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ProjectReport of the FAO/WB/UNDP/GEF/FCK Regional Training Workshop on Sturgeon Hatchery Practices and Management - Atyrau, Kazakhstan, 14–19 April 2009 2010
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No results found.In recent years, the Governments of the Caspian Sea littoral States have indicated in various occasions in recent years that sturgeon rehabilitation and management in the Caspian Sea is a priority issue for them. A number of national and international activities are carried out to support recovery of sturgeon stocks in the Caspian Sea. Examples of these activities include amongst others: • Studies, stakeholder consultations and workshops organized by the multi-donor Caspian Environment Programme (CEP) funded by Global Environment Facility (GEF), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the World Bank, the United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) and the European Union (EU). • The new regional United Nations Development Programme–Global Environment Facility (UNDP–GEF) project “The Caspian Sea: Restoring Depleted Fisheries and Consolidation of a Permanent Regional Environmental Governance Framework” (Cas pEco), due to become effective in early 2009. • Capacity building activities in fisheries management by the World Bank Trust Fund for Environmentally and Socially Sustainable Development (TFESSD). • Training activities by the UNDP-GEF project “Integrated Conservation of Priority Globally Significant Migratory Bird Wetlands Habitat: a Demonstration on Three Sites”. • Workshops organized under the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) Technical Cooperation Programme (TCP) project “Capacity building for the recovery and management of the sturgeon fisheries of the Caspian Sea (GCP/INT/3101). The Caspian Fisheries Technical Workshop, jointly organized by the above mentioned FAO TCP project and the World Bank, and held in Rome, Italy, from 28 to 30 April 2008, indicated an urgent need for training in sturgeon hatchery operations. Similarly, the 2008 work programme of UNDP-GEF project “Integrated Conservation of Priority Globally Significant Migratory Bird Wetlands Habitat: a Demonstration on Three Sites” listed among its activities the conducting of training workshops on development of alternative livelihoods and business, including the organization of training workshops on fish farming. In order not to duplicate activities, but reinforce each others strengths instead, the UNDP-GEF project, FAO and the World Bank have teamed-up with the Ministry of Agriculture of Kazakhstan to provide high quality, targeted training to hatchery sta ff from the Caspian Sea littoral countries. -
Book (series)Sturgeon Hatchery Manual 2013
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This Sturgeon Hatchery Manual includes the latest available scientific research findings and experiences and compiles advice given in earlier manuals and handbooks on sturgeon culture and reproduction practices. This document can be considered an update of the Sturgeon Breeding and Rearing Handbook (Chebanov, Galich and Chmyr, 2004), which was published in the Russian language. The Sturgeon Hatchery Manual was prepared in response to numerous requests for practical guidance on this s ubject from the Central Asian and Caucasus region to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO). This manual is targeted particularly at sturgeon farmers, sturgeon hatchery operators, hatchery technicians, and fisheries and aquaculture managers involved in sturgeon aquaculture development and the restocking and rehabilitation of sturgeon populations in the countries around the basins of the Black and Caspian seas. It aims to provide a practical handbook of mode rn sturgeon hatchery practices and management. The manual is available in the English, Russian and Turkish languages. The manual starts with a chapter on the taxonomy, biology, distribution and life histories of Azov-Black and Caspian Sea sturgeons. Subsequent chapters discuss the following aspects of sturgeon hatchery practices: hatchery design, collection and transportation of wild broodstock, broodstock management, spawning and gamete processing, fry and fingerling rearing, prod uction of live feeds, the technology of artificial reproduction, ecological- morphological and ethological-physiological express estimation of larval and fingerling (fry) viability, release of fingerlings into natural waterbodies, the formation of domesticated broodstock, basic sanitation and fish health measures, tagging, and early sexing and maturity determination in live sturgeons using ultrasound techniques. The manual also contains an extensive list of references, a list of Acip enseriformes and numerous figures, photographs and tables to support the guidance given on the various hatchery practices -
ProjectGuidelines for Broodstock and Hatchery Management 1999
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No results found.The demand for fish fry in Lao PDR is currently estimated at 60 million per year and is constantly increasing. Most fish fry produced in the country originate from the Provincial government hatcheries, which have an estimated annual production of less than 11 million. This shortfall in supply is met in some part by the production activities of private farmers and more importantly through imported fish fry from Vietnam, Thailand and China. Imported fish fry is usually of poor quality an d has suffered extreme transport stress by the time it is stocked into the farmer’s ponds. The lack of choice of species and occasional cheating by middlemen also makes the purchase of this foreign fish fry less desirable. There is a high premium for fish fry produced in LAO PDR due mainly to farmer’s awareness that foreign imported fry is of poor quality. There are few private hatcheries providing fish fry to the provinces and thus the dependence upon production from the Provincial fi sh hatcheries remains. The low production from these hatcheries is due to a wide range of factors, but significant increase in production could be achieved merely by improvement of basic management techniques. As part of an initiative to improve the production from Provincial fish hatcheries, LAO/97/007 is providing assistance in the form of structural improvements and management training. Little attention has been paid to the issues of broodstock management in the past, since this has not been considered as being a critical issue. The result has been that the fish used for breeding in the hatcheries are usually not in an appropriate condition for production of good quality fry. The principle reasons for this are: poor nutrition, under sized animals, inadequate spawning techniques and possibly inbreeding problems. This manual is intended as a guide to hatchery managers and those involved in fish culture activities in Lao PDR. The emphasis of this manual is placed on appropriate techniques that are sensitive to the economic and management realities of Lao PDR. The final chapters of the manual are intended as a guide the effective planning of fish breeding and fry production in hatcheries, together with some examples of how to assess basic economic parameters essential for the sustainable operation of a small fish hatchery.
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