Market Study of Tiger Shrimp Fry in West Bengal, India -BOBP/WP/87

Rice-fish polyculture in bheries (enclosed paddyfields) has been a tradition in the West Bengal (India) delta. Fish are seeded naturally with the water let into the paddyfields. With the growing shrimp export market, shrimp culture in the bheries has proved economically attractive and the supply of tiger shrimp fry to the bheries is, now, a burgeoning business is West Bengal. The Bay of Bengal Programme (BOBP), at the request of the Government of West Bengal, studied the problems connected wi th the supply of tiger shrimp fry to the bheries. The problems were seen as a constraint to the development of the mainly export-oriented shrimp culture industry. BOBP looked into both natural collection and hatchery-reared supply of shrimp fry. It also helped the West Bengal Department of Fisheries to establish a small hatchery at Digha and it worked with some of the fry catchers of Medinipur District through a local NGO. The study of all these activities as well as the marketing process was seen as a step towards a better understanding of the existing tiger shrimp fry market and the fisherfolk involved in it. This, it was hoped, would lead to an elimination of some, if not all, the problems associated with the business. The BOBP study was undertaken under the ‘Small-scale Fisherfolk Communities’ project (GCP/RAS/l18/MUL).

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: M. Mahesh Raj & Robert Hall;Fishery and Aquaculture Economics and Policy Division
Format: Project biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1993
Online Access:https://openknowledge.fao.org/handle/20.500.14283/AE466E
http://www.fao.org/3/a-ae466e.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!