|
The St.
Kitts & Nevis Aquaculture Pilot Project & Environmental Research
(SNAPPER)
I would like to
share the excitement of successfully growing Tilapia in 100% seawater
inland. This project began in 1999 as a
challenge, after learning that a fisherman in Jamaica caught a tilapia in his
seine net. My background as an administrator of government funding for
community projects, led me to investigate the fisheries complex at Twickenham
Farm in Jamaica,
where experimental brood ponds were in operation. I learned as much as I could
and fell in love with aquaculture.
Now, St. Kitts
is one of the smallest islands in the Caribbean,
with no running rivers or pond sealing clay. In addition, the public water
supply is expensive. There is, however,
the Caribbean Sea on one side and the Atlantic
on the other. The first challenge was to find a suitable site for establishing
the ponds. Eventually, I had to settle for an 1/8 of an acre bordering the Atlantic, which was never calm. Lining up the ponds in
the traditional wind flow was a job, and additionally the ponds had to be above
ground level, in order to counter hurricane flooding. This work was all done by
hand, sweat, blood and tears. Finally, five ponds, 100’x25’x4’, materialized,
lined with the thickest non-leaching polyurethane on the market. The lining was
laid seamless by tucking the corners up and tacking the material when the sun
was hot, on a frame, then backfilling to
the required height. Piping was the next challenge. First the Atlantic feed was
difficult to stabilize, but a 4’ cast iron sleeve did the trick, with a 2”
schedule 40 PVC pipe threaded into it. A foot valve and strainer was attached
to the end, which must be cleaned regularly, due to seaweed and sand. At 150’
from foot valve to draft pump, priming was problematic, but solutions were
found. One and a half miles of pipe was laid for freshwater, saltwater,
groundwater, and included a 4” manifold for aeration. At this stage the project was still a zero
based, out–of-pocket budgeted effort, so the local landfill had to supply all
the bits and pieces which was creatively utilized.
Funding for the
project is still a problem, banks were skeptical when I told them I planned to
grow freshwater fish in seawater.
Funding agencies favored cooperatives or associations. As a development specialist I only thought of
bring the idea to fruition and opening it up to replication. And, so the struggle continued. Jamaica red
snapper was the fingerling of choice. In year three the saltwater research
began in earnest. Available expertise at a number of Universities, the
Taiwanese, Norwegians and our local fisheries department advised 50/50 or at
most 60/40, the greater being seawater, was the level of tolerance to be
expected. Well, in pushing the envelope I experienced massive fish kills on
numerous occasions, due to excessive algae growth (I opted for green water
culture); heat during June, July and August, and excessive salinity. Each of these problems had to be solved as
they occurred.
Now, the whole
project being a massive aquarium, water quality, ph, temperature etc became
major factors. In topping up the ponds
with pristine Atlantic sea water I realized my mistake, simply, evaporation by
wind and sun only involves fresh water, the salt remains. The salinity soared
and corned fish was the result. The heat problem was easy to solve. Partial
shade netting worked wonders and a continuous flow of ground water, both
addressed salinity and temperature.
Ground water was found at 8’ inland and slightly brackish. This gave
rise to developing a flow-over system at the far end of the ponds, with a
return path through sand under the ponds and back to the ground water well.
Cool.
I have since invested in a powerful Rotron
Regenorative Blower which powers 8 air stone pods with a H configuration
of air stones in each pond. In addition
home-made airlift pumps were made out of PVC pipes, and small washing machine
pumps turned upside down in a bucket to provide a 5’ spray of water. During
windless days these pumps helped to aerate and cool the ponds at minimal cost,
The project could be considered to be at
the 95% stage of completion. Salinity is still monitored by the taste test, while
the project is on the hunt to secure funding for the various meters.
Acclimatization
was the most problematic hurdle as I struggled in the research to determine
commencement stage, and all the other factors that had to be solved. It is now 7 years into the project cycle with
acceptable success, except for petty larceny of fish and visits from fishing
birds. The bird problem has been solved
with dogs on pond long length guide
wires and anti predator piano wire covering the area at 6” apart. Man however
is a different story. Invaluable technical assistance was received from Mr
Humphrey Brown, Production Manager of Aquaculture Jamaica Ltd. and Mr. Sam
Heyliger of the St. Kitts Department of Fisheries. The environmental component
constitutes a 10’ sand dune covered by a dense growth of 30’ of sea grape which
has been fortified by huge rocks in order to ensure the integrity of the dune.
There is now
market size fish of 1 1b. and the first
commercial sale was transacted on the 25th of March 2006, Customer feedback is positive regarding ease
of scaling, taste and size.
SNAPPER is
prepared to share experiences with anyone who is interested.
Contact
Information
Barrington E.O. Brown Ph.D. –Project Coordinator
St. Kitts &
Nevis Aquaculture Pilot Project &
Environmental Research (SNAPPER)
Conaree Beach,
Basseterre, St.
Kitts, W.I.
E-mail:
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
|