Sj. Rowland et al., PRODUCTION OF THE AUSTRALIAN FRESH-WATER SILVER PERCH, BIDYANUS-BIDYANUS (MITCHELL), AT 2 DENSITIES IN EARTHEN PONDS, Aquaculture, 130(4), 1995, pp. 317-328
Silver perch fingerlings (mean weight 15.3 g) were stocked at densitie
s of 21 000 and 7000 fish/ha in six 0.1-ha earthen ponds and cultured
for 10 months. There were three replicate ponds for each density. Pond
s were aerated for at least 11 h a day and water was added every 4 wee
ks to replace that lost by evaporation and seepage. Fish were fed a fo
rmulated diet containing 35% crude protein at 4% body weight per day f
or the first 4 weeks and at rates up to 3% thereafter. The mean annual
production rate of 9819 kg/ha of fish stocked at 21 000/ha was signif
icantly higher (P<0.01) than the annual rate of 3699 kg/ha of fish sto
cked at 7000/ha. The maximum daily production and growth rates achieve
d in any pond over a 1-month period during summer were 97.7 kg/ha and
5.1 g/fish, respectively. Stocking density did not significantly (P>0.
05) affect survival rate (treatment means for 21 000 and 7000 fish/ha:
92.8 and 94.7%), daily growth rate (0.2-3.3 and 0.3-3.4 g/fish), weig
ht at harvest (434.9 and 473.2 g), food conversion ratio (1.9:1 and 1.
8:1) and cost of feeding ($A1.55 and $A1.47/kg), suggesting that highe
r stocking densities and production rates are possible. Water temperat
ures ranged from 11.1 to 30.0 degrees C. Significantly (P<0.05) slower
growth during December was associated with concentrations of NH3-N up
to 0.65 mg/l. The results demonstrate that silver perch is an excelle
nt species for semi-intensive culture in static earthen ponds with the
potential to form the basis of a large industry in Australia, based o
n high-volume, relatively low-cost production.