Fish as feed inputs for aquaculture: practices, sustainability and implications

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78 Fish as feed inputs for aquaculture – Practices, sustainability and implications


The use of farm-made feeds based on trash fish/low-value fish and/or other animal
protein sources (mainly processing waste from poultry) is still a common practice in
freshwater and marine carnivorous finfish culture and crab and lobster fattening in
Asia. However, in some instances there are trends to change from the use of farm-
made feeds to commercial feeds, the most notable of these being in catfish farming in
the Mekong Delta, a sector that has witnessed an explosive growth in the last decade
and was estimated to have had a production volume of over 1 million tonnes in 2007
(Phoung and Oanh, 2009). The snakehead and catfish farming sector in Thailand is
predominantly based on farm-made feeds (see Boxes 2 and 3), but these feeds are
predominantly based on the use of poultry processing wastes and in such feeds the
amount of ingredients originating from aquatic organisms is often negligible, with
exceptions such as in pangasiid culture in Viet Nam (see Section 5.2).
In contrast to “farm made” feeds, commercially manufactured feeds are produced in
large quantities in central manufacturing plants and are purported to be in accordance
with the dietary requirements of individual species. Rarely, more generalized feeds
that are reckoned to be useable and effective for a whole range of cultured finfish are
also available in the market. In Asian aquaculture, some of the commonly found feed
types are those for tilapias, shrimp, eels, seabass and catfishes. Often such feeds differ
marginally in their specifications for different stages of the grow-out cycle of each
of the species, and of course, between species. It is not uncommon that in intensive
culture systems, the feed costs often account for more than 50 percent of the recurring
costs of an operation.
In general, there is very limited quality control of commercial feeds in the region,
perhaps with the exception of countries such as Thailand (personal observation). This
as an area where investigation is needed, especially in view of the proliferation of small-
scale feed mills in the region and the ever-increasing product certification requirements

BOX 3
Snakehead culture
Snakeheads are difficult to wean on to pellet feed, and hence the industry continues
to depend upon moist feeds that include about 70–80 percent trash fish. However, a
number of small hatcheries are now beginning to wean the wild-caught snakehead fry
on to pellet feed, initially feeding a mixture of pellet feed and minced trash fish and
gradually reducing the latter. The fish can be completely weaned on to a dry diet in 10
to 12 days. An increasing number of grow-out farms are beginning to obtain weaned
fingerlings, and in a few years, it can be expected that snakehead farming in Thailand
will be transformed almost completely, as was seabass farming.

Photos: Feed bag covers and the hatchery set up used for weaning snakehead
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