SEAFDECINSTITUTIONAL REPOSITORY
    • English
    • ไทย
    • 日本語
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • Bahasa Melayu
    • Burmese
    • Filipino
    • Khmer
    • Lao
    • Tiếng Việt
  • Khmer 
    • English
    • ไทย
    • 日本語
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • Bahasa Melayu
    • Burmese
    • Filipino
    • Khmer
    • Lao
    • Tiếng Việt
  • ចូល
ការបង្ហាញធាតុ 
  •   ផ្ទះ
  • 03 SEAFDEC External Publications
  • Journal Articles, Conference Papers and Book Chapters by SEAFDEC Staff
  • Conference Proceedings
  • AQD Conference Proceedings
  • ការបង្ហាញធាតុ
  •   ផ្ទះ
  • 03 SEAFDEC External Publications
  • Journal Articles, Conference Papers and Book Chapters by SEAFDEC Staff
  • Conference Proceedings
  • AQD Conference Proceedings
  • ការបង្ហាញធាតុ
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

A primer on putian.

Thumbnail
រកមើល / បើកOpen
កាលបរិច្ឆេទ
1986
អ្នកនិពន្ធ
Primavera, Jurgenne H.
Page views
669
ទិន្នន័យមេតា
មើលកំណត់ត្រាលម្អិតនៃធាតុ

Share 
 
អរូបី
With the growing interest among fishfarmars in the culture of sugpo or Penaeus monodon, some attention is being focused on the lesser known prawns and shrimps such as putian, Hipong puti (Tagalog), putian (Cebuano, Ilongo), lunhan (Cebuano) and udang putih (Indonesia) are collective names given to two closely related species -- Penaeus indicus, so named bacause it is the Indian prawn and P. merguiensis or the banana prawn which gets its specific name from the Mergui Archipelago in Thailand, its type locality. Both are also called white prawn referring to their light color and almost transparent shell.

Aside from the Philippines and Indonesia, the distribution of these Indo-West Pacific species extends from Southest Africa for P. indicus and the Persian Gulf for P. merguiensis to India, South China, Southeast Asia, North Australia and New Guinea.

Very similar in apperance, the two species can be differentiated by means of a straight rostrum and high traingular rostral crest for P. merguiensis and curved rostrum amd low rostral crest for P. indicus. More convenient for a laymen is to associate yellowish to greenish antennae with P. indicus and a brown or raddish antennae with P. merguiensis. The maximum recorded body weight is 50 g and 35 g, respectively, for P. merguiensis and P. indicus.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10862/511
ប្រធានបទ
Crustacea; Shrimp culture; Seed resources; Pond culture; Shrimps; Penaeus merguiensis; Penaeus indicus
បណ្តុំបណ្តុំ
  • AQD Conference Proceedings [298]

© SEAFDEC 2025
អាស័យ​ដ្ឋាន​ទំនាក់ទំនង
 

 

រុករក

ឃ្លាំងទាំងមូលសហគមន៍ / ការប្រមូលកាលបរិច្ឆេទចេញផ្សាយអ្នកនិពន្ធចំណងជើងប្រធានបទការប្រមូលនេះ។កាលបរិច្ឆេទចេញផ្សាយអ្នកនិពន្ធចំណងជើងប្រធានបទ

អ្នកប្រើប្រាស់ដែលបានចុះឈ្មោះ

ចូល
Related Links
SEAFDEC/TD IRSEAFDEC/AQD IRSEAFDEC/MFRDMD IRSEAFDEC/IFRDMD IR

© SEAFDEC 2025
អាស័យ​ដ្ឋាន​ទំនាក់ទំនង