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A strategic reassessment of fish farming potential in Africa











Aguilar-Manjarrez, J.; Nath, S.S. CIFA Technical Paper. No. 32. Rome, FAO. 1998. 170p.


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    A strategic assessment of warm-water fish farming potential in Africa 1994
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    Aquaculture in Africa is in its beginning stages in terms of output. Estimates of fish farming potential have not yet been made in a comparable or comprehensive way for the continent or its regions even though this information is needed for development planning. This study is a strategic assessment of the areal expanses and locations encompassing suitable to optimum potential for subsistence and commercial warm water fish farming in ponds. Three temperature regimes were specified using the Nil e tilapia as a model. These corresponded to one or two crops per year with growth ranging from fair to good while at the same time ensuring over-wintering without special precautions. In concert with each temperature regime, subsistence fish farming potential was assessed on the basis of availability of surface water for storage in ponds, suitability of topography and soil texture for pond construction, availability and variety of agricultural by-products as inputs, and local market potential. F or commercial farming two criteria were added: perennial streams and rivers as independent or supplementary sources of water and availability of paved and motorable roads. Thresholds were established for each criterion corresponding to optimum, suitable and marginal conditions. A geographic information system (GIS) was used to evaluate the criteria on 10 minute (18 km × 18 km) grids and by country boundaries. In all, there are some 9.2 million km2, equivalent to 31% of the African surface, con taining areas suitable for warm water fish farming at a subsistence level. The corresponding results for commercial fish farming indicate that there are 3.9 million km2, equivalent to 13% of the African surface, encompassing area potentially suitable for warm water fish farming. Of the 48 countries included in this study, 40 possess at least some land suitable for subsistence and commercial warm water fish farming.
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    Irrigation scheduling: From theory to practice. Proceedings 1996
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    A strategic assessment of the potential for freshwater fish farming in the Caribbean Island States. / Una evaluación estratégica de la potencialidad para la piscicultura dulceacuícola en los Estados Insulares del Caribe. 1998
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    This report describes the potential for inland fish farming among the Caribbean Island States based on methods used in an earlier study (“A strategic assessment of the potential for freshwater fish farming in Latin America”, COPESCAL Technical Paper, No. 10, 1997) to estimate freshwater fish farming potential in Latin America. Four criteria were used to estimate potential for small-scale fish farming in ponds: water loss, potential for farm gate sales, soil and terrain suitability for ponds and availability of agriculture by-products as feed or fertilizer inputs. A fifth criterion was added in order to estimate potential for commercial fish farming: urban market potential. These criteria were weighted in different ways to make small-scale and commercial fish farming models on the basis of expert advice. Numbers of crops per year of Nile tilapia and common carp were predicted based on monthly climatic variables. By varying feeding levels and harvest sizes small-scale and commercial leve l outputs were simulated. Combining the small-scale and commercial models with the simulations of fish production provided overall suitability ratings for each 5 are minute grid (approximately 9 × 9 km). Field verifications were carried out in Jamaica and the Dominican Republic. The results suggest good potential for freshwater fish farming among many of the Caribbean Island States with relatively large areas rating very suitable or suitable for the combined criteria and with relatively high crops/year output of the species considered. The results of the field verifications indicated the importance of local knowledge for the interpretation of the predictions.

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