Take care,
Gretchen
Posted 10 April 2008 - 03:07 PM
Posted 10 April 2008 - 03:46 PM
Is it legal to collect/ship these? I'm looking for a fish to breed as feeders, and someone recommended these guys.We have a problem with invasive Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) in southern Mississippi (ecapees from aquaculture facilities that have established breeding populations in the wild). I just pulled these out of a swamp behind our offices yesterday.
Posted 10 April 2008 - 04:06 PM
Is it legal to collect/ship these? I'm looking for a fish to breed as feeders, and someone recommended these guys.
http://forum.nanfa.o...h...ost&p=34747
I'm talking about an indoor tank so no chance of escape (and I live in Vermont -- they couldn't survive here anyway). But... it it's against the law, I guess I'll need to get them from a legal source (aquaculture, I guess).
Thanks, Jase
Posted 10 April 2008 - 04:11 PM
Ok, so you're telling me that you can't catch and ship some?For aquaculture purposes, I believe (hope!) you need to get them from a legal source. If you choose to aquaculture these fish please be very ecologically resposible with your operation. People thought they couldn't survive in MS either (I know VT is much colder, however...).
Take care, Gretchen
Posted 10 April 2008 - 04:21 PM
For aquaculture purposes, I believe (hope!) you need to get them from a legal source. If you choose to aquaculture these fish please be very ecologically resposible with your operation. People thought they couldn't survive in MS either (I know VT is much colder, however...).
Take care,
Gretchen
Posted 10 April 2008 - 04:23 PM
Ok, so you're telling me that you can't catch and ship some?
Posted 10 April 2008 - 04:31 PM
Edited by silverperch, 10 April 2008 - 04:56 PM.
Posted 10 April 2008 - 04:53 PM
How's this look for "well outside the tolerance range"?I think production of tilapia should only be done under extremely controlled conditions indoors unless at latitudes well outside the tolerance range of the exotic species in question. Accurate knowledge of tolerance range would be needed.
Edited by jase, 10 April 2008 - 04:57 PM.
Posted 10 April 2008 - 08:49 PM
How's this look for "well outside the tolerance range"?
![]()
http://tinyurl.com/3sbz4x
http://www.weather.c...y/monthly/05477
http://www.victoryse...m/frost/vt.html
Especially check my *average* January lows. February looks about the same.
http://www.weather.c...77?climoMonth=1
Of course I'd do a lot more research (even beyond what the state might require) I were ever going to think of doing actual aquaculture of tilapia here -- but for keeping a couple in an aquarium indoors, I'd feel pretty comfortable here.![]()
I'm going to look into an aquaculture license anyway -- I've been wanting to do it for a while anyway, and I'm buying property that might let me start. I'd be looking at yellow perch, not tilapia, though. Vermont just isn't cut out for tilapia unless it's indoors or in a well-heated greenhouse.
-Jase
Posted 10 April 2008 - 09:00 PM
Yeah, unless I decided to be one of those nutjobs who raises them for personal consumption in a plastic swimming pool in his basement -- and I *am* that nutty.I agree, you are beyond what a Nile tilapia can tolerate. Heating bills will be your undoing if you decided to rear the species for the going market price. Heating issues would even be an issue with yellow perch.
Posted 10 April 2008 - 10:12 PM
Edited by BLChristie, 10 April 2008 - 10:13 PM.
Posted 10 April 2008 - 10:34 PM
What is going on know with native centrarchids and introduced tilapia in southern Florida? Some studies have been conducted. May provide insight into what a population in Mississippi might do.
Posted 11 April 2008 - 06:15 AM
Heres a paper considering the effects of introduction into N. American watersheds:
http://www.specifyso...al_CJF_2006.pdf
Though as to what specific effects they may have on out-competing natives, I would say it's a pretty scary proposition considering what the damage they've already done in Lake Victoria, with hundreds of species forced into extinction as a result.
It's also quite amazing that any state government would allow the aquaculture of such a species (except under the most controlled conditions) given their demonstrated potential for ecological devastation in the third world.
Posted 11 April 2008 - 09:45 AM
Posted 11 April 2008 - 03:52 PM
Edited by Gambusia, 11 April 2008 - 03:58 PM.
Posted 14 April 2008 - 10:56 AM
I fish a local lake that has well established populations of O. Aurea.
Bass love them as forage and they do a fair job of eating plants.
Don't think they are going to eradicate your bluegills
It is interesting that O. Niloticus is surviving in Mississippi
Posted 14 April 2008 - 11:26 AM
We think they will cause problems for our native fishes by changing the ecosystem because they are bottom-up feeders( i.e. they eat detritus, algae, and other plant material). As you said they do a fair job of eating plants. The environment I just collected them in is heavily vegetated and is prime habitat for all sorts of neat centrachids, bowfin, fundulids, gar, brown bullhead, and other fish that like that kind of habitat. The question is what would happen to that habitat with a healthy population of tilapia that feed at the base of the food chain? Would the vegetation decrease? Would sediment characteristics change (Less veg. may allow water to flow faster so sediments would become coarser) ? How would these things affect the native fish communities?
Posted 14 April 2008 - 11:51 AM
Posted 14 April 2008 - 06:37 PM
Edited by Gambusia, 14 April 2008 - 06:38 PM.
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