May 21, 2008
A new automated tool that provides support for sea cage aquaculture managers
in making crucial decisions about locating their sites and determining the
number of fish that can be sustainably farmed is now available.
A project undertaken by AIMS in collaboration with the Indonesian Ministry of
Marine Affairs and Fisheries, and funded by the Australian Aid Program through
the Australian Centre for International Agriculture Research (ACIAR), has
developed a user-friendly decision support tool available on CD and the
Internet.
CADS_TOOL (Cage Aquaculture Decision Support tool) is immediately useful to
finfish aquaculture in South East Asia but is equally useful in tropical
Australia, according to AIMS researcher Dr David McKinnon.
Australia does not yet have a lot of tropical sea cage fish farming, with
only two such farms producing barramundi in northern Australia, including one
near Cardwell. The major growth area for tropical sea cage aquaculture is South
East Asia.
"Indonesia in particular has a huge need for management tools in aquaculture
development," Dr McKinnon said.
"It is the largest aquaculture producer in South East Asia and the industry
nearly trebled in size between 1995 and 2000," he said.
Indonesian aquaculture mostly produces high value finfish such as coral
trout, which fetch around $90 per kilogram live on the Hong Kong wholesale
market.
To address the huge growth in South East Asian aquaculture, the AIMS/ACIAR
project employed physicist Dr Halmar Halide to develop a simple yet robust tool
that any sea cage aquaculture manager could access and use.
Dr Halide, who was on secondment to the project for two and a half years,
returned recently to the Physics Department at Hasanuddin University in Makassar,
South Sulawesi.
The tool that he devised assists with site classification and selection, and
determines how many fish can be held at a particular location. It is planned to also make the package available on CD from AIMS.
To view CADS_TOOL,
click here.
One of the major challenges associated with growing fish in sea cages is
finding the right place to put the cages. Site selection is the biggest factor
in determining the commercial viability of a sea cage aquaculture operation,
according to Dr McKinnon.
Finding a location that has the optimum water quality, water temperature,
oxygen, light and nutrient levels, that is close to where farm workers live and
to markets for the fish involves a complex range of decisions. CADS_TOOL will
simplify the process for many sea cage aquaculture managers.
The tool allows managers to classify a site, select the best site from
several alternatives, calculate its sustainable holding density and perform a
basic economic appraisal.
"We believe that CADS_TOOL will greatly improve decision making by sea cage
aquaculture managers," Dr McKinnon said. "In a rapidly expanding industry, this
will be a major factor in ensuring both environmental and economic
sustainability."