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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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Aquaculture
Carp
Fingerlings
Fish farms
Fish ponds
Fisheries and Aquaculture
Fisheries production
Growth control
Landscape with people
Male action scene
Ponds
Research facilites
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CHINA 1978. Fish Farming Techniques
1978 (exact date unknown). A worker at the Kwangchow Centre checks the growth of carp fingerlings prior to transferring them to maturing ponds.
01/01/1978
Credit
© FAO/Florita Botts
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
322.08 KB
Unique ID
UF1WC4
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.
Background Information
The domestic raising of fish in village ponds has been practiced in China for more than 2,000 years. Carp, a fish rich in protein, has always been highly prized. Recent advances in fish culture techniques have been introduced to improve productivity. Although carp normally spawn in fast-flowing rivers, a method of artificial propagation has been developed to induce carp to spawn in ponds by injecting both male and female with an extract of carp pituitary gland (hormones). This and other techniques are demonstrated at the Government's Freshwater Fisheries Research and Training Centre at Kwangchow near Canton. Under FAO's Technical Cooperation Programme, the Government of Bangladesh has sent 50 Bangladeshi technicians to Kwangchow to learn new techniques in order to improve fish farming in their own country.