Aquaculture in Vanuatu exists on a small scale, both commercially and privately. Several aquacultural efforts have been made in the country, including attempts to raise Pacific oyster, rabbitfish, Malaysian prawn, and tilapia. Experiments with Kappaphycus alvarezii and three species of giant clam were carried out by the Fisheries Department in 1999. The official Fisheries Department records state that $1165 US of cultured coral was exported from the country in 2000, with 275 pieces in total. The cultivation of Macrobrachium lar in taro terraces is practiced for subsistence purposes, and Macrobrachium rosenbergii has been identified by the Vanuatu government as a high-priority species.

There is little commercial or private-sector aquaculture in Vanuatu. The Fisheries Department operates a small hatchery for trochus shell (Trochus niloticus), producing juveniles which are used in experiments to study the impact and potential of reef re-seeding as a means of enhancement the wild trochus fishery. Similar experimental work on green snail (Turbo marmoratus) is also carried out.

In mid-1999 the Fisheries Department carried out some spawning trials of three specieis of giant clams. In the same year the department brought seaweed (Kappaphycus alvarezii) from Fiji for some experimental culture. On September 1, 2008, Vanuatu became the first Pacific Island country to have an aquaculture development plan and an Aquaculture and Fisheries Association.

See also

  • Fishing in Vanuatu

References



24138878_10100615516960909_12892044_o Vanuatu Aquatics Federation

Primary Sector Industries Vanuatu Foreign Investment Promotion Agency

Fishing in Vanuatu Ocean Blue Fishing

Vanuatu

Vanuatu — Google Arts & Culture