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Crystal River Mariculture CenterThe Crystal River Mariculture Center is located at Progress Energy Florida's Crystal River energy complex in Citurs County near the Gulf of Mexico.A BRIEF HISTORY
The concept of a multi-species marine hatchery to mitigate fisheries impacts at Crystal River was developed as an innovative, cost-effective, alternative to conventional engineering solutions. The Crystal River Mariculture Center became part of a negotiated settlement, which included flow reduction at two of the power plants and helper cooling towers to further decrease the discharge water temperature. The Crystal River Mariculture Center began operation October 1991. The facility will remain operative as long as water from the Gulf of Mexico is utilized for condenser cooling at the power plants. Besides offsetting the impacts of power plant operation, the facility will provide educational opportunities for students, teachers, and the general public. New and innovative aquaculture techniques will be developed as different species are selected for culture. Since the Mariculture Center represents an innovative, cost-effective, solution for the mitigation of environmental impacts, the success of this program is of interest to the utility industry as well as federal and state agencies. WHAT IS MARICULTURE?
The Mariculture Center complex includes a two-story, 8100-square-foot, hatchery building and eight one-acre ponds. The hatchery building includes a water-chemistry laboratory, four spawn rooms, an incubation tank room, aglae production room, and administrative spaces. Each spawn room contains two 12-foot-diameter tanks connected to a recirculation system. This system includes a biological filter for the removal of dissolved waste products, a sand filter for removal of particulate matter, and an ultraviolet filter for pathogenic bacteria control. The grow-out ponds are located a short distance from the hatchery building. Each one-acre pond has a synthetic rubber liner to prevent water leakage, will hold approximately one million gallons of seawater when filled to capacity, and is three to five feet deep. At one end of the pond is a specially designed concrete drain structure, complete with adjustable drain valve, two removable screens, and a sump area where fish are collected during harvest. WHAT SPECIES ARE CULTURED?
Each species requires a unique set of conditions under which it will spawn and the newly hatched larvae will grow. For some of the species, those conditions are well documented; for others, they have yet to be discovered. One of the biggest challenges at the Mariculture Center will be to meet the special conditions required by the individual species. WHICH FISH FIRST?
HOW IS IT DONE?
Upon hatching, the fish larvae are ready to feed and must either be stocked in ponds or provided with live food in the incubation tanks. Organic and inorganic fertilizers are used prior to stocking to prepare the ponds. The fertilizers create a thick "soup" of microscopic organisms as food for the pond-stocked larvae. Larvae kept in incubation tanks must also be provided with live food. For redfish, a microscopic animal called a rotifer is an ideal live food organism. Rotifers are relatively easy to grow in large numbers using certain types of algae as their food; they then provide good nutrition for the larval fish. The larvae stocked in the ponds are grown to what is called fingerling size, about one to three inches in length. That takes approximately 60 days, depending upon water temperature and food availability. At harvest, the ponds are drained and the fingerlings are collected and placed in a fish trailer for transport. A single pond may yield as many as 30,000 three-inch fingerlings at harvest time. WHERE DO THEY GO?
HOW DO WE KNOW?
Tagging large numbers of small fish is a very difficult task. One of the recommended techniques for tagging one-to-three-inch fingerlings involves the use of coded wire tags. The tag is a tiny piece of wire marked with a binary code. The tag is inserted under the skin of the fish near the head. This efficient tagging process allows large numbers of small fingerlings to be tagged with a minimum of handling and disturbance. The only drawback to this system is that there are no external marks on the fish, making identification after release difficult. The tags can only be detected with the use of a special device, and this requires a labor intensive effort for the capture and identification of marked fish. The Mariculture Center will continue to investigate the latest technologies available for the most effective and efficient tagging of fish to be released. WHAT IS NEXT?
The Mariculture Center has a small staff of dedicated biologists, and there will be occasion to seek outside assistance for specific aquaculture needs. The center is in the process of developing cooperative programs with several agencies and institutions throughout the state. These agreements will provide the Mariculture Center access to a network of aquaculture experts, and the center can, in turn, provide culture space for their use. For additional information call (352) 563-4584. |
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Fish and Wildlife Research Institute 100 Eighth Avenue SE St. Petersburg, Florida 33701-5020 PH: 727-896-8626 |
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