ABSTRACT

Key features:

  • Takes a quantitative approach to the science of aquaculture
  • Covers the complete landscape of the scientific basis of fish culture
  • Promotes problem solving and critical thinking
  • Includes sample problems at the end of most chapters
  • Guides the reader through the technical considerations of intensive aquaculture, including fish growth rates, hydraulic characteristics of fish rearing units, oxygen consumption rates in relation to oxygen solubility and fish tolerance of hypoxia, and water reconditioning by reaeration and ammonia filtration.
  • Discusses the environmental effects of aquaculture
  • Includes a chapter on hatchery effluent control to meet receiving water discharge criteria

Aquaculture Technology: Flowing Water and Static Water Fish Culture is the first book to provide the skills to raise fish in both a flowing water and a static water aquaculture system with a pragmatic and quantitative approach. Following in the tradition of the author’s highly praised book, Flowing Water Fish Culture, this work will stand out as one that makes the reader understand the theory of each type of aquaculture system; it will teach the user "how to think" rather than "what to think" about these systems.

The book presents the scientific basis for the controlled husbandry of fish, whether it be in a stream of water or a standing water pool. Part 1, Flowing Water Fish Culture, is a major revision of the author’s initial book and includes greatly expanded coverage of rearing unit design criteria, fish growth and the use of liquid oxygen, hatchery effluent control, and recirculating systems. Part 2, Static Water Fish Culture, presents the scientific basis of fish culture in standing water systems including nutrient and dissolved gas dynamics, pond ecology, effects of fertilization and supplemental feeding, water quality management and representative static water aquacultures.

Aquaculture Technology conveys the science in a manner appropriate for use by university students and teachers and others involved in fish production and aquaculture research and development worldwide. It will enable the reader to adapt to changing technologies, markets, and environmental regulations as they occur.

section 1|158 pages

Flowing water fish culture

chapter 1|2 pages

Flowing water fish culture

chapter 2|18 pages

Fish growth in hatcheries

chapter 4|12 pages

Fish culture rearing units

chapter 5|10 pages

The solubility of oxygen in water

chapter 6|14 pages

The oxygen requirements of fish

chapter 7|12 pages

Rearing density and carrying capacity

chapter 8|24 pages

Reaeration of flowing water

chapter 9|16 pages

Ammonia production and toxicity

chapter 10|14 pages

Fish hatchery effluent control

chapter 11|18 pages

Water recirculation

section 2|78 pages

Static water fish culture

chapter 12|2 pages

Static water fish culture

chapter 13|10 pages

Review of limnology

chapter 14|4 pages

Principles of static water aquaculture

chapter 15|8 pages

The ecology of static water aquaculture

chapter 16|8 pages

Photosynthesis and respiration

chapter 17|8 pages

The carbon cycle, alkalinity, and liming

chapter 18|20 pages

Nutrient cycles and fertilization