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Starting a mud crab hatchery
by Junelyn S. de la Rosa |
January-March
2004
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"Clasping"
mud crabs |
Today, more and more farmers are going into
mud crab farming. Studies have shown that mud crab farming
is a very lucrative business with a 1.54 return on investment
in only 60 days. Scientists from the College of Fisheries
and Ocean Sciences of the University of the Philippines in
the Visayas (UPV) have prepared a guide in starting a mud
crab hatchery.
Mud crab species
There are four kinds of mud crabs in the Philippines: the
king crab (Scylla serrata), the purple crab (S. tranquebarica),
the orange or red crab (S. olivacea), and the rare green mud
crab (S. paramamosain). Among the mud crabs, the king crab
is the most popular for its fast growth and flavor and is
called an "export winner" for its high demand in
the international market.
Hatchery/nursery
facilities
Tanks for broodstock maturation, rearing, spawning, nursing,
and for holding water should be constructed. They can be made
of concrete, fiberglass or wood with dimensions of 0.5 to
1 cubic meter. The number of tanks should depend on the number
of larvae and crablets that you are planning to produce.
Food production
Mud crabs feed on phytoplankton and zooplankton. Thus, in
any hatchery one must learn how to culture phytoplankton to
ensure that there is enough food for the mud crab juveniles.
The first step to phytoplankton culture is obtaining an algal
starter from laboratories or institutions that are selling
them.
Chlorella, Nannochloropsis, and Tetraselmis
are the common algae. You can start culturing them in one-liter
capacity bottles. When the phytoplankton has bloomed and the
density is 3 to 5 x 105 cells/ml, transfer them to ten-liter
carboys. Upon reaching the same density, they should be transferred
to a 0.5 to 1 ton- tanks where they will be allowed to bloom
more.
In culturing phytoplankton, maintain the water
temperature from 20-25 °C for indoor culture and provide
good aeration to give enough supply of carbon needed for plant
growth. And use boiled or filtered seawater with a salinity
of 25-30 ppt for the culture and sterilize all the containers
before use.
Also, for bigger culture, use urea (21-0-0)
and ammonium phosphate (16-20-0) to supply the essential nutrients
needed by the algae.
Broodstock management
and spawning
The major source of broodstock is the wild-caught post juveniles
or half-grown crabs while adult or berried female crabs are
used as spawners. A minimum weight of 200 to 300 grams for
broodstock and 450 grams for spawners are desired.
The king crab is sexually matured when the
width of its carapace reaches 14 cm and it weighs 450 grams
while the other mud crabs can spawn even if its carapace is
still below 10 cm and weigh 300 grams.
As soon as the broodstocks and spawners of
the king crab arrive at the hatchery- they place them in the
tanks at 300 spawners per tank and 1000 broodstocks per tank
with a 10 cm sand substrate at the bottom. Feed them daily
with mussel meat (Perna viridis) at 5% to 10% of their biomass.
Change the water (at least 30%), scrub the sides of the tank
and remove excess feed daily.
Mud crabs become mature and mate when they are 4 months old.
In ponds or tanks, male and female crabs clasp for 5 to 7
days to fertilize the eggs.
There are two methods of spawning: the natural
and the induced. In the natural method, the mud crab is left
in the tanks until they become sexually mature and spawn.
For induced spawning, the most common method used is ablation
where one (unilateral ablation) or both (bilateral ablation)
of the mud crab's eye stalks are crushed or cut to induce
spawning 7-13 days after fertilization.
The advantage of unilateral ablation is that the mud crab
can spawn again while in bilateral ablation the mud crab dies
after hatching the eggs. In both cases, observe the mud crabs
closely until the eggs fill the abdominal flap.
Since ablation increases the appetite of the
mud crabs, feed the mud crabs more until the eggs are hatched.
Incubation ranges from 7 to 13 days. At this time, the berried
(pregnant) crabs should be transferred to another tank without
the substrate. Expect the eggs to hatch when the eggs turn
from light orange to dark grey.
After the eggs are hatched, transfer the larvae
into the large tanks filled with 5-10 tons of filtered seawater
with 34 ppt salinity. Add algae and rotifer at a rate of 5
x 10 (3) cells per cubic meter and 25 ind/ml, respectively.
Yeast-grown rotifer may also be added at 5 ind/ml. Give supplemental
diet of 6 grams/ton/day and feed them at 6AM, 12 NN, 6 PM
and 12 MN.
Rearing of larvae
in nursery
Line the nursery tanks with soil (10 cm thick) inoculated
with lab-lab. For large tanks, line them with mud substrate
that has been seeded with lab-lab. Apply lime and chicken
manure at 2 kg/ 10-ton tank and ammonium phosphate at 500
grams per tank. After fertilization, transfer the megalopae
at a density of 20,000 to 30,000 per cubic meter. Apply organic
fertilizer to encourage the lab-lab to bloom.
For those using hapa nets as nurseries, use
hapa nets with a mesh size of 1 mm and a dimension of 1m x
1 mx 1.5 m. Install the nets in a canvass-lined earthen pond.
Line the hapa net bottom with 3-5 cm thick mud substrate.
Apply chicken manure and inorganic fertilizer (16-20-0) at
a rate of 20 g to 500 g /cubic meter. Fill the pond with water
until a depth of 20 cm to promote growth of microbenthic algae
that will serve as food for the larvae. Other organisms such
as bloodworms, oligochaetes could also serve as food for the
larvae. Harvest by totally draining the pond. 
Source: “A guide to hatchery and nursery
production of mud crab (Scylla serrata) juveniles” by
Romeo Fortes, Juliana Baylon, Evelyn Marasigan, Allan Failaman,
Gerome Genodepaz, Sol Garibay and Gisela Ann Mamon of the
College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences at the University
of the Philippines in the Visayas, Miag-ao, Ilo-ilo.
Photo: www.todayaqua.com
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