Farming of Tilapia
Farming of Tilapia
Farming of Tilapia
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FARMING OF TILAPIA
Breeding Plans, Mass Seed Production and Aquaculture Techniques
M.G. Hussain
BSc Fisheries (Hons), MSc Aquaculture & Management, PhD Aquaculture Genetics (Stirling, UK)
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FARMING OF TILAPIA
Breeding Plans, Mass Seed Production and Aquaculture Techniques
First Edition 2004 M.G. Hussain 2004 Hussain, M.G. 2004. Farming of tilapia: Breeding plans, mass seed production and aquaculture techniques. 149 p.
Cover and other photos by M.G. Hussain Printed by Momin Offset Press, Dhaka, Bangladesh
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Dedication
The author dedicates this book to his family, especially to his wife Habiba Akter Hussain and sons Sazzad Hussain and Ali Hussain without whose love, patience, kindness and encouragement this book could never have been completed
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Contents
List of figures List of tables Preface Acknowledgements Chapter 1 1.1 1.2 1.3 Chapter 2 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Chapter 3 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Chapter 4 4.1 Introduction Importance and potential of tilapia species in aquaculture Tilapia species introduction in Bangladesh Performance and potentials of the GIFT strain of Oreochromis niloticus General and reproductive biology of tilapia Taxonomic classification Generic groups of tilapias General biology of Nile tilapia Breeding and reproductive biology of Nile tilapia x xiv xv xvii 1 1 2 3 9 9 9 10 11
Brood stock replacement and breeding plans for 18 tilapia hatchery stocks Brood stock management to avoid genetic stock deterioration Brood stock replacement techniques Breeding plan and genetic stock improvement of tilapia Maximizing the effective population size (Ne) Ploidy manipulation and production of all sterile, female and male population Genomic status and determination of sex
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18 19 20 30 31 31
4.2 4.3
Production of genetically induced all sterile population 4.2.1 Induction of polyploidy Production of genetically induced all female population 4.3.1 Induction of meiotic gynogenesis 4.3.2 Induction of mitotic gynogenesis Production of genetically induced all male population Protocols for chromosome karyopyting Body colour inheritance and development of purebred strains of red tilapia Inheritance of body colour in commercially available strains Importance and problems associated with the present stocks Mechanisms of progeny testing to develop purebred strains of red tilapia Maintenance of purebred brood stock for seed production in the hatchery Development and operation of mixed sex commercial tilapia seed production systems Mixed sex tilapia seed production in ponds Mixed sex tilapia seed production in concrete tanks Mixed sex tilapia seed production in hapas Mixed sex tilapia seed production in rice fields Development and operation of monosex commercial tilapia seed production systems Sex reversal technique for the production of monosex fish fry
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32 32 38 38 39 42 42 45 45 46 48 51 53
53 56 59 61 63 63
7.2
All male monosex seed production through inversion of sexes in tilapia 7.2.1 Hatchery design and operation of monosex seed production systems 7.2.2 Production of YY males and operation of monosex all male seed production system Development and operation of semi-intensive tilapia culture systems Tilapia culture in seasonal ditches and ponds Tilapia culture in rice fields Polyculture of tilapia with carps Tilapia culture in pens Tilapia culture in ponds under commercial farming management Development and operation of intensive tilapia culture systems The suitability of tilapia for intensive culture Tilapia culture in cages Tilapia culture in tanks and raceways 9.3.1 Tilapia culture in tanks 9.3.2 Tilapia culture in raceways Diseases and parasites of tilapia and their control measures Marketing of tilapia Strategies and prospects of frontier development of tilapia aquaculture
63 66 78 86 86 87 90 91 93 102 102 103 107 108 110 113 121 126 130 134 144
Chapter 8 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 Chapter 9 9.1 9.2 9.3
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List of figures
1 2 3 4 5 Mozambique tilapia, Oreochromis mossambicus Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus Red tilapia strain Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (GIFT) strain a. Genital papilla of male Oreochromis niloticus having two opening; the urogenital opening, where the milt and urine are excreted and the anus, for the discharge of fecal waste. b. Genital papilla of female Oreochromis niloticus having three openings; the anus, the urethra for urine passing and the oviduct, where egg passes through Histological section of an ovary shows various stages of development at peak maturation of female Oreochromis niloticus Histological section of a testis shows various stages of development at peak maturation of male Oreochromis niloticus A simple tilapia egg incubation system having a. plastic water bottles and b. medium type of trays connected to the recirculating system Floy tagging underneath the scale below the dorsal fin and above the lateral line of tilapia Plastic numbered tags with nylon thread PIT tagging into the visceral cavity of tilapia
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4 4 5 5 13
16
16
25
9 10 11
28 28 29
12 13 14 15
A schematic diagram of inducing polyploids in O. niloticus using pressure, heat and cold shocks 1 1.5 L vessel capacity pressure apparatus Thermostatically regulated 50 L capacity water bath A schematic diagram of inducing two types of gynogenesis (meiotic and mitotic) in Oreochromis niloticus using pressure, heat and cold shocks Metaphase chromosome of Oreochromis niloticus. a. haploid (n = 22), b. diploid (2n = 44), c. triploid (3n = 66), d. aneuploid metaphase (hyperhaploid or hypodiploid) Purebred red tilapia Impure blotched type tilapia of red phenotype Tilapia fry holding hapas Low cost tilapia breeding and fry rearing tanks Tilapia egg incubation and hatching system model Typical modern monosex tilapia seed production hatchery system in Thailand Tilapia breeding hapas in pond Gathering tilapia breeders at regular intervals for egg collection purpose in the breeding hapa Plastic vowels placed in a bamboo frame for separating the collected fertilized eggs having different colours (based on different age groups)
33 35 35 38
16
44
17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25
52 52 57 57 68 68 73 73 74
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26 27 28 29 30 31 32
A series of round bottom plastic jars and flat trays for incubating the fertilized eggs/hatched fry with yolk sac Separate flat trays where hatched larvae are kept until their yolk sac resorption stage is over The protocol for preparation and application of hormone mixed feeds for sex reversal of Nile tilapia fry Automatic hormone feed mixing machine The technique of application of hormone mixed feeds to the first feeding fry in the transitory hapas Manual counting of tilapia fry a. Hapas can be installed in the pond and fixed and tied to nylon ropes and bamboo poles for feeding hormone mixed feeds; b. Hapas can be installed and fixed with RCC frame made over the pond for feeding hormone mixed feeds The protocol for feeding of hormone mixed feeds The technique of application of hormone mixed feeds to the early fry in the nursery hapas The protocol for sex identification in tilapia fry The protocol of producing all male monosex population through the indirect method of sex reversal The monk in a pond A typical layout of a fish arm View of a commercial fish farm
33 34 35 36 37 38 39
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40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51
Simple paddle wheel type of aerators set in the ponds for aeration of water to add more oxygen The floating rafts with net cages for intensive tilapia culture The cemented tanks for intensive tilapia culture Race ways for intensive tilapia culture Abdominal dropsy in tilapia Protozoan parasite Chilodonella sp. Protozoan parasite Trichodina sp. Fish lice Argulas sp. Washing of harvested live tilapias in the holding tank with the inflowing cool water before marketing Tilapias in the retailing fish market for the consumers Tilapia is a fish of the decade Tilapia is a good food fish
101 106 109 111 116 117 118 119 123 123 129 129
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List of tables
1 Serum calcium concentration and steroid hormone levels in mature female and male O. niloticus. All values are mean SE estimated from an equal number (n=10) of fish in each category Inbreeding resulting from some matings between closely related individuals Correlation between effective population size (Ne) and rate of inbreeding in a hatchery Polyploidy induction in various Oreochromis spp. using pressure, heat and cold shocks Gynogenesis induction in various Oreochromis spp. using pressure and heat shocks Formulated feed for feeding tilapia fry in rearing hapas and nursery ponds Formulated feed for feeding tilapia under semi-intensive system in the grow out ponds Available data on tilapia cage culture in different countries Available data on tilapia culture in tanks in different countries 17
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
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Preface
In the context of declining trends both in inland and marine capture fisheries, aquaculture is the most promising option for increasing fish production. In addition to earning profits, aquaculture can improve the livelihoods and nutrition of the resource-poor rural people in the region. In fact, promotion of aquaculture of Indian and Chinese major carp and shrimp species has taken place for many years in the developing countries of this part of Asia, like Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Although production was promisingly increased especially for carps through adoption of improved technologies, but these could not be diversified out of freshwater areas. On the other hand, mass involvement of rural people in carp and shrimp culture was found difficult due to their limited water resources and financial incapability in many cases. Like Thailand and Vietnam, recently farming of riverine catfish (Pangasius sutchi) has dramatically increased in Bangladesh. However, feed crisis and low market prices have severely damaged the progress of farming of this fish in the country. On the other hand, improved extensive shrimp culture is in collapse due to disease outbreaks in recent times. Under such conditions, a large number of commercial catfish and shrimp producers are looking for alternative species to culture in their farms to maximize the production. Of the available farmed species, tilapias are among the best candidates to overcome the situation due to their desirable characteristics like ease of seed production, high yield, disease resistance and efficiency of growing well with organic and agricultural wastes and low cost feeds. In spite of the promising future of tilapia farming in Bangladesh, it took a long time to realize the fact, due to some negative attitudes of the respective organization(s) and decision makers. Although the best tilapia farming species like Nile tilapia (Oreochronis niloticus) was introduced in this country in 1974, but it was not clear that the species is highly potential and productive for suitable water bodies until the Bangladesh Fisheries Research Institute (BFRI) discovered the truth through introduction of GIFT strain (1994) and subsequently conducted intensive research and developed the super strain of GIFT. Tilapia farming is gaining popularity day by day in Bangladesh and a number of entrepreneurs have already initiated its hatchery development
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for commercial mixed and monosex seed production and farming in different parts of the country. It has been felt that very little readily available information on farming practices of tilapia is available in Bangladesh and elsewhere in this region. Therefore, an attempt has been made to prepare a comprehensive handbook and publish it initially in English for the national and international readers. This book highlights the importance of tilapia species in aquaculture, the performance of the GIFT strain of Oreochromis niloticus, general and reproductive biology of tilapia, brood stock replacement and development of outbred and genetically improved hatchery stocks of tilapia in the Chapter 1, Chapter 2 and Chapter 3. Simple classical biotechnological tools to develop genetically induced all sterile, female and male populations in tilapia and production of purebred red tilapia strains are detailed in Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 . In Chapter 6 and Chapter 7, special emphasis has been given to simple techniques for design and operation of mixed and monosex mass seed production systems. Detailed development and operation of semi-intensive systems, intensive systems of tilapia culture, disease and parasites of tilapia and their control measures and marketing of tilapia are presented respectively in Chapter 8, Chapter 9, Chapter 10 and Chapter 11. All these chapters are designed for progressive fish farmers and entrepreneurs. Finally in Chapter 12, a note on future strategies and prospects of frontier development of tilapia aquaculture is highlighted. I have tried my best to invest my knowledge on the subject in compiling the best information on tilapia farming in this book, which I believe will be useful as a guide to hatchery operators, entrepreneurs, progressive farmers, researchers and planners developing programs for simple breeding, stock improvement, mass seed production and various aquaculture techniques of the fish in Bangladesh and elsewhere in Asia where tilapias are being used for promotion of aquaculture. M.G. Hussain
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Acknowledgements
The author wishes to acknowledge the kindness of all of his good friends and colleagues, who have provided information, materials and photographs for use in this book. These persons are: Dr. R.S.V. Pullin, Dr. M.V. Gupta, Dr. A.E. Eknath, Dr. R.A. Dunham, Dr. M.M. Dey, Dr. G. C. Mair, Dr. R.W. Ponzoni, Drs. J. Janssen, Prof. B.J. McAndrew, Dr. M. Karim, Dr. A. Wahab, Dr. R.I. Sarder, Dr. M.J. Alam, Dr. A.H.M. Kohinoor and Mr. S. Islam. Dr. E. Hoq assisted and formulated the overall design of the book. Special thanks are due to Dr. M.A. Mazid, Director General of Bangladesh Fisheries Research Institute for his kindness to allow me for using many materials from the institute library and stations including his valuable suggestions and encouragement. Dr. Nuanmanee Pongthana, the former Director, National Aquaculture Genetic Research Institute, Thailand guided me to collect information and design of monosex tilapia hatchery from private tilapia hatchery entrepreneurs of several provinces in Thailand. She also provided a number of her diagrams and photographs for this document. I am also indebted to Mr. Yong Kim Thai, Managing Director of PKPS Farm Mart, Selangor, Malaysia for his kind permission to use some of his farm photographs in this book. All the assistance and support from the tilapia hatchery and farming entrepreneurs of Bangladesh viz. NIRIBILI Group, Shubra Hatchery Group, Bismillah Hatchery Group, Muktagacha Fisheries, Poultry and Dairy Farms Ltd. and Riliance Aqua Ltd. are greatly acknowledged. I owe my greatest debt to my lovely wife Habiba Akhter Hussain (Koli) for her continuous support and encouragement until the completion of this book. Above all my thanks go to Dr. David J. Penman, Fish Genetics and Reproduction Research Group, Institute of Aquaculture, Stirling University, Scotland, who provided a wealth of information and critically reviewed and improved the first draft of the manuscript.
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Farming of Tilapia
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1.1
Introduction
IMPORTANCE AND POTENTIAL OF TILAPIA SPECIES IN AQUACULTURE
Tilapias are a group of Cichlid fish native to African countries. In the early days of the 20th century, tilapias were wild fish in the great lakes and rivers of that continent. In the central African countries, farming of tilapias in ponds was introduced after Second World War. After that the tilapia species were spread over most of the tropical and sub-tropical countries of the world. In recent years, commercial farming of several species of tilapia has become a common practice in aquaculture throughout several regions of the world such as China, SE Asia, Africa, USA and Latin America/Caribbean (Vannuccini 1998). According to FAO, the total world production of tilapias (wild and aquaculture) has increased from 37, 500 mt in 1950 to 1, 265, 800 mt in 2000. While widespread introductions have provided the mechanism for expansion of tilapia culture, effective management of reproduction is the primary factor that has been instrumental in the realization of their aquaculture potential in the later half of the 20th century (Shelton 2002). Although the important natural tilapia genetic resources are in Africa, the major aquaculture industries at present are in Asia. About 989,899 mt tilapia were produced in Asia in 1999 of which 62.6% came from China. Other countries like, Thailand (151,647 mt), Philippines (99,724 mt), Indonesia (86,930 mt) and Sri Lanka (31, 450 mt) are the major tilapia producing countries in Asia (Guerrero 2002). A total of about 70 species of tilapia have been so far listed as native to Africa (Anon 1984). Only a few species are suitable and popular for farming in ponds and other culture systems, which include Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus), Blue tilapia (O. aureus), Mozambique tilapia (O. mossambicus), three spotted tilapia (O. andersonii), longfin tilapia (O. macrochir), Galilee tilapia (Sarotherodon galilaeus), blackchin tilapia (S.
Farming of Tilapia
melanotheron) and redbelly tilapia (Tilapia zillii). There are also some genetically improved strains such as Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (GIFT), red tilapia strains and hybrids. Pullin (1983) compared the attributes of various species with culture potential; he suggested concentrating research efforts on the Blue tilapia and Nile tilapia. While the former is still used to produce hybrids, it has been effectively left behind as the Nile tilapia (O. niloticus) has taken the lead as the principal species (cited by Shelton 2002). Above all, O. niloticus has been recognized as the prime domesticated species for farming in a wide range of aquaculture systems from simple waste-fed fishponds to intensive culture systems (ICLARM 1991). In the First International Symposium on Tilapia in Aquaculture (May 1983, Nazareth, Israel) Drs. Liao and Chen concluded that Tilapia is no longer an African fish but an International fish. It is believed that in the future it may become the most important fin fish in the world. Vannuccini (1998) stated Tilapia, once considered a low value fish, only suitable for the ethnic market, has in recent times gained wider consumer acceptance and is now considered an attractive menu item in chain restaurants. Tilapia has also been described as the important aquaculture species of the 21st century, which being grown on commercial farms in 100 countries of the world from extensive to super-intensive. It remains to be seen whether the food fish of the 21st century will surpass production of the carps in aquaculture during the new millennium (Fitzsimmons 2000).
1.2
Among tilapias, Mozambique tilapia, O. mossambicus (Figure 1) was the first species, which was introduced into Bangladesh from Thailand in 1954. The fish did not flourish and proved to be a pest due to its early maturation and prolific breeding habits in the ponds. As a result, producers
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and consumers regarded the fish as nuisance fish. During the 1970s a renewed interest in tilapia culture developed in some Asian countries including Bangladesh with the introduction of Nile tilapia, O. niloticus (Figure 2). Overall performance of Nile tilapia and other fast growing tilapias have proved that they are no longer pests but have come to be known as aquatic chicken. In 1974, the Chitralada strain of Nile tilapia, a promising farmed species, was introduced into Bangladesh from Thailand through UNICEF. The Bangladesh Fisheries Research Institute (BFRI, formerly FRI) initiated the second introduction of the fish in this country, also from Thailand, in 1987. Meanwhile, a red mutant tilapia (Figure 3), a hybrid between albino O. mossambicus x O. niloticus, was developed in Taiwan and introduced into Thailand. In 1988 Drs. M.G. Hussain and S. Dewan brought a batch of this red strain of tilapia to Bangladesh from the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT), Bangkok, Thailand. Under the Dissemination and Evaluation of Genetically Improved Tilapia in Asia (DEGITA) project of WorldFish Center (Formerly ICLARM), another promising Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (GIFT) strain (Figure 4), a synthetic strain of O. niloticus, was introduced in July 1994 from the Philippines.
Farming of Tilapia
the Genetically Improved Tilapia in Asia (DEGITA, Asian Development Bank (ADB) Technical Assistant Grant Project: RETA No. 5558)".
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1.3.2 The suitability of GIFT strain for seed production and aquaculture
The GIFT strain has, meanwhile, proved to be very suitable fish for aquaculture in Bangladesh and other DEGITA countries. The desirable characteristics of this genetically improved strain are as follows: High yielding Excellent breeder Efficient converter of organic and agricultural wastes in to high quality protein Resistant to disease Very hardy Tolerant to over crowding conditions Able to grow in either fresh or brackish water
The GIFT strain of O. niloticus is being presently widely used for mono sex seed production in a large number of tilapia hatcheries in Thailand (Dr. Nuanmanee Pongthana, personal communication).
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the selected group showed 27.3% superiority over the non-selected GIFT control. Due to excellent performances for growth and other relevant traits (survival, fecundity and disease resistance) the new strain can be termed as Super Strain of GIFT (ie. BFRI Super GIFT). The new super strain is gaining popularity day by day in Bangladesh and a number of entrepreneurs have already initiated its hatchery development for commercial mixed and monosex seed production and farming in several regions of the country. To date, tilapias have yet to be farmed widely in Bangladesh, because interest in tilapia farming is growing due to its success in other Asian countries and increasing consumer acceptance (ADB 2004).
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2.1
Tilapias are predominantly freshwater finfishes often some species characterized with nest building and surface or mouth brooding habits. The taxonomic classification of the Nile tilapia is given below: Phylum: Subphylum: Class: Order: Family: Genus: Species: Common name: Chordata Vertebrata Osteichthyes Perciformes Cichlidae Oreochromis Oreochromis niloticus Linnaeus Nile tilapia
2.2
The fishery scientists and taxonomists change the generic names of tilapias from time to time on the basis of research on their various characters but mainly by spawning and breeding behaviors. Dr. E. Trewavas, a Senior Tilapia Taxonomist of British Museum (Natural History) made a thorough review of natural history of African cichlid species in her book Tilapiine Species and showed the basis for distinguishing Tilapia, Sarotherodon and Oreochromis as genera. According to Trewavas (1983) the three main distinct generic groups of tilapias are as below: Genus Tilapia: Includes those species which are substrate spawners and do not keep the eggs in the mouth for incubation, e.g. T. zillii.
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Genus Sarotherodon: Includes those species which are mostly paternal mouth brooders and sometimes eggs and hatched larvae are brooded by both parents, e.g. S. galilaeus, S. melanotheron. Genus Oreochromis: Includes those species which are exclusively maternal mouth brooders. In this group the males construct and defend a mating territory in an arena with other males in adjacent terrirories, and females come to find spawning partners, e.g. O. niloticus, O. aureus, O. mossambicus.
2.3
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2.3.3 Growth
In tropical pond waters under semi-intensive culture management, the Nile tilapia can grow to 150 250 g in 4 to 6 months, 500 to 800 g in 10 to 12 months and 2 3 kg in 2 years. In the great lakes of Africa, several scientists (Worthington and Ricardo 1936; Lowe-McConnell 1958) recorded maximum sizes of 61- 64 cm, weights 4-7 kg.
2.3.4 Food
O. niloticus is capable of using a wide range of food materials from tiny plankton (phytoplanton and zooplankton) to macrophytes. It grows well on artificial feeds. The young fry are omnivorous, actively pursuing copepods, hydracarines and various insects, both aquatic larvae and terrestrial insects that fall on the water (Trewavas 1983).
2. 4
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erected conical genital papilla fully descends to deposit the ovulated ova (unfertilized eggs) in batches (30 60 eggs/batch). It is reported that the females subsequent to ovulation attract the partner males through releasing sexual pheromones (Velasco 2003a). The male ejects milt over the eggs to effect fertilization immediately after deposition of each batch of eggs by the female (Chen 1976). In view of mouth brooding the female picks up the fertilized eggs in to her mouth. Ova deposition and fertilization activities occur over a period of up to 2 3 hours.
Fig. 5 a. Genital papilla of male Oreochromis niloticus having two opening; the urogenital opening, where the milt and urine are excreted and the anus, for the discharge of fecal waste. b. Genital papilla of female Oreochromis niloticus having three openings; the anus, the urethra for urine passing and the oviduct, where egg passes through.
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(f) Fecundity
The colour of ripe and fertilized eggs is pale yellow orange; they are ovoid in shape and the size ranges between 1.0-2.0 mm x 1.5-3.0 mm in diameter, and 2.3 2.8 mm in length. The fecundity fluctuates widely from a few hundred to several thousand eggs, depending on the size and age of the female. It is reported that as the weight of GIFT strain O. niloticus increases to a range of 180 498 g, the number of eggs decreases. It means that absolute fecundity in this species is inversely correlated with the weight of sexually mature females (Velasco 2003a).
The weight of first feeding tiny fry of Nile tilapia is about 0.01g and after this stage they are able to take natural or artificial feeds and move easily in the surrounding waters and do not need any parental care.
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Fig. 6 Histological section of an ovary shows various stages of development at peak maturation of female Oreochromis niloticus.
Fig. 7 Histological section of a testis shows various stages of development at peak maturation of male Oreochromis niloticus.
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hormone acts as precursor in oestrogen synthesis. Ultimately, vitellogenin and all other sex steroid hormones have interlinked functions to regulate oocyte maturation. Similarly in male fish sex steroid hormones also regulate more or less the sexual maturation and development of testicular products (ie. semen and sperm). Serum calcium concentration (index of vitellogenin) and sex steroid hormone levels in sexually matured female and male O. niloticus have been determined respectively by using the atomic absorption spectrophotometry and radioimmunoassay techniques (Hussain et al. 1995) and the data are presented in Table 1.
Table 1. Serum calcium concentration and steroid hormone levels in mature female and male O. niloticus. All values are mean SE estimated from an equal number (n=10) of fish in each category. Sexes Female Male Serum Ca++level -1 (mg 100 ml ) 34.286.3 16.460.5 Testosterone (ng ml-1) 39.077.1 82.0717.2 11-ketotestosterone (ng ml-1) 0.0 37.4512.5 17--oestradiol (ng ml-1) 0.012.542.3 0.0
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Brood stock replacement and breeding plans for tilapia hatchery stocks
BROOD STOCK MANAGEMENT TO AVOID GENETIC STOCK DETERIORATION
3.1
As it is an established fact that the main drawback of all the existing commercial tilapia strains is their precocious maturation and short cycle habit of reproduction in pond conditions, which ultimately leads the subsequent generations to become stunted and undesirable. The most detrimental problem associated with the growing population, as they rapidly become poor genetic material due to inbreeding of stocks for poor brood stock management. A short generation time and essentially uncontrolled reproduction make tilapia susceptible to inbreeding. On the other hand, in a small-scale seed production system of tilapia inbreeding will be common because of the mating of close relatives as in most cases female and male breeders are chosen from the finite population. Such uncontrolled inbreeding often leads to the loss of genetic variability and other deleterious consequences known as inbreeding depression. Inbreeding depression makes a stock having the characteristics of reduced growth rate, loss of fecundity, increased incidence of deformities, poor survival etc. Inbreeding tends to increase the homozygosity across all loci fixing some alleles while others are lost (Mair 1999). Such genetic stock deterioration will undoubtedly be a critical problem for tilapia seed production. Therefore, a good brood stock management practice in a hatchery or seed production system of tilapia is essential to avoid inbreeding and other related genetic stock deterioration aspects.
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Table 2. Inbreeding resulting from some matings between closely related individuals (Dr. Raul Ponzoni, personal communication). Mating between breeding stocks Full sibs Parent offspring Half sibs Uncle-niece First cousins Unrelated Inbreeding rate at 1st generation (%) 25.0 25.0 12.5 12.5 6.5 0.0
3.2
Use of a high effective population size (ie. Ne) supported by standard reference stocks/strains will be the main principle of the tilapia breeding plan in a hatchery. The mating protocol should be devised in such a way that will reduce the chances of declining genetic variation between pairs. A tilapia hatchery operator should maintain at least 500 brood fish (more or less equal number of females and males) per generation as a standard population size for breeding. For brood stock replacement a simple protocol should be developed and maintained to ensure that each pair of breeders will contribute only once to the next generation. The steps of the protocol is furnished below: Required numbers of founder stock need to be collected from a known source (either from BFRI or from its regional stations/sub-stations) and reared in the holding tanks/ponds until maturity. Brood stock should be transferred and kept separately by sex in two transitory hapas (size 8 m x 2.5m x 1 m). Before stocking at least 80 to 100 breeding hapas (size 1 x 1 x 1 m) need to be set in a pond. A pair of female and male breeders (1:1 ratio) are stocked in each breeding hapa.
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It is necessary to check the mouth of all the stocked fish in each hapa 10-14 days interval to collect the fertilized eggs/larvae with yolk sac in view of their artificial incubation. Fertilized eggs/larvae with yolk sac that have been collected from the mouth of each female fish will be kept separately and incubated family wise in plastic jars. Immediately after hatching, the larvae are shifted to a series of trays and kept until their yolk sac resorption stage i.e. first feeding fry stage (in farmers condition, if the egg/larvae incubation system is not available, in that case, mouth checking is not necessary, alternatively fry produced in the hapas can be collected at fortnightly interval by scooping them from the inside or lifting up the bottom). Subsequently, at least 200 fry from each progeny family will be transferred to separate nursery hapas (size 1 x 1 x 1 m). Fry need to be grown up to 30 40 g size in the same hapa by reducing their numbers 40 50 fingerlings/m3. From each progeny group at least 5 females and 5 males should be selected as reference stock by manual sexing and shifted them for brood stock replacement. This will be done to ensure the equal contribution of each breeding pair to brood stock replacement as well as to maximize the effective population size (Ne).
3.3
In view of enhancing productivity of aquaculture species including tilapia, a number of advanced genetic techniques are presently available viz. chromosome manipulation, hybridization, cross breeding, sex reversal (including YY-male technology), gene transfer and selective breeding. None of these techniques are suitable for continuous improvement of desired traits of a population except selective breeding. Selective breeding is a long-term continuous strategy to improve the production performance and quality of tilapia (WorldFish Center 2004). In a well-designed
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selective breeding program the pedigree of brood fish can be monitored to increase the accuracy of selection and to restrict inbreeding. Through adopting brood stock replacement program as described above, the tilapia hatchery operators have a chance to collect and maintain superior brood stock and mate them accordingly. If the selective breeding technique can be added with brood stock replacement program, then it will be wonderful to improve a stock with desirable traits and high genetic variation. In this way, genetically superior individuals can be developed per generation, heritability and genetic variability of all traits can be increased to a maximum level and inbreeding depression can be kept to a minimum (Hussain and Mazid 2001). Such superior and outbred stocks may be of benefit to breeding and aquaculture by increasing growth rate, fecundity, survival and disease resistance of commercially important tilapia species/strains.
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the production of next generation. Individual selection of the breeders is followed based on empirical assessment of best size and weight, good growth and healthy appearance (Hussain and Mazid 2001). It is also reported that when using a mass selection method, after several generations the accumulation of inbreeding can be a major problem. The selected breeding candidates can become more related to each other. If large families are naturally produced or stocked in the test environment, the wide genetic variation and common non-genetic effects (e.g. maternal and age effects) may easily result in a disproportionately high contribution of individuals from just a few parents to the next generation, and a consequent accumulation of inbreeding. Such inbreeding reduces the genetic variation and the potential for further genetic improvement in the breeding population (WorldFish Center 2004). In this situation either family selection strategy or combined selection strategy can be followed as described in the manual entitled Gift technology manual: An aid to tilapia selective breeding published by WorldFish Center (2004).
3.3.3 Initiate breeding and testing programs (a) Selection, sexing and maintenance of brood stock
During the month March/April, when the Nile tilapia brood stock derived as base population become sexually mature, the best females and males are chosen (weighing between 100-150 gm each) and kept separately by sex in two transitory hapas (size 8 m x 2.5m x 1 m) set in a pond until they are used for the planned selective breeding program. During this transitory period, the brood stock are maintained by proper feeding.
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hapa. Artificial feeds having 35% crude protein can be fed @ 3 - 4% per estimated weight of biomass 2-3 times daily.
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Fig. 8a A simple tilapia egg incubation system having plastic water bottles.
Fig. 8b A simple tilapia egg incubation system having medium type of trays.
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either side with the needle carefully inserted underneath the scale below the dorsal fin and above the lateral line (Figure 9). Another type of flat, comparatively longer shaped plastic numbered tags with nylon thread (Figure10) can be used by fixing them at the dorsal fin or tail region of the tilapia fingerlings. For tilapia the most convenient is digital tagging by Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT) tags (Figure 11). The capsulated PIT tags are implanted within the visceral cavity of the fish, which provide a safe, secured and permanent identification of experimental fish (both for fingerlings and breeders). An electronic scanner is used to read out the digital number at the time of sampling and harvesting.
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Fig. 9 Floy tagging underneath the scale below the dorsal fin and above the lateral line of tilapia.
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Fish can be harvested when they attain the weight about 100 150 g. All the test fish should be captured as carefully as possible and the individual tag numbers, sex, sexual maturation condition, body weight, standard length, body width, body depth etc. should be recorded.
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Ploidy manipulation and production of all sterile, female and male population
GENOMIC STATUS AND DETERMINATION OF SEX
4.1
Like other finfish, the gametes (i.e. sperms and eggs) are produced by the male and female O. niloticus. A single gamete can be termed as genome (i.e. having a haploid set of chromosomes). At fertilization of mature egg and sperm, the two haploid genomes or gametes form a zygote and this complement is termed as diploid. Each genome in this species of tilapia contains 22 chromosomes, therefore, a zygote has a diploid genomic status having a total of 44 chromosomes. O. niloticus has an XX/XY sex determining system. Here, each haploid set of chromosomes in the egg contains a single X sex chromosome and in the sperm it contains either an X or a Y sex chromosome. In this case, the offspring that are produced from the fertilized eggs having XX (homogametic) set of sex chromosomes become females, while those are produced having XY (heterogametic) set of sex chromosomes become males. As the mechanism of sex determination is known in Nile tilapia, the methods of controlling sex have become easier. Ploidy or chromosome manipulation has become popular research in this fish since 1980s for the generation of genetically induced sterile and mono-sex (either all female or all male) populations. Various techniques have been developed so far to interfere with normal functioning of the metaphase spindle apparatus during cell division in eggs using several causal agents, such as physical shocks (temperature and hydrostatic pressure), chemicals (i.e. endomitotics) and anesthetics (i.e. nitrous oxide and freon). As a result,
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individuals with differing genomic status can be produced in a population as below: Polyploids (triploid and tetraploid) Gynogenetics (both meiotic and mitotic gynogenetics) Androgenetics (embryonic development with chromosomes)
paternal
4.2
Genetically induced sterile populations can be produced by the induction of polyploidy (triploidy and tetraploidy) in the developing eggs of Nile tilapia. Such sterility in both female and male fish can be of benefit to aquaculture, where control of reproduction and population is desirable.
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embryos. A schematic diagram of inducing polyploids in O. niloticus using pressure, heat and cold shocks is shown in Figure 12.
Fig. 12 A schematic diagram of inducing polyploids in O. niloticus using pressure, heat and cold shocks (Hussain 1996).
Methods for triploidy and tetraploidy induction (a) Collection and maintenance of brood stock
Sufficient numbers (>100 pairs) of purebred O. niloticus brood stock including improved GIFT strain are to be collected from a known source and attention to be given for their special maintenance in ponds or tanks and feeding with protein rich artificial feeds. For artificial breeding in view of chromosome manipulation works, sexually mature fish are maintained under at least 12-h photoperiod and transferred into a series of 120 L glass aquaria provided a recirculated, aerated and temperature controlled (281 oC) water supply in a wet laboratory. A single male and female are accommodated in each aquarium but are kept separate by a sheet of Perspex. In these aquaria the fish need to be fed with commercial pellets (at least 40% protein) at the rate of 2-3% body weight per day.
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For pressure shocking the fertilised eggs, the vessel and hydraulic pump reservoir are first filled with 281 oC clean water. Eggs are held in individual uncapped vials and, after the vessel is sealed and purged of air, the pressure release valve is closed, pressure was applied gradually by a manually operated hydraulic pump. The time is taken to raise the pressure level from ambient to 8,000 9,000 psi typically in the region of 30 sec with the passage from 8000 10,000 psi taking a further 10 sec. Pressure is released by gradually opening the valve and so the pressure dropped typically over 30 sec (9,000 0 psi). After the pressure treatment, the eggs are removed from the vials and transferred directly to incubating jars. For thermal (heat and cold) shocking the fertilized eggs, the water bath (temp. range 0 to 100 oC capable of maintaining 0.1 oC) needs to be filled with clean water and allowed to heat the water up to required temperature. The optimal pressure, heat and cold shock parameters for the induction of triploidy in O. niloticus (Hussain et al., 1991) are as follows: Pressure shock: 8000 psi, 2 min duration to be applied 9 min after fertilization (a.f.). Heat shock: 41 oC, 3.5 min duration to be applied 5 min a.f. Cold shock: 9 oC, 30 min duration to be applied 7 min a.f.
The optimal pressure and heat shock parameters to suppress the first cleavage or mitotic events of cell division in the fertilized eggs in the Nile tilapia (Hussain et al. 1993) can be used for the induction of tetraploidy are as below: Pressure shock: 9000 psi, 2 min duration to be applied 40-50 min a.f. Heat shock: : 41 oC, 3.5 duration to be applied 27.5-30 min a.f.
The induction of triploidy and tetraploidy has already been carried out in various Oreochromis spp. is shown in Table 4.
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Induction widow 9 min a.f. 5 min a.f. 7 min a.f. 15 min a.f. 57-60 a.f. 92 min a.f.
Authors Hussain et al. (1991)) Hussain et al. (1991)) Hussain et al. (1991)) Valenti (1975)) Myers (1986) Don & Avatalion (1988)
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4.3
Genetically induced all female populations in fish can be produced by artificial diploidization of the maternal chromosome complement either by retention of the second polar body or inhibition of first cleavage using physical and chemical treatments. So two types of gynogenetic individuals can thus be generated through the induction of meiotic or mitotic events of fertilized eggs. A schematic diagram of inducing two types of gynogenesis (meiotic and mitotic) in O. niloticus using pressure, heat and cold shocks is shown in Figure 15.
Fig. 15 A schematic diagram of inducing two types of gynogenesis (meiotic and mitotic) in O. niloticus using pressure, heat and cold shocks (Hussain 1996).
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chromosome set(s). At present there are few direct applications of meiotic gynogens in aquaculture because the fish partly or mostly are inbred and have reduced variability compared to normal diploids. It has commonly suggested that meiotic gynogentic induction coupled with sex inversion such that functional XX males could be produced (Nagy 1987; Thorgaard and Allen 1987; Pongathana et al. 1995). Such sex-reversed males are thought to be useful in cross breeding experiments to produce all outbred monosex female population, where the growth rate of females is superior to males.
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Methods for induction of meiotic and mitotic gynogenesis (a) Source of brood stock, their maintenance, sperm/egg collection and fertilization
The true breeding O. niloticus brood stock collection, their maintenance, stripping of sperm/egg collection and fertilization protocols are described in section 3.1.1 of this chapter.
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Pressure shock: 8000 psi, 2 min duration to be applied 9 min after fertilization (a.f.). Heat shock: 41 oC, 3.5 min duration to be applied 5 min a.f.
To interfere with the first mitosis for the induction of mitotic gynogenesis the recommended optimal parameters of pressure and heat shocks (Hussain et al. 1993) can be used as below: Pressure shock: 9000 psi, 2 min duration to be applied 40-50 min a.f. Heat shock: 41 oC, 3.5 min duration to be applied 27.5-30 min a.f.
Table 5 shows a brief review of suppression of meiotic and mitotic events of cell division in the fertilised eggs to produce meiotic and mitotic gynogenetics in various Oreochromis spp. Egg incubation and checking of survival rates of embryos at various developmental stages can be done as described in the protocols in section 2.2.3. and 3.1.1. Determination of ploidy status can be performed as explained in the protocols in section 4.5.
Table 5. Gynogenesis induction in various Oreochromis spp. using pressure and heat shocks.
Species Oreochromis niloticus Oreochromis niloticus Oreochromis mossambicus Oreochromis niloticus Oreochromis niloticus Oreochromis niloticus Causal agents PS HS HS PS HS HS Intensity level 8000 psi for 3.5 min o 41 C for 3.5 min 41.7 C for 3 min 9000 psi for 2 min o 41 C for 3.5 min 41 C for 3.5 min
o o
Induction widow 9 min a.f. 5 min a.f. 32-54 min a.f. 40-50 min a.f. 27.5-30 min a.f. 25-35 min a.f.
Ploidy status Meiotic gynogenetic Meiotic gynogenetic Meiotic gynogenetic Mitotic gynogenetic Mitotic gynogenetic Mitotic gynogenetic
Authors Hussain et al. (1991) Mair (1988); Hussain et al. (1991) Varadaraj & Pandian (1990) Hussain et al. (1993) Hussain et al. (1993) Mair (1988)
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4.4
The induction of androgenesis is the alternative method of producing genetically induced all male population in tilapia and other selected fish species to replace hormonal sex reversal. Another possible application of genetically induced males lies in recovering genotypes from cryopreserved sperm, which is important as egg and embryo cryopreservation has not yet been succeeded. Androgenesis is a genome manipulation technique, the reverse to gynogenesis, which involves a genetically inactivated egg fertilised with normal sperm. The resulting embryo develops with entirely paternal chromosomal inheritance without any contribution from the maternal chromosomes. The eggs can be inactivated successfully by gamma or x-rays including UV irradiation. The first androgenetic diploids were produced by the suppression of first cleavage of inactivated eggs in salmonids (Parsons and Thorgaard, 1985; May et al. 1988; Thorgaard et al. 1990) and later in Nile tilapia (J.M. Myers personal communication). For the commercial production and application of genetically induced males need further research.
4.5
Hussain and McAndrew (1994) developed an improved technique for chromosome karyrotyping from embryonic and soft tissues of tilapia. The protocol for chromosome preparation from embryonic tissues is as follows: Embryonic tissues need to be collected from newly hatched or 1 dayold larvae of treatment groups. For each group (ca 100) 15 - 20 embryos are placed in a small Petri dish containing 8 - 10 ml of 0.002 - 0.005% colchicine solution (freshly prepared or stored for 4 - 6 hrs at 28oC).
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Tissues are obtained from the embryos in chilled 0.75% saline solution under a dissecting microscope by removing their heads and yolk sacs and putting these in distilled water (hypotonic solution) for 8 - 12 min. The tissues are then immersed in a fixative of 4:1 methanol - acetic acid at 4oC. After two changes the tissues are stored in the fixative for 30 - 90 days. To prepare the slides, the tissues are removed from the fixative and, later blotting out the excess fixative, placed in the cavity of a Perspex slide with two to three drops 60% glacial acetic acid and minced for 1 min. with a glass rod to allow sufficient dissociation of epithelial cells. After 15 - 20 min., three to four drops of cell suspension are dropped from a height of 30 - 40 cm onto a clean glass slide on a warmed hot plate (44 - 48oC) and withdrawn within 8 - 12 seconds leaving a fine and clean ring of cells using a single micro-hematocrit dropper. Slides are air dried and stained with freshly prepared 10% Giemsa stain (prepared in 0.01M phosphate buffer pH 7.0) for 15 - 20 min. The slides are rinsed in distilled water, air dried and mounted with DPX after 10 min. of Xylene wash.
The protocol for chromosome preparation from soft tissues is as follows: Soft tissues like gill epithelia and the soft edges of the caudal fin are collected from 25-30 day old (after hatching) fry. The are placed overnight (10-12 hours) in a plastic container with aerated 0.01-0.02% colchicine solution. The temperature of the solution is maintained 281 oC. Tissues are collected with fine scissors and forceps then transferred immediately to distilled water for 10-20 min before being fixed in 4:1 methanol-acetic acid (two changes) and stored at 4 oC up to 30 days. Slides are prepared according to the same technique described for chromosome karyotyping from embryonic tissues. Metaphase spreads of chromosomes are to be checked and chromosome number noted by observing the slides under x400 and x1000 (oil immersion) magnifications, respectively, with a compound microscope.
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Counting the chromosomes of as many karyotypes as possible per slide carries out the karyological examination. The karyotypes of O. niloticus consisting of 22 pairs with no morphologically distinct sex chromosomes. In fact only one pair large marker chromosomes are recognizable and remaining 21 being similar in size and acrocentric morphologically. The haploid, diploid and triploid metaphases, which are composed of respectively one (n=22 including one large marker chromosome), two (2n=44 including two large marker chromosomes) and three (3n=66 including three large marker chromosomes) sets of chromosomes are shown in Figure 16 a-c. Aneuploid metaphase (hyperhaploid or hypodiploid) is composed of more than 22 and less than 44 chromosomes in this species (Figure 16 d).
Fig. 16 Metaphase chromosome of Oreochromis niloticus. a. haploid (n = 22), b. diploid (2n = 44), c. triploid (3n = 66), d. aneuploid metaphase (hyperhaploid or hypodiploid) (Hussain 1995).
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5.1
After the discovery of Mendels theory of heredity or inheritance, many geneticists working with various plants and animals have since conducted an immense number of experimental works. Meanwhile, studies have also been made particularly to determine the genetics of body colour inheritance in a limited number of commercial and experimental populations of fishes including tilapias. Commercially available red tilapia strains are mostly hybrids and products of cross breeding involving as many as four different species in which O. mossambicus and O. niloticus are predominant (McAndrew et al. 1988). The Taiwanese red tilapia has been reported as a hybrid between albino O. mossambicus and O. niloticus by Kuo (1969, 1988) and Liao and Chang (1983). Initially the founder hybrid strain did not produce a high frequency of red fry, but after several years of continued selection and hybridization trials using F1 progeny, the proportion of red phenotypic fry was increased from 30% in 1969 to 80% in 1974. Later further genetic improvement of such red tilapia was made through cross breeding (Kuo and Tsay 1988). These crosses were made between phenotypic individuals such as red, white, brown and wild type: colour segregations occurred in all crosses. The pink phenotype was homozygous dominant, the red heterozygous and the wild type homozygous recessive. The red strain in the Philippines was introduced from Singapore in 1978 and the breeding characteristics of various crosses of different phenotypes
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(ie. pink, grey, black spotted and albino) were subsequently investigated (Galman et al. 1988). Among all red, pink and albinos, the pink phenotype seemed to be homozygous dominant. Among U.S. strains of hybrid red tilapias, the first one derived from cross breeding involving O. aureus, O. hornorum and O. mossambicus (Sipe 1979) and the second strain a red-gold colour mutant hybrid between O. hornorum and red O. mossambicus (Behrends et al. 1982). Observing several generations, the authors stated that red-gold colouration was dominant and controlled by two or three gene pairs in this strain. In Israel, the red/gold body colour of O. mossambicus has been determined and it was revealed that the mutant phenotype was inherited as a Mendelian recessive (Wohlfarth et al. 1990). Tave et al (1989) demonstrated that black body coloured fish were homozygous dominant, gold fish were homozygous recessive and bronze fish were heterozygotes. In an Egyptian strain of O. niloticus, the red body colour was inherited as an autosomal dominant trait in presence of wild type (McAndrew et al. 1988). Hussain (1994) also observed similar pattern of colour inheritance both in Egyptian and Thai red strains. His results demonstrated that red body colour in these two mutant strains is controlled by a single autosomal dominant R gene. The frequency of blotchy pattern in these strains further indicated that blotched phenotype are heterozygotes (Rr), which might be epistatic to the R gene and expressed only in its presence.
5.2
Red tilapia strains have become increasingly popular to fish farmers and entrepreneurs for their characteristic body colour, fast growth, tasty flesh and high demand in the market. These strains are commercially cultured in many tropical and sub-tropical countries of the world such as Taiwan, the Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Israel, Guam, Greece, Brazil, Jamaica and USA. Although the Thai red strain was introduced into Bangladesh in 1988, extensive farming practice of this fish has not yet
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flourished. It is expected that like the GIFT strain of Nile tilapia, the red strain will also take a place in aquaculture soon due to its commercial importance and high demand in the international markets. Despite the commercial importance and development of several red tilapia strains in many regions of the world, one major problem of these mutant strains is that the majority of them do not breed true, including Thai red strain. Another problem associated with the appearance of varying proportions of blotched types (presence of black spots on the skin) of fish in each generation, which are not as valuable to the consumers as the pure red individuals. It will be difficult to maintain or improve the quality and development of pure breeding red populations of the present stocks until the mode of body colour inheritance is well understood by tilapia hatchery workers and researchers.
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as all homozygous at the R allele, to allow the undesirable r allele to be selected out.
5.3
A number of red females can be used to cross with red males. Stripped eggs of each red female need to be fertilized with freshly collected milt of red males and incubated separately. No females in these crosses are used more than once and males can be used several times with different females.
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F1 progenies produced in these crosses need to be reared for few weeks in the nursery hapas until the fry develop distinguishable body colour. It is expected that body colour segregation of progenies of all these crosses will be all red. Thus it can be presumed that the parental red stocks will be either RR or Rr genotypes or combination of both. In these crosses it will be difficult to identity the true breeding parental stocks to develop purebred red strains for breeding purpose until the F1 progenies are used for sib crosses.
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5.4
For purebred red brood stock development, fingerlings (20 30 g in weight) of RR genotypes could be produced or collected and stocked at the rate of 3-4 fish/m2 in the small and medium type brood stock rearing earthen ponds ranging from 1000 1500 m2 with the depth of 1.0 to 1.5 m. During all the phases of growing period of brood stocks, the fish should be fed with formulated or commercial feeds having at least 30% crude protein @ 3-10% body weight. During 1st and 2nd week of rearing the fish can be fed @ 10%, during 3rd and 4th week @ 5% and during 5th and 6th week onwards @ 3% body weight. Care should be taken not to contaminate with wild type or impure red blotched type Rr genotypes (Figure 18) in the rearing ponds. Brood stock replacement and stock improvement protocols and monosex production techniques for red strains will be the same as described respectively in Chapter 3 and Chapter 7.
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Development and operation of mixed sex commercial tilapia seed production systems
MIXED SEX TILAPIA SEED PRODUCTION IN PONDS
6.1
Mixed sex seed production through controlled natural spawning in small and medium earthen ponds is a common practice for tilapia breeders. This system consists of three basic components as follows: i) ii) iii) Brood stock collection and maintenance. Fry production through natural spawning. Rearing of fry in nursery ponds.
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alternatively a mixture of 60% rice bran and 40% mustard oil cake can be given at 5 -10 % biomass 2 times a day. Feeding of brood fish during low temperature and rainy days should be avoided to minimize the loss of resources.
6.1.2 Fry production through natural spawning (a) Pond selection and preparation
One or two ponds having an area of 400 800 m2 with inside slope about 1:3 and average water depth of 1.0 meter need to be selected for the purpose of natural spawning. All the predatory fish and animals are to be completely eradicated by dewatering and drying of ponds before stocking of fish. If this is not possible, then ponds need to be poisoned by using rotenone @ 10 12 kg/ha.. Ponds should be limed @ 250 300 kg CaO /ha. Seven days after liming, manuring and fertilization of each pond should be made respectively with cattle dung @ 800 1000 kg/ha and Urea plus T.S.P (25 + 25 kg/ha).
(b) Stocking of brood fish Sexually matured breeders weighing 80 to 100 g each should be stocked @ 2-3 fish/m2 with a sex ratio of 1 male to 3 females.
(c) Feeding
Supplementary feeds with a mixture of 60% rice bran and 40% mustard oil cake or 75% rice barn or 25% fish meal can be given at 3-5% biomass 2 times a day.
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Fry can be fed formulated feeds (Table 6) and feeding rate can be reduced to 8 10% biomass 2 4 times per day. The fingerlings are expected to attain the average body weight about 8 10 g each.
6.2
Concrete tanks are often useful for tilapia seed production. Tanks can be constructed at any places including the towns and cities, which do not need much surface land area.
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(c) Feeding
Supplementary feeds with a mixture of 60% rice bran and 40% mustard oil cake or 75% rice barn or 25% fish meal can be given at 3-5% biomass 2 times a day. The females while mouth brooding, they do not actively take artificial feeds. In this case, reducing the feed may lessen water quality deterioration in the tanks.
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After second week, the density will be 300-400 per m2 and feeding rates will be 10-12% of biomass. Fry will be ready to sell when they will be >1 g each. Advanced fry can be reared further by stocking 100 150 2 individuals/m by feeding formulated feeds (Table 6) for 40 60 days. The fry/fingerlings can be harvested in the tanks by netting or draining the water.
6.3
A commercial mixed sex seed production system in fine meshed hapas (net cages) can be operated easily for large-scale production of tilapia seed for aquaculture where monosex tilapia culture is not preferred. The marginal or small-scale farmers with one or two earthen ponds having an area of 1500 2000 m2 each can follow a simple and efficient method.
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Prior to capture and transfer of fry from breeding hapas another series of nursery hapas having the size of 8 m x 2.5m x 0.8 m need to be set in the same pond(s) or other pond(s). Fry can be collected by using dip or push net or by lifting the hapas and transferred to nursery hapas. Breeders weighing more than 250 g should always be replaced with new batches. During the first week, the stocking of fry will be 1000 1500 per m2 and feeding will be made with high protein powder feed (at least 35% crude protein) @ 15-20% of biomass 4-6 times per day. During the second week, their density should be reduced to 500 700 per m2 and feeding rates will be 12-15% of biomass.
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During third week, the density will be 300-400 per m2 and feeding rates will be 10-12% of biomass. Fry will be ready to sell when they will be >1 g each. In view of producing better stockable size, advanced fry can be 2 reared further by stocking 100 200 individuals/m in nylon hapas (8 m x 2.5m x 0.8 m) by feeding formulated feeds (Table 6) for 40 60 days.
Table 6. Formulated feed for feeding tilapia fry in rearing hapas and nursery ponds (Hoq et al. 2003) . Proportion (%) Fish meal 28.00 Mustard oilcake 20.00 Rice polish 37.00 Wheat bran 10.00 Molasses 5.00 Total 100 Cost per kg feed: US$ 0.25 (Taka 15); FCR: 2.0 Feed ingredients Crude protein (%) 16.80 7.20 4.50 1.50 30.00
6.4
Rice fields are the ideal place for rearing tilapia fry either at the time of rice cultivation or after rice harvesting. Land can be prepared by using lime CaO @ 250 300 kg /ha; Seven days after liming, manuring and fertilization of rice plot should be made respectively with cattle dung @ 800 1000 kg/ha and Urea plus T.S.P (25 + 25 kg/ha). Immediately after sowing rice seedlings, mixed sex tilapia fry weighing 1 2 g can be stocked @ 0.1 0.2 million/ha for 30 40 days. Water depth in the rice plot should be at least 20 25 cm during fry rearing period. Fry can be fed rice polish and feeding rate should be 5 8% per estimated body weight of biomass for 2 - 3 times per day.
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The fingerlings are expected to attain the average body weight about 8 10 g each at end of rearing period. Enough care should be taken to protect any incidental escaping of fry/fingerlings from the rice fields to the surrounding canals/water bodies.
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7.1
Sex reversal is a technique of changing of sexes from one sex to another in fish by administering synthetic steroid hormones before and/or during the period of sexual differentiation. In this technique, the first feeding fry are treated with male hormones or androgens (ie. 17-methyl testosterone), which develops testes and male sexual characteristics at maturity and on the other hand, treatment with female hormones or oestrogens (17oestradiol) produces individuals with ovaries and female characteristics in fish. The choice of conversion of sexes (either all males or all females) depends on growth performance characteristics of individual sexes of fish species. For instance, in tilapia males grow faster than females, masculinization using androgen hormones (Shelton et al. 1978; Guerrero 1979; Guerrero and Guerrero 1988) and in case of salmonids and cyprinids, where females grow faster than males, feminization using oestrogen hormones (Shelton 1987; Bye and Lincoln 1986) have become a popular practice. The use of monosex populations also eliminates reproduction during grow out in the case of tilapias.
7.2
Despite the popularity of tilapia species in worldwide aquaculture, the main drawback of all the existing commercial strains is their precocious
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maturation in tropical and sub-tropical climatic conditions. This leads to prolific breeding and over-crowding in grow-out systems, resulting in undesirable stunting and low yields of harvestable size fish. In many countries, where the acceptable market is 150 g or more and tilapias are normally grown in mixed sex culture this has become a critical problem (Guerrero 1982). In order to overcome this serious problem, since 1960 several methods have been proposed and developed to reduce and eliminate uncontrolled reproduction in grow-out systems. The main goal of all these methods was to produce monosex populations of tilapias by manual separation of sexes, interspecific hybridization and masculinization using hormones and genetic manipulation techniques. Hand or manual sexing of tilapia by examining urogenital papilla is a simple technique but it is time consuming, laborious, wasteful and sometimes unreliable at the small fish (<10 g). Interspecific hybridization of tilapias to produce all male hybrids was demonstrated first by Hickling (1960), using female O. mossambicus and male O. hornorum. After that many others also came forward to initiate similar interspecific hybridization between more supposedly homogametic species involving crosses of O. mossambicus x O. niloticus (Kuo 1969; Majumdar and McAndrew 1983); O. niloticus x O. aureus (Pruginin et al. 1975; Hulata et al. 1983). However, many of these crosses did not produce the predicted 100% male offspring. The results of Majumdar and McAndrew (1983) indicate that the mechanism responsible for sex determination in hybrids is indeed variable and complicated and that a number of different alleles of different strength are operating in the tilapias as a whole. On the other hand, genetic impurity of existing tilapia strains and careless maintenance of brood stocks in poor farming conditions made more problematic the method of hybridization for mass seed production of all male tilapia population. As interspecific hybridization and genetically induced all male seed production in tilapia have proved difficult in practice, direct masculinization of tilapias using hormones is the most common method
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for monosex male production (Shelton et al. 1978; Guerrero 1979; Guerrero and Guerrero 1988). The results of these authors suggest that functional sex-reversal using hormones can lead to the production of all male monosex population in tilapia for aquaculture. Monosexing has been the key that has facilitated the development of tilapia culture in the global food fish arena (Shelton 2002). In this process, male steroids is administered to first feeding tilapia fry so that the undifferentiated gonadal tissue of genetic females develops into testicular tissue, producing individuals that grow and function reproductively as males. Generally the primal gonadal tissue starts to differentiate into ovarian tissue with 34 weeks after hatching in O. niloticus (Velasco 2003b). Some concern has been raised that consumption of steroid-treated tilapia (ie. sex-reversed male tilapia using hormones) might be harmful for human health. But there is no evidence for any human health hazard (Green and Teichert-Coddington 2000). Recent studies have demonstrated that exogenous steroids are rapidly cleared from tissue after the end of treatment: no residual can be detected within one month of the termination of monosexing treatment (Rothbard et al. 1990; Green and TeichertCoddington 2000). In Asia, Philippines and Thailand are the two leading countries where commercial mass seed production of all male Nile tilapia using androgen hormones is a popular practice.
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Fig. 21 Tilapia egg incubation and hatching system model (Courtesy: Dr. Nuanmane Pongthana).
Fig. 22 Typical modern monosex tilapia seed production hatchery system in Thailand.
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Number of 2 liter capacity jars: 30. Number of trays, 28 x 43 x 10 cm each: 60 (50% for jars plus 50% to use as nursing trays). Number of plastic container for holding the trays, 30 x 120 x 20 cm: 30. Steel/iron/wooden stands: 15 (50% for jars plus 50% for nursing trays).
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females are separated by their different colors (4 colors are normally identified viz. Whitish, pale yellow, deep yellow and reddish tiny fry with yolk sac) and can be kept in separate plastic bowls placed in a steel, iron or bamboo frame (Figure 25). Collected products can be disinfected with 5-7 ppt solution of saline water for 8-10 minutes at ambient temperature. After that the eggs/larvae/yolk sac fry are shifted to the hatchery for incubation.
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Fig. 24 Gathering tilapia breeders at regular intervals for egg collection purpose in the breeding hapa.
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Fig. 25 Plastic vowels placed in a bamboo frame for separating the collected fertilized eggs having different colours (based on different age groups).
Fig. 26 A series of round bottom plastic jars and flat trays for incubating the fertilized eggs/hatched fry with yolk sac.
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Fig. 27 Separate flat trays where hatched larvae are kept until their yolk sac resorption stage is over.
Fig. 28 The protocol for preparation and application of hormone mixed feeds for sex reversal of Nile tilapia fry (Courtesy: Dr. Nuanmane Pongthana).
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For commercial operation automatic feed mixing machine can be used (Figure 29). For the safety of the workers involved in hormone feed preparation should use hand gloves and face mask.
Feeding of hormone mixed feeds to the first feeding fry in transitory tanks
The system for feeding of hormone mixed feeds to the first feeding fry in transitory tanks (Figure 30) is briefly explained below: Size of tank: 17 m x 3 m x 0.75 m. Number of tanks: 4. Covered with fine meshed netting materials. Hapa size: 8 m x 2.5 m x 0.6 m. Number of required hapas in each tank: 2. Number of fry in each hapa: 1,50,000. Water level in the tank: 60 cm. Feeding hormone treated feed is initiated in these hapas. Feeding rate: At satiation level. Feeding intensity: 4-6 times daily. Duration of feeding: 3 days. Water quality of the tanks need to be maintained by regular exchange of fresh cool water (temperature 24 27oC). At the end of transitory period fry are shifted to nursery feeding hapas by estimating their numbers (Figure 31).
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breeding hapas or well designed hapa holding frame can be made over the pond using RCC construction as shown in Figure 32a and 32b. The protocol for feeding of hormone mixed feeds is shown in a flow diagram (Figure 33) and technique of application of feeds to the early fry in the nursery hapas is shown in Figure 34. The well designed fry feeding system for the production of all male monosex fry is summarized below: Hapa size: 8 x 2.5 m x 0.75 m Number of required hapas: 25 hapas Stocking density of fry in each hapa: 100, 000 Total number of stocked fry : Apprx. 2.5 million Feeding rate: 15-30% per estimated body weight Feeding intensity: 4-6 times daily Duration of feeding hormone mixed feeds: 18 -21 days Monosex all male fry production: Apprx. 2 million per month Water quality of the nursery hapa holding ponds need to be maintained by regular exchange of fresh cool water (temperature 24 27oC)
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The technique of aceto-carmine stain preparation is as follows: Carmine (granular stain): 45% Acetic acid: Boil for 2 4 minutes, cool and filter. 0.5 g. 100 ml.
7.2.2 Production of YY males and operation of monosex all male seed production system
Direct hormonal masculinization might not appear to be a viable technique in tilapia and might have adverse environmental impacts or consumer reaction in near future, in that case the indirect method of producing monosex all males (ie. YY males) by combining both sex-reversal and/or genetic manipulation of the sex determining system will once be the alternative choice of the commercial seed producers.
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Fig. 30 The technique of application of hormone mixed feeds to the first feeding fry in the transitory hapas.
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Fig. 32a Hapas can be installed in the pond and fixed and tied to nylon ropes and bamboo poles for feeding hormone mixed feeds.
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Fig. 32b Hapas can be installed and fixed with RCC frame made over the pond for feeding hormone mixed feeds.
Fig. 33 The protocol for feeding of hormone mixed feeds (Courtesy: Dr. Nuanmane Pongthana).
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Fig. 34 The technique of application of hormone mixed feeds to the early fry in the nursery hapas.
Fig. 35 The protocol for sex identification in tilapia fry (Courtesy: Dr. Nuanmane Pongthana).
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(c) Protocols for production of all male monosex population using YY males
It needs to go up to at least three generations to produce all male monosex population through this indirect method of sex reversal (Figure 36). The essential steps of the protocol are as follows:
Production of F1 generation
The first feeding fry are fed with estrogen hormone mixed feeds at the rate of 15-30% body weight 4 6 times daily for at least 21 days in a series of nursery hapas. It is expected that the sex reversed progeny will be about
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100% female having XX and XY genotypes. The XY genotypic females can be termed as neofemales and need to be identified by progeny testing.
Production of F2 generation
Sexually matured neofemales (XY genotype) can be crossed with normal female (XX genotype) to produce F2 generation of progeny. The genotype ration of the produced generation are expected to be 1XX females: 2 XY males: 1 YY males (75% males and 25% females). Among males, YY genotypic males need to be identified by further progeny testing at their maturity.
Production of F3 generation
YY genotypic males can be crossed with normal females (XX genotype) to produce F3 generation of all males (XY genotypes). Commercial production system of all male monosex population using YY males can be established and operated same as monosex seed production using androgen hormones. In this case, precautions must be taken for breeding, progeny testing and identifying carefully the YY genotypic males and preserved them separately in the system. True breeding tilapia strains and highly experienced technician(s) are prerequisite for running such system for commercial seed production.
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Fig. 36 The protocol of producing all male monosex population through the indirect method of sex reversal.
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8.1
Because of the seasonal river flow and monsoon rains, 34% of the country is considered to be wetlands that remain under water for at least 6 months of the year. The country has millions of small ponds, seasonal water fieldditches; borrow pits, flooded paddy fields etc. that all have potential for producing increased yields of fish through managed aquaculture practices. The seasonal closed water areas particularly in the form of small natural depressions, hilly creeks, dead river lagoons, shallow marshy wetlands, road side ditches, backyard impoundments and ponds, where average water depth remains 80 100 cm, are highly suitable for mixed or monosex farming of improved strain (s) of tilapia.
Seasonal pond is preferred having an area 0.04 0.08 ha (ie. 10 20 decimal) with average depth of 0.8 1.25 m. Selected ponds should be dried. Dykes should be repaired and free of unwanted vegetation. Liming of pond bottom with 250 300 kg CaO or CaCo3 per ha. Cattle dung or poultry manure can be applied on the bottom @ 2000 3000 kg per ha. Ponds need to be filled with fresh water and water level can be remained at optimum. Pond fertilization with urea and triple super phosphate (TSP) @ 50 kg in 1:1 ratio can be used before stocking of tilapia fingerlings.
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quantity of fertilizers and manures in the rice fields, the available aquatic condition become rich enough in natural food to support fish growth. So, in most cases supplementary feeding to growing fry and fish is not a prerequisite.
15 days after transplantation of rice seedlings, when water depth of the plot remains around 20 cm, the plot will be ready to stock tilapia fry. About 4000 5000 tilapia fry (either mixed or monosex) having a weight of 10 - 15 g each can be stocked per hectare. Improved strain of Nile tilapia (eg. Super strain of GIFT) should be considered for stocking in the rice fields for better production.
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If the ponds are stocked with mixed sex tilapia, undesirable populations of tiny fry will be marked within 3 months of stocking, in that case as many as possible of the fry must be removed by repeated netting (using fine mesh seine net) at 15 days intervals to avoid the problem of over population. Every month sampling of growing fish should be made to check the growth and adjust the feeding rate.
8.4
When a part of open water bodies like dead river basins, small streams, canals, hilly creeks etc. is encircled or blocked by using bamboo screens or nylon nets, it can be termed as a pen. Tilapia can be cultured in these types of suitable pens comparatively keeping moderate or high density with or without feeding.
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The pen fencing should be fixed with strong bamboo or wooden poles having the enough height above the level of water to withstand wind pressure and water current, if any. Water depth of the pens should be 1 3 m.
8.4.3 Feeding
Fish should be fed with formulated feeds as shown in Table 7 @ 3% per estimated body weight. Feeding intensity should be at least 2 times daily. Every 30 days sampling of growing fish should be made to check the growth and adjust the feeding rate.
If the stocking density remains >30 fish/ m3 and the water bodies seem to be productive, in that fish might not need artificial feeding.
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8.5
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If the ground is completely flat type, completely new ponds need to be constructed. In such case, ponds can be made both with outlet and inlet by pass facilities for supply and evacuation of water.
The dike construction: Building a solid and seepage protected earthen wall or dike is one of the most important task of pond construction to keep enough water for planned fish production. Manual laborers, bulldozers, mechanical excavators etc. can be used for digging ponds and transporting soils for constructing dikes. The following principles can be followed to construct an ideal dike: Width of the dike at the top should be equal to its height but should be never less than 1 m wide. The dike must be some 30-40 cm above the surface of water for small ponds and 50-60 cm for large ponds. The slope for outside angle of the dike should be 1:1 to 1:1.5 and on the inside slope about 1:2. For small pond it can be reduced to 1:1.
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When dike construction is complete, it can be covered with the topsoil and turf or soft grasses. Draining installation (the monk): In a pond the monk is a part of dike, which regulates the required level of water as well as draining of water at the time of urgency and harvesting period of fish in a pond (Figure 37). The emptying device consists of a horizontal channel or drainage pipe running the full length of the foot of the dike, and also a vertical branch or so called monk, quadrangular in shape 40-60 cm wide (also depends on the area of the pond) open on one side of front. The monk is normally built in concrete and should reach at least 30-40 cm above the level of water. Two or three parallel groves are made using U shaped iron rod or cutting the concrete for making the placing of screen and wooden boards (20-30 cm high and 4-6 cm thick).
8.5.2 Operation and Management of Commercial Tilapia Farms (a) Area of farms
Area of commercial tilapia farms can vary from 3 to 25 ha, which depends on production target and management system. (Figure 39). Typical farm areas might be as follows: Small farm: Medium farm: Large farm: 3 5 ha 7 10 ha 15 25 ha
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For good fish growth of tilapias, desirable water quality parameters are: pH: Dissolved Oxygen: Free Carbon Dioxide: Total Alkalinity: Total Hardness: Temperature: Salinity: 6.5 to 9.0 3.0 to 8.0 mg/L 5.0 to 12 mg/L 10.0 to 100.0 mg/L 50.0 to 250.0 mg/L 25.0 to 30.0 oC 1.0 to 15.00 ppt
8.5.3 Option for commercial tilapia farming in ponds under the management of high stoking density
In commercial farms tilapia can be cultured even under high stocking density provided simple paddle wheel type of aerators are set in the ponds
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(at least two aerators in 1 ha pond) for aeration of water to add more oxygen (Figure 40). Under such type of farming management, the grow out pond preparation; liming and fertilization procedure will be same as above. Stocking density of advanced fry/fingerlings should be maintained @ 80,000 100,000 per ha. In that case input cost will be high due to running aerators (the cost the machine and electric bills) but production of marketable size fish can reach up to 15,000 20,000 kg per ha per crop.
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Fig. 40 Simple paddle wheel type of aerators set in the ponds for aeration of water to add more oxygen.
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9.1
It is mentioned in the first chapter of this book that commercially important tilapia species or strains have some special characteristics, viz. ease of seed production, resistance to infectious diseases and poor water quality, tolerance to wide range of environmental conditions, efficiency to convert organic and agricultural wastes in to high quality protein and ability to grow well at high stocking and overcrowding situations, which make them feasible for farming under various culture systems. Among the desirable cultivable finfishes, tilapias are the most suitable candidates for intensive culture in cages and raceways due to their amenability to intensification. Bangladesh has more water resources per capita than most other countries of the world and demand of fish for consumption and export is very high, therefore, the aquaculture industry is booming day by day. The time is not very far off when intensive farming of commercially important fish species particularly tilapias will take the place in aquaculture due to limited land and other resources. Many entrepreneurs might come forward in near future to initiate developing the high input and high cost systems for tilapia farming in this country. Because, for the international and domestic markets, tilapia has tremendous prospects to be considered as a number one protein food item. In view of that an attempt has been made to narrate briefly the available techniques of tilapia culture in the cages, tanks and raceways.
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9.2
Among intensive culture methods, cage culture is one by which the farmer can stock a large number of fish, control over feeding, minimize unwanted reproduction, harvest easily and obtain maximum profit from per unit area. It permits the more intensive exploitation of a water system with a low capital expenditure. The method can be utilized minimal infrastructural requirements and the ease of management lends the system to intensification (Balarin and Haller 1982). Various materials viz. simple bamboo poles and nylon nets, plastic and steel materials etc., can be used to construct cages for tilapia culture. Very large operations have been developed in the Philippines and Indonesia based on cage culture of respectively tilapias and common carps that provide jobs for thousands as members of cooperatives or employees of companies and food for local consumption and for international trade (Fitzsimmons, 1997). Cage culture of tilapia has also been attempted commercially or experimentally in other countries viz. Brazil, China, Cote dIvoire, El Salvador, Guatemala, Israel, Indonesia, Philippines, Puerto Rico, Niger, Sri Lanka and USA. In Bangladesh, Bangladesh Fisheries Development Corporation (BFDC) was the pioneer to initiate experimental cage culture of Nile tilapia in Kaptai Lake, Ragamati some time during 80s but no production data is available. Subsequently CARE, Bangladesh conducted grow-out trials of GIFT strain in cages at Meghna river lagoon area near Munshiganj during 90s (Hussain et al. 2000). Even, meanwhile, CARE implemented a CAGES project for more than 5 years with limited success as potential livelihood option in different places of Bangladesh. Recently a number of private entrepreneurs have initiated tilapia cage culture at Meghna river canals near Chandpur. As public water bodies like reservoirs, river lagoons, lakes, irrigation canals, deep borrow pits, estuaries, coastal bays including perennial natural depressions, and village ponds etc. are suitable for cage culture, therefore, small or large scale operation of tilapia culture in cages in these or other selected suitable water bodies has a bright future to play an important role in aquaculture.
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9.2.2 Construction and setting of net cages (a) Essential materials for constructing a floating net cage
Bamboo pieces Styrofoam blocks Empty Drums Nylon nets with a mesh size of 15 25 mm Wood pieces Plastic ropes Iron nails
Net materials (mesh size 15 25 mm) should be cut and fixed by sewing the ends with plastic ropes to form a square net. Various sizes of net can be considered viz. 1 x 1 x1 m; 2 x 2 x 2.0 m; 4 x 4 x 2.5 m; 6 x 6 x 2.5 m; 8 x 8 x 2.5 m.
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(h) Harvesting of fish and expected production Fish weighing on an average about 200 g can be harvested by using dip or push net or by lifting the cages and transferred to bamboo baskets or plastic buckets. Under such intensive system of cage culture expected tilapia production will be 30 70 kg/m3 (averagely 50 kg/m3)..
The tilapia cage culture information and production data of different countries are summarized in Table 8.
Fig. 41 The floating rafts with net cages for intensive tilapia culture (Courtesy: Dr. Nuanmane Pongthana).
Water quality and fish health in the cages needs to be monitored regularly. Dead and sick fish should always be removed from the cages.
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If the growing fish do not take feed particularly in rainy or cloudy days, it is better to stop feeding until the next day. If the stocked fish show any attempt of jumping out, in that case lids made of fine mesh nets can be used over each net cage. At every harvest, the nets need to taken out from the raft to remove the algae scum and sun dried before using further. Security of the cages needs to be ensured to avoid poaching and escapement of fish during windy or stormy weather as well as during monsoon months.
Table 8. Available data on tilapia cage culture in different countries (Revised after Balarin
and Haller 1982) Countries Bangladesh China Philippines Cote dIvoire Niger Nigeria Puerto Rico USA USA Species O.niloticus O.niloticus Hybrid (O. mossambicus x O.niloticus) O.niloticus O.niloticus S.galilaeus O.niloticus T.zillii 0..aureus O.aureus O.aureus no./m 350 300400 200 215488 264 256 300500 286857 487
3
Production 3 kg/m 30.68 100.6 63.0 35-76 68.64 17.43 17-23 35-94.30 66.5-85
Reference Hussain et al. (2000) Guerrero (1997) Guerrero (1997) Coche (1975) Mikolasek et al. (1997) Ita (1976) Jordan & Pagan (1973) Pagan (1970) Suwanasart (1971)
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needed for this purpose. In water-limited areas, intensive tank and raceway culture requires water treatment and recirculation (Cole et al. 1997). In tanks and raceways tilapias are cultured under crowded conditions. These systems are especially attractive in areas that can recover the effluent water from these farm operations to use for field crop irrigation and can be used as good source of fertilizers (Fitzsimmons 1997). Experimental or active rearing of tilapia in tanks has been reported from a number of countries (Table 9) and use of raceways reported from a few countries (Table 10) of the world.
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An intensive tilapia culture tank is required to have a demand feeder, a low flow to velocity ratio, so that water can be made useful to maintain a high water quality, maximize the requirement of oxygen of growing fish and provide rapid expulsion of solid wastes and faecal materials through the central drain (Balarin and Haller 1982). The cost and construction complexity of tanks should be low and the system should have access to water recirculation and aeration. Tanks should be adaptable to fry rearing, on growing and fattening of desired numbers of fish.
Fig. 42 The cemented tanks for intensive tilapia culture (Courtesy: Mr. Y. K. Thai).
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Table 9. Available data on tilapia culture in tanks in different countries (Revised after Balarin
and Haller 1982). Countries Beligium Kenya Malaysia Scotland Taiwan USA Species O. niloticus O. niloticus Male red tilapia O. niloticus x O.aureus O. niloticus x O.aureus hybrid O.aureus no./m 100800 200250 23 90 200250 12.5
3
Reference Melard & Philippart (1980) Balarin & Haller (1979) Guerrero 1989 McAndrew (cited by Balarin & Haller 1982) Sports (1983) Lauenstein (1978)
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Table 10. Available data on tilapia culture in raceways in different countries (Revised after
Balarin and Haller 1982) Countries Hawaii Kenya Kenya USA USA Species O. mossambicus O. niloticus O. niloticus O. aureus O. aureus no./m 10002800 1650 1000 6502500 100400
3
FCR 1.5:1
Reference Uchida & King (1962) Balarin & Haller (1979) Balarin & Haller (1979) Lauenstein (1978) Lauenstein (1978)
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viruses. Diseased fish exhibit extreme inflammation of abdomen, erratically swimming and discomfortness. At high water temperature, the infected fish generally start to die. Treatment: The infected fish can be treated by applying antibiotic Oxytetracycline or Streptomycin or Chlorampheniocol at the rate of 1 mg per 100 g of fish. Among the surgical treatment, the fluid of the abdomen can be taken out by a hypodermic needle with syringe. The best preventive measure against the dropsy is to liming and drying out the ponds at every alternative year before stocking.
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near the incoming water supply and occurrence of a higher rate of fish mortality. Chilodonella sp. is generally active to cause disease in tilapia fry fingerlings at the temperature below 20 OC. Chilodonelliasis is a common parasitic disease in tilapia fry and fingerlings during the cold season (Hussain 1988).
Treatment: The pond should be treated by Potassium permanganate (3-5 ppm), Formalin (25 ppm), Methylene blue (3 ppm), Malachite green (0.10.15 ppm). Any one of these chemicals should be applied every alternative day for 2-3 times. Dip or Bath treatment: The infected fish may be treated by dipping them in solution of Potassium permanganate (10 ppm) for one hour. For prevention of the disease, every alternative year ponds should be disinfected by liming just before releasing the fish.
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Treatment: Treatment in ponds can be carried out by applying Malachite green (0.1-0.15 ppm), Formalin (25 ppm) or Sodium Chloride (200 ppm) for only one time. Dip or Bath treatment: The diseased fish can be bathed by Malachite green (1.25-5.0 ppm) or Formalin (250 ppm) for half an hour.
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Treatment: For pond treatment Mesoten or Dylox may be applied at the rate of 0.25 ppm once in a week for at least 4 weeks. A preventive measure is to dry out ponds at every alternative year. Dip or Batch treatment: The infected fish can be treated by dipping in the solution of Potassium permanganate (10 ppm) or Sodium chloride (5%) for half an hour.
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11 Marketing of tilapia
11.1 DEMAND OF TILAPIA IN THE DOMESTIC MARKETS
Tilapias are becoming popular fish recently among the traders due to their suitability for selling any size (fingerling to adult) in the domestic market of Bangladesh and other South-east Asian countries. In this part of the world, there are multi various purchasers of different income levels, who might prefer different size grade tilapia. It is obvious that rich people always prefer large size and poor people due to their financial incapability go for medium and smaller size for the cheaper price. Consumers of this country normally used to like indigenous carps, shrimp, catfish and other small species as food fish but due to their unavailability and extremely high price in the domestic market, they are bound to purchase tilapias and Chinese carp species.
11.1.1
In many developing countries of South-east Asia, tilapias are marketed fresh or frozen. So, it is essential to handle the fish carefully at harvest to ascertain their freshness and quality for good market price. The harvested fish need to be kept alive for washing in the holding tanks with the inflowing cold water before their shifting and processing for the market (Figure 48). Many consumers prefer live tilapia like catfish. Pick up vans having fiberglass tanks can be used for live fish transportation. Live tilapias can also be shifted in plastic bags with oxygenated water like fish fry/fingerling transportation. Crushed ice is used for processing fresh tilapias for market. In this case, fish are kept with ice (ice to fish ratio 1:3) in bamboo baskets having inner
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side rapped with polythene sheet or Styrofoam boxes for transportation to local markets or distant places.
11.1.2
Like other fishes, in Bangladesh tilapias are sold in the domestic markets following the distribution channel of fish trade as below: Primary Market: Rural market, where the brokers are engaged to sell the fish to the small and medium traders by collecting them from the village ponds/farms. Secondary Market: Market nearby the administrative unit headquarters (ie. Thana Headquarters) operated by the commission agents and fish are sold and packet for shifting to urban markets. Higher Secondary Market: Market at the towns and cities also operated by commission agents and fish are sold to second distributors. Final Consumers Market: The second distributors sell the fish to retailers to make them available in the retailing markets for the consumers (Figure 49).
11.1.3
The overall fish landing facilities and wholesale markets are not well established all over Bangladesh. Private fish traders are the dominant groups who control the major landing centers in the rural and urban areas. These centers are unhygienic and poor; there is no particular auction and packing sheds, no adequate drainage and cleaning facilities. Ministry of Local Government through its municipalities controls only the wholesale and retail markets in most of the cities and towns. Conditions of municipal markets are not also at the mark for controlling hygienic aspects of fish.
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Fig. 48 Washing of harvested live tilapias in the holding tank with the inflowing cool water before marketing (Courtesy: Mr. Y. K. Thai).
Fig. 49. Tilapias in the retailing fish market for the consumers (Courtesy: Mr. Y. K. Thai).
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Tilapia farming should be expanded and bank credits need to be provided to the interested farmers/entrepreneurs. As the fish producers ie. farmers get less price at the farm gate, so they are not getting enough profit from tilapia culture, therefore,
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Government should fix the farm gate price of the fish like rice and other food grains. Ancillary market facilities like road networks, concrete sheds, washing, packing and preservation facilities, holding tanks for keeping live fish and nice display facilities need to be created. Tilapia processing industries, in particularly filleting, ice packing and canning industries should be encouraged and supported. It is obvious that international regulations need to be strictly followed for processing of tilapias for export. Appropriate policies and strategies need to be formulated and adopted by the Government for commercial farming of tilapias and their export.
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Among the South East Asian countries, Bangladesh in particular abounds with hundreds and thousands of seasonal water bodies (>0.1 m ha) in the form of ditches, shallow ponds, road side canals, barrow pits etc. which retain water for 4-6 months, where carp species can not be cultured. No doubt, these water bodies have tremendous potential for aquaculture of fish species with short life cycle and characteristics of faster growth rate and require low input support (Hussain et al. 2000). In such cases, tilapia can be a promising candidate for aquaculture in the suitable seasonal water bodies. Recently, adequate feed crisis and low market price severely damaged the exotic riverine catfish (Panagsius sp.) farming in the country, therefore, a large number of commercial catfish producers have found tilapia as an alternative species to culture in their farms to maximize the production. Success of such attempts will encourage the entrepreneurs to come forward for initiating commercial tilapia farming in freshwater ponds and other suitable water bodies. In brackish water ponds (0.14 m ha) of the country, where improve extensive shrimp culture is in collapse due to disease outbreak, commercial farming of tilapia will be an alternative. Similar aquaculture activities can further be expanded in the suitable brackish water polders and enclosures (0.87 m ha). In Kaptai reservoir (0.07 m ha) and other similar water bodies commercial cage culture of monosex tilapia could flourish to boost fish production. It is presumed that tilapia farming will largely be expanded both in small and commercial scales, so there will be an extreme need for huge number of quality seeds (both mixed sex and monosex). In that case, development and operation of commercial tilapia hatcheries will be essential throughout the country. Commercial seed production activities both in public and private hatcheries will enable to create additional employment opportunities for a large group of unemployed people.
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Glossary
Additive genetic variance: The proportion of the total phenotypic variance that depends on the additive effects of the genes. Alleles: Members of a pair of different hereditary factors that may occupy a given locus on a specific chromosome and that segregate in formation of gametes. Alternative form of gene. Androgenesis: Opposite to gynogenesis, which involves fertilization of eggs with inactivated maternal nucleus, and prevents any contribution of the female genome to the embryo. As a result, embryonic development proceeds with the inheritance of only paternal chromosome sets. Breed: Group of animals having a common origin and identifying characters that distinguish them as belonging to a breeding group. Breeding population: A group fish to be used for planned breeding. Breeding value: The genetic value of a fish or a population, in terms of its or their ability to transmit certain distinguished features that separate them from other such group. Broodstock: Parent (Female and Male) fish cultivated to provide eggs/milt or fry. Chromosomes: Darkly staining bodies in cell nuclei, which carry the heredity material. They occur in pairs in somatic cells with the number of pairs and morphology being characteristic of the species. Chromosome set: A group of chromosomes representing a genome, consisting of one representative from each of the pairs characteristic of the somatic cells in a diploid species. Combined selection: Combination of both within-family and betweenfamily selection to increase the accuracy of the estimates of breeding values, and thereby achieve a greater selection response. Crossbred: An animal produced by crossing two or more pure breeds, strains or lines. Crossbred individuals are from intraspecific matings. Crossbreeding: Mating systems in which hereditary material from two or more pure breeds, strains or lines is combined.
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Diploid: Cells with two members of each pair of chromosomes. This is termed the 2n condition and is characteristic of most fish species. Effective population size (Ne): The ideal population size is infinitely large, ensuring no loss of genetic variation which is a function of the total number of breeding individuals, the sex ratio, the mating system employed, and the variance of family size in the production of fish that are used to produce the next generation. Family selection: Selection of the best male and best female fish from a family, such type of selection based on deviations from average family performance. Fecundity: Number of eggs produced; sometimes expressed as number per fish, sometimes per kg of fish. Gene: The classical term of the basic unit of heredity. Genotype: Genetic makeup of a fish; that portion which is inherited. The complete genetic make up is also referred to as the genome. Gonad: Fish organ in which either eggs or sperm are produced; generally termed as ovary in female or testis in male. Gynogenesis: Gynogenesis involves fertilization of eggs with inactivated sperm, and prevents any contribution of the male genome to the embryo. As a result, embryonic development proceeds with the inheritance of only maternal chromosome sets. Hapa: Fine meshed rectangular or square structure on which fertilized eggs or larvae are deposited after artificial spawning and hatching. Haploid: Having one complete set of chromosomes (see also Diploid); most gametes are haploid so that when fertilization occurs the diploid condition is restored. Heritability: The proportionate amount of additive genetic variance: h2 = VA/Vp Inbreeding: A system of mating in which mates are more closely related than average individuals of the population to which they belong.
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Inbreeding depression: Decreased performance in growth rate, fecundity, survival, etc. and an increased percentage of deformed/abnormal fish that occur due to inbreeding. Karyotype: The somatic chromosomal complement of an individual or species. The term is often used for photomicrographs of the metaphase chromosomes arranged in a standard sequence. Mass selection: Individual selection or empirical selection of the best male and female individuals from a population. Meiotic gynogenesis: Gynogenetic diploids poduced by the suppression of the second meiotic cell division of fertilized eggs. Mitotic gynogenesis: Gynogenetic diploids produced by the inhibition of the first mitotic cell division of fertilized eggs. Morula: An embryo that consists of a cluster of cleaving blastomeres. Monosex population: Production of only female or male fish through genetic manipulation or sex inversion. Pedigree: A fishs family tree. Phenotype: Physical appearance or characteristics of an organism. Phenotypic variance: The variance that is observed or measured for a particular aspect of the phenotype in a population. Polyploidy: A state where a cell or an individual contains three or more sets of chromosomes: e.g. triploid (3n) or tetraploid (4n). Progeny: Offspring of any generation. Selection: A breeding program in which the breeder chooses which fish will be the next generations broodstock, based on some predetermined criteria. Sex reversal: Modification of sex using hormonal manipulation. Sexual maturation: Condition of female and male individuals having ripe gonadal materials (eggs and sperm). Triploidy: Individuals having 3 sets of chromosomes (4n). Tetraploidy: Individuals having 4 sets of chromosomes (4n). Vitellogenesis: The formation of yolk in the developing oocyte.
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Vitellogenin: A protein synthesized in the liver of sexually maturing females and incorporated into the yolk spheres of the developing oocyte. XX chromosome: Homozygous pair of sex chromosomes; produces in tilapia a female. XY chromosome: Heterozygous pair of sex chromosomes; produces in tilapia a male. YY male production: Indirect method of producing monosex all males (having YY genomic status) by combining both sex-reversal and/or genetic manipulation technique of the sex determining system in tilapia.
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References
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Hussain, M.G., A. Chatterji, B.J. McAndrew and R. Johnstone. 1991. Triploidy induction in Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus L. using pressure, heat and cold shocks. Theor. Appl. Genet., 81:6-12. Hussain, M.G. 1992. Genetic manipulation studies in Oreochromis niloticus L. Ph.D. Thesis, University of Stirling, Scotland, UK. Hussain, M.G., D.J. Penman, B.J. McAndrew and R. Johnstone. 1993. Suppression of first cleavage in the Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus L. a comparison of relative effective of pressure and heat shocks. Aquaculture, 111:263-270. Hussain, M.G., D.J. McAndrew, D. Penman and P. Sodsuk. 1994. Estimating gene centromere recombination frequencies in gynogenetic diploids of Oreochromis niloticus L., using allozyme, skin colour and a putative sex determining locus (SDL-2). p. 502509 In: A.R. Beaumont (Editor), Genetics and evolution of aquatic organisms. Chapman and Hall, London. Hussain, M.G. 1994. Genetics of body colour inheritance in Thai and Egyptian red tilapia strains. Asian Fisheries Science, 7:215-224. Hussain, M.G. and B.J. McAndrew. 1994. An improved technique for chromosome karyotyping from embryonic and soft tissues of tilapia and salmonids. Asian Fisheries Science, 7:187-190. Hussain, M.G. 1995. Suppression of meiotic and mitotic cell divisions in Nile tilapia. Asian Fisheries Science, 8: 133-142. Hussain, M.G., G.P.S. Rao, N.M. Humayun, C.F. Randal, D.J. Penman, D. Kime, N.R. Bromage, J.M. Myers and B.J. MCandrew. 1995. Comparative performance of growth, biochemical composition and endocrine profiles in diploid and triploid tilapia Oreochromis niloticus L. Aquaculture, 138: 87-97. Hussain, M.G. 1996. Advances in chromosome engineering research in fish: review of methods, achievements and applications. Asian Fisheries Science, 9:45-60. Hussain, M.G. 1998. Manipulation of chromosomes in fish: review of various techniques and their implications in aquaculture. Bangladesh J. Fish. Res., 2(1):99-108. Hussain, M.G., D.J. Penman and B.J. McAndrew. 1998. Production of heterozygous and homozygous clones in Nile tilapia. Aquaculture International, 6:197-205.
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Hussain, M.G., A.H.M Kohinoor, M.S. Islam, S.C., Mahata, M.Z Ali. M. Tanu, M.A Hossain and M.A Mazid. 2000. Genetic evaluation of GIFT and existing strains of Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus, under on-station and on-farm conditions of Bangladesh. Asian Fish. Science, 13(2):117-126. Hussain, M.G., A.H.M Kohinoor, M.S. Islam, M.A Hossain, M.M. Dey and M.A Mazid. 2000. Growth and production performances of GIFT strain of Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus L., in ponds and cages under different farming conditions in Bangladesh. J. Aqua. Trop., 15:273-280. Hussain, M.G. and M.A. Mazid. 2001. Genetic improvement and conservation of carp species in Bangladesh. Bangladesh Fisheries Research Institute and International Center for Living Aquatic Resources Management. 74p. Hussain, M.G., M.S. Islam, M.A. Hossain, M.J. Wahid, A.H.M. Kohinoor, M.M. Dey and M.A. Mazid. 2002. Stock improvement of silver barb (Barbodes gonionotus Bleeker) through several generations of genetic selection. Aquaculture, 204::469-480. Hussain, M.G. and A.H.M. Kohinoor. 2003. Breeding, monosex male tilapia seed production and culture technologies of BFRI super tilapia. Extension manual No. 25. Bangladesh Fisheries Research Institute, Mymensingh. Ita, E.O. 1976. Approaches to the evaluation of fishery reserves in the development and managements of Inland Fisheries. Rome, FAO, CIFA/72/514, 18p. Jordan, D.T. and F.A. Pagan. 1973. Developments in cage culture of Tilapia aurea in a rock-quarry pond in Puerto Rico. Comm. 10th Ann. Meet. Ass. Islands Mar. Lab. Carib, 59pp. Kuo, H. 1969. Notes on the hybridization of tilapia. JCRR Fish. Ser. No. 8, p.116-117. Kuo, H. 1988. Progress in genetic improvement of red hybrid tilapia in Taiwan. p. 219-221. In: R.S.V. Pullin, T. Bhukaswan, K. Tonguthai and J.L. Maclean (Editors), The Second Int. Symp. on Tilapia in Aquaculture. ICLARM Conference Proceedings 15, Department of Fisheries, Bangkok, Thailand and International Center for Aquatic Resources Management, Manila, Philippines.
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Velasco, R.R. 2003b. Production of all male population. p. 25-40. In: Training manual on broodstock management and sex reversal of tilapia using GIFT protocol. GIFT Foundation International Inc. (unpublished). Wohlfarth, G.W., S. Rothbard, G. Hulata and D. Szweigman. 1990. Inheritance of red body coloration in Taiwanese tilapias and in O. mossambicus. Aquaculture, 84:219-234. WorldFish Center. 2004. GIFT technology manual: An aid to tilapia selective breeding. WorldFish Center, Penang, Malaysia, 56p. Worthington, E.B. and C.K. Ricardo. 1936. Scientific results of the Cambridge Expedition to the East African lakes, 1930-1. No. 15. THe fish of Lake Rudolf and Lake Baringo. J. Linn. Lond. (Zool) 39: 353-389.
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Index
Abdominal dropsy, 115 Absolute fecundity, 14 Aceto-carmine squash technique, 17, 78 Additive genetic gain, 22 Additive genetic variation, 21 Aerator, 97 Aeromonas punctata, 115 Allele, 18, 21, 48 All male monosex population, 42, 65, 83, 84 Androgenesis, 42 Aneuploid metaphase, 44 Anus, 12 Aquatic chicken, 3 Aquatic larvae, 11 Argulas sp., 119 Artificial feed, 11, 14, 33, 113 Artificial hatching system, 24 Artificial incubation, 20 Artificial incubation system, 24 Asian countries, 8 Asian Development Bank (ADB), 3 Atomic absorption spectrophotometry, 17 Automatic feed mixing machine, 76 Average genetic gain, 22 Blackchin tilapia, 1 Bamboo pole, 60, 76, 92, 103, 105 Base population, 21, 23 Biomass, 24, 54, 58-60, 70 Blotched type, 50 Blue tilapia, 1 Body colour inheritance, 45, 47 Body weight, 27, 29, 56 Brackish water, 7, 10, 98, 127
144
Breeding behaviour, 9 Breeding candidate, 23 Breeding hapa, 19, 23, 60, 77 Breeding pond, 23, 69 Breeding population, 21, 30 Breeding tank, 56, 58-59 Breeding value, 27, 29 Brood stock, 19, 23, 40, 53 Brood stock management, 18 Brood stock replacement, 18-21 Cage, 27, 103, 107 Cattle dung, 86, 96 Caudal fin, 10 Chichlid, 1, 9-10, Chilodonella sp., 117 Chitralada strain, 6 Chlorampheniocol, 116 Chromosome, 31, 37 Chromosome karyotyping, 37, 42-43 Chromosome manipulation, 20, 31, 33 Circular tank, 108 Clonal line, 39 Closely related individual, 29 Coefficient of variation, 22 Colchicine solution, 42 Cold shock, 36 Combined selection, 22 Combined selection strategy, 23 Commercial tilapia farm, 95 Common carp, 103 Common farm environment, 27 Communal testing, 26-27 Control group, 7 Copepod, 11 Courtship behavior, 12
Farming of Tilapia
Cross breeding, 20, 45 Crude protein, 48, 58 Cryopreservation, 42 Cumulative weight gain, 7 DEGITA countries, 6 Demand feeder, 109 Dike construction, 95 Diploid, 3-32 Diploid metaphase, 44 Disease resistance, 21 Dissolve oxygen, 11 Dorsal fin, 10, 26 Earthen pond, 27, 53, 59, 77 Effective population size (Ne), 1921, 29-30 Egg, 13, 31, 40 Egg incubation system, 66 Egyptian red strain Endocrine hormone, 15 Endomitotic, 31 Ethyl alcohol, 72, 83 Existing strain, 6 Family selection, 22 Family selection strategy, 23 Fecundity, 14, 18, 21 Feeding intensity, 27, 96, 105 Feeding rate, 27, 56, 58-60, 87, 96, 105, 109, 112 Feeding trolley, 105 Fertilization, 13, 31, 34 Fertilized egg, 14, 20, 24, 36, 38, 70 Fine meshed hapa, 59 Fingerling, 20, 26-27, 56, 111 Finite population, 18 Fish meal, 54, 58 First cleavage, 36, 39 First feeding fry, 20, 24, 55, 71 First mitotic division, 32
Floating raft, 105 Floy tag, 26 Formalin, 117 Formulated feed, 27, 53, 56, 59, 98, 105, 109, 112 Founder stock, 18 Freshwater, 10, 127 Freon, 31 Fry, 20, 26, 53, 111 Full-sib family, 26 Galilee tilapia, 1 Gametogenesis, 32 Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (GIFT), 2 Gene transfer, 20 Genome, 31, 37 Generic names, 9 Genetic gain, 21-22 Genetic improvement, 22-23, 29 Genetic stock deterioration, 18 Genetic selection, 22 Genetic variability, 18, 21-22 Genetic variation, 19, 21,23, 30 Genital papilla, 12, 34 Giemsa stain, 43 GIFT strain, 3-7, 22, 33, 103 Gill-raker, 10 Glacial acetic acid, 43 Glass aquaria, 48 Gonad development, 15 Growth performance, 22 Grow-out period, 27 Gynogenesis Half-sib, 29 Hapa, 20, 24 Haploid, 31 Haploid metaphase, 44 Hatching, 14 Hatching stage, 14, 37
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Heat shock, 36, 40-41 Heritability, 21-22 Heterogametic, 31 Heterozygous, 45-47 Heterogeneous, 21
Histological section, 15 Holding tank, 19 Homogametic, 31, 64 Homozygosity, 18 Homozygous, 45-48 Hormone mixed feed, 77
Hybridization, 20, 64 Hybrid strain, 6 Hydracarine, 11 Hydrolic pump, 36 Inbreeding, 18, 23, 30 Inbreeding depression, 18, 21, 29 Incubation system, 20, 34 Individual selection, 22-23 Intensity of selection, 21 Intensive culture, 56, 103, 1o3 In vitro, 34 Israel strain, 3 Larnaea sp., 120 Larvae, 20 Lateral line, 10, 27 Liming, 94 Lipophosphoprotein-calcium, 15 Livelihood, 103 Local strain, 6 Longfin tilapia, 1 Malachite green, 117 Malathion, 120 Manual stripping, 34 Marker chromosome, 44 Masculinization, 64, 78 Mass selection, 22, 29
146
Mass selection strategy, 22 Maternal effect, 23 Maternal mouth brooder, 10, 14 Mating, 12 Meiotic gynogenesis, 38 Melanophores, 50 Metaphase chromosome, 44 Methanol-acetic acid, 43 Methylene blue, 117 Methyl testosterone-17, 63, 72 Microscope, 34, 78 Micro-pipette, 34 Milt, 13 Mixed sex, 89 Modified Cortlands solution, 40 Monosex population, 63-64 Monosex tilapia seed production system, 66 Morula stage, 14, 37 Mouth brooding, 9, 13 Mozambique tilapia, 1, 2 Mustard oilcake, 55, 58, 60 Myxobacterial infection, 115 Myxobolus sp., 119 Natural breeding, 12 Nile tilapia, 1-3, 6, 9-12, 14-15, 31, 47, 70, 92 Nitrous oxide, 31 Nest building, 9 None selected control group, 7 Non-genetic effect, 23 Nursery hapa, 20, 26, 77, 83 Nursery tank, 58 Oestradiol-17, 15, 63, 83 Oestrogen, 17 Oestrogenic control, 15 Omnivorous, 11 On-farm, 6 On-station, 6
Farming of Tilapia
Oocyte, 15, 78 Oocyte maturation, 17 Oogonia, 15 Oreochromis andersonii, 1 Oreochromis aureus, 1, 10, 37, 107, 110, 112 Oreochromis machrochir, 1 Oreochromis mossambicus, 1-3, 10, 41, 45, 47, 64, 112 Oreochromis niloticus, 1- 4, 7, 9-11, 14, 17, 31, 33, 37, 40-41, 45-46, 53, 65, 107, 110, 112 Outbred stock, 21 Ovary, 15 Oviduct, 12 Ovulation, 13 Oxytetracycline, 116 Paddle wheel, 97 Parallel pond, 95 Parasite, 113 Parental care, 14 Passive Integrated Transponder (PIT) tag, 27 Paternal mouth brooder, 10 Peak maturation, 15 Pectoral fin, 34 Pedigree, 21 Perennial pond, 90 Perspex, 33 pH, 10 Phenotype, 45 Phosphate buffer, 43 Photoperiod, 33 Physiological condition, 113 Phytoplankton, 11 Pigmentation stage, 14, 37 Plastic tray, 24, 71 Ploidy manipulation, 31 Polyculture, 90 Polyetheline, 69, 91
Farming of Tilapia
Selective breeding, 7, 20, 23 Selection intensity, 29 Semen, 17 Semi-intensive culture, 11, 87, 91, 97 Serum calcium concentration, 17 Sex chromosome, 44 Sex determination, 31 Sex ratio, 17, 30, 54, 58, 70 Sex reversal, 20, 63, 78 Sex steroid hormone, 15, 17 Sexual dimorphism, 11 Sexual maturation, 15, 17 Sexual pheromones, 13 Sib cross, 49 Silver barb, 22 Site selection, 93-94 Small-scale farmer, 59 Spawning, 12 Sperm, 15, 17, 34, 40 Spermatogonia, 15, 78 Spermatozoa, 15 Spindle apparatus, 31 Standard length, 27 Standard population size, 19 Standard reference stock, 19 Steroid hormone, 32 Sodium Chloride, 118 Solid waste, 109 Stocking density, 27, 55, 77, 92, 97, 98-99, 105 Stock solution, 72 Streptomycin, 116 Substrate spawner, 9 Super Strain of GIFT, 8, 22, 70 Supplementary feed, 54, 60 Tagging, 26 Tank, 27, 102, 107 Taxonomic classification, 9 Terrestrial insect, 11 Tetraploidy, 32, 34, 37
148
Thai red strain, 46-47 Three spotted tilapia, 1 Tilapia zillii, 2, 9, 107 Tilapia farming, 8, 126-128 Tilapia hatchery, 66 Transitory hapa, 19 Trichodina sp., 118 Triploidy, 32, 34, 37 Triploid metaphase, 44 True breeder, 48, 70 Undifferentiated gonadal tissue, 65 Unfertilized egg, 12 Urethra, 12, 34 Urogenital opening, 12 Urogenital papilla, 15, 64 UV sterilization, 37
Farming of Tilapia
149