culture, the Koi represents strength, courage
and success in life.
-On international Children’s Day (June 1), Carp windsocks
are flown from each home. This tradition symbolizes the parents wishing success
for their children’s lives in the future.
Common carp (cyprinus carpio)
1.
Temperature optimum; 20-33 C
2.
Survives 4C (overwintering, metabolic
depression)
3.
Tolerates low oxygen levels but optimal growth
at > 3 ppm DO (dissolved oxygen)
4.
Algal crashes and resulting complete oxygen
depuration are a common cause of carp mortalities
Carp reproduction
1.
Collection of eggs and milt for artificial
fertilization
2.
Natural spawning (Dubisch method)
3.
Small (120 – 300 m2) shallow ponds (30 – 60 cm
deep) kept grass-covered and dry when not used
4.
When the temperature warms to 18-20C ponds are
flooded to 25-3 cm deep
5.
Ponds are then stocked with spawners (broodstock
= 2-3 females and 4-5 males)
6.
Spawning occurs within 1-2 days and fertilized
eggs are collected from substrate
Lowering egg adhesiveness after Artificial Fertilization
1.
Mixing ration ~1 part milt (sperm) : 100 parts
eggs (weight not numbers!)
2.
Urea .3% plus sodium choloride .4% is used as a
saline solution for multiple washes, 1 part solution : 10 parts fertized eggs,
over a period of 1.5 hours to remove the “stickness” from eggs
3.
A final rinse uses tannin to complete the
process lowering adhesiveness of the eggs
Eggs are incubated in upwelling jars (10 I) for 3-3.5 days
at 24C
Aftering hatching larvae are reared in upwelling tanks (200
I) 3-4 days at 20-24C
During this time the air bladder inflates and swimming commences
Rearing of carp fry
Fry ( post-yolksac larvae) are reared in small ponds
-If outside, then Predator removal
-Quicklime (pH > 11) CaCO3 + H2O -> Ca(OH)2 + CO2
-Bleach
Pond fertilization
-2 weeks prior to stocking to promote algal growth (food source)
-3:1 to 6:1 N:P ratio
Stocking of fry
-200-400 larvae/m^2
-grow in 30 days to fingerling size
Grass carp (Ctenopharyngodon Idella)
1.
Also known as the White Amur carp
2.
Herbivorous, fry feed on plankton, change to
vegetation at ~6’’
3.
> 20 C grass carp feed continuously eating
several times their body weight in plant material daily
4.
Rapid growth; live for as long as 10 years
5.
Meat quality is very high and preferred over
other carp
Omnivore = Common Carp, bighead carp
Herbivore – Grass carp, silver carp
Carnivore – Black
carp
Bighead carp
1.
Omnivorous fish / they feed on phytoplankton and
zooplankton and or pellets
2.
Fourth most important carp species
3.
Very fast growing
4.
Native to Asia
5.
Highly invasive species in the us
6.
Eyes on bottom
Black Carp (Mylopharyngodon Piceus)
1.
Native to Eastern Asia
2.
Introduced to the US in the 1970’s
3.
Black carp are carnivores (meat eater)
4.
They feed on molluscs
5.
Similar to grass carp but gill rakers are fused
and hardened to enable crushing of mollusk shells
Intensification of carp monoculture
-Natural production 150 – 300 kg/ha/yr
Fertilization 500 – 800 kg/ha/yr
Supplementary feeding 1-4 mt/ha/yr (soaked grains)
Complete feeds 5-10 metric tons/ha/yr
Polyculture – Tang Dynasty (618-907) A.D.
Polyculture: Rich-fish aquaculture
Advantages
1.
Rich production improved
2.
Additional source of protein and/or revenue
3.
More sustainable, less waste
Disadvantages
1.
Not useful with high-yielding, short stem rice
varieties needing shallow water
2.
Not useful with multiple rice cropping; fish
growth limited
3.
Need to provide refuges during rich field
drainage
4.
Limited use of common insecticides and
herbicides
Polyculture: Rice-Azolla-carp aquaculture
1.
Azolla is an aquatic fern (duckweed), that
floats on the water surface
2.
It can assimilate atmospheric nitrogen owing to
the nitrogen fixation by symbiotic cyanobacteria (blue green alga)living in
cavities of azollaleafs
3.
Less nitrogen fertilizer is needed for carp
culture