Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects.

Seychelles has a relatively long history of prawn farming, which was established on Coetivy Island in 1989 by the Islands Development Company Ltd and the Seychelles Marketing Board and later taken over and managed by the latter. The farm comprised of two hatcheries and around 200 ponds and occupied an area of around 96 ha, and when in full production had a workforce of around 350 people (mainly Thai and Sri Lankan nationals). Production of Penaeus monodon (Black Tiger prawn) peaked at 1200 tonnes per annum in 2004, but by 2007 had declined to just under 400 tonnes (Fig. 1). Broodstcok w as imported from Madagascar and Mozambique. The product was held in high esteem internationally and locally (Hecht, 2009). For several reasons production at the prawn farm ceased in late 2008. Amongst others these included the high operational costs due to the location of the farm, which is situated approximately 300 km away from the inner islands and the difficulty to produce sufficient numbers of post larv ae for stocking into grow-out ponds and other private sector interests. Much of the hardware of the farm has been sold, but the pond infrastructure remains available for future developments.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lesperance, Aubrey D.
Other Authors: Troell, M.
Format: Book Section biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Seychelles Fishing Authority 2011
Subjects:Pearl oyster farming, Mariculture, Prawn culture,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1834/14835
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spelling dig-aquadocs-1834-148352021-05-19T06:18:49Z Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects. Mariculture in the WIO region "Challenges and Prospects". Lesperance, Aubrey D. Troell, M. Hecht, T. Beveridge, M. Stead, S. Bryceson, I. Kautsky, N. Mmochi, A. Ollever, F. Pearl oyster farming Mariculture Prawn culture Seychelles has a relatively long history of prawn farming, which was established on Coetivy Island in 1989 by the Islands Development Company Ltd and the Seychelles Marketing Board and later taken over and managed by the latter. The farm comprised of two hatcheries and around 200 ponds and occupied an area of around 96 ha, and when in full production had a workforce of around 350 people (mainly Thai and Sri Lankan nationals). Production of Penaeus monodon (Black Tiger prawn) peaked at 1200 tonnes per annum in 2004, but by 2007 had declined to just under 400 tonnes (Fig. 1). Broodstcok w as imported from Madagascar and Mozambique. The product was held in high esteem internationally and locally (Hecht, 2009). For several reasons production at the prawn farm ceased in late 2008. Amongst others these included the high operational costs due to the location of the farm, which is situated approximately 300 km away from the inner islands and the difficulty to produce sufficient numbers of post larv ae for stocking into grow-out ponds and other private sector interests. Much of the hardware of the farm has been sold, but the pond infrastructure remains available for future developments. Published 2018-12-02T17:59:12Z 2018-12-02T17:59:12Z 2011 Book Section Not Known http://hdl.handle.net/1834/14835 en WIOMSA Book Series;11 pp.19-22 Seychelles Western Indian Ocean Seychelles Fishing Authority Victoria, Seychelles
institution UNESCO
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-aquadocs
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Repositorio AQUADOCS
language English
topic Pearl oyster farming
Mariculture
Prawn culture
Pearl oyster farming
Mariculture
Prawn culture
spellingShingle Pearl oyster farming
Mariculture
Prawn culture
Pearl oyster farming
Mariculture
Prawn culture
Lesperance, Aubrey D.
Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects.
description Seychelles has a relatively long history of prawn farming, which was established on Coetivy Island in 1989 by the Islands Development Company Ltd and the Seychelles Marketing Board and later taken over and managed by the latter. The farm comprised of two hatcheries and around 200 ponds and occupied an area of around 96 ha, and when in full production had a workforce of around 350 people (mainly Thai and Sri Lankan nationals). Production of Penaeus monodon (Black Tiger prawn) peaked at 1200 tonnes per annum in 2004, but by 2007 had declined to just under 400 tonnes (Fig. 1). Broodstcok w as imported from Madagascar and Mozambique. The product was held in high esteem internationally and locally (Hecht, 2009). For several reasons production at the prawn farm ceased in late 2008. Amongst others these included the high operational costs due to the location of the farm, which is situated approximately 300 km away from the inner islands and the difficulty to produce sufficient numbers of post larv ae for stocking into grow-out ponds and other private sector interests. Much of the hardware of the farm has been sold, but the pond infrastructure remains available for future developments.
author2 Troell, M.
author_facet Troell, M.
Lesperance, Aubrey D.
format Book Section
topic_facet Pearl oyster farming
Mariculture
Prawn culture
author Lesperance, Aubrey D.
author_sort Lesperance, Aubrey D.
title Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects.
title_short Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects.
title_full Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects.
title_fullStr Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects.
title_full_unstemmed Mariculture Development in Seychelles and other Western Indian Ocean Island States: an Overview of Challenges and Prospects.
title_sort mariculture development in seychelles and other western indian ocean island states: an overview of challenges and prospects.
publisher Seychelles Fishing Authority
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1834/14835
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