Valsad District Aquaculture Association

Valsad District Aquaculture Association Valsad District Aquaculture Association is an organisation monitoring AQUAFARMER's activities in Val

15/09/2023
05/02/2023

RIBBON FISH CURRY

WHAT GOES IN
Ribbon fish (medium size) - 2 nos
Carrots (fancy cut) - 50 gms
Green peas - 50 gms
Bengal gram - 50 gms
Oil - 30 ml
Butter - 30 gms
Onion chopped
Coconut paste
Ginger paste
Garlic paste
Tomato chopped
Coriander leaves chopped - 30 gms
Red Chilly paste - 10 gms
Coriander powder - 10 gms
Turmeric powder - 1/2 tspn
Tamarind juice - 15 ml
Salt - 10 gms

HOW TO PREPARE

1. Clean the white surface of fish and slice into large fillets. Cut each in 4" long pieces.
2. Heat oil and butter in a pan and golden fry onion in it.
3. Add soaked peas, gram and carrot and saute with chopped tomato.
4. When the ingredients are well cooked add tamarind juice, salt, coriander leaves.
5. Cook gently without stirring.
6. When cooked, carefully transfer into a service dish and finsih with tempering.

Accompaniment : Rice preparation and roti.

Cooking time : 30 mts

07/12/2022

09/11/2022

26/10/2022

Make sure to add Seafood to your diet, twice a week. 🦈🦐🦑

24/10/2022

Exporters are saying that they are losing for Rs. 240 for 100 count announced by the government, they cannot buy at that rate...

So, is it not a loss if you sell the 100 count which you have grown with hard work for 210 rupees by taking debts and not sleeping at night and day ???

So the prawn industry is good if the seed hatcheries, feed companies, exporters and farmers are all good..

Especially if the farmer is good, then anyone will be good... So, farmers can build lakes only if they give proper quality seed feed to the farmer and give minimum support price. Otherwise... Hard work...

Wishing wholeheartedly that everyone should be fine and farmers should be included

Aqua farmer 😢🙏

18/10/2022

Eco-friendly biofloc method used for S. Korea's first production of Asian tiger shrimps

17-10-2022, Ajudaily

SEOUL -- A South Korean aquafarm is ready to release fresh or live Asian tiger shrimps, which are regarded as high-end shrimp ingredients for various grilled shrimp dishes and imported in frozen form from Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam and Thailand. It was the first commercial farming of black tiger shrimps in South Korea.

Asian tiger shrimps identified by black stripes across the dorsal side of the tail are native to Indo-Pacific, Asian, and Australian waters. They prefer warm water and can be found in estuarine or marine habitats on the ocean floor in the sediment. The black tiger prawn yields a high economic value with a large size and sweet taste, but it is known to be susceptible to diseases.

An aquafarm in Dangjin, a port city some 80 kilometers (49.7 miles) southwest of Seoul, brought in some 150,000 seed shrimps from Thailand in May 2022 and cultivated them at high density in an eco-friendly bio-floc method that reduces the amount of feed by allowing microorganisms to ingest excrement emitted by shrimps and letting shrimps eat microorganisms when they grow.

Black tiger shrimps would be released in November 2022. Dangjin city officials said that the success of black tiger shrimp aquaculture is expected to give a new boost to the domestic shrimp farming industry, which has been dominated by white-leg shrimps, also known as Pacific white shrimps, which are native to the eastern Pacific Ocean.

"We will try hard for fishermen to gain stable income through the innovation of the aquaculture industry," an unnamed Dangjin official said in a statement on October 17. Traditionally, Chinese white shrimps, or fleshy prawns, have been favored in South Korea, but aquaculture production was devastated by a series of epidemics in the 1990s and early 2000s.

An eco-friendly indoor farm has already been created in Dangjin that can produce white-leg shrimps using a bio-floc system, which was developed in 2016 to reuse water in indoor aquaculture tanks. Bio-floc technology was upgraded and applied to shrimp and fishing farming. Since viruses and diseases can be blocked by thorough quarantine, an optimal aquaculture environment can be created without being affected by climate.

16/10/2022

Black tiger shrimp revival in Asia facing a market challenge

October 12, 2022, Seafood source

A shift back to black tiger shrimp farming, and away from vannamei – which is becoming more prone to disease and more costly to farm – is under way in Asia. But whether the market is willing to consume the increased volume, at higher price levels, remains a question.

One of the main themes discussed at the inaugural Global Shrimp Forum (GSF) – which took place in Utrecht, The Netherlands, from 6 to 8 September – was the ongoing revival of black tiger shrimp farming in Asia and whether this expansion will be welcomed by the market, according to the latest blog by analyst Willem van der Pijl, the founder of consultancy Shrimp Insights and the managing director of the GSF Foundation, which organized the event.

According to van der Pijl, vannamei farming has become more difficult as competition increases, with lower selling prices and higher production costs. In this context, only big players who are capable of investing in advanced technologies and equipment for their farming operations can survive. For a large number of the rest, mostly small-scale producers, vannamei production may be no longer feasible.

“An alternative strategy to continue making a living of shrimp farming could be for these farmers to start cultivating black tiger shrimp,” he said.

Van der Pijl said industry opinion expressed at the forum made him believe the growth of black tiger shrimp farming was the key trend to watch in the shrimp industry. This resurrection will be backed by the development of domestic specific pathogen-free shrimp genetics and improvements in the required infrastructure, such as broodstock multiplication centers and hatcheries, in China, India, Indonesia, and Vietnam.

Charoen Pokphand Foods (CPF) Senior Vice President Robins McIntosh said many Asian farmers, who are struggling with the capital-intensive production of vannamei, have begun to farm more black tiger shrimp mainly thanks to the breeding programs undertaken by CPF and Moana Technologies. The two companies have achieved postlarvae growth and survival comparable to any Pacific white shrimp breeding scheme, he said. McIntosh called the black tiger shrimp the “poor farmer’s shrimp” because the animals can grow relatively fast and suffer from fewer diseases than vannamei, resulting in lower farming costs.

McIntosh said global production of black tiger shrimp rose to 546,000 metric tons (MT) in 2021 from 382,000 MT in 2019. China, where CPF accounts for about 85 percent of the postlarvae market, will produce an estimated 180,000 MT of black tiger shrimp in 2022, up 20 percent from 2021, possibly surpassing Vietnam as the largest producer of the shrimp species in the world, he said.

In India, Vaishnavi Aquatech, which is owned by the family of Dhaval Contractor – another speaker at the GSF – began importing domesticated black tiger broodstock from Moana for production in 2021. The contractor family operates six hatcheries across India, which have collectively produced more than one billion postlarvae.

Vaishnavi Aquatech recently expanded by building a government-accredited broodstock multiplication center, which Willem van der Pijl believes will be “the main enabler of further growth of India’s black tiger shrimp production” in the coming years. Vaishnavi Aquatech’s adult broodstock, which are produced from parent postlarvae imported from Moana’s headquarters in the U.S. state of Hawaii, will be used to produce F1 generation broodstock. The contractor hopes to see a doubling of India’s farming area of black tiger shrimp to 130,000 hectares in the fiscal year 2026-2027 from its current level, and an expansion of India’s black tiger shrimp production to around 455,000 MT in 2026-2027 from 220,000 MT in 2022-2023.

“When he presented this number at the GSF last September, the audience was shocked,” van der Pijl said.

Many farmers in Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Odisha, and West Bengal are likely to switch from vannamei to black tiger shrimp farming, especially those who have struggled with the recent rise in operational costs of vannemei production, according to van der Pijl.

In Indonesia, which currently touts a modest output of around 50,000 MT of black tiger shrimp from a total farming area of 300,000 hectares, B**g Tiro, a co-owner of a number of vannemei hatcheries, is also working on a plan to bring domesticated black tiger shrimp to local farmers. Tiro said black tiger shrimp production in Indonesia can only grow if more postlarvae are made more readily available to local farmers. After several farming trials using Moana’s genetics, B**g Tiro built his own small broodstock multiplication centers in several of Indonesia’s key farming areas to supply breeders and nauplii to his company’s own hatcheries and other jointly operated facilities. He recently purchased three batches of parent postlarvae from Moana to stock his own broodstock multiplication center in Indonesia, and he now aims to sell postlarvae in three locations in Indonesia by the end of the year.

However, across Asia, the shift back to black tiger shrimp is dependent on the willingness of customers to pay higher prices. In China, consumption of black tiger shrimp is not a big problem because it is believed to have a superior taste and appearance, and can therefore be sold as a premium fresh product. The U.S. and Northern Europe were previously major destinations for black tiger shrimp, along with Japan and the Middle East, but switched their preference to vannamei as that became the dominant shrimp species available around 15 years ago. It will be necessary for Asian black tiger shrimp producers to regain market share in those regions in order to remain viable, Jeff Stern, co-president of Censea, the largest black tiger shrimp importer and distributor in the U.S., said at GSF.

Black tiger shrimp is still sold into Europe, but is mostly consumed in the foodservice sector in Northern Europe and through a few retailers in Belgium and Germany. France, where OSO and Unima have had success exporting black tiger shrimp grown in Madagascar, may not be a big enough market for Asian exporters to target, as it currently consumes less than 6,000 MT of black tiger shrimp annually.

And in Asia’s own foodservice sector, where black tiger shrimp has long been popular, Heiko Lenk and Rogier Speelman of Lenk Frozen Foods and Fisherman’s Choice warned at GSF if the price difference between the black tiger shrimp and vannamei exceeds USD 1.00 (EUR 1.03) per kilogram, consumers will generally choose the latter.

Even if the price difference is kept at below USD 1.00 per kilogram, the U.S. and Northern Europe alone are unable to absorb a volume of more than 500,000 MT, van der Pijl said.

“While acknowledging that we will likely see a surge of black tiger shrimp production in India and Indonesia, the resurrection might be very short-lived if the producers, feed companies, processors, and their overseas buyers don’t work together to develop the market,” van der Pijl said. “For the revival of black tiger shrimp to be successful, we may not only need to look at the suitable farmer-system-species combination but extend it with the right specification-market combination.”

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396001

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