Abstract

The potential and prospect of fish farming of Sreemangal, Moulvibazar was carried out from January to December 2015 by interviewing of 90 fish farmers with a well-structured questionnaire. The survey revealed that 40% of the ponds were seasonal and 60% perennial, of which 85% with single ownership and 15% accompanied by multiple ownership. The average pond size was 0.13 ha and depth 2.6 m. The ponds were prepared using of lime, cow dung, urea and TSP at the rate of 250, 250, 40 and 20 kg/ha, respectively. Nearly all of the farmers practiced polyculture with Indian major carps and exotic carps. Fish was stocked from March to June and average stocking density was 15,500 fingerlings/ha. To sustain natural food production, farmers generally used cow dung, urea and TSP at the rate of 2,600, 300 and 150 kg/ha/yr, respectively. Healthy environmental condition was maintained by applying lime and salt at 600 and 60 kg/ha/yr, respectively. The fish were fed by supplementary feed (45% farm) e.g., rice bran and mustard oil-cake with an average quantity of 2,200 and 550 kg/ha/yr, respectively and artificial pellet feed (55% farm). The average fish production, production cost and profit were found 2,945 kg/ha/yr, 1,25,940 and 94,935 Tk./ha/yr, respectively. The major constraints for sustainable pond fish farming were non-availability of fish fingerlings during stocking period, insufficient water in dry season, high production cost, poor technical knowledge, lack of money etc. By establishing more hatcheries, arranging training at farm level, providing interest free or at lower interest loan to the farmers the existing fish production could be increased.Res. Agric., Livest. Fish.3(2): 361-368, August 2016

Highlights

  • Aquaculture and fisheries at the moment is one of the most important potential sectors of the national economy, accounting to 3.69% of national GDP, 22.60% of agricultural GDP and 2.09% of foreign export earnings (FRSS, 2015)

  • The total fish production in Bangladesh in the fiscal year 2013-14 was estimated as 3.55 million tons, of which 1.96 million tons (55.15%) were obtained from inland aquaculture, 0.99 million tons (28.07%) from capture fisheries and 0.60 million tons (16.78%) from marine fisheries (FRSS, 2015)

  • Fish and fishery resources play a vital role in improving the socio-economic condition, combating malnutrition, earning foreign currency and creating employment opportunities in Bangladesh (Bhuiyan et al, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

Aquaculture and fisheries at the moment is one of the most important potential sectors of the national economy, accounting to 3.69% of national GDP, 22.60% of agricultural GDP and 2.09% of foreign export earnings (FRSS, 2015). In Bangladesh no other sector depicted progress prospective more visibly than fisheries. The total fish production in Bangladesh in the fiscal year 2013-14 was estimated as 3.55 million tons, of which 1.96 million tons (55.15%) were obtained from inland aquaculture, 0.99 million tons (28.07%) from capture fisheries and 0.60 million tons (16.78%) from marine fisheries (FRSS, 2015). Fish and fishery resources play a vital role in improving the socio-economic condition, combating malnutrition, earning foreign currency and creating employment opportunities in Bangladesh (Bhuiyan et al, 2011). More than 17.5 million people are engaged with this sector on full time and part time basis (FRSS, 2015)

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