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

Comparison of various water replenishment and fertilization schemes in brackishwater milkfish ponds

Thumbnail
View/Open
Request this document
Date
1989
Author
Bombeo-Tuburan, Isidra
Page views
85
Metadata
Perlihat publikasi penuh

Cited times in Scopus



Share 
 
Abstract
The study was undertaken to determine the optimum combination of the frequency of water replenishment and fertilization that can yield the highest growth, survival, and gross production of milkfish. Results indicated that mean body weight and survival were not significantly different (P > 0.05) among the treatments. Gross fish production was higher in biweekly fertilization if considered as a single factor. However, when this was in combination with the weekly or biweekly water replenishment, similar gross fish production was attained. In any case, because biweekly fertilization has a better effect than a weekly schedule, the former should be used in combination with any other level of replenishment. A weekly water replenishment, however, is impractical in big pond areas of 5–10 ha compartments which are still common in some milkfish ponds in the Philippines. Therefore, biweekly water replenishment and fertilization with 16–20–0 at 50 kg ha-1 would be reasonable.
Description
Contribution No. 224 of the SEAFDEC Aquaculture Department.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10862/1215
Suggested Citation
Bombeo-Tuburan, I. (1989). Comparison of various water replenishment and fertilization schemes in brackishwater milkfish ponds. Journal of Applied Ichthyology, 5(2), 61-66.
DOI
10.1111/j.1439-0426.1989.tb00474.x
Subject
feeding experiments ASFA; habitat improvement (fertilization) ASFA; water quality ASFA; biological production ASFA; water management ASFA; pond culture ASFA; Chanos chanos AGROVOC
Taxonomic term
Chanos chanos GBIF
Koleksi
  • AQD Journal Articles [1175]

Related items

Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

  • Thumbnail

    Acute nitrite toxicity and methemoglobinemia in juvenile milkfish (Chanos chanos Forsskal) 

    Almendras, Jesus Manolo E. (Elsevier, 1987)
    Nitrite was about 55 times more toxic to milkfish juveniles in fresh water than in 16% brackish water: the 48-h median lethal concentrations were 12 mg NO2-N/l (95% confidence limit=7.4–19.6) and 675 mg ...
  • Thumbnail

    Limnological notes on the finfish production problem of Laguna de Bay. 

    Santiago, Alejandro E. (College of Arts and Sciences, University of the Philippines, 1988)
    Environmental problems have significantly affected fishery production and management in Laguna de Bay, the largest lake in the Philippines. Fishermen and fishpen operators are complaining about the slow growth of fish and ...
  • Thumbnail

    [The Philippines recommends for milkfish:] Pond culture 

    Corre Jr., Valeriano L.; Saclauso, Crispino A.; Garcia, Yolanda T.; Salayo, Nerissa D.; The Milkfish Technical Committee 2016 (DOST-PCAARRD, 2016)

© SEAFDEC 2023
Contact Us
 

 

Lihat

Semua PublikasiKomunitas & KoleksiTanggal terbitPengarangJudulSubjekKoleksi iniTanggal terbitPengarangJudulSubjek

Akunku

MasukDaftar

Statistics

View Usage Statistics
Related Links
SEAFDEC/TD IRSEAFDEC/AQD IRSEAFDEC/MFRDMD IRSEAFDEC/IFRDMD IR

© SEAFDEC 2023
Contact Us