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Effects of Shrimp farming on Mangroves

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Marine shrimp aquaculture and natural resource degradation in Thailand.Environmental Management 19:27 37. Glenn, E. P., J. W. O Leary, M. C. Watson, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effects of Shrimp farming on Mangroves


1
Effects of Shrimp farming on Mangroves
SWES 474/574 Pamila Ramotar, Ashlee Rhudy and
Thomas Benson
2
Contents
  • Introduction
  • Impacts of shrimp farming
  • Shrimp diseases
  • Benefits of Aquaculture
  • Mitigating effects
  • Conclusions

3
Introduction
  • Mangrove forests support a wealth of life, from
    crustaceans to people, and most importantly the
    health of the planet.
  • Forests mangroves form are among the most
    productive and biologically complex ecosystems on
    Earth.
  • Mangroves are evergreen trees and shrubs that are
    well adapted to their salty and swampy habitat.
  • They having breathing roots (pneumatophores) that
    emerge from the oxygen-deficient mud to absorb
    oxygen.
  • Their location combined with their low perceived
    value makes mangrove forests prime targets for
    shrimp farm development.
  • Mangroves provide nursery grounds for fish and
    shrimp

4
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5
  • One of the greatest threats to mangrove survival
    comes from shrimp farming.
  • At first glance, shrimp might seem the perfect
    export for a poor country in a hot climate
  • Rich countries have an insatiable appetite for it
    (shrimp has overtaken tuna to become America's
    favorite seafood),
  • The developing world has the available land and
    right climate to farm it.
  • A prime location for shrimp ponds, though,
    happens to be the shore zone occupied by
    mangroves, marshes or mainly salty flats
  • The relative to low ecological value of tropical
    and subtropical marshes and salt flats, have been
    conceived as coastal wastelands with low
    ecological and economic value.
  • This has led to of loss of marshes through land
    development or modification for use in shrimp
    farming.
  • Few attempts have been made to value salt marshes
    in economic and ecological terms
  • To compound matters, shrimp farmers typically
    abandon their ponds after a few crop cycles (to
    avoid disease outbreaks and declining
    productivity) and move to new sites, destroying
    more mangroves as they go.

6
  • Mangrove depletion is associated with shrimp
    aquaculture in Asia and Central America.
  • Large areas of mangrove wetlands have been
    converted into milkfish and shrimp farms and
    includes
  • in the Philippines (205,523 ha) (Chua 1992)
  • Indonesia (211,000 ha) (Chua 1992).
  • 69,400 ha in Thailand (Dierberg and
    Kiattisimkul 1996)
  • 102,000 ha in Vietnam (Primavera 1998)
  • 6500 ha in Bangladesh (Primavera 1998)
  • 21,600 ha in Ecuador (Alvarez and others 1989)
  • 11,515 ha in Honduras (Stonich 1995, De Walt and
    others 1996).

7
Impacts General
  • The siting locations for shrimp pond
    construction
  • In extensive systems farms are located near
    the shore line to take advantage of the tide to
    collect post larvae, large hectares of mangroves
    are destroyed.
  • the management and technology applied during the
    operation of shrimp ponds
  • the size or scale of the production and the
    surface dedicated to it, and
  • Depend on whether the farms would be extensive,
    semi intensive and intensive based on the systems
    used it would determine the management and
    technology used.

8
Impacts General
  • Seepage of brackish water from the culture ponds
    into groundwater supplies
  • The impact associated with intensive shrimp
    culture is the seepage of brackish water from the
    culture ponds into groundwater supplies and
    adjacent rice paddy fields.
  • In some locations in Thailand, new shrimp pond
    construction occurs behind mangrove zones where
    freshwater wetlands and rice-growing areas are
    affected by surface and subsurface saltwater
    intrusion generated by pumping groundwater to the
    ponds.
  • This leads to social costs, such as a reduction
    in domestic and agricultural water supplies,
    decreases in fish production, further
    marginalization of coastal fishermen, and
    displacement of labor
  • The use of groundwater has resulted in land
    subsidence.

9
Impacts Effluents and Shrimp Pond
  • Effluents from shrimp ponds are enriched in
    suspended solids, nutrients, and biochemical
    oxygen demand (BOD) with concentrations largely
    depending on whether the management is extensive,
    intensive or semi intensive
  • Studies have clearly shown that BOD, ammonia,
    chlorophyll a, and total suspended solids
    increase with stocking density
  • extensive shrimp ponds produce few wastes, semi
    intensive ponds produce intermediate waste loads.
  • the degree of intensification, i.e., higher
    stocking density ,use of water, feeds and
    fertilizers, produces an increased waste load.
  • When effluents derived from agriculture,
    industry, and municipal areas are combined,
    sources of good quality water are sometimes
    scarce.
  • When weather and tidal conditions (i.e., cloudy
    days, low winds, and neap tides) are combined,
    the result is a critical degradation of water
    quality in the shrimp ponds and the adjacent
    estuarine/lagoon waters.

10
Impacts Capture of Wild Post larvae and Wild
Shrimp Stocks
  • Mortality of shrimp fry bycatch, loss of mangrove
    ecosystems, and genetic degradation of native
    populations may all contribute to a decline in
    biodiversity .
  • During the 1980s and 1990s, about 35 of the
    world's mangrove forests had vanished.
  • Shrimp farming was a major cause of this,
    accounting for over a third of it.
  • Mangroves, through their roots, help stabilize a
    coastline and capture sediments their removal
    has led to a marked increase of erosion and less
    protection against floods.

11
Shrimp Farming and disease
  • Its an aquaculture business used to raise shrimp
    for human consumption
  • World production is close to 800,000 metric tons,
    about 30 from shrimp raised on farms in more
    than 50 countries.
  • It is estimate that farmed shrimp will account
    for more than 50 of total global production
    within the next five years.
  • While approximately 99 of farmed shrimp are
    raised in developing countries, almost all of it
    is exported and consumed in rich, industrial
    countries - the US, Western Europe, and Japan.
  • Since 1993 shrimp farming has encountered many
    issues that is believe to be viral diseases
    and is the main reason for the collapse of the
    industry.

12
Cultured Systems
  • There are three types of systems used to raised
    and culture shrimp.
  • Intensive culture system the shrimp are raised
    in high density and insensitively managed tanks
    and ponds
  • Semi-intensive system the shrimp are raised in
    moderate densities with some management in cages
    and ponds
  • Extensive systems Shrimp are raised in low
    density ponds or tanks with little management in
    natural bodies of water
  • In Intensive and some semiintensive systems
    prevention and treatment of disease is possible,
    however because of the high density of these
    systems it aids the development and transmission
    of the diseases.
  • In extensive systems treatment is impractical.

13
Diseases
  • Shrimp are susceptible to protozoa, fungi,
    bacteria, and viral diseases.
  • Antibiotics can be used to combat protozoa, fungi
    and bacteria caused diseases
  • 11 different virus disease of shrimp
  • Consisting of three parvo-like, 2 reo-like,
    toga-like virus, and many baculoviruses
  • The major pathogen in china is IHHNV (hypodermal
    and hematopoietic necrosis virus), which is a
    parvo-like virus that causes high mortality rates
    in juvenile shrimp

This picture shows Shrimp with IHHNV disease
which is seen in the bent rostrums
14
  • They found that there is an occurrence with
    affected areas and the nutrient content of the
    estuary
  • Due to less rain and run-off the salinity of the
    estuaries is high and in range to grow bacteria
  • Also the decrease in river flow cause nutrients
    to build up in the estuaries causing nutrient
    loading.

This picture shows shrimp with the white spot
virus.
15
Measures taken to prevent disease
  • Disinfecting the farming ponds before stocking
  • Enriching nutrition in the estuaries
  • Improving ecological conditions
  • Improving water quality (grow in low salinity
    water)
  • Supplying high quality feeds to the shrimp
  • They also use polyculture

16
Polyculture
  • The main system used is the shrimp-fish system.
  • This helps because the fish eat the sick and
    infected shrimp stopping disease transmission and
    improving the balance in the ecology of the pond.
  • Problem The fish may cause shrimp survival to be
    low.

17
Capture of wild postlarvae
  • Wild fry provides seed for many shrimp farms
  • Collection of wild fry can lead to bycatch waste
    which hurts local fish populations
  • Can have devastating effect on weaker ecosystems

18
Benefits of aquaculture
  • Aquaculture is a sustainable global seafood
    source
  • Important economic role in developing countries
  • Provides millions of jobs worldwide
  • Little to no effect on local marine populations

19
Benefits Continued
  • Aquaculture can reduce pressure from commercial
    fishers
  • Applicable to a variety of fish and crustacean
  • Year round production provides room for world
    population growth

20
Sustainable aquaculture
  • Can be obtained through practices that are
    environmentally no degrading, economically viable
    and socially acceptable
  • Proper management and regulations are key
  • Biggest inhibitor is lack of knowledge worldwide

21
Mitigating the impacts - Effluent
  • The polyculture of bivalve mollusks, fish, and
    shrimp, using pond water to feed oysters,
    mussels, and seaweed in the effluent streams
  • Use of shrimp farm effluents to irrigate salt
    tolerant crops. Glenn and others (1991) and Brown
    and others (1999) found that various plants in
    low salinities (Salicornia bigelovii, Atrilplex,
    Distichlis) and high salinities (Suaeda esteroa)
    remove nitrogen from shrimp effluents effectively.

22
Mitigating the impacts - Shrimp pond
  • The alternatives for use are
  • To convert to salt ponds
  • Culture of other species (shellfish and crabs)
  • To restore the ponds for halophyte and/or
    mangrove plantings.

23
Mitigating the impacts
  • Pond Designs
  • Improved pond designs (Dierberg and Kiattisimkul
    1996, Sandifer and Hopkins 1996), construction of
    wastewater oxidationsedimentation ponds,
  • Reduction of water exchange rates are also
    examples of actions to mitigate water quality
    deterioration.
  • Improving the method for feed supply (Paez-Osuna
    and others 1998)
  • Improve the nutrient composition of the feed
    (Avnimelech 1999) could be an effective strategy
    for lowering the load of nitrogen and phosphorus
    released into the environment.
  • Another alternative is to use mangrove wetlands
    as filters of pond effluents prior to their
    release into adjacent waters.

24
Mitigating the impacts - Capture of Wild
Postlarvae and Wild Shrimp Stocks
  • Regulate wild fry by catch by establishing
  • suitable sites,
  • periods,
  • catch effort
  • stimulating the use of hatchery post larvae.

25
Conclusions
  • Shrimp farming has caused social dislocation,
    ecological change, and environmental destruction
    that is arguably worse
  • Serious environmental problems include the
    destruction of coastal wetlands, water pollution,
    disruption of hydrological systems, introduction
    of exotic species, and depletion and salinization
    of aquifers.
  • Most critical social problems identified by local
    peoples is the loss of communal resources -
    including mangrove areas, estuaries, and fishing
    grounds - that local people depend on for both
    subsistence and commercial economic activities.

26
Best Management practices 1. Pond
preparation 2. Good quality seed selection 3.
Water quality management 4. Feed management 5.
Health monitoring/Biosecurity 6. Pond bottom
monitoring 7. Disease management 8. Better
Harvest and post-harvest Practices 9. Record
maintenance/Traceability 10. Environmental
awareness and instituted educational programs
helps to promote suitable shrimp farming
27
Income from pre-existing livelihood activities
like fishing and farming may be affected
negatively by the loss of habitat and
environmental degradation. Benefits related to
broadening the economic base of rural areas,
generating local employment, enhancing food
security, and conserving local environments
Mangrove protection laws are enacted in many
countries New farms are usually of the
semi-intensive kind, which are best constructed
outside mangrove areas There is a trend to
create tightly controlled environments in the
farms, with the hope to achieve better disease
prevention
28
  • Waste water treatment has attracted attention
    modern shrimp farms have effluent treatment ponds
    where sediments are allowed to settle at the
    bottom and other residuals are filtered.
  • Low-intensity polyculture farming for some areas
    are recommended
  • Mangrove soils are effective in filtering waste
    waters and tolerate high nitrate levels,
  • The industry has also developed an interest in
    mangrove reforestation

29
References
  • Alongi, D. M., K. G. Boto, and A. I. Robertson.
    1992. Nitrogen and phosphorus cycles. Pages
    251292 in A. I. Robertson and D. M. Alongi
    (eds.), Tropical mangrove ecosystems. American
    Geophysical Union Press, Washington, DC.
  • Alvarez, A., B. Vazconez, and L. Guerrero. 1989.
    Multi-temporal study of mangrove, shrimp farm and
    salt flat areas in the coastal zone of Ecuador,
    through information provided by remote sensing.
    Pages 141146 in S. Olsen and L. Arriaga. (eds.),
    Establishing a sustainable shrimp mariculture
    industry in Ecuador.
  • Boto, K. G. 1992. Nutrients and mangroves. Pages
    138145 in D. W. Connell and D. W. Hawker (eds.),
    Pollution in tropical aquatic systems. CRC Press,
    Boca Raton, Florida.
  • Boyd, C. E., and J. W. Clay. 1998. Shrimp
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  • Boyd, C. E., and L. Massaut. 1999. Risks
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  • Alongi, D. M., K. G. Boto, and A. I. Robertson.
    1992. Nitrogen and phosphorus cycles. Pages
    251292 in A. I. Robertson and D. M. Alongi
    (eds.), Tropical mangrove ecosystems. American
    Geophysical Union Press, Washington, DC.
  • Alvarez, A., B. Vazconez, and L. Guerrero. 1989.
    Multi-temporal study of mangrove, shrimp farm and
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30
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