30
{ Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber

{ Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

{

Cobia AquacultureTodd Shomber

Page 2: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

TaxonomyFamily: Rachycentridae

Rachycentron canadum

Page 3: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Quick Facts:* Other names: Lemon fish and Ling. * More are caught by Rec Fishers than Commercial boats.Diet: Crabs, Fish, and Squid *Growth up to 72in or 1.82 metersand weight up to 135lbs.*Habitat: All structure types but mainly found around floating objects offshore.

Page 4: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

And….!!!!

Page 5: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Stylish!!!! Much Style!!!!!

Such Fish!!!!

Page 6: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Spawn: April-September in G.O.M about every 10 days Dispense sperm and eggs into water column where fertilization occursLarvae hatch a 24-36 hours later One month after hatching juvenile has adult coloration Fully mature: males 1-2 years females 2-3 years

Life Cycle

Life Cycle

Page 7: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Migrations and Range

Page 8: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Life cycle in farm raised Cobia

Page 9: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Broodstock Cobia produce between 1-1.2 million eggs per spawn

Page 10: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Spawn Stimulation Cobia stimulated to spawn through: Hormones, changing water temp or photoperiod.

Page 11: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Larval Rearing Tank in recirculating raceway system Juvenile Cobia fed enriched rotifers and nauplii Juveniles slowly weaned off zooplankton to dry food after 25-30 days.5-10% of eggs survive this stage

Page 12: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

*Juvenile Cobia in raceway systems

*Raised in this system to at most 1000 grams

*Major goal of this stage is to grow fish large enough to transport to outdoor cages(grow out systems) but small enough to transport in mass numbers with a minimal death rate.

Page 13: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Raceway System!!!

Page 14: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Grow out phase:*Successful in near shore and offshore cages*Largest cages used in Caribbean measured at 3000 m3*Suggested temp to minimize grow out time and reduce disease is 29C* Regular water flow through cages to keep a continuous amount of high DO is necessary *Grow out period is 1-1.5 years/ Final weight at 6-10kg

Page 15: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Open ocean cage!!!!!

Page 16: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

*Recirculating systems for eggs, larvae, and juveniles• Temperature around 29C• pH around 8 • High aeration levels (open water cages as adults)

• D.O. 8-9 mg/L• Salinity best at 25ppt

Water Chemistry

Page 17: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Grow out tanks need water similar to that of sub tropical oceans

Temperature is the biggest key Most be grown in warm areas

Water Chem (continued)

Page 18: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Farm Raised Vs Wild Food Rotifers- 8oz 13$ Shrimp- 1oz 13$Marine Pellets- 100g 8$

Blue crab- 1 dozen whole crabs 40$

Sustenance

Page 19: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Feed per day* China uses both floating and sinking pellets(42-45% crude protein)* Caribbean uses U.S produced pellets containing (50-53% crude protein)* Fed 6 days a week at 0.5-0.7% body weight.

Page 20: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Market Value

*Very Fast Growth Rate. Becomes mature at 1-2 years.*Top country production: China and Taiwan province of China. * Great tasting fish, not many bones. * Has potential to compete with Salmon in production rates and commercial success * Grow faster than Salmon * Raised for consumption.

Page 21: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

China and Taiwan Province

Page 22: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Market Value continued….* Cobia farming is in its infancy *China and Taiwan Province finding that good quality Cobia have potential to be one of the most important marine fish of the commercial fish future.*Greater market value than other fin fish * Selling to Japan, China, and U.S*Cobia fillets in U.S anywhere from 17-25$/lb.

Page 23: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Chef Todd suggests grilled or blackened Cobia.

Page 24: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Economic Future* Improvements to nursery phase of fish will be needed for large farming of Cobia. *U.S and Taiwan working on intensive and super intensive Recirculating Systems* If this can occur………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

Page 25: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

COBIA EXPLOSION!!!

Page 26: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Fast Growing (mature in 3 years tops) Sustain health in cultured environments

May keep wild populations safer A new “star” in the aquaculture world Good investment (17-25$ lb) Great tasting & versatile cooking methods

Advantages Hugh’s Favorite!!!!!!!

Page 27: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Disadvantages

Problems with juvenile survival rate from egg to larvae form(5-10%) and during transportation to grow out tanks

Hard diet to replicate (shrimp, blue crabs, and squid) Fickle about their water chemistry (29C, pH 8, and

salinity at 25ppt) Cage systems have environmental concerns (Where

does the “duke” go?) Cobia are very easily infected with a variety of

diseases. (Marine velvet disease, Trichodinosis, and Monogenean infestation)

Page 28: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

In summary: Cobia can be ,if given the proper amount of attention, a competitor with Salmon on the aquaculture landscape. Research needs to improve in the areas of larval and juvenile growing and survival rates, but the Cobia’s fast growth and high price tag are advantages that are not easily ignored.

Page 29: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Before I leave you………..

Page 30: { Cobia Aquaculture Todd Shomber. Taxonomy Family: Rachycentridae Rachycentron canadum

Are we sure our teacher isn’t a pro wrestler with the name Hugh Hammer?