Farm dam culture of marron

Project number: 1973-015
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (DPIRD) WA
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1976 - 31 Dec 1976
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Continue & expand the survey & experimental work on marron production to establish optimal methods & types of dams for production.
2. Test the market potential with marron from the "wheatbelt" of the south-west of WA

Background study on the commercial utilisation of the sea urchin

Project number: 1974-009
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Principal Investigator: Trevor Dix
Organisation: Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania (NRE TAS)
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1976 - 31 Dec 1976
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Sample selected populations of sea urchins at regular intervals to determine seasonal changes in gonad size and condition with a view to indicating if, where and when the gonad might be utilised effectively for food processing

Consumption patterns and attitudes towards seafood in North and Central Queensland

Project number: 1977-014
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Principal Investigator: Sue Bandaranaike
Organisation: James Cook University (JCU)
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1979 - 31 Dec 1979
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Illustrate spatial variations in seafood consumption patterns ... in Nth Qld
identify distance decay functions...
examine differences in purchasing habits
limited purchasing opportunities & lack of market research causes low consumption
socio-economic

Development of small scale invertebrate fishery in Tasmanian waters

Project number: 1978-017
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Organisation: Department of Natural Resources and Environment Tasmania (NRE TAS)
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1980 - 31 Dec 1980
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Explore & develop Tas invertebrate fisheries
.
2. assess harvesting, processing & marketing requirements
3. Stocks: molluscs Eucrasatella kingicola & Fulvia tenuicostata, crustaceans Leptomithrax australensis, Ovalipes bipustulatus & Pseudocarcinus gigas.

Market potential for jack mackerel

Project number: 1979-015
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Organisation: Tasmanian Smokehouse
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1980 - 31 Dec 1980
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Ascertain the potential continuity of supply of jack mackerel for primary & secondary processing.
2. Undertake product development.
3. Investigate market potential, domestically and overseas.

Final report

Final Report • 1.73 MB
1979-015-DLD.pdf

Summary

Market potential for jack mackerel

Development of fish handling, processing and packaging systems and their influence on the quality of Australian seafood products

Project number: 1980-007
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Organisation: CSIRO Geelong Waurn Ponds
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1983 - 31 Dec 1983
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Help industry to fully exploit an expanding catch by marketing high quality products.
2. Examine effects of different systems of handling, chilling & processing fish, seasonal composition, different packaging & time-temperature in spoilage processes

Jellyfish products and marketing feasibility

Project number: 1980-021
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Organisation: Clarence River Fishermen's Co-operative Ltd
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1981 - 31 Dec 1981
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Ascertain if the vast quantities of jellyfish (Cyanea capillata) available in the Clarence River, adjacent estuaries and ocean waters are suitable for Japanese :kragi" and sun-dried or pickling for Chinese and Asian trade

A program to develop a consensus as to "marketing" names of fish throughout Australia and to publicise to the trade and to the public these "marketing" names

Project number: 1980-027
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Principal Investigator: Jacki Knight
Organisation: Australian Seafood Industry Council (ASIC)
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1981 - 31 Dec 1981
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Enable production of a list of Australian and imported commercial fish, showing the scientific names, local names in each State and a suggested marketing name for each variety

Clarence River pilot prawn farming project

Project number: 1981-069
Project Status:
Completed
Budget expenditure: $0.00
Principal Investigator: Geoff L. Allan
Organisation: Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development (NSW)
Project start/end date: 28 Dec 1984 - 31 Dec 1984
Contact:
FRDC

Objectives

1. Establish a small pilot prawn farm adjacent to the Clarence River to fatten stunted school prawns taken from the river system.
2. Assess the economic viability & practicality of experimental results obtained at the Brackish Water Research Station

Final report

Author: Geoff Allan
Final Report • 1984-12-31 • 3.64 MB
1981-069-DLD.pdf

Summary

The research programme was largely comprised of farming trials in a 1 ha prawn farming pond and in swimming pools on the pond bank at the field site. Juvenile school prawns (Metapenaeus macleayi) were collected by commercial trawlers in Lake Wolloweyah, transported by punt to the pond where they were stocked and farmed for 2 to 3 months before harvest and marketing at the Sydney Fish Market.

The prawn production results were used as the basis for an independent economic analysis of school prawn farming. The first version of this analysis is discussed in the accompanying NPS2 paper and a revised version presented at the N.S.W. Department of Agriculture Prawn Farming Open Day (a compilation of the papers delivered at this Open Day is attached). Both versions predicted attractive returns on capital but it should be noted that the extrapolation from pilot scale to commercial scale must necessarily be in part hypothetical until it is supported by consistent commercial success.

Project products

Report • 3.94 MB
1981-069-Product.pdf

Summary

This report deals with the period July to October 1977 during which time inspections of the prawn farming industries of Japan, the Philippines and Thailand were made. A total of ten weeks was spent in Japan with shorter periods in the Philippines and Thailand.

Japan not only has the most successful prawn farming industry in the world but its aquaculture research in general is also the most advanced and diverse. Thus it was possible to inspect facilities used for the culture of many species and a brief section dealing with the aquaculture of some of these other species is included, along with observations from the other two countries visited.

The bulk of the report deals with Japanese aquaculture and the aim has been to provide considerable detail but  mostly as a supplement to existing works published in English. Much less published information is available for the aquaculture industries of the Philippines and Thailand and thus the sections relating to these countries are written in as much detail as possible. Some understanding of the larval development of penaeid prawns and portunid crabs is assumed in some sections of this report but not in the general summary (Section 10) which also includes recommendations relevant to the Australian situation.

Article • 1978-12-08 • 168.30 KB
1981-069-Product-2.pdf

Summary

Juvenile school prawns (Metapenaeus macleayi) were collected from the Clarence River, N.S.W., Australia and fattened in artificial ponds. After harvest these prawns were assessed by taste panels along with other samples of the same species collected from estuarine fisheries in N.S.W. Taste panels could not detect any significant differences between pond-fat­tened and wild prawns and both were found to be highly acceptable.
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