272 3-78FR
272 3-78FR
272 3-78FR
3
7 8 F R
f-2^J->8fX ^
2?2-3
by
Marilyn Chakroff,
PEACE CORPS
VITA
;,iSJ.:.
I n t . •:.-<•.
September, 1976
FRKSHWATER FISH POND
@ VITA, 1976
May be reproduced without
payment of royalty for offic-
ial U.S. Government purposes.
About this manual
FieAhuxUeA Flih Pond CuttuAe. and Management is the second 1n a series
of publications being prepared by the United States Peace Corps and
VITA, Volunteers in Technical Assistance. These publications combine
Peace Corps' practical field experiences with VITA'S technical expertise
in areas in which development workers have special difficulties finding
useful resource materials.
PEACE CORPS
Since 1961 Peace Corps Volunteers have worked at the grass roots level
in countries around the world in program areas such as agriculture,
public health, and education. Before beginning their two-year assign-
ments, Volunteers are given training in cross-cultural, technical,
and language skills. This training helps them to live and work closely
with the people of their host countries. It helps them, too, to
approach development problems with new ideas that make use of locally
available resources and are appropriate to the local cultures.
Recently Peace Corps established an Information Collection & Exchange
so that these Ideas developed during service in the field could be made
available to the wide range of development workers who might find them
useful. Materials from the field are now being collected, reviewed,
and classified in the Information Collection & Exchange system. The
most useful materials will be shared. The Information Collection 4
Exchange provides an important source of field-based research materials
for the production of how-to manuals such as Fizthuxtfe/L P-Uh Pcnd Cuttune.
and Management.
VITA
VITA people are also Volunteers who respond to requests for technical
assistance. In providing solutions, their aim is the most appropriate
answers for specific situations. Therefore, VITA specialists often must
produce new designs or adapt technologies so that they are of value
in developing areas.
Many VITA Volunteers have lived and worked abroad. Most VITA people now
work in the United States and other developed countries where they are
engineers, doctors, scientists, farmers, architects, writers, artists,
and so on. But they continue to work with people in other countries
(Hi)
through VITA. Thanks to their contributions of time and expertise, VITA
has been providing technical assistance to the Third World for more than
15 years.
Requests for technical assistance come to VITA from many nations. Each
request 1s sent to a Volunteer with the right skills. For example, a
question about fish pond operation might be sent to a VITA Volunteer who
has had years of experience working to develop fish ponds in Asia, and
who 1s now a university professor.
THE PURPOSE
The strength of both Peace Corps and VITA lies In Volunteers. These
manuals represent an excellent means of communicating Important know-
how gained through Volunteer experiences and Inputs.
Joan Koster, the Illustrator, has been a VITA Volunteer for more than 3
years. She 1s a teacher, professional artist, and writer. Ms. Koster,
who has travelled and studied in Greece for a number of years, currently
is preparing a manuscript on looms and weaving.
OTHER CONTRIBUTORS
Many thanks are due here to a number of people who aided the preparation
of this manual:
Dr. Peter Black, Dr. Robert Werner, Dr. David Hanselman — Faculty
of the College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State Univer-
sity of New York, Syracuse.
(iv)
William McLamey, New Alchemy Institute, Woods Hole, Massachusetts.
REPLY FORM
For your convenience, a reply form has been provided here. Please
send it in and let us know how the manual has helped or can be made
more helpful. If the reply form is missing from your copy of the
manual, just put your comments, suggestions, descriptions of problems,
etc., on a piece of paper and send then to:
(v)
PLEASE RETURN THIS FORM
NOTE TO THE USER: This manual was published because Peace Corps and
VITA workers and volunteers wish to help in a growing area of worldwide
interest. In order to provide the most effective help, the preparers
of the manual need to know how it is being used, or how you feel it could
better serve your needs. Please fill in the following form and return
it to:
* * *
Date
Your Company or
Your Name Agency, if any
Your Address
1. How did you find out about the PC/VITA Freshwater Fish Pond Culture
and Management manual? How did you get your copy?
2. Which parts of the manual have you found most useful? Least useful?
Why?
(v11)
3. Did you find the manual easy to read, too simple or complex,
complete or incomplete?
4. How has this manual helped your work? What have you done to apply
the information?
Which plans have you used? Did you make changes in any of the plans?
(For example, when you were building a drainage system, did you
substitute any materials for the ones mentioned or change the design?)
If you made changes, please describe what you did that was different.
Include photos, sketches, etc., if possible or important.
7. What were your successes using the manual or implementing any of the
plans or procedures? Problems? Please describe completely.
(viiD
Table of Contents
ition Page
(ix)
I Introduction
. Fish farming can help a farmer make the best use of his land.
. Fish farming can provide extra income.
There may be additional reasons; you and the pond owners can determine
these from the local situation. The three points listed above are very
broad, however, and apply, at least in part, to most situations.
Therefore, each point is discussed more fully below.
FISH A S F O O D Farmers know that all living things need food, and that
without food, living things die. However, they are not as likely to know
the characteristics of food which make it valuable (or not) to the body.
Food is important because it provides proteins, vitamins, minerals, fats,
and carbohydrates. These things are called nutrients: they are materials
that the body must have to live and grow. Every kind of food has dif-
ferent amounts of each of these nutrients. For example, some foods
contain more protein; others have more fat than protein.
4
Proteins are the most important part of food. Protein is made of carbon,
hydrogen, and nitrogen. These are called elements. The combinations of
elements in protein make it the most useful nutrient. Foods that contain
a lot of protein are especially good for people to eat. And fish contains
a lot of protein.
The table on the opposite page shows a list of foods that humans eat.
The first number beside the food1 shows the number of grams of protein in
the food when it is fresh. The second number tells how many grams of
protein there are in food which has been dried. The table shows that
fish — whether fresh or dried -- is a very good source of protein.
(lOOgm of dried fish contains more protein than lOOgm of fresh fish only
because dried foods have water taken out. Therefore, lOOgm of fresh fish
weighs less when it is dried.)
If the farmers in your area already eat a lot of fish, or like fish, fish
farming for food may not be hard to introduce and have accepted.
If they do not eat fish often, you will have to keep this 1n mind when
you talk about fish as a healthy food. Food just may not be the most
Important reason, from their point of view, for wanting to grow fish.
5
FISH
Fatty (herring) 17 46
Non-fatty (haddock) 16 84
HEAT
Beef 20 67
Liver 20 67
DAIRY PRODUCTS
Milk 3.4 26
Eggs 12 46
CEREALS
Wheat 12 14
Maize 10 11
Oats 10 11
Rice 8 9
OIL SEEDS
Soya 33 37
Cottonseed 20 21
Sesame 21 22
But there are other reasons you can offer a farmer. For example, a
farmer may consider cultivating fish 1f he realizes that fish are easy
to grow, cheaper than some kinds of meat, available as food all year
round, etc. You will have to see which combination of arguments works
best for getting farmers Interested.
Whether the farmer raises fish, crops, or animals, he is using his land
in certain ways. His aim in all cases 1s to increase the production of
food and the yield from the land. What farmers, and other people, often
do not realize 1s that fish culture can help get more out of the land.
Here are a few ways in which fish culture can help support and extend a
farmer's land use:
. Land gets tired when 1t 1s used for growing the same crop
year after year. These crops use up nutrients 1n soil, and
they begin to grow poorly. Fish ponds can be built on this
land and fertilized to provide food for the fish. After a
few years of fertilizing and growing fish, the soil Inside
the pond regains some of the nutrients used up by the grow-
ing of crops year after year. The land can then be used for
crops again.
. Some farmers own land that may not be very good for growing
crops: 1t 1s too sandy, for example. But there are ways of
building fish ponds in sandy soil. So the farmer would be
able to use land that was once not of much value to him.
. There are many ways that fish farming can fit Into the
farmer's plan for his land. The important thing is that all
of these ways help the farmer make the best use and get more
out of what he has -- readily, and often without much expense.
For example, a farmer who grows paddy rice can grow fish in
that paddy; fish ponds can be built as part of water supply
and Irrigation systems; vegetable scraps and animal manures
can be collected and used for fertilizing ponds. The fanner
should know that a farm with a fish pond or ponds can give
a total food yield that 1s higher than a farm with no fish
ponds.
The following diagram illustrates some of the ways 1n which the fish
pond fits into the farm: The same water source is used by both the
garden and the fish pond; the mud from the bottom of the pond makes
7
good fertilizer for the garden; vegetable matter from the garden can be
used to fertilize fish ponds; manure from the animals can be used for the
pond and parts of fish can be used to feed animals; etc.
VEGETABLE
GARDEN
\MALS
FISH
POND
If the major reason for building the fish pond is to get increased and
better food for his family, a farmer certainly does not need fancy ponds
or expensive equipment. Fish ponds can be very inexpensive to keep.
Fish do not require fancy foods. Many ponds provide all the food the'
fish need. But besides the foods they find in the water itself, some fish
eat leafy garbage, mill sweepings, beer residues, spoiled grains, broken
rice, and many other waste products that might not otherwise be used.
8
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9
Before construction can begin, the fanner must look over his land to
choose the place or places where ponds can be built, and decide what
kind and how many to build. He must also decide on the kind of fish
culture he wants to do, and on the type of fish that he wants to raise.
He must look at his resources and his needs very carefully before he
actually begins building and operating a fish pond. This section will
give Information to guide the farmer 1n the Dlannlng of ponds and kind
of fish culture.
The Site
One of the most Important parts of planning 1s finding the right place
(selecting the site) for the pond. F1sh ponds use the land 1n a different
way from agricultural crops such as rice or wheat, but fish also are a
crop. And when a farmer builds a fish pond, he is choosing one use of
12
his land Instead of some other use. If the site for the pond Is well-
chosen, the pond can be more productive than the land by Itself. But If
1t 1s not chosen well, the fanner may lose, or, at best, gain nothing
from his fish pond. When considering a site for the fish pond, the
farmer should remember and consider several points that were made In the
Introduction:
. Often poor agricultural land can be turned Into very good fish
ponds. In general, the better the soil of an area, the better
the fish pond. But this does not mean that a pond cannot be
built on poor land. It does mean that the farmer will have to
work harder to maintain the pond and the fish.
. If the pond 1s built on agricultural land which Is not producing
good crops, but the pond 1s cared for well, eventually the pond
bottom soil will become more fertile than 1t was before. If
this pond 1s a large one, after harvesting the fish, the pond
can be planted again with a land crop, like c o m , and allowed
to grow. Then when the corn 1s harvested, the land can be
turned back Into a fish pond. This means that a farmer can get
two good uses out of his land Instead of one poor crop.
. Other farmers may want to grow fish In rice paddles by digging
trenches around the edges of the paddy for fish to swim 1n.
This 1s another way of culturlng fish which will be discussed
in somewhat more detail later 1n the manual.
The point of the discussion above, 1s that a fish pond 1s Just one use
that a farmer's fields can have, and the choice of how the land can be
used Is important.
13
There are three factors that work together to make a good site for a
fish pond:
. Water supply
. Soil
. Topography
C/^'^^'r^a^K^^JWTER V ^ / a L , DRAIN
"//,. '///, ,„„„ '///,-^v
Pond bwitt uiing a ''"'--"//frs
ipxing at a uxtteA iouxce.
14
eggs 1n It. If the water from a spring has travelled very far,
It may need to be filtered before 1t 1s used for a fish pond.
But filtering Is easy to do (see the "Construction" section)
and the Important fact 1s that the water supply 1s available.
. Dlzlli. The best source of water for a fish pond 1s well water.
Well water has few contaminants and, 1f the well 1s a good one,
the water 1s continuously available. Well water and spring
water, however, are both often low 1n oxygen content. F1sh
need to have oxygen 1n their water to live. Since this problem
is overcome easily (see water quality information in the section
on "Preparing the Pond") the major factor to be considered
here 1s an adequate water supply.
Most fish ponds use water that comes from a stream, river, or lake.
A diversion ditch or channel 1s dug between the water source and the
pond to take water from source to pond. This 1s a good way to fill a
pond because the water can be controlled easily. When the pond 1s full,
the channel can be blocked with a gate or a plug (see "Construction"
section), and the water will stop moving Into the pond.
There can be problems with this kind of water supply; for example, often
in tropical areas streams flood in the rainy season. This extra water
can be dangerous to the pond and must be diverted away from the pond by
a channel built for that purpose. IT IS BEST NOT TO CHOOSE A PLACE THAT
IS KNOWN TO FLOOD WHEN CHOOSING A WATER SUPPLY AND SITE FOR A POND. When
a pond floods, all the fish escape,and the pond is empty at harvest time.
If the water for the pond is being taken from a stream, lake, or river,
then the farmer should plan to filter the water carefully when filling
the pond. Water from these sources sometimes contains unwanted fish or
fish eggs. Filtering prevents these fish or eggs, and other harmful
animals, from entering the pond.
uality of the Water Supply. Finding an adequate water supply 1s the
irst step. Then the farmer has to check that supply to make sure It
can be used for a pond. This check of the water should Include:
. looking at the water, smelling 1t, and tasting it.
. looking to see 1f there Is a family upstream who take baths 1n
the water before 1t gets to the pond.
. making sure that there is no family or village downstream that
depends upon the source for their drinking water.
If the water supply seems all right, the farmer must also find the
answers to some other questions. Where the water comes from, how far 1t
travels to get to the site for the pond, and what kind of soil It travels
over will all affect the quality of the water. These questions and their
answers tell what must be done to make the water right for a pond:
15
. Is the water very clear? Then the farmer may have to fertilize
the pond because there are not enough nutrients 1n the water.
There are many things which can be done to make water good for a pond.
If the farmer knows his supply and the kind of water he has, he can
take the steps necessary to use his supply well.
SOIL The second Important part of site selection is the soil of the
area. The soil of the pond roust be able to hold water. It also con-
tributes to the fertility of the water because of the nutrients it
contains.
Ability of Soil to Hold Water. The best soil for a pond contains a lot
of clay. Clay soil holds water well. When a place with a good water
supply is found, the fanner must test the soil. He can tell a lot about
the soil simply by feeling 1t. If the soil feels gritty or rough to the
touch, 1t probably contains a lot of sand. If 1t feels smooth and
slippery, 1t probably means there 1s a lot of clay 1n it. This smooth
soil is good for a fish pond.
If 1t holds Its shape when the farmer opens his hand, 1t will
be good for a pond. Remember, the more clay 1n the soil, the
better 1t 1s for building a pond.
If the soil 1s sandy, or does not contain much clay, the farmer can still
build a pond. There are ways of building ponds In these soils. But he
should be aware that building a fish pond In such soils requires more
effort and may not be as successful. Digging test holes will tell the
fanner what his soil 1s.
Larger ponds can be built 1n soils with clay. If the soil 1s rocky or has
shifting sand, etc., only small ponds are possible. If there are other
locations available, the farmer would be wise to see if there is another
place with soil better suited to the fish pond. More Information on soil
1s Included 1n the "Construction" section.
Ability of Soil to Provide Nutrients. Soil also contributes to the pond's
fertility. Fertility Is a measure of the nutrients 1n the pond, and 1t
simply refers to how much food there Is available 1n the pond for the
fish to eat. A very fertile pond 1s one which contains a lot of fish food.
17
The soil of the pond contains some of these necessary nutrients -- like
Iron, calcium, and magnesium. In addition, however, soil also can contain
a d d s ; these substances often are harmful to fish. Whatever a soil has
in it 1s drawn Into the pond by the water and thus comes In contact with
the fish. Sometimes after a heavy rainstorm, there are big fish kills
1n new ponds. This happens because the heavy rain carries larger
amounts of acids from the soil Into the pond. So the farmer who 1s aware
of the kind of soil he has for his fish pond can prevent this problem
before 1t happens.
REMEMBER: One good Indicator of the quality of soil 1s whether It has
been used for growing crops. If crops grow well 1n that location, the
soil will probably be good for the fish pond. If crops did grow well
there before the nutrients were used up, then 1t will probably still be
free of harmful substances.
The farmer will learn quickly to recognize by sight the slope that 1s
best for a pond. Because a slope 1s so Important, the first thing a
farmer should look for 1s a site with a slope and a water supply. If
he can use a natural slope for his pond, the pond will be cheaper and
easier to construct.
The best places to look for such combinations of slope and water supply
are where water collects from streams and flows through the valley at
the bottom of a slope. If the pond 1s built on the slope above the
water flow, water drained from the pond can flow directly into the stream.
Water might be brought to the pond 1n a number of ways depending upon the
situation -- by streams running down the slope upon which the pond is
situated, for example. Another good place to look for a good combination
of slope and water supply is on plains or flattish ground between hills.
These plains often receive water from brooks or streams.
There are many possibilities. The important thing is that the fanner
look for a topography that makes fish farming as easy and as successful
as possible.
The number of pond walls the farmer must construct depends upon the land
and on how he fixes his drainage system. A barrage pond usually needs
only one wall -- the main wall between the water source and the pond area.
One kind of drainage system called a sluice (see "Construction" section)
can be used to let water both in and out of the pond. There are also a
number of simple drainage systems which can be used that do not require
any complicated construction.
Barrage ponds should not be built where the flow of water 1s too great:
1t 1s difficult to keep the water from breaking down the wall 1f the
pressure of the water 1s too great. Brooks and streams which flow well,
but not too strongly, make good sources for barrage ponds.
Even when the flow of water Is not great, however, barrage ponds require
overflow channels. Because barrage ponds are usually built in low areas,
they are likely to fill up 1n heavy rains. Overflow channels are any
kind of system which can be set up to stop the pond from collecting too
much water. The overflow takes extra water away from the pond. If this
extra water 1s not taken out, the pond wall may break. Therefore, the
overflow system is needed to help the drainage system handle the flow of
Water when there 1s too much water in the pond.
21
The overflow system can be wide grooves cut Into the top of the wall
toward the ends away from the middle; 1t can be large hollow tree trunks
which are set Into the tops of the wall and work as pipes to drain the
water Into ditches, or even to carry the water Into storage areas for use
later when the water supply 1s low. Another kind of overflow can be
ditches, dug Into the ground above pond level, which take the extra water
away when the water rises to that level.
An overflow often 1s not screened, because 1f something large catches
on U , the pressure of the water behind 1t might cause the entire wall to
break. This fact results 1n a loss of fish at time of flooding.
^.i^Pil^'V^//////
OVERFLOW
DITCH %
6- SCREEN
f
f WATER
INLET
#
DRAMGE
DITCH ^//////////ill/nl/nilwM HIIII*^
Diversion Ponds. These ponds are made by bringing (diverting) water fros
another source like a stream or river. Channels are dug to carry the
water from the water source to the pond.
22
. PaAatltZ Astern. In this series, each pond has Its own Inlet
and outlet. Therefore, each pond can be managed as a separate
pond.
23
Diversion ponds are often better than barrage ponds because they are less
likely to overflow, and the water source 1s often more dependable through-
out the year. But barrage ponds require less construction and are likely
to be cheaper. In addition, for some farmers, barrage ponds are the best,
and perhaps the only, way for them to use their land for fish ponds.
The art of constructing and planning a fish pond or fish operation 1s
very much an Individual thing. There are basic ways of using resources,
for example, land and water sources. But the exact shape and type of
fish pond must be decided by the farmer for his situation. There are
many ways of making fish ponds which will work, and the "right" way for
any given farmer 1s the way which works best for him. Many aspects of
fish farming are determined by experimenting with pond operation, but
much can be done by good planning before fish pond construction.
Therefore, the farmer must look at his sites and consider the types of
ponds he can build from the viewpoint of the number, size, and depth of
the ponds he 1s going to need. If, for example, the farmer thinks he
has a good area for a diversion pond, but hits solid rock at lm and needs
a pond 2m deep, he can find this out before he Invests a great deal of
time and money. If he has room for two small diversion ponds and a
barrage pond, or for a large diversion pond and a barrage pond, he can
base his decision on what kind of pond to build upon the number, size,
and depth of pond he needs for what he will be doing.
The Number of Ponds. The number of ponds depends on the possible sites
and on what the farmer plans to do with his fish ponds. If he is going
to raise fingerlings to market size, he will need one or a few "rearing"
ponds. If a farmer plans a larger operation in which he will breed fish
for the eggs and fry, he will need space for nursery pond, rearing pond,
and a pond for brood stock. Nursery ponds can hold eggs and fry until
they are fingerling size; rearing ponds hold the fingerlings until they
are market size; brood ponds hold the fish to be used for breeding.
The Size of Ponds. The size of ponds depends upon the same factors —
topography, water supply, and need. Nursery ponds usually are smaller
than rearing ponds because the fry are very small. The size of nursery
24
ponds depends on the fish species being cultured. In fact, eggs and fry
can even be kept 1n washtubs, oil drums or any other such container which
holds enough water for the number of fry and 1s supplied with enough
oxygen.
As the fish grow, they need more space. So rearing ponds are usually
bigger than nursery ponds, and brood ponds are bigger than rearing ponds.
Sometimes a farmer will have to choose between one large pond or several
smaller ponds. His site would allow him to decide either way.
Here are some advantages of small and large ponds:
Smalt Vondi: . harvest easily and quickly
. drain and refill quickly
. treat for disease easily
. are not eroded by wind easily
laAQi Vondb-- . cost less to build per hectare of water
. take up less space per hectare of water
25
Farmers are going to be roost Interested 1n working the fish pond Into an
already going farm as simply and easily as possible. This 1s why
culturlng fish 1n rice paddles 1s popular 1n some areas. In fact, fish
ponds can be set up 1n almost any area where a rice paddy can be located
— even on steep hillsides.
Small ponds are easier to care for and construct. As a farmer gains
experience, he can go on and build larger ponds. Starting small 1s a
good Idea until the farmer feels he knows what he 1s doing and 1s successful.
Depth of Ponds. The depth of ponds depends upon the fish being grown.
F1sh species like different kinds of food, and the depth of the ponds
affects the kinds of food produced by the pond. A common carp, for
Instance, eats worms and other bottom organisms and must have a pond
that 1s not deeper than 2m. But when the carp are fry, they eat only
plankton, the tiny free-floating plants and animals suspended throughout
the water. So nursery ponds for carp fry are often only 0.5m deep.
(As mentioned before, eggs and fry can be taken care of In almost any
container which holds enough water and has enough oxygen.)
Other fish feed at other levels 1n the ponds depending on their life
stage and on their own food preferences. A very deep pond will not
produce as much food because the sunlight cannot light the water below
a certain depth,and the plankton will not be able to make oxygen for the
fish (see water quality). On the other hand, a very shallow pond might
be turbid, covered by water plants easily, and become very hot. Host
pond owners make sure that the water depth at the edges of the pond 1s
at least 75cm to discourage water plants. It Is best 1f the pond Is
about 75cm deep at the shallow end and up to 2m deep at the deepest end.
This will give the best results with most pond fish.
pond 1s harvested (the fish are taken out). The pond area can then be
prepared for a new batch of fish and stocked again.
One pond can provide a good food source for the family. However, rearing
fish means that somewhere there must be a source of fry or flngerllngs
for use 1n the pond. The farmer must check his area carefully, so that
he 1s sure the young fish are available Before he builds one pond.
The source can be a river where he collects the young fish, or a local
fish farm which breeds fish to supply fanners who have small ponds, or a
government hatchery where the farmer can buy the young fish. If the
farmer decides that he wants to breed fish 1n his pond, It Is possible
to breed some fish Inside small nets placed 1n the pond. A single pond,
though, 1s usually used Just for rearing fry or flngerllngs to a good
size for food and market.
While one pond usually means that the farmer Is wise to concentrate on
raising one batch of fish from fry or flngerllngs to market size, he
still must decide what kind or kinds of fish he will raise In his pond.
He can raise one kind of fish alone (monoculture), or he can raise
several kinds together (polyculture).
^
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-
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MIXED A&ES SEPARATED bY A»B.
SULECTIVt HARVESTING
28
Monoculture Is the most common kind of pond culture. For a small fish
farmer who Is most Interested 1n having a nearby, year-round supply of
protein (and who does not have a lot of time or Interest to give to the
pond), a monoculture may be a very good Idea.
POLYCULTURE
ft
F1sh stocked 1n a polyculture must be able to live together. And living
together successfully means that the fish put Into the pond together do
not all ne«d to eat the same food. A polyculture can have fish of any
size or age — as long as a balanced relationship 1s maintained.
Some examples of polycultures are:
. flngerllngs of two or more species stocked together 1n a
fertilized pond and left to grow. A good mixture In this
29
A iaAmeA moi-t be
aaAciul to avoid
the. ptoblem o{,
£l6h competing ioK
iood when he plani
a polycultuAe..
There are no crosses that produce 1001 female offspring as yet. Males
are preferred because they continue to grow during the breeding season,
when there are no females present — even though they (the males) continue
to build their nests 1n preparation for mating.
Monosex culture 1s a valuable method of pond culture, but 1s usually
difficult to do: the hybrid crosses are very new; hand-sorting fish by
sex causes many of the fish to die from stress. Even 1f the fish are
sorted without stressing them, one fish of the opposite sex that
accidentally finds Its way Into the pond can ruin the whole monosex
culture. So monosex culture 1s generally not practiced by small-scale
fish farmers.
The major difference between a large farm operation and a small one nay
be only the number of ponds. Three ponds 1s enough to have a full-fledged
operating fish farm which Includes breeding, selling fry and flngerllngs
to other farmers, and raising fry and flngerllngs to market and brood
size. Once the farmer 1s a skilled pond manager, these ponds should do
well and provide a good return on his Investment.
Until the farmer 1s experienced, however, 1t Is better for him to start
with small efforts and a smaller operation. Small pond failure Is not as
severe. Once the ponds are working well, the farmer can expand and build
more and/or larger ponds. But he should be encouraged to start small.
There are a lot of factors 1n fish pond management that are learned best
by experience. But a bad experience will discourage, rather than encourage,
the pond owner.
The fanner now has a firm idea of his site and the types of ponds it is
possible for him to build. He also should know what he wants to do with
his ponds — raise fish for food or run a fish-marketing business. Now
he must consider very carefully what type or types of fish he is going
to raise In his ponds. The success of the pond depends upon choosing
the fish that will grow best 1n the type of ponds and conditions that a
farmer 1s planning.
The following pages give some: 1) general Information on characteristics
of fish, and 2) detail about certain fish which have proved to be good
pond fish and why. This information should serve as a guide to a fanner
trying to decide which fish will do best in his ponds.
Characteristics of Fish
The major body parts of all fish perform the same functions, and they
are located 1n about the same places on any different fish's body. But
the size, shape, and color are often different, and these differences
help tell the fish apart. Knowing how a healthy fish looks is Important.
All fish have a tail consisting of the caudal peduncle, and the caudal
i-in. The fish's fins help 1t steer through the water and hold it
upright in the water. Often a sick fish cannot steer or flops over on
Its side. Other fins on the body include:
DORSAL FIN
Paitf* o& ikz CUapia., one. o£ ikt but o$ ttitzd pond iiik
Other identifying parts that a l l fish have are the mouth, the qznliol
apznJjngA (to reproductive organs), and the bxXsjinJl tine.. The lateral line
is a small l i n e of nerve cells which runs along the length of the body
about midway on the side of the body. Sometimes the lateral line is
covered by a layer of scales; sometimes i t is a different color than the
rest of the body. In any case, the lateral line is an area of sensitivity
that helps the f i s h feel pressure and temperature changes in the water
around i t .
35
Some fish, like catfish, also have batbeis, small projections that hang
down from the sides of the mouth. Barbels help the catfish sense Its
surroundings, find food,and attract small fish to the catfish so that
1t can eat them.
When a farmer breeds fish he will want to be able to tell the difference
between male and female fish. This can be difficult with some fish.
However, some fish change color 1n the breeding season (tilapia, for
example), so they are easy to identify by sex. Some fish can be classi-
fied according to the color and size of their genitals. The separation
of fish by sex is best learned by actual experience in the pond.
When the farmer goes to buy fish, he must already know what healthy fish
look like. I t 1s very Important that he be as familiar as possible with
each of the fish he decides to raise. He must know the characteristics
of that fish and Its l i f e cycle, Its eating and breeding habits, etc.
The farmer who begins any fish pond enterprise without having this kind
of Information 1s Inviting failure. And 1f 1t 1s a new venture, 1t 1s
particularly Important that the fanner's f i r s t effort be as successful
as possible.
After the yolk sac 1s gone, the fry searches for food 1n the water. All
fry eat the tiny suspended and swimming plants and animals called plank-
ton 1n the water. Plankton are hard to see, but If a farmer puts some
of his pond water Into a glass container and holds It up to the light so
that the light shines through the water, he can see the tiny plankton
floating 1n the water. The length of the fry stage depends upon the
species of fish. Usually a fish 1s a fry at least until the yolk sac 1s
absorbed. Fry range from 2mm to 30mm 1n length. This growth process can
take 2 to 6 or 8 days depending upon the type of fish.
37
As the fry grow bigger, they are called flngerllngs. They are called
fingerlings because at this stage of the growth cycle, they are about the
size of a person's finger. Flngerllngs vary 1n size -- from 4-10cm.
Above 10cm, the fish 1s better called a post-f1nger!1ng. The adult fish
ranges 1n size; some can be as large as 2m long and weigh 22kg. An adult
fish 1s a fish which 1s sexually mature.
Fingerlings have different eating habits from fry; they are now much
bigger and can eat larger pieces of food. As flngerllngs, the fish begin
to show that they like certain foods better than other foods. Each kind
of fish chooses Its own kind of food, depending upon his needs and what
1s available. For example, a carp fry will eat plankton; as a flngerling,
the carp eats pieces of decayed matter and Insect larvae; as an adult
the carp will eat plankton, decayed matter, Insect larvae, worms, snails,
and almost anything that 1s on the bottom of the pond. Common carp, for
example, are called "bottom feeders," because they eat food from the bot-
tom of the pond.
There are many fish that do grow well 1n ponds. Some of these are fish,
grown locally; some are fish grown 1n other parts of the world.
Many governments today are Introducing exotic fish species (these are
kinds of fish not native to that country) Into fish pond programs.
They do this for three reasons:
. Some Introduced fish grow better and faster than native fish.
But exotic fish must be watched and used very carefully. They must not
escape into local waters. Some exotic fish which escape create problems
1n natural waters when they begin to compete with local fishes for food.
Also, introduced fish can carry diseases or parasites that are fatal to
native fishes.
NAMES (Continued)
Genus • species Common name
COMMON CARP
The common carp, CypUmA cxwpio, 1s a favorite warm water pond fish.
Conmon carp are used as a pond fish because they:
. spawn easily 1n ponds.
Common carp generally are a grey-green color. However, they also can be
gold, yellow, orange, pink, blue, green, or grey. They spawn all year
round 1n warm waters, and they can be made to spawn by the pond owner.If
they do not spawn naturally. Common carp are good to eat when they are
cooked properly. They can be grown In ponds by themselves (monoculture)
or 1n ponds with Chinese or Indian carp (polyculture).
Some of the yields gotten In various countries by stocking cannon carp in
monocultures are shown 1n the following table.
Yield,
Country Culture methods kg/hectare
Conclusion: Common carp are a very easy fish to breed, keep, and harvest,
so a fish pond that relies on common carp will probably do well. Common
carp are a good fish for a farmer to use for his first effort. Kith good
management, cornnon carp will continue to produce healthy eggs and fry
until they are too old (above 5 years of age).
TILAPIA
. grow rapidly.
. taste good.
. can withstand wide temperature ranges.
Tllapla are herbivorous: some species eat higher plants; some eat
phytoplankton. Both the Java tllapla and the Nile tllapla {Titapia.
nitotlcjx) do well 1n very enriched waters (waters polluted by sewage).
All tllapla have slightly different eating habits, depending on the
species.
Tllapla reproduce every month or so, once they become sexually mature.
They then take very good care of their own eggs and fry In ponds. If
the farmer plans to breed and raise fry, this fish 1s a good choice
because the fish themselves take care of the fry at a stage where many
fish of other species die easily. The major problem with raising tllapla
1n fish ponds 1s that they become sexually mature at a small size, and
43
CHINESE C A R P S
Other kinds of carp, besides the common carp, often are grown 1n ponds.
Most commonly used are the Chinese carps. Some of these are:
The preceding table shows polyculture mixes: as you can see, common carp
can also be used 1n polyculture with Chinese carp. Chinese carp are
grown 1n ponds because they grow well 1n polycultures, and they are very
good to eat. The silver carp grows faster and 1s tastier (according to
some farmers) than coitmon carp. The grass carp Is most often used to
control weeds 1n the pond. In fact the grass carp does a better job of
weed control than do chemicals. The grass carp 1s perhaps the most Inter-
esting of the Chinese carp and 1s now being studied by scientists 1n
many countries to find better ways of breeding 1t in ponds.
A farmer might run Into problems raising Chinese carp -- 1f he does not
look Into his local situation very well. Farmers will have to have a '
source of Chinese carp fry from a government hatchery or a local breeder
before trying to raise Chinese carp. The carp only breed once a year,
and then, 1n most cases, only with help from man. Also, Chinese carp are
very susceptible to diseases. Then, because they are delicate fish, they
must be handled very carefully, or they will be Injured.
Conclusion: A farmer just beginning a fish pond probably would not want
to breed Chinese carp, but he certainly should be familiar with these
fish and how they might help his ponds. For example, even two or three
large grass carps placed 1n a pond with many fish of one other species
could be valuable for keeping a pond balanced.
INDIAN C A R P
There 1s one last group of carp often cultured in ponds. These are the
Indian carp. Indian carp are further divided Into minor and major carp.
The major carp of India are the catla [Catla catta), the rohu {Labto nokUa),
46
and the mrlgal [CiMhina. m>ugata.). The minor carp are the reba, the bata,
the sandkohl, and the nagendram fish. The Indian major carp will not
spawn 1n standing water, so special ponds are built 1n India to provide
a flow of water for these fish, who must have running water In which to
spawn. The Indian carp can be made to spawn by man, but this Is a dif-
ficult process (see "Managing Brood Stock"). However, there seems to be
no reason why the Indian carp cannot be spawned In ponds 1n places where
ponds can be constructed to provide constantly running water.
Conclusion: A farmer who has only a small pond should not try to breed
Indian carp. Indian carp can be grown 1n polycultures with common carp,
but are not as good or fast growing 1n ponds as the Chinese carp.
Indian carp are also susceptible to many diseases. This 1s a fish for
an experienced fish farmer who 1s Interested 1n, and able to, experiment.
GOURAMI
The gouraml {Oiphfionemu gc>umy) 1s a very good pond fish. It 1s
originally from Indonesia, but now 1s grown all over Southeast Asia.
Gouraml possess an accessory air-breathing organ, which means that they
can survive 1n waters that are low In dissolved oxygen. This makes 1t
an Important fish 1n areas where the temperature remains high and there
Is little water for certain periods of the year. Gouraml spawn all year
round 1n warm water conditions. Gouraml:
. spawn easily all year round 1n warm waters.
. taste good.
. are easy to breed.
. accept a variety of foods.
. are hardy.
47
Conclusion: Gouraml are good fish for a first-time fish farmer. And
they are certainly a fish to be considered very thoughtfully by farmers
who live 1n areas that remain very hot and dry for periods of the year.
The gouraml 1s used to these conditions, and there are other pond fish
which would not do well at all under these conditions.
CLARIAS CATFISH
CltvuM catfish are found throughout Asia, India, and Africa, as well as
the Middle East. The species most often used as pond fish are CltvUai
mcxAocephatub and ClatuM baXxackii. CtoJuu macxocephaluA 1s preferred
for Its good taste; CtaJuai batxachut grows faster.
These catfish have accessory air-breathing organs; they can even crawl
out of ponds to look for food. Because they can live 1n shallow ponds,
these catfish are sometimes used 1n culture with rice (see paddy culture).
They are scavengers, which means they will eat just about anything.
However, they prefer to eat worms, snails, and other fish. They are
often used 1n polycultures with tllapla where they serve as predators on
the very small tllapla. They will eat supplementary foods, and give very
high production 1n ponds. In Thailand, ClarUai catfish yield about
97,000kg/ha when they are fed supplementary foods. These catfish are
hardy: they sometimes get external parasites, but these do not kill the
fish.
Conclusion: The catfish are another good fish to be raised 1n areas
where high heat and long dry spells are found. They are good to eat,
easy to keep, and can be used 1n ponds 1n a number of ways. Certainly
a farmer who already cultures paddy rice might be Interested In consi-
dering adapting his paddy to catfish culture.
TAWES
The common name tawes 1s applied to three species of fish — BoAboi
gorUonotuA, PurvUoi javaniait, and PunXUul goiuonotai. These fish
usually are used 1n fish ponds for vegetation control, 1n polycultures
with Chinese carp. Tawes are able to spawn all year round, but they
most often spawn 1n the rainy season. Tawes need wel1-oxygenated water
48
with a strong current to spawn. Tawes feed on soft water plants, but will
also take rice bran. There 1s not a great deal known about the tawes at
present, but 1t can be used 1n polycultures when the grass carp 1s not
available.
HETEROTIS NILOTICUS
The HeAesiotu nctoticui spawn easily 1n ponds. The mature fish w i l l
build a grass-walled nest 1n the weeds at a pond's edge and spawn inside
this nest. They spawn when water 1s low and very warm, at the end of
the dry season. The mature f i s h feed only on plankton, but 1n a pond
they w i l l accept supplementary food. This fish has a swim bladder which
can serve as an accessory a i r breathing organ.
Conclusion: There 1s not yet a great deal known about the HtttAotU
ruloticui as a pond f i s h . But 1t seems that i t is a good choice of fish
for warm climates and warm waters. A farmer who lives in such a climate
might find raising, and even breeding, this fish quite easy - - particu-
l a r l y in a very w e l l - f e r t i l i z e d pond.
49
OTHER GOURAMIS
These are the snakeskln gouraml (or Sepat S1am — TruchogaAttn. pecfcwtoti*),
the three-spot gouraml [TxlchogcuteA. t/Uchoptvun). and the kissing
gouraml (HUoitom tumincki). All of these fish taste good. And they
breed easily 1n well-oxygenated, warm water. They do require a pond which
has a good growth of vegetation (particularly Hyd/uJJU veAticsUlata.).
MILKFISH C U L T U R E
The mllkflsh {Chanoi chanoi) can be raised in freshwater even though it
is primarily a bracklshwater fish, and will not breed 1n ponds. The fry
are caught along the shoreline at breeding season (the rainy season) and
transferred to freshwater ponds. Mllkfish culture 1s done for the most
part in the Philippines and 1n some other Southeast Asian countries, like
Indonesia and Taiwan.
Conclusion: This 1s not a fish for the first-time fish farmer. In fact,
1t 1s not a good choice for any farmer uniess he has a saltwater pond; 1s
Interested 1n trying to acclimatize the fish to a freshwater pond; or can
buy nllkfish from a source that has them already 1n a freshwater pond.
EEL C U L T U R E
Eels (Angoctta sp.) have been cultured In Japan and Taiwan for years.
Eels are very much a luxury food and are not normally grown alone 1n ponds
outside of these two countries. The eels are grown 1n ponds 1n poly-
culture with other fishes and are particularly useful 1n polyculture
with species of tllapia because they eat the smaller tllaplas. The eels .
used 1n Taiwan {AngiUtta japoiUaa.) spawn 1n the sea and the fry (called
elvers) swim upstream and are collected by dealers. Eels must be fed
supplementary feeds like pellets made of trash fish.
OTHER P O N D FISH
Some other fish grown in ponds are the goldfish {CaAaii-iui awiatui), the
crucian carp {CaAoiiiai c&uiA&iul), and SzManochfumii KobuAtui. Any of
these fish can be grown 1n polycultures with Chinese, common carp, and
tllapia.
Conclusion: The use of one of these fish In a pond stocked with other,
more Important fishes, results 1n an increase in yields of both species.
In polycultures these species can utilize other food sources and also
act as predators and weed controllers.
51
One other fish species used 1n freshwater ponds 1s the striped mullet
(Uugil ctphalui). Like the mllkflsh, the mullet 1s primarily a salt-
water fish,and Its fry are collected as they swim upstream. Recently the
mullet has been made to spawn by man, but this 1s difficult to do because
mullet are very sensitive to handling. However, mullet can survive 1n
wide temperature ranges and are herbivores, so some farmers may want to
try mullet.
A CLOSING N O T E O N FISH
All these fish have been and are now being cultured 1n fish ponds around
the world. However, as stated before, they are not the only fish which
can be grown 1n ponds. In every area there are a number of fish 1n
natural waters that could be grown 1n fish ponds. So you might find 1t
52
a good Idea to experiment with local fish In your ponds, to find those
fishes that might be available to farmers 1n your area for use 1n their
ponds. It 1s better for an extension worker to do the experimenting
than 1t 1s to have a farmer risk wasting his time or money, or even more
Importantly, risk failure. If a farmer falls, he may not want to try
again.
Fish Pond Construction
IMPORTANT: Stress that the "right" way 1n any situation 1s the way
which:
. the owner can afford
. the owner can manage easily
. fits the owner's needs most completely
DRAINAGrE SYSTEM
A fish pond has three main parts: the walls, the water Inlet, and the
drainage system. Walls are also called dams, dikes, levees, or bunds.
This manual uses "walls." Whatever they are called, walls hold the water
in the pond. They can be built using soil taken from Inside the pond,
or they can be built with soil taken from another place. They must be
strong enough to withstand the pressure of all the water Inside the pond:
water constantly pushes against the walls. They must also be water
tight (impermeable), so the pond does not leak.
55
The water Inlet, located above the pond water level, is used to let water
Into the pond and is closed off after the pond is filled.
The drainage system is used to empty the water from the pond when the
farmer is ready to harvest the fish.
There are many ways of making inlet and drainage systems: the most
Important criterion is that they work. But the walls are especially
important: they are all that keep the fish inside the pond. The walls
must be built carefully.
Pond construction follows the same principles whether the pond 1s a
single backyard pond or part of a large fish hatchery. These are the
steps 1n pond construction:
. Survey the land
. Mark out the area of the pond
. Measure and mark out the walls
. Excavate the pond bottom, if necessary
. Build the drainage system
. Build the water inlet
. Build the walls
. Seal the pond bottom and walls
Each of these steps will be discussed in detail in the following pages.
There are a number of ways which can be used to determine slope. The
way outlined here probably would not be used by many farmers 1f they
were building a pond on their own, but this 1s an accurate method of
determining slope and should be encouraged 1f at all possible.
To survey the land for slope, some
STAKES stakes (long, straight pieces of
wood), some string (flshllne, etc.),
and a carpenter's level are needed.
Most farmers will not be familiar
with the level, a device that has
an air bubble trapped Inside which
rests between two drawn lines.
When the level 1s placed on the
ground, 1t shows whether the area
1s flat or sloped: 1f 1t 1s straight
or flat (level), the bubble stays
In the middle between the lines;
STRING- 1f the land slopes, the bubble will
move to the right or left of the
lines, depending upon the direction
of the slope.
CaApetUeA'A Itvtt
STAKE
GROC
LEV EC
This drawing shows that one string 1s tied at 20cm; the other 1s tied at
25cm. Therefore, one end of the area 1s 5cm lower than the other. The
distance covered by the string 1s 100cm, so the slope 1s 5% (over 100cm
of ground, the elevation changed 5cm). Since a slope of 2-5$ 1s good for
a fish pond, this site has a satisfactory slope for a pond.
Other Ways of Determining Slope. As mentioned earlier, the above method
of measuring slope Is a good one, but 1t may be difficult for some people
to do. It 1s possible to calculate slope roughly. A farmer, who realizes
that what he is looking for 1s a way to place his pond so that the water
can enter from the water source and drain away well, can figure the slope
of his land by doing such things as rolling a ball or other round object
and watching carefully to note where and how quickly the ball rolls. A
good slope would mean a slow-rolling ball. A variation of this Involves
throwing a quantity of water, or a mixture of water and dye, on the ground
and watching the path 1t takes and Its speed as 1t moves along the ground.
It 1s Important to consider slope carefully. A well-placed pond with
good drainage 1s easier to care for and has more chance to be successful.
It may be necessary for the pond owner to measure his land only once to
find a good location. Or It may be necessary to repeat the measuring a
number of times. This 1s probably a good thing to encourage since
locations which look alike to the eye often have enough difference 1n
slope to make a big difference to a fish pond. Also, determining slope
58
1s a larger project 1f more than one pond is being built. Then the ponds
must be laid out In relation to each other.
There may be several areas which have the correct slope, but only one
which 1s good 1n terms of getting the water into the pond from the water
source and out of the pond easily. For example, the farmer might H k e
to drain his pond so that the water irrigates his fields. Therefore, he
will want to keep this 1n mind when he decides upon the exact placement
of his pond. Likewise, 1f he 1s building a pond on a hillside 1n back
of his house, the slope may be perfect, but he will need to avoid drainage
Into his buildings.
Once the slope is found, the location of the main wall can be determined.
Of course, If the pond 1s built on flat ground, 1t will have four walls.
If the pond 1s a barrage pond, 1t may only have one wall. The number of
walls depends upon the land. The shape of the land may mean that one
wall or two walls or four walls will be needed.
.,1*411
/
STAKES
STRING
59
The farmer has to plan the depth of his pond and the height of his wall.
If the pond 1s going to be 2m deep at the deepest end, for example, the
walls should always be at least 30cm higher than the water level for a
small pond, and at least 50cm higher for a large pond. Also, the walls
will settle after they are finished, so 1t is best to make the wall 10*
higher than the desired final height of the wall. A 2m deep pond, there-
fore, would have walls with a total height at the deepest point of 2.5 or
2.6m [height of wall before 1t settles « depth of pond + 30cm (for small
pond) or 50cm (for large pond) + 101 of depth and 30 or 50cm].
Tie strings to the stakes along the main wall line, at a height of 2.5
or 2.6m for a pond whose deepest end will be 2m. Use a levelling device
to connect strings to the stakes marking the other walls, 1f the pond has
other walls, at the same level as the string marking the height of the
main wall. The strings are the building markers. When the walls reach
the strings, they are the right height.
2cm
The pond bottom must be clear of rocks, roots, trees, and stumps so that
later, when a net 1s used to harvest the fish, the net will not get caught
and tear. If the pond bottom 1s already smooth and slopes well, 1t can
be left alone. Or, if the pond bottom only has grass on 1t, the grass
does not need to be removed before the pond 1s filled. In fact, once
water is added to the pond, the grass will die and rot and add nutrients
to the water.
If the pond bottom does not already slope downward, excavate (dig out)
the bottom area of the pond until a good slope for drainage is made.
Adjust the height of the strings tied to the wall markers if digging the
bottom has changed the height.
Keep the soil which was dug out of the pond: when the pond walls are
finished, the soil can be placed on top and planted with grass. This
fertile topsoll will root grass easily; this grass will help keep the
walls from eroding (washing away).
60
SCREEN
OVERFLOW /
61
One of the easiest ways to drain the pond is to place a bamboo or plastic
pipe through the base of the wall into the middle of the pond. The end
of the pipe which is inside the pond has a screen over it to keep fish
from entering the pipe. The other end of the pipe, the end that is
outside the pond, is plugged with wood or clay. To drain the pond at
harvest time, the plug is pulled out.
Two other methods of draining the pond which work but are not used as
often, are the siphon and the pump. A siphon 1s merely a flexible
plastic or rubber tube. One end of the tube is in the pond near the
bottom; the other end is placed on the ground outside the pond. A
vacuum is produced in the pipe by sucking at the end outside the pond
until water begins to flow out. The end of the pipe inside the pond
must be kept in the water or the siphon will not work.
SIPHON
/--OUTLET (MUST B>£
V L.0W6R. THAJ4 INLET)
POMO fcOTTOM
The pump 1s usually not a good idea for a farmer because the engines
that are used to run the pumps are costly and often not available, or
gasoline to run them is costly, or they must be given frequent attention
so they will not break down.
All ponds must be drained for harvesting fish. Also, it 1s a good idea
to let a pond dry out completely once every year or so to get rid of any
unwanted fish and/or disease-causing organisms.
The following are some tested, effective drainage systems a fanner can
consider for his pond.
RIVALDI VALVE This valve was named after a farmer in Paraguay who
first used the system. It is an easy and good method to use in a small
fish pond. A farmer who is building only one small pond for family use
would find this valve a good choice for his needs.
The Rivaldi valve is a flexible plastic pipe. Place the pipe on the
ground before the wall is built. Build the wall. Then turn up and tie
the pipe to a stake. Tie the pipe end at a level which is somewhat above
the usual level of the water in the pond. Keep the pipe up and tied to
the stake until 1t is time to drain the pond. Then, untie the pipe and
let 1t lay on the floor of the pond until the water is out of the pond.
At other times, the pipe works as an overflow to let out water after a
heavy rain: when the water level in the pond reaches the top of the pipe,"
62
water will flow down the pipe and out of the pond.
The R1vald1 valve should have a screen over the end Inside the pond to
keep fish from going out of the pond while the pond Is Ming emptied or
drained.
£CREEN
METAL PIPE
M>RAIN
CONCRETE ANCHOR
BLOCK
• ^ 0 0 0 bUOiCt < * «
COT"******
65
IMPORTANT: The wooden gates of the sluice must fit Into the slots well,
but easily. The wood will swell to make a tighter seal as 1t 1s soaked
by the water 1n the pond. The slots (grooves) can be filled with several
strong, long, narrow boards which have been bevelled or notched so that
they fit together tightly. Or the slots can be filled with single pieces
of wood. When single pieces of wood (or a number of boards which have
been fastened tightly together) are used 1n a sluice, the pond 1s drained
and the water flow regulated by lifting the entire wooden structure out
of the groove to a height which allows some or a lot of water to flow out
of the pond. When separate boards are used in the grooves, the boards
are taken out one at a time. If a small flow out of the pond is desired,
only one board may be taken out. To drain the pond, all the boards are
removed. In a sluice having two wooden gates, the space between the gates
can be packed tightly with earth. This will help seal the water Into
the pond.
WOOD BOARDS
WATER LEVEL
EARTH FILL
Side, view, — t
eajrfh- lilted 6twice- C
CONCRETE BASEL
MONK The monk 1s very much like the sluice, but 1t 1s not built into
the pond wall the way the sluice i s . Sometimes the back of the monk
does touch the wall, but 1t is not built Into the wall. Also, a monk is
never used at the inlet as a sluice can be.
DRAIN PIPE
66
SCREEN
A monk-type drainage system controls the level of water and prevents fish
from escaping when the pond 1s being filled. It also allows for good
drainage of the pond. The completed structure consists of a horizontal
drainage pipe and the vertical structure, or monk. The drainage pipe
must be placed before the walls are built; the monk may be built outside
the pond, and placed Inside later.
The drainage pipe runs from the back of the monk under the pond wall.
It should be between 20 and 40cm 1n diameter; 1f piping of this diameter
1s not available, two pipes may be used. For good drainage, place the
pipes 30 to 40cm lower than the pond bottom. Make sure the drainage pipe
1s on solid ground so that the pipes do not bend. Bent pipes are difficult
to clean out when clogged.
The monk Itself 1s a structure which 1s closed on three sides and open
1n the front. The open side should face the Inside of the pond and should
be at least 30cm wide; the entire monk should be at least 40cm above the
surface of the water.
The two parallel sides of the monk, and the bottom, have grooves cut 1n
them: a monk may have two or three grooves. One groove, or part of a
groove 1s always for the screen. The other groove(s) 1s for the boards.
Honks can be made of wood, concrete or brick, A wooden monk should use
strong wood — 4 to 5cm thick.
A concrete monk should be reinforced with metal. Before the concrete 1s
poured, a wooden form shaped like the monk 1s made and oiled. A frame,
67
slightly smaller than the wooden form, 1s made of chicken wire, or some
other strong wire, and set down Inside of the wooden form. The concrete
1s then poured Into the form. A good concrete mixture for monks 1s
1 part cement, 2 parts clean sand, and 4 parts crushed stone, by volume.
G R O O V E S FOR &OAR.DS
Cufjiuay o& monk
BRICK. WALLS
DRAIN PIPE
Top vizw
CONCRETE BASE of, monk
-^ r»)P£
4-
If the monk 1s made of
concrete, the grooves can
be shaped by bending Iron 3
rods Into a "U" shape.
Remember, the grooves must
be sunk Into the sides and
bottom of the monk.
3
The grooves are filled by
using a series of boards —
wide enough to fit the
grooves well and between
y-1
20 and 30cm high. Each
board has a hook on It so
It can be lifted from the
groove easily; the boards
\m
VH '
may also be bevelled or
notched so that they fit
together wel 1.
If the monk has three grooves, the first groove can be a large screen.
The screen 1s what keeps the fish from escaping as the pond drains.
However, 1f the monk has only two grooves, a smaller screen can be placed
above or below the boards 1n the first groove. Placing the screen at
the bottom allows water to drain out from the bottom of the pond.
68
There are other ways this kind of monk can be built. For example, m e
second groove could be filled by a large wooden gate (one piece of wood
or several fastened together) which could be raised and held up to allow
a flow of water from the bottom of the pond. It is this flow of water
from the bottom of the pond which 1s Important.
The Herrguth monk would probably not be used 1n a pond which is filled
by rainwater. In these ponds — sky ponds — a regular monk 1s used,
and the space between the two wooden gates 1s packed with mud to make
a watertight seal which lasts for the fish-growing season and 1s removed
when the pond is drained for harvest.
A large catching ditch can be made 1n front of the monk to help with
taking fish out of the pond when the pond 1s being drained for harvest.
DRAINAGE
DITCHES
CATCH
BASIN
MONK.
DIKE
DRAIN PIPE
Water Inlet
All ponds, except for those filled directly by a spring or by rainwater,
need water inlets. The water Inlet must be constructed so that 1t supplies
adequate quantities and quality of water, and so that it does not allow
unwanted fish or other materials to enter the pond. This usually means
there must be a channel of some kind to bring the water to the pond from
the source and a filter of some kind to keep the water which goes Into
the pond clean and free from predators.
70
COURSE SCR.EEN
Fine scsceeu
/////////////l//M.(/l//'ll!lillUV\\\^
A water inlet can be as simple as a bamboo pipe of good diameter running
from a water source through the wall into the pond. Remember: the Inlet
pipe should be placed above the water level so that incoming water drops
Into the pond. In some areas, such things as bamboo strips are tied to
the end of the inlet pipe which is placed over the pond. The water flow
into the pond 1s broken up by the strips and the water picks up and takes
more oxygen from the air Into the pond water.
POND
WATER INLET
NYLON MESH
BA&
WATERPROOF
LINER'
W N
2.H «
WATER INLET
WOOD 50X
J
5ARAN
These filters all have good and bad points. All must be cleaned often
to remove debris that collects 1n them from the water source. The best
filters are the sand and gravel filter, and the saran filter, but these
are more costly than the others.
The farmer should examine his water source carefully before deciding on
the kind of filter. If the water 1s very muddy, or has lots of leaves
and grass in it (organic matter), he can use the wire screen. If the
water source is free of organic material, the mesh bag will work because
1t is not likely to be torn. If the water contains unwanted fish and
eggs, as well as a lot of organic matter, the saran filter or the sand
and gravel filter is best.
To clean the filters, remove them and clean them with a brush and fresh
water. Or flush the filter with water in the opposite direction of the
normal water flow. This is called backwashing.
IMPORTANT: Filters must be kept clean to be of any use. These filters
should be cleaned each time water is let into the pond.
74
Y'H" 'if
"/\
't\\' VVALL-
'//// tll,,.'ll/\ !'iS
SILTATION %W"<U(/''iiiii> w""-'^\
W//// TAW'"'*"' V ' ^ ' ^ POND
<®3
^w> -
l
Ill'' --"//
till",ii"'"',.
1
wii "in" 0i''' on,1
„„(,. ttllli.' ////,,
One way to build pond walls in soil that does not have a lot of clay or
is very sandy is to build a "key." The key is made of clay soil (it can
be pure clay) and adds strength to the walls. To make a key, dig a
trench (or shallow hole) about lm deep and lm wide in the center of the
places where the walls will be. Then bring clay soil and pack 1t tightly
into the trench. Also put a thick layer of clay soil on the pond bottom
and pack that down tightly. The clay layer on the bottom and the key
run together as shown. This connection of the bottom and the key helps
prevent leaking. The drainage pipe should be placed in the clay lining.
76
fCLkS CORE
("KEY")
r-%-.
'SANDY / f *ft C SANDY AklIW
CLAY LINING
',VJ «v _^S':- • '-SOIL.
• fefe4
•'V'i'-iiw-Z
If the farmer has a son which 1s a mixture of clay and sand, »nd he 1s
not sure 1t 1s strong enough, he nay still wish to build a clay key. Or
he can build a key using the same soil used 1n the wall. This key must
be packed down very tightly.
TAMPED
SECTION*
II"- •'• •' "(1(1, '•' '!""• - ,;" •' "fan ''//'<'.
III!'-
ill/I'-
'•'((i,: 11 IK
The type of soil determines the ways 1n which the pond can be prepared
so water does not leak out (see "Seal the Pond Bottom", next page).
lll'IQI, SAND
v tll,
/Il'" llUK-^l/l,' HU/.MK Hl. l/iff"/to. ft: uin- iwjftt. ci AY * f <""• m"/'.'
77
The soil also determines the slope of the walls. Soil with a lot of
clay 1n 1t can have a greater slope on the outside wall than on the In-
side wall. A typical wall 1s built with an outside slope of 1:1 and an
Inside slope of 1:2. A slope of 1:2 means that for every change 1n
length of 2m there 1s a change of lm 1n height.
Once the walls are constructed, the farmer should plant grass on them.
The grass roots help to hold the wall together and prevent erosion of
the soil. However, NEVER plant trees on the wall. As the tree roots
grow they will crack and destroy the wall.
CLAY CORE.
A pond can be sealed using hollow cement blocks, but this 1s expensive.
Another method of sealing the bottom calls for using a sheet H n e r made
of polyethylene plastic, or a rubber liner. The waterproof sheet Is
placed on the pond bottom and around the sides In one piece (the fanner
may have to tightly seal several sections together), then covered with
soil.
. Cover the pig dung layer with banana leaves, cut grasses, or
any vegetable matter. Hake sure all the pig dung is covered.
78
because he had no place to get his soil tested, or because he has never
farmed the land -- 1s always safer 1f he puts H m e on the bottom of the
pond.
Lime comes 1n several forms: ground limestone; agricultural H m e ;
hydrated (builders') H m e ; or quicklime. Of all these types, hydrated
lime is cheapest to use because 1t 1s more concentrated.
L1me should be put on the pond bottom at the following rates for a new
pond:
The water should not go 1n too quickly. If the water goes 1n too fast,
the pond bottom will get stirred up and make the water muddy.
Let the pond sit for a few days after 1t has been filled. Then check the
quality of the water 1n the pond -- before adding the fish.
Fish growth depends greatly on the quality of the water used 1n the pond.
And the quality of the water depends upon where 1t comes from and what
kind of soil 1t travels over. Testing the water quality means making
sure that all the factors which relate to water are right for the fish.
These factors are: temperature, oxygen content, pH, turbidity, hardness,
alkalinity, and nutrient availability (source of food for the fish). The
farmer does not need to know these particular words to raise fish well,
but he does require a working knowledge of the factors that are part of
the water world in which the fish live.
TEMPERATURE
Fish are cold-blooded animals; that is, their body temperatures depend
upon the temperature of the water 1n which they live. Every.fish species
has a temperature range within which 1t grows quickly. This 1s called
the optimum temperature range, and I t means that this fish grows best
at temperatures within that range. In a fish pond, the fish should live
at their optimum to grow well. However, since fish have different
temperature requirements, the farmer must choose the fish which will
grow best in the temperature range of his pond.
Here are some of the common pond fish and their temperature ranges:
Genoa, 4pecie4 Common name. TempeAatuAs °C
Tltapia. moaamb-Lca. tllapla 25-35
OiphrionemuA gotamy gouraml 24-28
Puntuu javanicui tawes 25-33
CypiUnut, canpio common carp 20-25
Ctenopha/iyngodon Idtllui, grass carp 25-30
AnguilZa japonica. eel 20-28
This chart shows that all the fish on this 11st could live 1n water that
is 25°C (77°F). The chart also shows that an eel can live and grow well
at 20°C, but that the tllapla and the grass carp will not do well at 20°C
because this temperature 1s below the range 1n which they are comfortable.
When the temperature goes higher or lower than this optimum, fish will
not grow. Eventually, 1f the temperature goes too high or too low,
the fish will die.
The farmer must watch the temperature In the pond water carefully,
especially 1f the weather becomes unusually hot or cold. I f 1t 1s
possible, 1t 1s a good Idea for a farmer to use a thermometer to find
the temperature of his pond water. This can be done by using a
82
thermometer which 1s used for taking temperatures when people are sick.
The most Important step 1s to guide the farmer to stock fish which will
do well 1n the normal temperature ranges of his area. Then the tempera-
ture of the water will not generally be a problem, except 1n cases of
unusual weather.
H^^^L
Some experienced fish growers can judge the water temperature by putting
their arms 1n the water. Host people cannot tell temperature this way.
But if the right kind of fish has been chosen for the pond, the farmer
need only watch the fish to be able to judge the temperature of the pond
water. If the water 1s becoming too hot, the fish will r.ot eat and will
move very slowly.
If the farmer sees this behavior in his fish pond, he can take out some
of the pond water and put 1n new, cooler water. Another way of pro-
tecting the water from getting too hot is to find a way to shade the pond,
so that the sun does not shine directly on the water. The shading should
be temporary because sunlight is important to the success of the pond.
83
The picture on the previous page shows a fish pond being shaded by
palm tree branches stuck into the ground around the edges of the pond.
As soon as the temperature of the water goes down, the branches are
removed.
Temperature, however, usually does not act alone. If the fish are
showing signs of distress because of hot weather,' it 1s often a problem
caused by high temperatures and low oxygen content.
OXYGEN
The farmer cannot see oxygen, so 1t may be hard for him to realize
Its Importance. But it Is worth taking the time to help a pond owner
understand oxygen as a critical factor 1n the success of his fish pond.
Oxygen lack is a problem which can occur at any time during fish pond
operation, and there 1s a good chance the farmer will have to depend
only upon his own knowledge of the problem and Its cause to solve it
Immediately.
Fish, like all animals and human beings, need oxygen to breathe and,
therefore, to live. Through a process called respiration, fish and
human beings take 1n oxygen and give off carbon dioxide. Fish will not
grow well when the oxygen supply is low; and if the oxygen level gets
too low, they will die.
Oxygen is a gas. Human beings get the oxygen they need from the air.
They cannot see it, or smell it, but without it they would die. Most
fish can only get oxygen from the water 1n the fish pond. The farmer
cannot see the oxygen in the water either, but he should realize that
1t must be there 1n sufficient quantity for the fish to live.
Oxygen troubles arise in a pond when the supply of oxygen is used up
faster than oxygen 1s put into the pond. This happens to human beings
too -- 1f too many people are shut into a room with no windows or air-
holes, the respiration of all these people uses up the oxygen. Soon,
there 1s too much carbon dioxide in the air. The people have trouble
breathing until a window is opened and fresh air containing oxygen 1s
let 1n.
This 1s exactly what happens to fish 1n the fish pond. The fish are shut
up in the pond, and 1f there 1s not enough oxygen entering the pond,
they will have trouble breathing. And, if the problem continues, they
will die.
Water contains tiny plants and animals called plankton. Host plankton
are so very small that they cannot be seen without using a microscope.
84
Ktona. sp.
VictyobphaeMim
puZcheZtum
Water also contains higher orders of vegetation. These plants are much
larger than the phytoplankton.
HycUMZa vtnticittaXa
A favorite food
Kzolta. piiwata
of the gourami.
The fish and the zooplankton use oxygen and give off carbon dioxide in
respiration; the phytoplankton and higher plants use carbon dioxide and
sunlight to produce oxygen during a process called photosynthesis.
<o
oo A Cloudy Day Can Sometime*
CauAi Oxygen le.ve.li, to Vtop
The new water should be sprayed or bubbled into the pond so that the
water picks up oxygen from the air as it falls into the pond.
Oxygen also can be added to pond water by:
Stirring up the water already in the
pond. Some farmers beat and stir the
water with poles.
86
In addition, winds which are strong enough to ripple the surface of the
water 1n the pond help the air and water to mix. Remember: any disturbance
of the water made by man or by nature helps put oxygen Into (aerates)
the water.
Life under the water 1s a new Idea to many farmers. And 1t 1s sometimes
difficult to understand that the balances which exist on land are also
present 1n the water. Oxygen 1s produced and used both above and below
87
the surface of the water. The f i s h pond does well only when oxygen
production and oxygen use are in balanced relationship.
-;oc
up, he w i l l know how to watch for trouble
before i t happens. For example, i f
the color of the water changes from green
to clear— in a few hours or a day —
the phytoplankton are not producing / \
enough oxygen. I f the f i s h are at the / \
2 am 29 9.8
6 am 29 6.3
10 am 29 6.7
2 pm 30 9.4
6 pm 29 16.3
10 pm 29 10.7
Fish begin to be stressed when the oxygen level falls below 4mg/l. For
best growth, the oxygen levels should be above 5mg/l, but not more than
15mg/l. Above this level of oxygen, supersaturation often results
(too much oxygen).
Sometimes, if there is a lot of sun and a lot of wind activity at the same
time, and if the temperature 1s low, the water can become supersaturated
with oxygen. Supersaturated water contains more oxygen than water can
normally hold at a given temperature; it is a temporary condition. This
condition can place stress on the fish. However, it does not happen
very often in small ponds because the wind is not usually able to aerate
pond water as thoroughly as it can in a large pond.
However, many pond cwners are not able to get their water tested and
they do not have the r i g h t chemicals and equipment to do the tests
themselves. For these people, 1t is best to stress the importance of
using lime in their ponds. Lime is the proper treatment to correct
imbalances in these factors, each of which is discussed in some detail
here.
pH. pH is the measure of hydrogen ions (H*) in the water and is measured
on a scale of 1 to 14. I f the pH is between 0 and 7, the water is
considered to be a d d . I f the pH 1s at 7, the water is neutral (not
a d d or basic). A pH of 7 to 14 means the water is basic. Fish grow
best 1n a pH of between 6.5 and 9.0. Fish are very sensitive to low
pH, or, in other words, to water which 1s acid. Most pond fish w i l l die
i f the pH f a l l s below 4 for a very long period of time.
Some people measure pH by tasting the water. I f the water tastes sour
or s a l t y , i t has too much acid in 1t. Another way to find out pH is to
know where the water is coming from. I f the water comes from a swamp,
bog, or other place where the water is pretty stagnant and contains a
l o t of decaying material, I t may be acid. Most water, however, has a
pH which is very close to neutral. I f the water comes from a river or
lake, i t 1s not l i k e l y to have a pH that w i l l harm the f i s h . I f the
local f i s h do well in the water, the pond f i s h probably w i l l do well
also.
LCtmiLi PapnA. Some farm owners find out their pH by using litmus paper,
or pH paper. These are t h i n s t r i p s of paper which have chemicals on
them so that they change' color when they are placed into the water. I f
the water is a d d , the paper w i l l turn one' color; 1f the water is basic,
the paper turns a different color. The color on the paper is compared
to a color chart which w i l l give the pH for that color. There are also
electronic meters which measure pH, but these are expensive and not
necessary in a f i e l d s i t u a t i o n .
90
Another way a farmer can tell 1f the water Is hard is to wash his hands
with it at the side of the pond. If the soap takes a long time to lather,
and If the lather does not stay very long, the water 1s hard. If the
water is soft and does not contain many salts, 1t lathers very easily and
1s hard to wash off.
If the water is too soft, the farmer can increase the hardness by adding
lime to the water.
TURBIDITY
Turbidity is the term for the suspended dirt and other particles in water.
Turbidity can be a problem, especially in shallow ponds, if the dirt and
particles prevent sunlight from reaching the plankton, so that the phyto-
plankton cannot produce oxvgan. An operating pond can be turbid if there
91
are bottom feeders such as common carp stirring up the bottom mud. Or,
turbidity can result from a water source which has a lot of silt 1n 1t.
Turbidity can be measured by just looking at the pond water. Or turbidity
can be measured by using a device called the Secchl disc. The Secchl
disc 1s also used to determine the total productivity of the pond.
A SECCHI DISC
WEIGHT^
Turbidity also can be measured without a disc, but this requires somewhat
more experience. The farmer stands 1n the pond and sticks his arm under
the water.
One way to clear up muddy water 1s to scatter twelve bales of hay per hec-
tare around the edges of the pond. The hay will help to settle the mud
and can then be removed easily from the pond edges. However, do not use
this method 1s very hot weather, because the hay will begin to decay
very quickly and will begin to use up oxygen 1n the pond water. If the
pond water continues to have a lot of silt 1n 1t, the farmer should
consider adding a slltatlon tank (see "Construction").
NUTRIENT AVAILABILITY
All fish require certain elements to grow and reproduce. These essential
elements are: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium,
sulfur, calcium, Iron, and magnesium. Some other elements, called trace
elements, are needed only 1n small amounts. I f these elements are missing,
or present 1n too snail quantities, the fish w i l l not grow well.
F1sh get these elements from the pond soil, the pond water, and the
food they eat. Some fish ponds lack elements that are necessary to
fish. In these cases, 1t 1s necessary to add fertilizers to the water.
Fertilizers are simply materials which contain the missing elements.
The elements most often missing, or 1n short supply 1n fish ponds,
are nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K).
Fertilizers
Fertilizers are materials added to the pond to make the water more
fertile (productive). As stated before, fertilization 1s sometimes
necessary to help a pond provide the nutrients directly needed for
fish and plankton growth. As a major food source of fish, plankton
must be kept healthy and 1n good supply.
Fertilizer supplements the elements the pond gets from its own water
and soil. This 1s especially necessary 1n ponds made 1n soil which
has used up the nutrients once available.
A WELL-FERTILIZED POND
A pond which has a lot of phytoplankton is often a bright green color.
This color indicates a "bloom" of algae. In a normal bloom, the Secchi
disc disappears at about 30cm depth; when the Secchi disc disappears
at 20-40cm, the pond is very productive and fertile. No fertilizer
is needed In a pond under these conditions. Also, if the farmer places
his arm 1n the pond and his arm disappears from sight at the elbow,
the pond does not need fertilizer.
A/ • • ' / :
\\
^ '
In this case, there is too much
f e r t i l i z e r , and the farmer must
take off some of the thick layer
of algae formed at the top of the
pond and stop using f e r t i l i z e r
until the pond has recovered a
normal f e r t i l i z e r level.
;'-"BACTERIA"-'.
WHEN TO FERTILIZE
If the Secchi disc can still be seen at 43cm, for example, or if the
farmer can still see his entire arm from fingers to shoulder under the
water, there 1s not enough plankton. And it 1s necessary to add ferti-
lizer to the water in order to prepare the pond for the fish.
One other factor which determines the need for fertilizer is the quality
of the soil. If the soil is very productive, the need for fertilizer
is small; 1f the soil 1s not productive, the need 1s greater. A farmer
should know that the fertilizer he uses on his fields, If he uses one,
can also be used in his fish pond. The fish pond soil 1s often very
like the soil of the fields around 1t.
TYPES OF FERTILIZERS
The kinds of fertilizers used in fish ponds vary greatly, depending on
the amount of money which can be spent and what 1s available. Many
fish pond owners use organic fertilizers, or fertilizers that come
from living things; such as cow dung—because 1t 1s available on their
farms. Some big pond owners like Inorganic fertilizers, or chemicals
made by man, H k e the superphosphates. But these chemical fertilizers
are expensive and sometimes hard to get.
Choosing fertilizer can be difficult. The following paragraphs provide
more detail about organic and Inorganic fertilizers and some guidelines
to the proper use of each.
95
. Mix the material well. Then cut a l l of 1t into small pieces, using
a shovel, macheta, scythe, etc. The pieces should be about 3 to
5cm long. Cutting the matarial speeds the rotting orocess. ( I f
animal manure is hard to get, add some inorganic f e r t i l i z e r contain-
ing nitrogen to the ccmpost p i l e . )
. Turn the pile every few days. Use a shovel to keep i t well-mixed.
Compost piles can get too hot in the middle i f they are not turned
and mixed. Put a stick into the middle of the p i l e . Leave the
stick in the pile for 3 minutes, and then pull I t out. I f the stick
1s hot, dry, or smelly, the pile must be turned so that the inside
of the pile 1s now on the outside.
. Keep the p i l e moist, but not wet. Protect i t from the rain. Animal
urine can be used.to keep the p i l e moist and helos to add nitrogen
to the p i l e . A compost p i l e made in this way w i l l be ready f o r use
in only 3 weeks.
When ready, pile the compost in the corners of the pond and restrain 1t
with a screen; or cover the compost with a layer of mud to hold the
plant material In place so 1t does not f l o a t into the pond. The compost
releases i t s nutrients Into the pond water gradually.
APPLICATION RATES
F e r t i l i z e r should be applied at a rate determined by the area of your
pond. Area is the length of the pond multiplied by the width. For
WIDTH
LENGTH
98
example, if the oond is 10m wide by 20m long, it has an area of 200
square meters ( m 2 ) . This is equivalent to 2/100 of a hectare. The
measurements used for pond area are:
1 are « 100m2
1 acre » 40 ares • 4000m'
1 hectare » 100 ares = 2 . 5 acres = 10,000m2
Most ponds are not as big as one hectare, so the farmer w i l l have to
determine his pond's area before using the manure. I t w i l l be hard for
most farmers to calculate application rates in this way, but i t is
probably easy for you to develop some standard measures a farmer can
use which are based on the average-sized pond in your area.
Often fish ponds are managed in conjunction with other animals. Stables
are b u i l t r i g h t over the edge of the ponds, and the manure and urine
from a certain number of the animals are allowed to f a l l d i r e c t l y into the
pond. This e f f i c i e n t system works well for f i s h which can use animal
manure as fish food. This system gives large crops of healthy f i s h . Fish
ponds which share the area with a number of ducks show high yields of both
ducks and f i s h .
99
Now, the most common inorganic f e r t i l i z e r s used in fish ponds ire the
phosphorus f e r t i l i z e r s — basic slag, powdered single superphosphate,
granular double superphosphate and t r i p l e superphosphate. Some of
these f e r t i l i z e r s can last as long as three years in the pond, so even
though they are expensive i n i t i a l l y , they are often used in fish ponds.
Research shows that the best fish growth occurs when phosphate f e r t i -
lizers and organic f e r t i l i z e r s are'used together.
100
Foods
It 1s important to be sure that fish have good food. Feeding and
fertilization work together to make Jhe pond successful.
The growth of fish In ponds is directly related to the amount of food
available 1n the pond. The pond must provide all the food and nutrients
fish need. But all fish do not need the same kinds of food: different
species eat different types of food, and fish eat different foods de-
pending on the stage of their life cycle.
Newly-hatched fry eat from their yolk sacs until the sacs are gone.
The fry then eat the smallest phytoplankton 1n the pond. As the fry
get bigger, they can eat bigger foods. Adult fish eat the things that
their particular kind of fish enjoy—plankton, higher plants, worms,
insect larvae, etc.
101
F1sh foods can be natural (those found naturally in the pond) or sup-
plementary (those foods added to the pond).
Natural Foods. These foods are the phytoplankton, zooplankton, detritus,
snails, worms, insects and insect larvae, small plants like duckweeds
and various other weeds and grasses that can be found in a fish pond.
(See illustrations of Natural Foods at the end of this section.) Also,
if the fish is carnivorous and eats the flesh of other animals, small
fish are also a food source.
Some fish eat all these foods; some prefer only one kind of food.
Often a fish will choose one kind of food over another, even though
either of the foods would be eaten by the fish if the other food were
not available. Natural foods are the best foods for fish. The farmer
should encourage, as much as possible, the growth of these natural
foods — through maintaining the quality of his water, proper fertiliza-
tion of the pond bottom and the water, etc.
Sometimes, however, the farmer must add food to the pond because the
pond is not producing enough food for good growth. The best supple-
mentary foods a fanner can put into the pond are extra natural•foods.
But there are a great number of other foods which fish will eat.
Supplementary Foods. Almost anything can be used as a supplementary
food, depending on the fish species in the pond. Typical supplementary
foods are: bread crumbs, rice bran, fish meal, ground-up maize,
broken rice, soy bean cakes, peanut cakes, sweet potatoes,
guinea grass, napier grass, kang kong, manioc, water hyacinth, wheat,
silkworm pupae, and left-over animal feeds and some animal manures.
As stated previously, the kind of extra food depends on the kind of
fish. Tilapia, for example, will eat almost anything, including the
supplementary foods listed above. This 1s one reason why they are
such very good pond fish. The silver carp, on the other hand, will
eat only phytoplankton, even when it is a fish of marketable size.
The farmer must know what his fish will accept before he puts the
fish into the pond.
The food quotient 1s figured by dividing the total weight of the food
by the total Increase 1n weight gained by the f i s h over a period of
time. This 1s done as follows:
In other words, the f i s h has been able to use about 2.5g of food to
gain l.Og of weight a day. This is a good conversion r a t i o .
natural foods
phytoplankton
Ttiach&lomonab volzu.
?e.lidin<jum votzLL
Scinndumui sp.
Victyo&paeJu.um pwtcheXhm
HicAocyitiA aejuigino&a
zooplankton
Nauplius of Cyclopi
^1
A£omi sp.
Biachionai sp
105
higher plants
LEMNA POLXRRHlZA
VALLISNERIA
CERATOPHYLLUM E'lCHORNIA
MARSILIA
QUADRIFOUA
CHAR/V
106
JUSSlAEA REPE.NS
HYDRILLA
A20LLA PJNNATA
snails
A\ LYMNAEA SP
My &I0N\PHMARIA
?HYSOPSlS SP
CLEOPATRA SP
MELANOSES S?
PI LA SP
Managing the Pond
I t should be clear by now that much of the success of a fish pond depends
upon careful planning. Before the farmer could build the pond, i t was
necessary for him to think through why he wanted the pond — for food,
profit, or both, what kind of ponds he could build on his land and what
kind or kinds of fish are best suited to his climate and pond conditions.
Only when all these factors were thought out could the pond be built.
Now, with the pond constructed, fertilized, and otherwise prepared for
the fish, the farmer 1s ready to put the fish into (stock) the ponds
and get to the business of raising fish.
Stocking
Stocking is the word used to describe the act of placing the fish (stock)
into the pond. The stocking density is used here to refer to the total
number of fish which .can be put into (stocked) in a pond.
The stocking rate 1s the term used to refer to the number of one species
which are put Into a pond. Therefore, 1n a monoculture pond, the
stocking rate 1s the sane as the stocking density because there is only
one kind of fish.
In a polyculture of Chinese carp, however, the stocking density, or the
total number of flngerllngs, may be 20,000 per hectare. Of this total,
the stocking rate looks like this: grass carp are stocked at a rate
of 5,000; 5,000 are blghead carp; 10,000 are silver carp.
Stocking rate and density are Important. There Is only enough food and
room 1n a pond for a certain number of fish. The good growth of fish
depends upon putting the right number of fish Into the pond.
The age of the fish must also be considered when stocking ponds. For
example, more flngerllngs can be placed 1n a pond than brood fish, because
flngerllngs require less food per fish than brood fish. If the food
available 1n the pond is not supplemented, proper stocking rates and den-
sities are even more important.
STOCKING DENSITIES
The farmer must know how many fish he can put into his pond so that he
can get the right number--e1ther from the market or from a local stream
or lake. He should remember, when he decides upon this number, that
some of the fish will d1e--both when they are put Into the pond and
later. The following paragraphs provide some guidelines to use when
stocking a pond with some of the more common pond fish.
Common Carp. Stocking densities differ with the age and size of the
fish. In general, the more volume of water a carp has, the better is
its growth. This assumes that the pond contains enough food, and the
water temperature 1s right. The best growth of common carp has been
shown with stocking densities of about 10,000 to 20,000 fish per
hectare; more with fry; less with post-flngerlings. Some ponds use
109
T1lap1a. T1lap1a have been stocked 1n amounts ranging from 1000 fish
per hectare to about 50,000 fish per hectare when supplementary food
was provided. But stocking densities really depend on the rates of
reproduction of tllapla, and whether they can be separated by sex or not.
Chinese Carp. In general, the stocking rates can only be found by trial
and error, and often will be different from time to time, depending upon
the availability of fry. In Malaysia, a ratio of carp stocking has been
suggested of 2:1:1:3 for grass'carp, blghead, silver carp and common carp.
This means that 1f there were a stocking density of 7 Chinese carp, 2
fish would be grass carp, 3 would be common carp, and there would be only
one each of blghead and silver carp. This 1s a good stocking rate for
this density. The density for a given pond has to be figured In terms
of what the pond can support.
Indian Carp. Stocking densities of Indian carp are not widely known.
Some densities range from 4,000 to 11,000 fry or flngerllngs per hectare,
but again, the density depends upon the amount of food available to
the fish.
When stocking ponds to produce market-size fish, remember that the more
fish stocked, the more food must be available for the best possible
growth 1n ponds.
The following paragraphs describe the proper methods for carrying new
stock from the market or river to the pond, and for placing them into
the pond.
When fry are being moved for a short distance only, for example, from
a nursery pond to a rearing pond, they usually are carried 1n small plas-
tic or metal tubs, or 1n baskets.
. Add water from the pond to the bucket slowly ~ until the
temperature of the water in the bucket is the same as the
temperature of the water in the pond.
. Tip the bucket slowly into the pond, and let the fry swim
out into the pond themselves.
REMEMBER: SOME FRY WILL DIE EVEN WHEN HANDLED VERY CAREFULLY. THIS IS
TO BE EXPECTED.
Change the water in the bags after 6 hours. The oxygen will
\ast only that long.
Hake sure the bags do not get too hot and that the tempera-
ture of the water in the bags stays at about the same
temperature as the water from which the fingerlings or
fry were taken.
113
Stocking Adult Fish. Adult fish are a little more difficult to stock
than fry or fingerllngs. First, they are large (from 0.5kg up to
3.0kg) and can Injure people and themselves by jumping out of containers
or ponds when they are being carried or caught. For example, Chinese
carp often hurt themselves this way. This problem 1s controlled by
placing a net of some kind on top of the container so they cannot jump
out.
Adult fish often are nervous when being taken from one place to another.
Some pond owners even put a hand or a handkerchief over the fishes' eyes
when they are carried. Care is necessary when handling, however:
brood fish particularly are sensitive
to being handled. They bruise easily
if they are held tightly, and the
bruises can become sites for infection.
DAILY MANAGEMENT
Ponds and the fish in them must be taken care of every day. It is a
good Idea to have the pond owner follow a checklist of things to do.
Daily care will greatly lessen the chance that something will go
wrong in the pond.
A good checklist might look like this:
. check the pond for leaks
. clean filters
. watch fish behavior near the feediir: -u-^a
. feed the fish
. add fertilizer, if necessary
. watch for predators
IMPORTANT: Check the ponds at the same time each day. Early morning
is the best time because oxygen levels in the water are lowest then,
and the fish are more likely to have trouble at that time of day--if
they are going to have trouble at all.
Watch the Fish. A farmer can tell much about his fish by watching
them carefully. If they are swimming quickly and easily around the
pond, they are well. If they are waiting near the surface, they are
likely to be hungry. If they are gasping for breath at the surface
of the water, there is not enough oxygen and the farmer will know he
has to act quickly to aerate the water 1n the pond.
Feed the Fish. Remember: in some ponds 1t 1s not necessary to feed the
fish extra food. The pond can be made rich enough to fill all the
food needs of the fish. However, some ponds and some fish require sup-
plemental feeding. And, sometimes, even a pond which has provided
enough food before has to have food added to 1t.
Here are some good guidelines for feeding fish which might prove useful
to the farmer:
. Always feed the fish at the same time and in the same part
of the pond. The fish will learn where to go to get food.
Then, when the fish come near the surface of the water, in-
side the feeding ring,for example, the farmer can see how
well they are eating and growing.
There are more exact ways to determine how much fojsd to feed
the fish. Host pond owners feed fish at the rate "of 2 to
5% of body weight per day. Therefore, 100 flngerllngs
weighing 6g each (a total weight of 600g) would receive
5% of 600g, or 30g of food a day. One hundred fish of
breeder size weighing 1kg each, (total weight 100,kg) would
require 5kg of food a day.
. Feed fish only 6 days each week. This w i n give the fish
a chance to feed on whatever food remains 1n the pond.
Too much food can clog the gills of fish, particularly
those fish who eat only very fine particles of food.
Common Carp
Common carp feed well on the natural food produced in the pond. However,
pond owners often give common carp supplementary food,so the fish will
gain weight quickly. Some good supplementary foods for common carp
are dried silkworm pupae, fish meal and clam meat. However, these carp
will eat almost anything. Suplementary foods such as these are not
necessary. The best way to increase common carp growth rates is to
fertilize the pond well so that the pond produces a good supply of
natural food for the carp to eat.
119
Tilapia
Not much 1s known about the feeding habits of some of the tllapla,
for example, Tllapla nilotica. Tilapia mossambica and Tilapia zillii
are used to control filamentous algae, which Is a habitat for mosquito
larvae, thus the tllapla 1s used to help with malaria control.
Tilapia are hardy and accept many foods. Most tilapia ponds can be
managed in much the same way as carp ponds.
Chinese Carp
Chinese carp fry eat plankton, so it is important that they be placed
in a well-fertilized pond with a good supply of natural food. Fry
can be fed supplementary foods after a while. These foods include
egg yolk which is strained through a cloth into the pond, soybean meal,
rice bran, and peanut cake. Once the fingerlings get larger, they can
be fed like common carp.
Remember, however, that the small pond owner is likely to have Chinese
carp as part of a polyculture. If the polyculture has been planned
wisely, the Chinese carp will not need to be fed extra food.
Indian Carp
Young f r y of Indian carp, l i k e a l l carps, feed on the plankton in the
pond. Normally fish ponds In India are f e r t i l i z e d by draining the
pond and drying, then adding a f e r t i l i z e r made of some animal manure
mixed with o i l cake at the rate of 200 to 325 kg/ha. This produces a
good bloom of plankton for the newly hatched f r y . However, i t has
now been shown that the Indian carp prefer zooplankton, though sometimes
they are given supplementary foods. After the fish reach fir.gerllng
size, no supplementary food is given.
Note that in any pond, the f i s h can be kept healthy, well-fed and
growing well by making sure the pond 1s w e l l - f e r t i l i z e d so that i t
produces Its own food. As a general r u l e , i t 1s better for most small
farmers to work at keeping their ponds well f e r t i l i z e d or to find
natural foods which can be added to the pond. Most small farmers do not
have extra foods to share with f i s h , but they do have access to organic
f e r t i l i z e r materials, such as manure.
120
Watch for Predators. Check the pond area for signs of snake holes,
rat burrows, eels, and strange fish which may have entered through
holes 1n an Inlet screen for example. Any of these can be very
dangerous 1n a fish pond, particularly to a pond containing fry or
small flngerllngs. Make sure fences which protect ponds from farm
animals who might eat grass off the walls or break down the walls of
the pond have no breaks 1n them.
Not each of these things will require much time each day. But a good
pond manager will at least check each of these Items dally.
MONTHLY MANAGEMENT
Ponds which are managed well day by day will require little other
treatment. However, the following things will probably require more
careful attention every month or so:
. Check the pond walls. Cut grass which Is too long or
plant more, 1f necessary.
. Check the pond bottom. If there Is too much buildup of
silt and organic matter, shovel or scoop this material
out.
POND BOTTOM
Fry are very delicate and must be handled gently. Here 1s one way of
counting them:
. Take a basin or tub of which you know the size (50-100 l i t e r s )
. Put a l l the fry Into this basin.
. Scoop up fry Into a 200-250ml measuring cup.
. Count the f r y 1n the measuring cup by slowly and gently
pouring the fish back Into the basin.
. Estimate the total number of fry 1n the basin by setting up
a ratio l i k e t h i s .
number of f r y in measuring cup = volume of measuring cup
number of f r y in basin (total) = volume of basin
For example, a measuring cup of 250ml holds 100 f r y . Therefore,
1t 1s estimated, using this formula, that a 501 basin f u l l of
f r y hold 20,000 f r y .
For a fanner who has only one new pond, 1t 1s probably a better Idea
for him to start with young flngerllngs. This will give more chance
of success than starting with fry.
This 1s not to say that a farmer who has only one pond cannot start
his fish crop from eggs or fry. He can. One way this can be done 1s
to keep the eggs 1n a washtub or large container rather than a pond.
The eggs must have plenty of oxygen, so the water must be changed often.
Any unfertilized eggs must be removed so that they do not cause In-
fections 1n the fertilized eggs. Unfertilized eggs are white; ferti-
lized eggs are yellowish red.
Keeping fry 1n a smaller container 1s a good Idea because 1t allows
the farmer to better control the surroundings. Fry often get
bacterial and fungal Infections and are a favorite target of birds.
Again, the water must be kept rich 1n oxygen and food which can be
eaten by fry.
The care of eggs and fry 1s very difficult and very important. A
farmer who wishes to breed fish must certainly work to gain experience
handling delicate eggs and fry. A fanner who wants only a food source
1n his backyard may wish to take the easier road and start with
fingerllngs.
The size of flngerllngs depends upon climate, water tenperature, food
given, and the number of fish stocked 1n the pond. The following are
some average sizes and weights common 1n the Philippines:
Average Average
Lengths Weights
MUkflsh 6.57cm 2.9 grams
T11ap1a 6.33cm 5.8 grams
5.64cm 5.6 grams
Silver Carp 7.39cm 7.1 grams
Common Carp 7.39cm 7.1 grams
mi if-ill—'•</'/ .a p
\{lt"--
•ll/fii
128
Other characteristics used in choosing good brood stock are relative size
and the large, rounded abdomen in the female f i s h .
Choosing brood stock of common carp is more d i f f i c u l t . The characteristics
of these fish are:
After choosing the breeders, treat them for possible parasites for di-
sease before placing them into the brood ponds. This treatment is done
by placing the fish, one by one, into a bath of lOppm of potassium
permanganate for 1 hour, then transferring them to a bath of 15ppm of
formalin for another 4 to 12 hours. These mixtures can be prepared in
washtubs. After the fish are treated, they can be placed into the pond.
Of course, brood fish coming from a source which is known to be uncon-
taminated and free from disease'would not require this treatment.
(Further information on treating fish for disease is found in "Problems
of Fish in Ponds.")
The brood stock must be well cared for. If they in good health, the
eggs will be healthier. It is probably more important to feed brood
stock with supplementary foods than it is to give supplemental food
130
to fish at any other stage of growth. Feed then rice bran, soy bean
cakes, or other processed foods at a rate of 5% of body weight per
day. They should be managed carefully according to the general guide-
lines discussed earlier. Remember: brood stock should not be fed for
it least one day before they are caught for breeding.
When caught by net, examine the brood stock carefully and handle them as
little as possible. Use a cradle to handle and carry the fish from one
pond to another. They should be carried to a spawning pond, stocked in
the proper manner, and left to spawn. After spawning has occurred, the
brood fish should be caught again and carefully carried back and released
Into their brood pond.
Always remember to treat brood stock well, and never select a fish for
spawning which does not show the proper signs of readiness to spawn.
(See the following Information on spawning behavior.)
Each fish used in pond culture has very definite and very different needs
to spawn naturally 1n ponds. To encourage spawning, ponds can be pre-
pared differently depending upon the fish. Therefore, the best way to
prepare 1s to understand how that fish would spawn in nature. The
following describes the natural spawning behavior -- 1n nature and 1n
ponds -- of some of the more common pond fish.
THE COMMON CARP — Spawning 1n Nature
In China, common carp spawn 1n the rainy season when the water level and
temperature rise at the same time. This rise 1n temperature and water
level 1s a signal to the carp to begin maturing sexually. When they are
fully mature (ripe), they begin their mating behavior, which includes
chasing each other in and out of the plants floating on the water surface.
131
The farmer who sees his common carp doing this has a good Indicator that
his fish are ready to spawn.
When common carp are ready to spawn, the female carp begins to swim 1n
and out of the plants. She then releases her eggs on the plant roots.
The male follows her very closely. As she releases her eggs, he releases
his sperm (milt); the sperm fertilizes the eggs. Carp eggs are slightly
sticky adhesive) and they stick onto the plant roots just under the
water surface until they hatch. Depending on the temperature of the
water, the eggs hatch 1n 2 to 6 days.
The new common carp fry feed off of their yolk sacs for another 2 to 6
days, until 1t 1s absorbed, and then begin to feed on the zooplankton
1n the pond water. The carp can spawn all year round 1n nature, as long
as the water temperatures stay high, because a carp 1s capable of
breeding once every two or three months.
common cjuvp
132
After the Introduction of the kakabans, the female fish begin to Investi-
gate the fibers. Soon the females will begin spawning behavior and the
fish will spawn on the fibers of the kakaban. Because the eggs are
sticky, they stick to the kakaban, and the entire kakaban can be lifted
and transferred from the breeding pond to the nursery pond.
Important: Common carp are omnivorous; that 1s, they eat anything —
including their own fry. It 1s best to transfer the full kakabans to
another pond for hatching.
A kakaban 1s a floating mat that uses a fiber like Inkjuk, or beaten paJm
bark or leaves that have been shredded Into long fibers. These fibers
are bunched together and tied 1n the middle. The bundles are then nailed
down between two long pieces of wood or bamboo and floated just under the
water surface, with the ends hanging down Into the water. This will
look like the roots of water plants to the fish.
A kakaban 1s better to use for carp breeding than plants because 1t can be
boiled and sterilized each time 1t 1s used. This will prevent any fungus
or bacteria from attaching the newly-laid eggs.
133
The female will deposit her eggs, about 75 to 200 of them, 1n the nest,
and then the male releases his milt. The female picks up the eggs and
the milt 1n her mouth, so the fertilization of the eggs actually takes
place in the females' mouth, Tllapla often are called "mouth breeders."
The eggs remain 1n the female's mouth until they hatch -- 3 to 5 days.
Then the fry stay 1n the female's mouth until the yolk sac 1s gone.
During this time, the female does not eat.
As the fry grow, they continue to hide 1n the mother's mouth when they
are threatened. The main reason for this mouth-breeding 1s for protec-
tion of the young fish, since the tllapia have relatively few eggs
compared to some other pond fish. Tllapia 1s also a favorite food for
a number of predators. Because the fry are so well taken care of by the
mother (and even sometimes by the father fish), these young fish are
easier to raise than some other species of fry.
134
Tilapla will also spawn 1n ponds that do not have loose bottoms. In
these ponds, place large-mouth pottery jars or wooden boxes on their
sides on the pond bottom; the tilapla will use these containers as nests.
Young tilapla mature at about 3 months, when they are only 6 to 10cm
long. They can then breed every 3 to 6 weeks, as long as the water 1s
warm. In areas near the equator where the water is always warm, tilapla
can breed almost continuously.
When a fish begins to breed, his energy goes Into the development of his
reproductive organs, not into bodily growth. The main problem with
breeding tilapla 1n fish ponds, therefore, 1s the rapid reproduction of
this fish. Reproduction can be controlled by sorting the tilapla by sex
and placing them into separate ponds, or by producing a monosex culture
by hybrid crossing. However, these methods can usually be done only by
large commerical or government hatcheries where conditions are controlled.
The problem of fast breeding In tilapia ponds can also be controlled by
using some natural predators of tilapla 1n the pond. The predators most
often used are catfishes of the genus CIOJOJU, and, sometimes, eels like
kwvJJJba. jcuponlca, and some other carnivorous fishes like SeAAanochtomib
nebuitui, 1n a polyculture with tilapla that are reproducing. These
predators will eat the young fry, allowing the adult fish to continue
their growth by having no competition for the available food.
135
giabi caAp
iilv&l COAp
Chinese carp brood stock must be well cared for, like all brood stock.
They must be allowed to live undisturbed until time for spawning. How-
ever, the Chinese carp must be Induced to spawn (see Induced Spawning).
blghnad caAp
136
The hapa 1s held In place Inside the pond with stakes of bamboo or other
wood. The breeders are put inside the hapa. Kakabans are placed below
the water surface, and the top of the hapa 1s closed so that the
breeders do not escape while mating. After spawning, the kakabans can
be removed and taken to the nursery pond and the breeders released Into
the pond. Hapas can be used to spawn other fish as well.
THE GOURAMI — Spawning In Nature and Ponds
The gouraml build nests out of plant materials to lay their eggs. The
eggs hatch 1n about 30 hours. The fry float belly-up for 5 days until
feeding begins. The gouraml can spawn all year round In warm water
conditions.
This 1s a very good pond fish, and very easy to breed as long as you
have a well-fed brood stock. The natural food of the gouraml 1s soft
leaves of plants H k e Cplocasla and CaHca. They can also be fed rice
bran before breeding. Usually 10 females and 5 males are stocked 1n
ponds as small as 100m? and the eggs float until they hatch.
Breeding in ponds 1s done by Merely placing the breeders together 1n a
pond where there are some marginal plants available for nest building.
Once the fry hatch and begin to feed, they can be stocked 1n nursery
ponds.
138
To breed the snakeskln and three spot gouraml, place the ripe fish into
a well-oxygenated pond that has a good growth of aquatic vegetation,
particularly Hydrllla vertlcillata. These fish will continue to spawn
as long as the water temperature stays at 26 - 28°C. Hatching takes
place about 2 days after spawning, and the fry absorb the yolk sac
within 3 to 7 days.
The kissing gouraml spawn at 6-month Intervals and spawn within 18 hours
of stocking 1n the pond. Some of the eggs may be eaten by the parent
fish, so there must always be abundant vegetation 1n the spawning pond
to prevent this. The eggs hatch In 2 days and float on the surface for
3 to 4 days. The new fry eat the decaying plants and plankton 1n the
pond.
CLARIAS CATFISH — Spawning 1n Nature and Ponds
Clarias macrocephalus spawns during the rainy season 1n nests on the
bottom of natural waterways, while Clarlas batrachus spawns In horizon-
tal holes 1n the banks. Hatching takes place after 20 hours at 25 - 32°C.
The fry are then collected by hand net from the nests. There are
2,000 to 15,000 fry 1n each nest.
CIarias catfish will spawn naturally 1n ponds, but induced spawning
methods may be used 1f necessary.
139
The tawes spawn 1n the rainy season. Tawes ponds usually are about
200 to 500mz and about 50cm deep. The ponds should be dried for 5
days before they are filled, and the spawners should be introduced when
the pond 1s half full. Tawes need well-oxygenated water that has a strong
current to spawn. Mating occurs at night; then the current should be
turned off and the eggs spread out evenly on the pond bottom. The eggs
hatch 1n two to three days. After 20 days, the fry can withstand the
current, and 1t should be turned on again. Tawes females produce
about 20,000 fry each.
The eggs of HvttMtli are about 3mm in diameter, and are laid 1n the
bottom of the nest and then fertilized. One of the parent fish is
always 1n the nest to circulate water over the eggs (to give them
oxygen). The eggs natch in 4 - 5 days. The fry travel in a "school"
and stay with their parent fish for several months after hatching.
The fry are very delicate, and should not be handled for a while.
140
Induced Spawning. Induced spawning means making the fish produce eggs
and milt when they will not do so naturally. Induced spawning 1s done
when the pond conditions cannot be made to encourage natural spawning,
or when the fish are not ready to spawn when the farmer wants them to
spawn.
Spawning can be done by three methods:
. hormone injection
. hormone Injection with stripping
. stripping
Each of these methods has advantages and disadvantages.
The ripe fish must be k i l l e d to get the p i t u i t a r y gland out. This must
be done very carefully. The gland 1s very small: less than 1mm 1n
diameter 1n the common carp, which has a r e l a t i v e l y large p i t u i t a r y .
The p i t u i t a r y gland 1s a round, yellowish-red organ located In the brain
pan of the f i s h . Here 1s the method commonly used to take the gland
from the f i s h :
After the injection, the female fish will begin to develop her eggs
until they are ready for fertilization by the male. In some fish, it
is necessary to inject the female twice with varying amounts of
pituitary extract (see Chinese carp) and the male, once. After the
injections, the fish are treated in the same way as in natural
spawning.
144
MAKING A CENTRIFUGE
Tools and Materials:
. 1 hand drill
. 1 20cm piece small wood (or bamboo) dowel rod
. 2 metal cigar tubes (or plastic, or rubber hose with clamps)
. 2 pieces medium wire (long enough to wind around the tubes 6
or 7 times)
. 1 piece heavy wire about 9cm long (old coat hanger will work)
. cotton balls or pieces of soft material
. 2 test tubes or small clean glass bottles
. string, tape, and nylon fishing line
Construction Steps:
. D r i l l hole through one end of dowel rod about 1cm from the
end.
Remove d r i l l b i t from d r i l l .
First the eggs are stripped Into a dry dish. Then the milt 1s stripped
Into the same dish. Mix the eggs and milt gently with a feather. Add
water to the dish so that fertilization can occur. After a few hours,
and a few changes of water 1n the dish (to provide eggs with oxygen),
transfer the fertilized eggs to the kakabans and allow them to hatch
as normal.
There are other variations of stripping that are worse than the one
outlined above. One method Involves killing the female or male, or
both, and removing their reproductive organs and then mixing the eggs
and sperm by hand. Not only 1s 1t necessary to kill both breeders, but
If the eggs and sperm are not ripe (mature) and ready for fertilization,
no fry will hatch.
Si>u.ppi.ng uxcth Injection. Often stripping 1s done after the fish have
been Injected with hormone extract. The fish are Injected, and the
eggs are allowed to develop. Then the fish are stripped Into a dry
dish, etc. Stripping with Injections works fairly well. But of the
three methods of Induced spawning described here, the best 1s just
to Inject the fish and let them spawn by themselves In the pond. The
following paragraphs give directions for Induced spawning of some
Important pond fish.
the fry are hatched, they can easily be transferred without touching
them at all. This Is good, because Chinese carp fry are very sensitive
to handling stress.
After the carp spawn, the eggs are collected by net or by draining
the breedHng pond, and they are placed 1n the hatching bags (or
shallow trays) as soon as they have hardened after ferllzatlon (1 to
2 hours). The eggs hatch 1n 1 - 2 days depending on the temperature,
and then absorb their hoik sacs 1n another 3 - 6 days.
As soon as the fry absorb their yolk sacs, they should be transferred
1n the hatching bags to nursery ponds. The nursery ponds should be 0.5
to 1.0m In depth and the oxygen level should be at least 4ppm for good
fry growth.
The spawning of Chinese carp 1s a very complicated business and 1s usually
done Inside carp hatcheries so that all conditions can be controlled.
In China, the carp hatcheries sell their fry to fish pond owners who
then raise them to marketable size.. For most farmers, common carp 1s
a much easier fish to work with and 1s just as valuable for food as
are Chinese carp.
INDUCED SPAWNING OF CURIAS CATFISH
The CltvuM> mcuzAjotupbaluA fishes are Injected with pituitary extract at
a rate of 13 to 26mg/kg at 25 - 32°C. Spawning occurs within 16 hours.
Larvae (fry) absorb the yolk sac 1n 5 days, and are transferred and reared
in ponds only 18cm deep. The best food for fry is zooplankton, but
after 2 to 3 weeks, trash fish may be added. They can be fed rice bran
as well, and later on a mixture of trash fish, rice bran, and broken
rice. In Thailand this sort of production gives yields of 97,000 kg/ha
per year. CIOJIMH catfish are used 1n fish ponds throughout Southeast
Asia now, and are enjoyed for their good taste.
148
If the pond can be drained, harvest the fish by draining the pond into
the catch basin and collecting the fish with a scoop net. If the pond
cannot be drained, drain out as much water as possible and use a series
of nets to catch the fish.
Types of Nets
There are different kinds of nets which can be used in ponds. Some nets,
such as the one shown here are gill nets. G111 nets often have mesh
sizes from 2-3cm; they are often used to harvest the largest fish in a
pond and leave the smaller fish until they grow larger.
150
Another net used to harvest fish 1s the seine. A seine can collect all
the fish 1n the pond at one time because It has smaller openings (mesh
size) than the gill nets, and 1t 1s usually made of heavier fibers to
hold the fish. (See the end of this section for Instructions on making
a seine.)
Both seines and gill nets have lead sinkers (weights) attached to the
bottom ropes. These weights hold the nets at the bottom of the pond
(so the fish cannot escape underneath the nets as they are pulled).
Seines and gill nets also have floats attached to the top ropes to help
the net form an enclosure: the entire pond is netted with one sweep
of the net.
Netting a Pond
Let out as much water as possible. NEVER LET THE WATER OUT COMPLETELY.
As the fish have less and less water 1n which to live, they become
excited and use up more oxygen when there 1s less available. Plan on
harvesting while the water is draining out so the fish are caught before
they are stressed. Or, drain the pond almost completely, and then let
water slowly trickle through while netting the fish.
151
•>—•>-
U S I N G A SEINE Place the net at one end of the pond and slowly draw
the edges down the sides of the pond. Bring the middle of the net
across the pond.
Pick the fish up one by one and transfer them to buckets or tubs of
clear water for later weighing and transport.
Transporting fresh fish to market must be carefully done, so that the fish
are not damaged. Usually, fish are handled 1n the same way they were
handled when put into the pond. If 1t is not possible to get the fish to
market right away, they must be preserved -- either on 1ce for quick sale
in a nearby market; or salted, dried, smoked, or canned 1f going to a
distant market. These methods are discussed in the next section.
After Harvest
After the pond 1s harvested, it should be prepared for the next stocking
of fish:
Harvest
Begin again
155
MAKING A SEINE
A seine can be made using materials found in the market. The materials
needed are:
. rope
. cork floats
. lead sinkers (or something heavy to help the net sink)
. netting
. sewing needle for nets
The directions for making the net are as follows:
. Tie a rope that will be used for the top and bottom lines
between two trees. Use nylon rope, if possible, because it
will last longer than cotton or hemp.
. Mark each rope at 15cm intervals. Make sure the rope is
longer than the final net by a few meters.
. Stretch the netting until the meshes close completely; then
count the number of meshes in a 23cm section. Good netting
for a general seine will have 6 to 9 meshes 1n a 23cm stretched
section.
FLOATS
NYLON STRIN
+ NEEDLE
NETTING-
156
Use nylon string that 1s very strong. Wind a long section on
a net needle. Then tie the end onto the lead H n e rope (top
rope) at the first marking. Pass the needle through the num-
ber of meshes counted 1n the 23cm section of netting. Tie the
string on the rope at the second marking.
Repeat the process until the last marking on the top rope 1s
reached.
Pound the sinkers, or string them, onto the bottom rope at the
15cm Intervals. Tie the cork floats onto the top rope at the
same Intervals.
String the bottom H n e onto the netting 1n the same way as the
top H n e .
REMEMBER: The net must be washed, repaired, dried In the shade, folded,
and put away 1n a cool, dry place after each use. A net
which is taken care of 1n this way will last much longer.
157
Preserving Fish
F1sh that are not taken to the market fresh must be preserved 1n some way
after harvesting. All fish have bacteria 1n their Intestines; as soon as
they die, these bacteria begin to multiply, and the process of decay begins.
So the first thing which must be done -- as soon as possible -- Is to re-
move the intestines. After this 1s done, go on to preserve the fish In
the way chosen.
There are a number of ways to preserve fish: salting and smoking are
discussed here 1n some detail.
Salting Fish
Salting 1s a very old method of preserving fish. Salting depends on the
size of the fish, the species, and on the amount and quality of the
salt used. F1sh which have been salted well last a long time without
spoiling.
The most Important factor 1n salting fish 1s the quality of the fish
being salted. Use only fresh fish: fish which have been lying around
for hours are not good for salting. Also, use only clean equipment and
clean fish.
PLEASE READ THE DIRECTIONS THROUGH CAREFULLY BEFORE BEGINNING.
>> i .
>
^
GiLLS
>ANAL VENT
159
Gut the fish by cutting along the belly from the gills to
the anal vent.
Remove the guts and the black membrane in the gut cavity.
Cut off the head now, 1f preferred; it is not necessary.
Bleed the fish by removing the gills and all blood vessels
after cutting open the throat.
Cut the fish into the right shape for salting: small fish
may be left whole; larger fish should be split in half from
head to tail, so that all the fish flesh will be exposed to
SPINAL COLUMN
Smoking Fish
Smoked fish does not last as long as salted fish, because 1t must be re-
frigerated, frozen, or canned 1f 1t 1s to be stored. Smoked fish are pre-
pared 1n a smoke house which 1s merely a shed or a box over a fire which
1s controlled so that 1t produces smoke Instead of flames. The fish are
merely hung Inside the smokehouse so that they are surrounded by smoke.
It takes about six hours to smoke fish so that they can be eaten or stored.
Smoked fish are prepared like fish for salting. After they are bled, and
gutted, they are split from head to tall. They are then washed 1n freshwater
and placed 1n a saltwater brine made by dissolving 1kg ot salt 1n one liter
of water for one hour. Then the fish are removed from the brine and washed
1n clean, freshwater again. The fish are then drained and hung 1n a cool
breezy place for about an hour.
Spoiled Fish
Even spoiled fish can be used -- although it cannot be eaten by human
beings. Spoiled fish can be cut up and boiled, then dried in the sun or
cooked in an oven until it is very flaky. Once this 1s done, grind the
fish into a powder and mix it with powders of plants: this makes a very
nutritious food for fish in ponds. The powder can be used as a powder,
or it can be mixed with something to make 1t stick together so that the
powder can be pressed into pellets for fish.
Spoiled fish, and even the guts of fish that have been used 1n some other
way, are called "trash" fish. The powder 1s called "fish meal." F1sh
meal is used to feed fingerllngs or even brood stock. F1sh meal 1s one
of the best fish foods for pond fish.
y Problems of Fish in Ponds
Diseases
Diseases of pond fish are caused by fungi, bacteria, protozoans, worms,
and crustaceans. Usually diseases can be controlled by proper pond
management, which Includes draining the pond, drying It, and liming it
periodically, and also by preventing wild fish or unfiltered water from
entering the pond. Some diseases are fatal, but manv can be controlled
by treating the pond or the fish with chemicals.
Some diseases attack fish 1n ponds because some other factor is causing
stress: overcrowding, low oxygen levels, or not enough food. All of
these conditions weaken the fish so they can get diseases more easily.
The farmer must watch his fish for signs of stress and disease. Any
change 1n normal behavior may be a sign of disease; for example, gasping
at the surface for air, rubbing the body or head against the sides of
the pond, or ragged fins and sores on the body. Something 1s wrong when
a fish population stops eating suddenly. So the farmer must check the
fish often (see "Management"), especially in very hot weather.
Treatment: Remove dead fish from the pond; the remaining fish
will probably recover. Drain the pond and dry the
bottom. Treat the pond with quicklime or copper
sulphate to kill the fungus spores. Fill the pond
again. Add quicklime every few weeks until there
1s no more sign of the disease.
PROTOZOAN DISEASES
THE CVCLE 01
ICH OISEASE INFECTED PISH
ADULT PARASITE
u?g? ^REE-SWIMMING-
'&£& YOUNG- STAGE
ENCYSTED STAGE AT
»POND BOTTOM
Treatment: Drain the pond, and Hrne 1t. Or treat the fish
with chemicals as follows:
COST IA
TRICHODINA
These dilates cannot be seen by the naked eye, but the lesions and sores
that they cause can be seen by looking closely at the fish.
Treatment: Add 3ppm of potassium permanganate to pond. Or dip
the fish 1n baths of 5 to 10X sodium chloride (salt)
for 5 to 20 minutes dally for up to one week.
CRUSTACEAN PARASITES
Lernea. The anchor worm is the most common disease of this type (a copepod).
This worm attacks the g i l l s or any other part of the body. I t burrows Into
the f i s h , leaving I t s two eggs cases protruding on the outside of the f i s h .
iumta. causes red sores, and makes the fish thin so that their market
value 1s much lower.
169
IERNLA
Treatment: Add castor o i l in a t h i n f i l m over the surface of
the pond. Treat f i s h infected with young leAnea
in a formalin bath, or remove each parasite by hand.
ARGULUS
General Treatments
Farmers often will have trouble finding the proper chemicals for treating
their ponds or deciding which disease the fish have and which treatment
to give. Here are some general treatments: any of these treatments will
help an infected pond.
Some pond owners always treat new brood stock with a one-hour bath 1n
lOppm of potassium permanganate, and then transfer the fish to a bath of
15ppm of formalin for 4 to 12 hours. This ensures that no parasites will
be introduced Into the pond with the brood stock.
Other Problems
Other problems are caused by deficiency or environmental factors.
Deficiency problems appear because the fish are missing some factor they
need to grow and be healthy. The missing factor can be a lack of essential
171
Predators
Other problems occur in fish ponds when other animals eat the fish.
Frogs, snakes, and birds eat young fish and must be kept out of ponds.
The worst predators, of course, are carnivorous fishes, like the
CtaMyicu, catflshes. Prevent these fish from entering the ponds by
screening the water inlet.
In any pond, all unwanted (trash) fish and predators must be removed
before stocking the pond, if the pond can be emptied, simply drain the
pond, plow and dry the bottom, etc. If the pond cannot be drained, seine
the pond as completely as possible. However, many fish escape the net by
staying at the edges of the pond. The best way to get rid of the
predators 1s to poison the pond water 1n a pond which cannot be drained.
Other poisons used in fish ponds are quicklime, teaseed cake, camelia
seed cake, tobacco waste, and powdered croton seed. These are some
172
application rates:
Quicklime: 160kg/ha
Teaseed Cake: 150kg/ha
Camel 1a Seed Take 50 to 200kg/ha, depending on depth
Powdered Croton Seed
Seed: 50 to 200kg/ha, depending on depth
Tobacco Waste: 150 to 200kg/ha
Most of these natural poisons will degrade (break down) and disappear
from the water In 7 to 12 days. After this period, seine the pond again.
If no live fish are caught, stock the pond.
There are many chemicals which can be used to poison predators 1n fish
ponds. However, many of them stay 1n the ground too long. Others are
dangerous. One of these chemicals which can be used safely 1s saponin,
which 1s a component of Teaseed Cake. Apply a dose of 0.5ppm 1n the
pond.
In most places, there are fishermen and farmers who know of some local
plant which causes fish to die. These are all better sources of poison
than chemicals. Many times, when there 1s a tree that overhangs a pond,
fish will be killed when the tree leaves drop Into the pond. Watch for
plants which do this, and use them 1n ponds Instead of poisons 1n a
chemical form.
DO NOT USE CHEMICALS LIKE ENDRIN, DIELDRIN, AND DDT IN PONDS: THEY CAN
LAST IN THE GROUND FOR YEARS, AND LATER, KILL THE POND FISH. NEVER USE
POISONS WITHOUT FIRST CHECKING WHETHER THEY CAN BE USED IN PONDS. SOME
POISONS KILL OTHER ANIMALS AND HUMAN BEINGS, AS WELL AS FISH.
SUMMARY: FISH DISEASES & TREATMENTS
TREATMENT
DISEASE PISEASE ORGANISM IN POMPS IN BATHS
In Cages
In many parts of the world, the only water available 1s flowing water
or large bodies of water where 1t 1s not possible to divert thi water
Into a pond. In these waters, 1t 1s possible to grow fish in small
cages. Cage culture can also be practiced 1n areas 11ke swamps where
there 1s water not being used for any other purpose.
Cages can be rectangular boxes, bamboo cylinders, or anything that
can be floated 1n a water current so that the water passes through.
Fast flowing water 1s best for cage culture. If the water 1s not flowing
very fast, problems such as oxygen lack and competition for food can
occur. These can be big problems 1n cages because there are usually more
fish placed 1n the small area of the cage than would normally be 1n the
same area 1n the pond.
Cage culture 1s still experimental, but In Ideal conditions, good growth
rates have been shown by fish that were grown In cages and given extra food.
In Pens
F1sh can also be cultured 1n pens Inside lakes or offshore areas. Fish
culture in pens has been done in Israel and Scotland for years, and.is
now being done 1n some Asian countries. Pens are constructed of bam-
boo or wooden poles that are forced down into the lake or shore bottom.
Then nets are strung from pole to pole to form an enclosure. The nets
are anchored Into the lake bottom with weights or sinkers, and the fish
are placed inside the pen for culture. Fish grown 1n pens can be
controlled a little better than fish 1n cages because pens are larger
(fish pens can be comparable in size to regular fish ponds) and provide
more area and more food.
178
F1sh pens placed 1n fertile (productive) lakes have very good growth
rates. In a fish pen placed 1n a major lake In the Philippines, silver
carp stocked at 7 grams gained an average of 4 grams a day 1n a 52-day
growing season.
Fish pens have many good points: they require no extra feeding of fish,
no fertilization, and very little maintenance (although a lot of care
1s given to the nets). The fish are stocked and harvested later at the
end of their growing season. F1sh pens can work 1n areas where the
water 1s not very productive, but 1n these areas, the fish must be fed
supplementary foods. Feeding rings are used so the food will stay 1n
the pen and not float out Into the water. F1sh 1n pens are usually
harvested by gill nets; seines also may be used.
In Rice Paddies
This manual has already mentioned the practice of culturlng fish 1n
fields with rice. Here is further, brief mention of that subject.
The farmer digs deep trenches all along the dikes of the paddy. He then
floods the field and plants the rice. After the rice has grown to
a height of 5cm or so, fish can be placed Into the paddy field.
This culture method can be used only with fish that are resistant to
low oxygen levels and are not herbivores - herbivores might eat the young
rice plants. Clarlas catflshes are good fish to culture 1n rice
paddles because they have accessory breathing organs which help them to
180
breathe even when the paddy gets dry and the water 1n the trenches gets
very low.
After the rice 1s harvested, the fish are caught 1n hand nets and sold.
This 1s not really a culture of fish, but a culture of rice with some
fish added. It can be an easy way for a farmer who has no extra land on
which to build fish ponds to Increase the total production of his land.
181
Glossary
acclimatt - to become adjusted to a change from the normal environment
(also acctutiafctze).
a/ica - the length times the width of a piece of land or other surface.
back uxiikUig - forcing water in the opposite direction from Its
normal flow.
banbeli - sensitive organs that hang down on the sides of the mouth
of certain fishes.
bablc - having base forming elements (alkaline on reaction).
bloom - a very good growth of algae 1n a pond that has a strong green
color.
buood pondi - ponds where the fish used forbreeding are keot.
buood itock - the fish used for breeding 1n fish ponds.
cage - an enclosure to hold fish in the water.
iny - f i s h that have just hatched until they reach flngerling size.
genitali - reproductive organs.
genital opening - the opening on the fishes' body where the eggs or
sperm are released.
gitti - the part of a fish that allows 1t to breathe in the water.
giavity - the tendency of things to f a l l downwards towards the center
of the earth.
omnlvo/a. - an organism ( l i k e man) that can eat both plants and animals.
plankton - the tiny plants and animals that grow in ponds that are
eaten by f i s h .
lupJJuvUon - breathing.
6tA.u& - any change that 1s not normal 1n the environment that creates
problems.
•OuLih i-uh - f i s h not wanted 1n the pond, or_ f i s h that are too small to
eat or_ spoiled f i s h .
uxutuitight - impermeable.
zooptankton - small animals in ponds that can be seen with the naked eye.
185
Resources
1. American Public Health Association. 1971. Standard methods
f o r examination of water and wastewater. 13th ed. Am. Pub.
Health A s s o c , Washington, D.C. 874 p.
13. Clemens, Howard P. and Kermit E. Sneed. 1962. Bioassay and use
of p i t u i t a r y m a t e r i a l s to spawn warm-water f i s h e s . Research
Report 6 1 , Bureau of Sport Fisheries and W i l d l i f e , United States
Department of A g r i c u l t u r e (USDA). 30 p.
186
19. Eipper, A.W. and H.A. Gegier. 1965. Fish management in New
York farm ponds. Cornell Extension B u l l . 1089. New York
State College of A g r i c u l t u r e , I t h a c a , New York. 39 p.
39. Maar, A . , M.A.E. Mortimer, and I . Van der Lingen. 1966. Fish
c u l t u r e i n c e n t r a l east A f r i c a . FAO, Rome, I t a l y . 158 p.
45. Meyer, Fred P., K.E. Sneed, and P.T. Eschmeyer. (eds.). 1973.
Second report to the fish farmers. Resource Pub. 113. Bu. Sport
Fish, and W i l d l . , USDI. 123 p.
47. Ong, Kee Bian. 1968. Fish culture. Rorneo Literature Bureau.
Asiatic Lithographic Printing Press, Ltd. Hong Kong. 80 p.
48. Patino R., Anibal. Cultlvo experimental de peces en estanques.
Cespedesia I I (5): 75-127. (translated by Wm. 0. McLarney in
the Journal of the New Alchemists. 3:86-90)
49. Prowse, G.A. 1968. Some basic concepts on fish culture. FAO
Indo-Pacific Research Council, 13th Session. Brisbane,
Queensland, Australia.
51. Report to the fish farmers. 1970. Resource Pub. 83. Bu. of
Sport Fish, and W i l d l . , USDI. 124 p.
53. Samaka Service Center. 1962. The Samaka guide to homesite farminq.
Samaka Service Center, Manila Philippines. 166 p.
54. Shell, E.W. 1966. Monosex culture of male Tilapla nilotica
(Linn.) in ponds stocked at 3 rates. FAO World Symposium on
Warm Water Ponf Fish Culture. Rome, I t a l y .
189
61. Swingle, H.S., E.E. Prather, and J.M. Lawrence. 1953. Partial
poisoning of overcrowded fish populations. Circ. 113. Agric.
Exp. Sta., Auburn, Alabama. 15 p.
62. Swingle, H.S., B.C. Gooch, and H.R. Rabanal. 1963. Phosphate
fertilization of ponds. Proceedings 17th Ann. Conf., South-
eastern Assoc. Game and Fish Commissioners, Arkansas: 213-217.
63. Taverner, John. 1600. Certaine experiments concerning fish and
fruite. London. 38 P. (reprinted 1968. Da Capo Press and
Theatrum Orbis Terrarum Ltd., Amsterdam and New York).
64. Torrans, Eugene Leslie. 1973. Fish culture in Cameroon. Peace
Corps Program and Training Journal. ACTION, Washington, D.C.
1(5): 14-47.
65. University of Rhode Island Marine Memorandum 30. 1972. Fisheries
cooperatives: Their formation and operation. Marine Advisory
Service. University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, Rhode
Island. 18 p.
66. World Neighbors in Action. Raising fish in local farm ponds means
protein and profit in Paraguay. World Neighbors International
Headquarters, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. 5(2-E).
INDEX
Acclimate - p. 49
Acids - p. 15, 17, 90
A l k a l i n i t y - p. 89 - 90
Anal f i n - p. 34
Anal vent - p. 34
Anchor worm - p. 168 - 169
AngiUZla. japorujia - p. 39, 50
Anus - p. 35
Application rates - p. 97 - 100
AJiguZaA - p. 169
AjUiticMhfi nobitii - p. 39, 43
Aquaculture - p. 1
Fish farming - p. 6
Fish meal - p. 163
Food - p. 7, 1 0 0 - 1 0 6
Natural - p. 101
Supplementary - p. 101, 117 - 119
Food quotient - p. 101 - 102
193
Genital opening - p. 34
Genital papilla - p. 35
GUI rakers - p. 34
Gley - p. 77
Goldfish - p. 39, 50
Gouraml - p. 40, 46, 47, 137
Kissing - p. 40, 49, 138
Snakeskln - p. 40, 49, 138
Three-spot - p. 40, 49, 138
Gravity - p. 17
GyJwdactylui - p. 169
Kakaban - p. 132
Key - p. 75 - 76
Kissing gouraml - p. 40, 49, 138
Magnesium - p. 90
Management - p. 107 - 148
Dally - p. 115
Monthly - p. 121
Marketing - p. 152 - 153
194
Nets - p. 149
Nutrients - p. 3, 16 - 17, 92 - 93
Number of ponds - p. 23
Operculum - p. 34
Organic f e r t i l i z e r s - p. 9 5 - 9 6
Optimum temperatures - p. 81
04pfc*onemu4 aanjzmy - p. 40, 46 - 47
Overflow channels - p. 20 - 21
Oxidation - p. 85
Oxygen - p. 14, 19, 83 - 88
Respiration - p. 83
Rivaldi valve - p. 61 - 62
Rohu - p. 40, 45
Rosary ponds - p. 22
Run-off - p. 13
Walls - p. 19, 5 4 , 74
Water q u a l i t y - p. 14
Water supply - p. 13
Worm parasites - p. 169
Wells - p. 14
Yolk sac - p. 36
Zooplankton - p. 84