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Challenge 03: Sustainably feed the global population

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://repository.unesco.gov.ph/handle/123456789/22

Ocean Decade


Challenge 03:
Sustainably feed the global population



Generate knowledge, support innovation and develop solutions to optimize the role of the ocean in sustainably nourishing the world’s population under changing environmental, social and climate conditions.

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  • Survival, growth and food conversion efficiency of Panulirus ornatus following eyestalk ablation
    Juinio–Meñez, Marie Antonette; Ruinata, Jesselita (Elsevier BV, 1996-11)
    The viability of eyestalk ablation as a means to enhance the growth of juvenile spiny lobsters in commercial growout cultures was investigated in a 4-month experiment. Three replicate groups of small-sized (86.3–94.4 g total weight; 44.1–46.6 mm carapace length (CL)) Panulirus ornatus were subjected to three experimental treatments: unablated/control, unilateral and bilateral eyestalk ablation. Only animals which were initially at the intermolt stage were used in the experiments. The average food conversion efficiency (12–17%) and monthly growth rates of bilaterally ablated lobsters, based on both total weight (42.0–64.0 g) and carapace length (6.7–7.0 mm CL) increments, were significantly higher than lobsters in the two other treatments during the first 2 months of the experiment but declined thereafter. At the end of the experiment, only 6% of the bilaterally ablated lobsters (n = 48) survived compared with 73% and 75% for unilaterally ablated and unablated lobsters, respectively. The extreme sensitivity of bilaterally ablated lobsters to water quality and diet renders bilateral ablation impractical for commercial growout culture. The high survivorship and generally higher growth rates of unilaterally ablated lobsters compared with unablated lobsters resulted in the highest gross yield among the three treatments. The results indicate that unilateral ablation may be a viable option to consider in accelerating the growth of small juvenile P. ornatus to a marketable size of 200–300 g.
  • Clonal propagation of Eucheuma denticulatum and Kappaphycus alvarezii for Philippine seaweed farms
    Dawes, C. J.; Trono, G. C.; Lluisma, A. O. (Springer, 1993-06)
    Technique improvement and cost reduction of branch culture, micropropagation, and callus production of carrageenan-yielding seaweeds Kappaphycus alvarezii and Eucheuma denticulatum is presented. Low cost branch culture is possible by enriching seawater with 0.1% coconut water with 1 mg l−1 indole-3-butyric acid for 24 h wk−1 or continuous culture with 0.01% Algafer, a Philippine fertilizer. Micropropagation of 0.5 cm explants had almost 100% new branch production demonstrating the viability of callus regenerated plants. The use of carrageenan as a media for callus production was not effective when compared to agar. Propagules of both species, transferred from the University of the Philippine Marine Science Institute (UPMSI) culture facility to the field, showed daily percent growth rates of 5 to 5.5% d−1 over 84 days. Based on the costs of the UPMSI laboratory, a culture facility in the seaweed farming area is estimated to cost about U. S. $22000 during the initial year and 58% less the second year.
  • Genetic improvement of farmed tilapias: Biochemical characterization of strain differences in Nile tilapia
    Macaranas, Julie M.; Agustin, Liza Q.; Ablan, Ma. Carmen A.; Pante, Ma. Josefa R.; Fukushima, A.; Pullin, Roger S. V. (Springer, 1995-03)
    Four African wild strains (Egypt, Ghana, Senegal and Kenya) and four established Asian farmed strains of Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus (popularly known in the Philippines as ‘Taiwan’, ‘Thailand’, ‘Singapore’ and ‘Israel’) were analysed electrophoretically at 30 protein loci to estimate genetic differences among the strains. All strains shared alleles at 14 monomorphic and 16 variable loci. Among the African strains, characteristic allele frequency differences were observed at AAT-1 * 46 for Ghana and Senegal, ADH * 83 for Kenya, ADH * 120 for Senegal, G3PDH-2 * 300 for Egypt, IDDH * 67 for Senegal, sMDH-1 * 120 for Kenya and SOD * 150 for Senegal. Genetic distance values among the strains revealed a clustering of the farmed strains with Egypt and Ghana O. niloticus, a slight separation of the Senegal strain and a larger separation of the Kenya strain. This profile may reflect the origins of the few founder populations of this species previously introduced to Asia. It also confirms the wider genetic divergence of the Kenya strain (O. niloticus vulcani) from the others studied here, which are all O. n. niloticus. Observed heterozygosities of the strains ranged from 0.026 to 0.071, with the African wild strains the lower values (mean Ho = 0.036) and the farmed strains the higher ones (mean Ho = 0.056). The implications of these results to the ongoing tilapia genetic improvement programme in the Philippines are discussed.