I have been on the search for fresh water prawns to stock my aquaponics troughs for a year now. During the cource of my search I have learned a lot about them. There is a certain type of prawn that works best in aquaponic troughs called Macrobrachium rosenbergii or giant river prawn. This variety grows very large and has a relatively easy larval stage when compaired to other species. Macrobrachium rosenbergii has a 30 day larval cycle to get to the post larval (PL) stage. During this larval stage salt water is required for the entire stage. There is special food that has to be prepared and feed at short intervals. It is very labor intensive to get them to the PL stage. Once they are able to be weened to fresh water they can be introduced into the troughs with little or no other work involved, other than harvesting. Macrobrachium rosenbergii are farmed commercially world wide.
The prawns that are in our rivers, here in Hawaii, are Macrobrachium lar or Tahitian river prawn. I once introduced prawns, that I caught in Waipio Valley, into my systems and they turned out to be Macrobrachium lar. They did fine for a week but then they began to wonder out of the troughs and died all over the yard. After some research I discovered that they have a several month salt water larval cycle. I found a publication by UH that stated they were finally "successful" at getting a couple of PL's out of hundreds and after several months of raising them. Macrobrachium lar has never been successfuly used in commercial production.
I am working on building my own hatchery so that when I get hold of some Macrobrachium rosenbergii I can raise my own PL's. There are not many people in the state raising PL's for sale and nobody on the Big Island. With how many aquaponic farms we have on the Big Island alone there is a good demand for PL's and that demand is growing state wide.
Prawn production is huge in Thailand and throughout eastern Asia. Hatchery design has been simplified in locations of limited resources, with good hatch rates. They are successful at hatching PL's in third world countries, so we should be able to do it here!
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Thanks for sharing your findings, Chris. Will be following your work with great interest.
You're doing some really important work for the future of this planet...
"...The United Nations has predicted the global population will reach seven billion this year, and climb to nine billion by 2050, "with almost all of the growth occurring in poor countries, particularly Africa and South Asia," said John Bongaarts of the non-profit Population Council.
To feed all those mouths, "we will need to produce as much food in the next 40 years as we have in the last 8,000," said Jason Clay of the World Wildlife Fund at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)... " http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20110220/ts_alt_afp/scienceuspopulation...
If you need a Prawn Supplier Aquaculture of Texas seems to be the place to go.
"Freshwater prawn (Macrobrachium rosenbergii) post larvae now available. Fifty cents each. Also, limited number of juveniles available, $1.00 each. Minimum order on Oahu is $50 for farm pickup. Call 382-8674 or email LSGusman@yahoo.com."
Linda Gusman, copied from aquaculturehub.com
I havent contacted her, but so far its the only lead for malaysian prawns in Hawaii. Also, this back in September... Let me know how it all goes
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