- This article is about the farming of marine (saltwater)
shrimp. For farming of fresh water species, see freshwater prawn farming.
A
shrimp farm is an
aquaculture business for the cultivation of
marine
shrimp or
prawns
for human consumption.
Commercial shrimp farming began in the 1970s,
and production grew steeply, particularly to match the market
demands of the U.S.
, Japan
and Western
Europe. The total global production of
farmed shrimp reached more than 1.6 million
tonnes in 2003, representing a value of nearly 9,000
million
U.S. dollar.
About 75%
of farmed shrimp is produced in Asia, in
particular in China
and Thailand
.
The other
25% is produced mainly in Latin
America, where Brazil
is the
largest producer. The largest exporting nation is
Thailand.
Shrimp farming has changed from traditional, small-scale businesses
in
Southeast Asia into a global
industry. Technological advances have led to growing shrimp at ever
higher densities, and
broodstock is
shipped worldwide. Virtually all farmed shrimp are
penaeids (i.e., shrimp of the
family Penaeidae), and just two species of
shrimp—the
Penaeus vannamei
(Pacific white shrimp) and the
Penaeus monodon (giant tiger
prawn)—account for roughly 80% of all farmed shrimp. These
industrial
monocultures are very
susceptible to
diseases, which have caused
several regional wipe-outs of farm shrimp populations. Increasing
ecological problems, repeated disease
outbreaks, and pressure and criticism from both
NGO and consumer countries led
to changes in the industry in the late 1990s and generally stronger
regulation by governments. In 1999, a program aimed at developing
and promoting more
sustainable
farming practices was initiated, including governmental bodies,
industry representatives, and environmental organizations.
History and geography
Shrimp have been farmed for centuries in Asia, using traditional
low-density methods.
Indonesian
brackish water ponds
called tambaks can be traced back as far as the 15th
century. Shrimp were farmed on a small scale in ponds, in
monocultures or together with other species such as
milkfish, or in rotation with
rice, using the rice
paddies
for shrimp cultures during the dry season, when no rice could be
grown. Such traditional cultures often were small operations in
coastal areas or on river banks.
Mangrove
areas were favoured because of their naturally abundant supply of
shrimp. Wild juvenile shrimp were trapped in ponds and reared on
naturally occurring organisms in the water until they had the
desired size and then were harvested.
The
origins of industrial shrimp farming can be traced back to the
1930s, when Kuruma shrimp
(Penaeus japonicus) was spawned and cultivated for the
first time in Japan
. By
the 1960s, a small shrimp farming industry had appeared in Japan.
Commercial shrimp farming began in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Technological advances led to ever more intensive forms of shrimp
farming, and the growing market demand led to a proliferation of
shrimp farms throughout the world, concentrated in tropical and
sub-tropical regions. The growing consumer demand coincided in the
early 1980s with faltering wild shrimp catches, creating a
veritable boom in shrimp aquaculture.
Taiwan
was amongst
the early adopters and a major producer in the 1980s; its
production collapsed beginning in 1988 due to poor management
practices and disease. In Thailand
, large-scale
intensive shrimp farming expanded rapidly from 1985.
In
South America, shrimp farming was
pioneered by Ecuador
, where it
expanded dramatically from 1978. Brazil had been active in
shrimp farming since 1974, but the trade really boomed there only
in the 1990s, making the country a major producer within a few
years. Today, there are marine shrimp farms in over fifty
countries.
Farming methods
When shrimp farming emerged in the 1970s as an economically viable
alternative to satisfy growing market demands that had surpassed
the capacity of the wild shrimp fishery, the
subsistence farming methods of old were
rapidly replaced by the more intensive practices of an
export-oriented business. Industrial shrimp farming at first
followed these traditional methods with so-called extensive shrimp
farms, but compensated for the low yield per area with increased
pond sizes: instead of ponds of just a few
hectares, ponds of sizes up to 100 ha (one
km²) were used in some places. The
initially largely unregulated business boomed, and in many regions
whole coastlines were transformed and huge areas of mangroves
cleared. Further technological advances made more intensive farming
practices possible that could achieve higher yields per area while
using less land. Semi-intensive and intensive farms appeared, where
the shrimp were reared on artificial feeds and ponds were actively
managed. Although there are still many extensive farms, new farms
typically are of the (semi-)intensive kind.
Until the mid-1980s, most shrimp farms were stocked with young wild
shrimp, called
postlarvae, typically caught by local
fishermen. Postlarvae fishing became an important economic sector
in many countries. To counteract the beginning depletion of fishing
grounds and to ensure a steady supply of young shrimp to farms, the
industry started raising shrimp from the egg and maintaining adult
shrimp for reproductive purposes in specialized installations
called
hatcheries.
Life cycle of shrimp
Shrimp mature and breed only in a marine
habitat. The females lay 50,000 to 1
million eggs, which hatch after some 24 hours into tiny
nauplii. These nauplii feed on
yolk reserves within their body and then undergo a
metamorphosis into
zoeae. This second larval stage feeds in the wild on
algae and after a few days metamorphoses again
into the third stage to become
myses. The myses already look akin to
tiny shrimp and feed on algae and
zooplankton. After another three to four days
they metamorphose a final time into postlarvae: young shrimp having
all the characteristics of adults. The whole process takes about 12
days from hatching. In the wild, the postlarvae then migrate into
estuaries, which are rich in nutrients and
low in
salinity. There they grow and
eventually migrate back into open waters when they mature. Adult
shrimp are
benthic animals living primarily
on the sea bottom.
Technologies
In shrimp farming, this lifecycle occurs under controlled
conditions. The reasons to do so include more intensive farming,
improved size control resulting in more uniformly sized shrimp, and
better predator control, but also the ability to speed up the cycle
by controlling the climate (especially in farms in the temperate
zones, using
greenhouses). There are
three different stages:
- Hatcheries breed shrimp and produce nauplii or even
postlarvae, which they sell to farms. Large shrimp farms maintain
their own hatcheries and sell nauplii or postlarvae to smaller
farms in the region.
- Nurseries are those parts of a shrimp farm where
postlarvae are grown and accustomed to the marine conditions in the
growout ponds.
- In the growout ponds the shrimp are grown from
juveniles to marketable size, which takes between three to six
months.
Most farms produce one to two harvests a year; in tropical
climates, a farm may even produce three. Because of the need for
salt water, shrimp farms are located on or near a coast. Inland
shrimp farms have also been tried in some regions, but the need to
ship salt water and competition for land with agricultural users
led to problems.
Thailand
banned
inland shrimp farms in 1999.
Hatcheries
Tanks in a shrimp hatchery.
Small-scale hatcheries are very common throughout Southeast Asia.
Often run as family businesses and using a low-technology approach,
they use small tanks (less than ten tons) and often low animal
densities. They are susceptible to disease, but due to their small
size, they can typically restart production quickly after
disinfection. The survival rate is anywhere between zero and 90%,
depending on a wide range of factors, including disease, the
weather, and the experience of the operator.
Greenwater hatcheries are medium-sized hatcheries using
large tanks with low animal densities. To feed the shrimp larvae,
an
algal bloom is induced in the tanks.
The survival rate is about 40%.
Galveston hatcheries (named after
Galveston,
Texas
, where they were developed) are large-scale,
industrial hatcheries using a closed and tightly controlled
environment. They breed the shrimp at high densities in
large (15 to 30 ton) tanks. Survival rates vary between zero and
80%, but typically achieve 50%.
In hatcheries, the developing shrimp are fed on a diet of algae and
later also
brine shrimp nauplii,
sometimes (especially in industrial hatcheries) augmented by
artificial diets. The diet of later stages also includes fresh or
freeze-dried animal protein, for example
krill. Nutrition and medication (such as
antibiotics) fed to the brine shrimp
nauplii are passed on to the shrimp that eat them.
Nurseries
Farmers transferring postlarvae from the tanks on the truck to a
growout pond.
Many farms have nurseries where the postlarval shrimp are grown
into juveniles for another three weeks in separate ponds, tanks, or
so-called raceways. A raceway is a rectangular, long, shallow tank
through which water flows continuously.
In a typical nursery, there are 150 to 200 animals per square
metre. They are fed on a high-
protein diet
for at most about three weeks before they are moved to the growout
ponds. At that time, they weigh between one and two grams. The
water salinity is adjusted gradually to that of the growout
ponds.
Farmers refer to postlarvae as "PLs", with the number of days
suffixed (i.e., PL-1, PL-2, etc.). They are ready to be transferred
to the growout ponds after their
gills have
branched, which occurs around PL-13 to PL-17 (about 25 days after
hatching). Nursing is not absolutely necessary, but is favored by
many farms because it makes for better food utilization, improves
the size uniformity, helps utilize the infrastructure better, and
can be done in a controlled environment to increase the harvest.
The main disadvantage of nurseries is that some of the postlarval
shrimp die upon the transfer to the growout pond.
Some farms do not use a nursery but stock the postlarvae directly
in the growout ponds after having acclimated them to the
appropriate temperature and salinity levels in an acclimation tank.
Over the course of a few days, the water in these tanks is changed
gradually to match that of the growout ponds. The animal density
should not exceed 500/liter for young postlarvae and 50/liter for
larger ones, such as PL-15.
Growout
Shrimp pond with paddlewheel aerators in Indonesia.
The pond is in an early stage of cultivation; plankton has
been seeded and grown (whence the greenish color of the water);
shrimp fry is to be released next.
The intake of a two-horsepower "Turbo aerator", which paddles one
metre below the water surface.
To avoid stirring up pond sediments, the water depth should be
at least 1.5 m.
In the growout phase, the shrimp are grown to maturity. The
postlarvae are transferred to ponds where they are fed until they
reach marketable size, which takes about another three to six
months. Harvesting the shrimp is done by fishing them from the
ponds using nets or by draining the ponds. Pond sizes and the level
of technical infrastructure vary.
Extensive shrimp farms using traditional low-density methods are
invariably located on a coast and often in
mangrove areas. The ponds range from just a few to
more than 100
hectares; shrimp are stocked
at low densities (2–3 animals per square metre, or 25,000/ha) . The
tides provide for some water exchange, and the shrimp feed on
naturally occurring organisms. In some areas, farmers even grow
wild shrimp by just opening the gates and impounding wild larvae.
Prevalent in poorer or less developed countries where land prices
are low, extensive farms produce annual yields from 50 to
500 kg/ha of shrimp (head-on weight). They have low production
costs (US$1–3/kg live shrimp), are not very labor intensive, and do
not require advanced technical skills.
Semi-intensive farms do not rely on
tides for
water exchange but use pumps and a planned pond layout. They can
therefore be built above the high tide line. Pond sizes range from
2 to 30 ha; the stocking densities range from 10 to 30/m²
(100,000–300,000/ha). At such densities, artificial feeding using
industrially prepared shrimp feeds and fertilizing the pond to
stimulate the growth of naturally occurring organisms become a
necessity. Annual yields range from 500 to 5,000 kg/ha, while
production costs are in the range of US$2–6/kg live shrimp. With
densities above 15 animals per
square
metre,
aeration is often required to
prevent oxygen depletion. Productivity varies depending upon water
temperature, thus it is common to have larger sized shrimp in some
seasons than in others.
Intensive farms use even smaller ponds (0.1–1.5 ha) and even higher
stocking densities. The ponds are actively managed: they are
aerated, there is a high water exchange to remove waste products
and maintain water quality, and the shrimp are fed on specially
designed diets, typically in the form of formulated pellets. Such
farms produce annual yields between 5,000 and 20,000 kg/ha; a
few super-intensive farms can produce as much as
100,000 kg/ha. They require an advanced technical
infrastructure and highly trained professionals for constant
monitoring of water quality and other pond conditions; their
production costs are in the range of US$4–8/kg live shrimp.
Estimates on the production characteristics of shrimp farms vary.
Most studies agree that about 55–60% of all shrimp farms worldwide
are extensive farms, another 25–30% are semi-intensive, the rest
being intensive farms. Regional variation is high, though, and
[Tacon (2002)] reports wide discrepancies in the percentages
claimed for individual countries by different studies.
Feeding the shrimps
While extensive farms mainly rely on the natural productivity of
the ponds, more intensively managed farms rely on artificial shrimp
feeds, either exclusively or as a supplement to the organisms that
naturally occur in a pond. A
food chain
is established in the ponds, based on the growth of
phytoplankton. Fertilizers and mineral
conditioners are used to boost the growth of the phytoplankton to
accelerate the growth of the shrimps. Waste from the artificial
food pellets and excrements of the shrimps can lead to the
eutrophication of the ponds.
Artificial feeds come in the form of specially formulated,
granulated pellets that disintegrate quickly. Up to 70% of such
pellets are wasted, as they decay before the shrimps have eaten
them. The shrimps are fed two to five times daily; the feeding can
be done manually either from ashore or from boats, or using
mechanized feeders distributed all over a pond. The
feed conversion rate (FCR), i.e. the
amount of food needed to produce a unit (e.g. one kilogram) of
shrimp, is claimed by the industry to be around 1.2–2 in modern
farms, but this is an optimum value that is not always attained in
practice. For a farm to be profitable, a feed conversion rate below
2.5 is necessary; in older farms or under suboptimal pond
conditions, the ratio may easily rise to 4:1. Lower FCRs result in
a higher profit for the farm.
Farmed species
Although there are many species of shrimp and prawn, only a few of
the larger ones are actually cultivated, all of which belong to the
family of
penaeids (
family Penaeidae),
and within it to the genus
Penaeus
. Many species are unsuitable for farming: they are too small to be
profitable, or simply stop growing when crowded together, or are
too susceptible to diseases. The two species dominating the market
are:
- Pacific white shrimp
(Litopenaeus vannamei, also called "whiteleg shrimp") is
the main species cultivated in western countries. Native to the
Pacific
coast from Mexico
to Peru
, it grows to
a size of 23 cm. P. vannamei accounts for 95%
of the production in Latin America. It
is easy to breed in captivity, but succumbs to the Taura disease.
- Giant tiger
prawn (P. monodon, also known as "black tiger shrimp")
occurs in the wild in the Indian Ocean
and in the Pacific Ocean
from Japan to Australia. The largest of all the
cultivated shrimp, it can grow to a length of 36 cm and is
farmed in Asia. Because of its susceptibility
to whitespot disease and the
difficulty of breeding it in captivity, it is gradually being
replaced by L. vannamei since 2001.
Together, these two species account for about 80% of the whole
farmed shrimp production. Other species being bred are:
- Western blue shrimp (P.
stylirostris) was a popular choice for shrimp farming in the
western hemisphere, until the IHHN virus
wiped out nearly the whole population in the late 1980s. A few
stocks survived and became resistant against this virus. When it
was discovered that some of these were also resistant against the
Taura virus, some farms again bred P. stylirostris from
1997 on.
- Chinese white
shrimp (P. chinensis, also known as the fleshy
prawn) occurs along the coast of China
and the western coast of Korea
and is being
farmed in China. It grows to a maximum length of only
18 cm, but tolerates colder water (min. 16 °C). Once a major factor on the world market, it is
today used almost exclusively for the Chinese domestic market after
a disease wiped out nearly all the stocks in 1993.
- Kuruma
shrimp (P. japonicus) is farmed primarily in Japan and
Taiwan
, but also in Australia; the only market is in
Japan, where live Kuruma shrimp reach prices of the order of
US$100 per pound ($220/kg).
- Indian white
shrimp (P. indicus) is a native of the coasts of the
Indian
Ocean
and is widely bred in India
, Iran
and the
Middle East and along the African
shores.
- Banana shrimp
(P. merguiensis) is another cultured species from the
coastal waters of the Indian Ocean, from Oman
to Indonesia
and Australia. It
can be grown at high densities.
Several other species of
Penaeus play only a very minor
role in shrimp farming. Some other kinds of shrimp also can be
farmed, e.g. the "Akiami paste shrimp" or
Metapenaeus spp.
Their total production from aquaculture is of the order of only
about 25,000 tonnes per year, small in comparison to that of the
penaeids.
Diseases
There are a variety of lethal
viral diseases that affect shrimp. In the densely
populated,
monocultural farms such virus
infections spread rapidly and may wipe out whole shrimp
populations. A major transfer
vector of many of these viruses is the
water itself; and thus any virus outbreak also carries the danger
of decimating shrimp living in the wild.
Yellowhead disease, called
Hua leung in
Thai, affects
P. monodon throughout Southeast Asia. It had been reported
first in Thailand in 1990. The disease is highly contagious and
leads to mass mortality within 2 to 4 days. The
cephalothorax of an infected shrimp turns
yellow after a period of unusually high feeding activity ending
abruptly, and the then moribund shrimp congregate near the surface
of their pond before dying.
Whitespot syndrome is a disease
caused by a family of related viruses. First reported in 1993 from
Japanese
P. japonicus cultures, it spread throughout Asia
and then to the Americas. It has a wide host range and is highly
lethal, leading to mortality rates of 100% within days. Symptoms
include white spots on the carapace and a red
hepatopancreas. Infected shrimp become
lethargic before they die.
Taura syndrome was first reported
from shrimp farms on the Taura river in Ecuador in 1992. The host
of the virus causing the disease is
P. vannamei, one of
the two most commonly farmed shrimp. The disease spread rapidly,
mainly through the shipping of infected animals and broodstock.
Originally confined to farms in the Americas, it has also been
propagated to Asian shrimp farms with the introduction of
P.
vannamei there. Birds are thought to be a route of infection
between farms within one region.
Infectious
Hypodermal and Hematopoietic Necrosis (IHHN) is a disease that
causes mass mortality among
P. stylirostris (as high as
90%) and severe deformations in
P. vannamei.
It occurs in Pacific
farmed and wild shrimp, but not in wild shrimp on the Atlantic
coast of the Americas.
There are also a number of
bacterial
infections that are lethal to shrimp. The most common is
vibriosis, caused by the bacterium
Vibrio spp. The shrimp become weak and
disoriented and may have dark wounds on the
cuticle. The mortality rate can exceed 70%. Another
bacterial disease is
Necrotising
hepatopancreatitis (NHP); symptoms include a soft exoskeleton
and fouling. Most such bacterial infections are strongly correlated
to stressful conditions such as overcrowded ponds, high
temperatures, and poor water quality: factors that positively
influence the growth of bacteria. Treatment is done using
antibiotics. Importing countries have repeatedly
placed import bans on shrimp containing various antibiotics. One
such antibiotic is
chloramphenicol,
which has been banned in the
European
Union since 1994, but continues to pose problems.
With their high mortality rates, diseases represent a very real
danger to shrimp farmers, who may lose their income for the whole
year if their ponds are infected. Since most diseases cannot yet be
treated effectively, the industry's efforts are focused on
preventing diseases to break out in the first place. Active water
quality management helps avoid poor pond conditions favourable to
the spread of diseases, and instead of using larvae from wild
catches,
specific pathogen
free broodstocks raised in captivity
in isolated environments and certified not to carry diseases are
used increasingly. To avoid introducing diseases into such
disease-free populations on a farm, there is also a trend to create
more controlled environments in the ponds of (semi-)intensive
farms, such as by lining them with plastic to avoid soil contact,
and by minimizing water exchange in the ponds.
Economy
The total global production of farmed shrimp reached more than 1.6
million
tonnes in 2003, representing a
farm-gate value of nearly 9 billion
U.S. dollars. This accounts for 25% of
the total shrimp production that year (farming and wild catches
combined).
The largest market for shrimp is the
United
States
, importing more than 500,000 tonnes of shrimp in
2003. About 250,000 tonnes went to Japan
, while the
four major European shrimp importing countries (France
, Spain
, the
UK
, and
Italy
) imported together about another 500,000
tonnes.
The import prices for shrimp fluctuate wildly.
In 2003 the import
price per kilogram shrimp in the United States
was US$ 8.80, slightly higher than in Japan at
US$8.–. The average import price in the EU was only about
US$5.–/kg; this much lower value is explained by the fact that the
EU imports more coldwater shrimp (from catches) that are much
smaller than the farmed warm water species and thus attain lower
prices. In addition, Mediterranean Europe prefers head-on shrimp
which weigh approximately 30% more but have a lower unit
price.
About 75%
of the world production of farmed shrimp comes from Asian
countries; the two leading nations being China
and Thailand
, closely followed by Vietnam
, Indonesia
, and India
.
The other
25% are produced in the western hemisphere, where the
South-American countries (Brazil
, Ecuador
, Mexico
)
dominate. In terms of export, Thailand is by far the leading
nation with a market share of more than 30%, followed by China,
Indonesia, and India, accounting each for about 10%. Other major
export nations are Vietnam, Bangladesh, and Ecuador. Thailand
exports nearly all of its production, while China uses most of its
shrimp in the domestic market.
The only other major export nation that has
a strong domestic market for farmed shrimp is Mexico
.

Disease problems have repeatedly impacted the shrimp production
negatively. Besides the near-wipeout of
P. chinensis in
1993, there were outbreaks of viral diseases that led to marked
declines in the per-country production in 1996/97 in Thailand and
repeatedly in Ecuador. In Ecuador alone, production suffered
heavily in 1989 (IHHN), 1993 (Taura), and 1999 (whitespot). Another
reason for sometimes wild changes in shrimp farm output are the
import regulations of the destination countries, which do not allow
shrimp contaminated by chemicals or antibiotics to be
imported.
In the 1980s and through much of the 1990s, shrimp farming promised
high profits. The investments required for extensive farms were
low, especially in regions with low land prices and wages. For many
tropical countries, especially those with poorer economies, shrimp
farming was an attractive business, offering jobs and incomes for
poor coastal populations and has, due to the high market prices of
shrimp, provided many developing countries with non-negligible
foreign currency earnings. Many shrimp farms were funded initially
by the
World Bank or substantially
subsidized by local governments.
In the late 1990s, the economic situation changed. Governments and
farmers alike were under increasing pressure from NGOs and the
consumer countries, who criticized the practices of the trade.
International trade conflicts erupted,
such as import bans by consumer countries on shrimp containing
antibiotics, the United
States
' shrimp import ban against Thailand in 2004 as a
measure against Thai shrimp fishers not using Turtle Excluder Devices in their
nets, or the "anti-dumping"
case initiated by U.S. shrimp fishers in 2002 against shrimp
farmers worldwide, which resulted two years later in the U.S.
imposing anti-dumping tariffs of the order of
about 10% against many producer countries (except China, which
received a 112% duty). Diseases caused significant economic
losses.
In Ecuador
, where
shrimp farming was a major export sector (the other two are
Bananas and Oil), the
whitespot outbreak of 1999 caused
an estimated 130,000 workers to lose their jobs.
Furthermore, shrimp prices dropped sharply in 2000. All of these
factors contributed to the slowly growing acceptance by farmers
that improved farming practices were needed, and resulted in
tighter government regulation of the business, both of which
internalized some of the
external
costs that were ignored during the boom years.
Socio-economic aspects
Shrimp farming offers significant
employment opportunities, which may help
alleviate the poverty of the local coastal populations in many
areas, if it is properly managed. The published literature on that
topic shows large discrepancies, and much of the available data is
of anecdotal nature. Estimates of the labor-intensiveness of shrimp
farms range from about three times less to three times more than
when the same area was used for rice
paddies, with much regional variation and
depending on the type of farms surveyed. In general, intensive
shrimp farming requires more labour per unit area than extensive
farming. Extensive farms cover much more land area and are often
but not always located in areas where no agricultural land uses are
possible. Supporting industries such as feed production or storage,
handling, and trade companies should also not be neglected, even if
not all of them are exclusive to shrimp farming.
Typically, workers on a shrimp farm can get better
wages than with other employments. A global estimate
from one study is that a shrimp farm worker can earn 1.5 – 3 times
as much as in other jobs; a study from India arrived at a salary
increase of about 1.6, and a report from Mexico states that the
lowest paid job at shrimp farms was paid in 1996 at 1.22 times the
average worker salary in the country.
NGOs have frequently criticized that most of the profits went to
large conglomerates instead of to the local population.
While
this may be true in certain regions such as Ecuador
, where most
shrimp farms are owned by large companies, it does not apply in all
cases. For instance in Thailand, most farms are owned by
small local entrepreneurs, although there is a trend to
vertically integrate the industries
related to shrimp farming from feed producers to food processors
and trade companies. A 1994 study reported that a farmer in
Thailand could increase his income by a factor of ten by switching
from growing rice to farming shrimp.
An Indian study from
2003 arrives at similar figures for shrimp farming in the East Godavari
district in Andhra Pradesh
.
Whether the local population benefits from shrimp farming is also
dependent on the availability of sufficiently trained people.
Extensive farms tend to offer mainly seasonal jobs during harvest
that do not require much training. In Ecuador, many of these
positions are known to have been filled by migrant workers. More
intensive farms have a need for year-round labour in more
sophisticated jobs.
Marketing
For commercialization, shrimps are graded and marketed in different
categories. From complete shrimps (known as "head-on, shell-on" or
HOSO) to peeled and deveined (P&D), any presentation is
available in stores. The animals are graded by their size
uniformity and then also by their count per weight unit, with
larger shrimps attaining higher prices.
Ecological impacts
Mangrove estuaries provide a habitat for many animals and
plants.
Shrimp farms of all types, from extensive to super-intensive, can
cause severe ecological problems wherever they are located. For
extensive farms, huge areas of
mangroves
were cleared, reducing
biodiversity.
During the 1980s and 1990s, about 35% of the world's mangrove
forests have vanished. Shrimp farming was a major cause of this,
accounting for over a third of it according to one study; other
studies report between 5% and 10% globally, with enormous regional
variability. Other causes of mangrove destruction are population
pressure, logging, pollution from other industries, or conversion
to other uses such as salt pans. Mangroves, through their roots,
help stabilize a coastline and capture sediments; their removal has
led to a marked increase of
erosion and less
protection against floods. Mangrove estuaries are also especially
rich and productive
ecosystems and
provide the spawning grounds for many species of fish, including
many commercially important ones. Many countries have protected
their mangroves and forbidden the construction of new shrimp farms
in tidal or mangrove areas.
The enforcement of the respective laws is
often problematic, though, and especially in the least developed
countries such as Bangladesh, Myanmar
, or Vietnam the conversion of mangroves to shrimp
farms remains an issue.
Intensive farms, while reducing the direct impact on the mangroves,
have other problems. Their nutrient-rich effluents (industrial
shrimp feeds disintegrate quickly, as little as 30% are actually
eaten by the shrimp with a corresponding economic loss to the
farmer, the rest is wasted) are typically discharged into the
environment, seriously upsetting the ecological balance. These
waste waters contain significant amounts of chemical
fertilizers,
pesticides,
and
antibiotics that cause
pollution of the environment. Furthermore,
releasing antibiotics in such ways injects them into the
food chain and increases the risks of bacteria
becoming
resistant against
them. However, most aquatic bacteria, unlike bacteria associated
with terrestrial animals, are not
zoonotic.
Only a few disease transfers from animals to humans have been
reported.
Prolonged use of a pond can lead to an incremental build-up of a
sludge at the pond's bottom from waste products and excrements. The
sludge can be removed mechanically or dried and plowed to allow
bio-decomposition, at least in areas without acid problems.
Flushing a pond never completely removes this sludge, and
eventually, the pond is abandoned, leaving behind a wasteland with
the soil made unusable for any other purposes due to the high
levels of salinity, acidity, and toxic chemicals. A typical pond in
an extensive farm can be used only a few years. An Indian study
estimated the time to rehabilitate such lands to about 30 years.
Thailand
has banned inland shrimp farms since 1999 because
they caused too much destruction of agricultural lands due to
salination. A Thai study
estimated that 60% of the shrimp farming area in Thailand was
abandoned in the years 1989 – 1996. Much of these problems stem
from using mangrove land that has high natural
pyrite content (
acid
sulfate soil) and poor drainage. The shift to semi-intensive
farming requires higher elevations for drain harvesting and low
sulfide (pyrite) content to prevent acid
formation when the soils shift from
anaerobic to aerobic conditions.
The global nature of the shrimp farming business and in particular
the shipment of
broodstock and hatchery
products throughout the world have not only introduced various
shrimp species as
exotic species, but
also distributed the diseases the shrimp may carry worldwide. As a
consequence, most broodstock shipment require health certificates
and/or to be SPF (specific pathogen free) status. Many
organizations lobby actively for consumers to avoid buying farmed
shrimp; some also advocate the development of more
sustainable farming methods. A joint
programme of the
World Bank, the Network
of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA), the
WWF, and the
FAO was established in August 1999 to study and propose
improved practices for shrimp farming. Some existing attempts at
sustainable export-oriented shrimp farming marketing the shrimp as
"ecologically produced" are criticized by NGOs as being dishonest
and trivial window-dressing.
Yet the industry has been slowly changing since about 1999. It has
adopted the "best management practices" developed by e.g. the World
Bank
et al. programme and instituted educational
programmes to promote them. Due to the mangrove protection laws
enacted in many countries, new farms are usually of the
(semi-)intensive kind, which are best constructed outside of
mangrove areas anyway. There is a trend to create even more tightly
controlled environments in these farms with the hope to achieve
better disease prevention. Waste water treatment has attracted
considerable attention; modern shrimp farms routinely have effluent
treatment ponds where sediments are allowed to settle at the bottom
and other residuals are filtered. As such improvements are costly,
the World Bank
et al. programme also recommends
low-intensity
polyculture farming for
some areas. Since it has been discovered that mangrove soils are
effective in filtering waste waters and tolerate high
nitrate levels, the industry has also developed an
interest in mangrove
reforestation,
although its contributions in that area are still minor. The
long-term effects of these recommendations and industry trends
cannot be evaluated conclusively yet.
Social changes
Shrimp farming in many cases has far-reaching effects on the local
coastal population. Especially in the boom years of the 1980s and
1990s, when the business was largely unregulated in many countries,
the very fast expansion of the industry caused significant changes
that sometimes were detrimental to the local population. Conflicts
can be traced back to two root causes: competition for common
resources such as land and water, and changes induced by wealth
redistribution.
A
significant problem causing much conflict in some regions, for
instance in Bangladesh
, are the land use rights. With shrimp
farming, a new industry expanded into coastal areas and started to
make exclusive use of previously public resources. In some areas,
the rapid expansion resulted in the local coastal population being
denied access to the coast by a continuous strip of shrimp farms
with serious impacts on the local fisheries. Such problems were
compounded by poor ecological practices that caused a degradation
of common resources (such as excessive use of
freshwater to control the salinity of the ponds,
causing the
water table to sink and
leading to the salination of freshwater
aquifers by an inflow of salt water). With growing
experience, countries usually introduced stronger governmental
regulations and have taken steps to mitigate such problems, for
instance through land
zoning legislations.
Some late adopters have even managed to avoid some problems through
proactive legislation, e.g. Mexico. The situation in Mexico is
unique owing to the strongly government-regulated market. Even
after the liberalisation in the early 1990s, most shrimp farms are
still owned and controlled by locals or local co-ops (
ejidos).
Social tensions have occurred due to changes in the
wealth distribution within populations.
The effects of this are mixed, though, and the problems are not
unique to shrimp farming. Changes in the distribution of wealth
tend to induce changes in the power structure within a community.
In some cases, there is a widening gap between the general
population and local élites who have easier access to credits,
subsidies, and permits and thus are more likely to become shrimp
farmers and benefit more. In Bangladesh, on the other hand, local
élites were opposing shrimp farming, which was controlled largely
by an urban élite. Land concentrations in a few hands has been
recognized to carry an increased risk of social and economic
problems developing, especially if the landowners are
non-local.
In general, it has been found that shrimp farming is accepted best
and introduced most easily and with the greatest benefits for the
local communities if the farms are owned by local people instead of
by restricted remote élites or large companies because local owners
have a direct interest in maintaining the environment and good
relations with their neighbors, and because it avoids the formation
of large-scale land property.
See also
- Freshwater prawn farming
shares many characteristics and problems with marine shrimp
farming. Unique problems are introduced by the main species' (the
giant river prawn,
Macrobrachium rosenbergii) developmental life cycle. The
global annual production of freshwater prawns (excluding crayfish and crabs) in 2003 was
about 280,000 tonnes, of which China produced some 180,000 tonnes,
followed by India and Thailand with some 35,000 tonnes each. China
also produced about 370,000 tonnes of Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir
sinensis).
- Shrimp fishery
- Krill fishery
Footnotes
The terminology is sometimes confusing as the distinction between "shrimp" and "prawn" is often blurred. The FAO, for instance, calls P. monodon the "Giant Tiger Prawn", but P. vannamei the "Whiteleg Shrimp". Recent aquaculture literature increasingly uses the term "prawn" only for the freshwater forms of palaemonids and "shrimp" for the marine penaeids.
Since adult shrimp are bottom dwellers, stocking densities in ponds are usually given per area, not per water volume.
The taxonomy of the whole genus Penaeus is in flux. Pérez Farfante and Kensley have proposed a subdivision or reassignment of several species in this genus to new genera based on morphological differences, in particular their genital characteristics. See Penaeus for more information. As a consequence, some of the farmed species are also known under names using the genera Litopenaeus, Farfantepenaeus, Fenneropenaeus, or Marsupenaeus instead of plain Penaeus. Penaeus vannamei, for instance, has become Litopenaeus vannamei.
Accurate statistics on shrimp farming do not exist. The FAO relies on the voluntary reporting of countries for its fisheries databases; if no numbers are reported, the FAO fills in its own "guesstimate". Such estimates are marked in the databases, but these obviously also contain estimates made already by the reporting government agencies, recognizable only by the suspiciously round numbers.
Notes
- Rönnbäck, 2001.
- Rosenberry, About Shrimp Farming.
- International Shrimp Action Network, 2000.
- Hossain & Lin, 2001.
- McClennan, 2004.
- Novelli, 2003.
- Indian Aquaculture Authority, Environment Report,
ch. 2.
- FAO, Impacts of salt-affected soils.
- van Wyk et al., HBOI Manual, ch. 4.
- van Wyk et al., HBOI Manual, ch. 6.
- Tacon, 2002.
- Chautard et al., p. 39.
- Rosenberry, Species of Farm-raised Shrimp.
- Josueit, p. 8.
- Bondad-Reantaso et al.
- Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission: Non-Native Species Summaries: Yellowhead Virus
(YHV), 2003. URL last accessed 2005-06-23.
- OIE: Aquatic Manual, sect. 4.1.3.
- OIE: Aquatic Manual, sect. 4.1.2.
- Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission: Non-Native Species Summaries: White Spot Syndrome
Baculovirus Complex (WSBV), 2003. URL last accessed
2005-06-23.
- OIE: Aquatic Manual, sect. 4.1.1.
- OIE: Aquatic Manual, sect. 4.1.6.
- van Wyk et al., HBOI Manual, ch. 9.
- Rosenberry, Chloramphenicol, 2005.
- Ceatech USA, Inc.: The Rationale to use SPF broodstock. URL last
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- FIGIS; FAO databases, 2007.
- Josueit, p. 9.
- FAO: GLOBEFISH Shrimp Market Reports;
FAO GlobeFish; 2003 –
2005.
- Josueit, p. 16.
- FoodMarket: Shrimp Production; data from GlobeFish,
2001. URL last accessed 2005-06-23.
- Josueit p. 7f.
- Funge-Smith & Briggs, 2003.
- Lewis et al.
- Thai Farmers Research Center, 2004.
- Rosenberry, Shrimpnews, 2005.
- Global Aquaculture Alliance: Antidumping. URL last accessed 2005-08-23.
- Rosenberry, B.: Annual Reports on World Shrimp Farming; Comments
on shrimp prices in the on-line excerpts 2000–2004. URL last
accessed 2005-08-18.
- Lewis et al., p. 22.
- Consortium Draft Report, p. 43.
- Barraclough & Finger-Stich, p. 14.
- Indian Aquaculture Authority: Environment Report,
ch. 6, p. 76.
- Hempel et al., p. 42f
- Consortium Draft Report, p. 45.
- Lewis et al., p. 1.
- Barraclough & Finger-Stich, p. 17.
- Kumaran et al., 2003.
- Barraclough & Finger-Stich, p. 15.
- McClennan, p. 55.
- Tanavud et al., p. 330.
- Wilkinson
- Fitzpatrick et al.
- Valiela et al., 2001.
- Owen, 2004.
- National Aquaculture Association (NAA): Antibiotic Use in Aquaculture: Center for Disease
Control Rebuttal, NAA, U.S., December 20, 1999. URL last
accessed 2007-11-26.
- NACA/MPEDA: Health Manual, 2003.
- World Rainforest Movement: Unsustainable versus sustainable shrimp
production, WRM Bulletin 51, October 2001. URL last
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- Consortium, Draft Report.
- Rönnbäck, 2003.
- NACA: Codes and Certification; Network of
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2005-08-19.
- Boyd et al., 2002.
- Global Aquaculture Alliance: Responsible
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- Barraclough & Finger-Stich, p. 23ff.
- DeWalt, 2000.
- Hempel et al., p. 44.
- Barraclough & Finger-Stich, p. 37.
- Consortium: Draft Report, p. 47.
- New, M. B.: Farming Freshwater Prawns; FAO Fisheries
Technical Paper 428, 2002. ISSN 0429-9345.
- Data extracted from the FAO Fisheries Global Aquaculture Production
Database for freshwater crustaceans. The most recent data sets
are for 2003 and sometimes contain estimates. Accessed
2005-06-28.
- Pérez Farfante & Kensley, 1997.
- Rosenberry, B.: Annual Reports on World Shrimp Farming; Comments
on the quality of aquaculture statistics in the on-line excerpts
2000–2004. URL last accessed 2005-08-18.
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External links
- FAO Fisheries Department: Review of the State of World Aquaculture,
FAO Fisheries Circular 886, Rev. 1; FAO, 1997. ISSN 0429-9329.
- Holthuis, L. B.: FAO Species Catalogue, Vol. I: Shrimps and Prawns of the World,
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28, 1996. Part of a series for which the newspaper The
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1997.
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Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA) has many of the
World Bank et al. reports and a lot of current information
about shrimp farming in Asia.
- Scampi.nu
is a Swedish web site critical of shrimp farming that has many
excellent links to English articles.
- Mai Po gei wai is a WWF-managed extensive shrimp farm
in Hong
Kong
.
- Monterey Bay Aquarium
'Seafood Guide' offers good information on
choosing seafood that is caught using sustainable and
environmentally aware methods.
- Environmental Justice Foundation The Environmental
Justice Foundation has created several video and written reports
about the damaging shrimp farming causes to coastal habitats.
- Shrimp farming, from Greenpeace.