#PaduthaKulam #FishFarming #FishFarmingKerala
മത്സ്യ കുഞ്ഞുങ്ങളെ വാങ്ങാനും പരിശീലനത്തിനും ഒരു കേന്ദ്രം
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Padutha Kulam Fish Farming
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The unique feature of Kerala is the presence of large number of estuaries and backwaters covering almost the entire coast. It is well endowed with abundant inland water resources with a variety of aquatic life. The rivers, rivulets, streams, etc., originating from the Western Ghats are well known for their biodiversity.
Decreasing production trend from capture fisheries, anthropogenic factors, climate change etc makes aquaculture a prominent source of food supply. Growth of aquaculture may ease pressure on the threatened wild stock and increase food supply to cope with the increasing demands. Fish forms an important item of the diet and offer employment to coastal inhabitants. The development of fisheries and aquaculture ensures food and nutritional security. Fish is one of the cheapest and most easily digestible animal protein.
Aquaculture being a fast growing food production system will continue to strengthen its role in contributing to food security and poverty alleviation in India and many developing countries. There are several emerging diseases for farmed fish in India, particularly for freshwater fish and prawns. The practice of seed import without adequate precautions could bring many new diseases to the aquaculture sector in Kerala. The indiscriminate capture of ornamental fish from the wild without adequate replenishment is a serious threat to the biodiversity of the state
Fish and fisheries products are the primary protein sources for some 950 million people worldwide, and are an important part of the diet of many more. Fish is the most heavily traded food commodity in the world. Aquaculture being a fast-growing food production system, will continue to strengthen its role in contributing to food security and poverty alleviation in India and many developing countries, in view of the stagnating yields from capture fisheries and increasing demand for fish and fishery products. Despite its high productivity, there is very little recognition of freshwater- dependent fishery production due mainly to a general lack of data and scientific literature compared with industrial marine fisheries. The majority of freshwater fisheries and aquaculture is small-scale and has received only scant attention during the past few decades.
The world production of fish reached an all-time high of about 172 million MT in 2018, largely contributed by the increasing aquaculture. The world inland and coastal aquaculture has been steadily increasing over the past few years. India with an area of 3.3 million sq. km and a population of over a billion people, occupies second position in the world in aquaculture production, contributing to over 10 million MT of fish. Inland aquaculture has been the major fish producing system in India. Most of the aquaculture activities in India could be regarded as rural aquaculture. Freshwater aquaculture in village tanks and ponds follow the improved traditional or semi-intensive composite culture/ polyculture system and they serve the household needs for fish and generate some additional income for the family.
Freshwater resources of Kerala
The state of Kerala is gifted with rich resources of freshwater bodies suitable for aquaculture. The state has a total freshwater area of 1, 58,358 ha, consisting of reservoirs (42,890 ha), private ponds (21,986 ha), irrigation tanks (2,835 ha), freshwater lakes (1,620 ha), panchayat ponds (1,487 ha), village ponds and other water holds (1,317 ha), and check dams, bunds, barriers or anicuts (1,138 ha). The state has 41 west-flowing and 3 east-flowing rivers, constituting an area of 85,000 ha.
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