The cold water fisheries deal with fisheries activity in water where temperature of water ranges from 5 to 25 degrees centigrade. The water temperature under cold water fisheries should not be more than 25°C even in summer. Such conditions in India occur in Himalayan and peninsular regions.
9 Fines...
The cold water fisheries deal with fisheries activity in water where temperature of water ranges from 5 to 25 degrees centigrade. The water temperature under cold water fisheries should not be more than 25°C even in summer. Such conditions in India occur in Himalayan and peninsular regions.
9 Finest Coldwater Aquarium Fish
Orangethroat Darter.
Three-Spined Stickleback.
Orange-Spotted Sunfish.
Diamond Sturgeon.
Siberian Sturgeon.
Sterlet.
Fathead Minnow.
Southern redbelly dace.
Tench.
Rosy Barb. Hailing from Afghanistan and Bangladesh, this little fish is tolerant of temperatures in …
Gold Barb. The gold bard, or Chinese barb, is an extremely popular cold-water fish. Any aquarium …
Two Spot Barb. This fish hails from Nepal, India, and Pakistan. The omnivorous two spot barb …
Bloodfin Tetra. Natives to Southern Brazil and Paraguay, both the standard bloodfin .
Coldwater fish in terms of the aquarium trade refers to any fish species that prefer cooler water temperatures. The optimal temperatures for these fish hover around the 68-degree mark, although each species’ temperature range may vary from the norm.
Size: 2.26 MB
Language: en
Added: Jul 20, 2020
Slides: 97 pages
Slide Content
Ashish sahu
INTRODUCTION
High Oxygen
Low Carbon dioxide
Inorganic soil
Sparse vegetation and food
Low fertility & high transparency
CONTD…
High & mid-latitude lakes,rivers,streams,their
tributaries & reservoirs dammed across such rivers
Located 914m above msl
Temperature : 0°-20°C
IMCs do not survive
Contribute less to total inland fish production
but comprise unique biodiversity with valuable
indigenous germplasm & maintain
environmental quality in hills
Trouts & salmons are the only exotic game
fishes introduced
•Coldwater species –in Himalayas & Peninsular hill
ranges
•Maintain relatively low temperatures & supports
low productivity
•Waters of temperature within the tolerance of
troutsof family Salmonidaeare termed cold
•0°-20°C, optimum 10°-12°C
DISTRIBUTION
258 species spread over the Himalayas & the
Peninsular Plateau
Belong to 21 families & 76 genera
CHARACTERISTIC OF COLD WATER STREAM
V-shaped valley
High gradient
Clean water
Rocky and gravelly bottom
Little organic matter and cool temperature.
DISTRIBUTION IN THE INDIAN HIMALAYAS
Depends on the flow rate, nature of substratum, water
temperature & availability of food
Torrential streams-3 zones based on dominant species
& hydrological features (Sehgal,1988)
1. Headwater zone: inhabited by rheophilicloaches &
catfishes –Nemacheilusgracilis, N.stoliczkae&
Glyptostemumreticulatum
CONTD…
2. Large stream zone: formed by the
joining of headwater streams,inhabited
by Diptychusmaculatus&Nemacheilus
spp.
In the upper reaches of the most
torrential section of this zone inhabits
snow trouts–Schizothoraichthys
esocinus, S.progastus, Schizothorax
richardsonii& Schizopygopsis
stoliczkae
Intermediate reaches occupied by
Schizothoraxlongipinnus, S.planifrons
& S.micropogon
CONTD...
Least rapid reaches occupied by Garra
gotyla,Crossocheilusdiplochilus,Labeodero&
L.dyocheilus
3. Slow moving meandering zone: inhabited by
a large number of cold & eurythermalspecies-
Bariliusspp.,Torspp.,catfishes,Homalopterid
fishes & snakeheads(Channaspp.)
CONTD…
•Menon(1954) recognised6 major groups of
Himalayan fishes based on morphological
characteristics which enable them to inhabit
the torrential streams
•1. dwelling in shallow,clearcoldwater in
foothills without any striking modification to
current-Labeospp., Torspp., Bariliusspp., &
Puntiusspp.
•2.inhabiting the bottom water layers in deep
fast current, with powerful muscular
cylindrical body –Schizothoracines&
introduced trouts
CONTD…
•3. sheltering among pebbles & stone to ward off the
strong current-Crossocheilusdiplocheilus
•4. sheltering among pebbles & shingles in shallows
with special attachment devices –loaches,
Nemacheilusspp., Botiaspp. & Amblycepsspp.
•5. cling to exposed surfaces of bare rocks in lower
current with adhesive organs on the ventral side –
Garra, Glyptothorax,Glyptosternum
•6. cling to exposed surfaces of bare rocks in fast
current, with limpet shaped bodies & mouth, gills, &
fins highly moified-Balitora
TEMPERATURE TOLERANCE
Endemic Schizothoracines(Schizothoraichthys
esocinus& Diptychusmaculatus) -cold
stenothermic
Exotic Brown trout –upper tolerance 20°C.
Carps, mahseers& lesser barils–tolerate over
25°C.
Schizothoracines& brown trout –remain
active in near zero temperatures which
prevail in lesser & greater Himalayan streams
during December & January
MIGRATION
Steep fall in temperature during winter months
Schizothoracines migrate from head waters to
lower altitude & represent a sizeable part of the
catch in large rivers & their tributaries
CATEGORIZATION
•On the basis of temperature tolerance:
1. Eurythermal:-having broad temperature tolerance
level-S.richardsonii,Cyprinuscarpio& Barilius
bendelisis
•2. Stenothermal :-having a narrow temperature
tolerance level nearly uptofreezing point of water-
Salmotruttafario(brown trout),Salvilinus
fontinalis(Eastern brook trout) & Diptychus
maculatus(Tibetiansnow trout)
COLDWATER RESOURCES
WATER RESOURCES LENGTH/AREA
HIMALAYAN & DECCAN PLATEAU RIVER SYSTEMS 1000 km
BRACKISH WATER LAKES (> 3000 masl) 2340 ha
FRESHWATER NATURAL LAKES (1500 -2000masl) 18150 ha
KASHMIR HIGH MOUNTAIN LAKES ( > 3000m asl) 400 ha
VALLEY WETLAND ECOSYSTEM 3000 ha
SHIVALIK HIMALAYAN LAKES 74 ha
CENTRALHIMALAYAS ( FRESHWATER LAKES IN KUMAON REGION) 355 ha
WATER AREA UNDER RESERVOIRS 265000 ha
ECOLOGICAL ADAPTATIONS
•Endowed with great powers of locomotion & streamlined
bodies
•Possess structures adapted for clinging, burrowing or
otherwise to withstand fast water currents
•Very little food available –so mouth modified for rasping
encrusted organisms & removing algal slime off the
submerged rocks
•Lips modified for removing periphyticorganisms-in snow
trout, mahseer, certain minor carps & minor catfishes
CONTD…
•not adapted for feeding in deep &
muddy waters
Adapted to live in highly oxygenated
waters –so gill openings narrowed &
gills reduced –so cannot live in
waters poor in oxygen
SPECIES DIVERSITY
Indigenous + exotic –258 species
spread over the Himalayas & the
Peninsular plateau
21 families & 76 genera
Vast & varied piscine diversity –tiny
loaches to mighty mahseers
Known for sports,for food & for
ornamental value
SPORT FISHES
Principal species of sport value in Kashmir,Himachal
Pradesh,Uttarakhand,North-Eastern states,Nilgiris,Kodai
hills & Munnar ranges:
Brown trout –Salmo trutta fario
Rainbow trout –Salmo giardneri
Golden mahseer –Tor putitora
Deep bodied mahseer –Tor tor
Copper mahseer –Tor mosal
Black mahseer –Naziritor chelynoides
Chocolate mahseer –Neolissocheilus hexagonolepis
Salmo trutta fario
Brown trout
Salmo giardneri
Rainbow trout
Tor putitora
Golden mahseer
Tor tor
Deep bodied mahseer
Tor mosal
Copper mahseer
Neolissocheilus hexagonolepis
Chocolate mahseer
FOOD FISHES
Snowtrouts-schizothorax spp., Schizothoraichthys
spp. &Lepidopygopsis typus
Tor spp., Common carp,& a few minor carps(L.dero &
L.dyocheilus)
But contribution to commercial fisheries is low:
* slow growth & small size –fetch low price
* main gear –cast net –one man unit –so hardly any
community fishing
Meagre transportation facilities
ORNAMENTAL FISHES
Many colourful & fascinating species recognised
as ornamentals
uplands of N-E Himalaya known as Repository of
Ornamental fish species
INDIGENOUS COLDWATER FISHES
Mahseer ,Snow trout & Indian hill trout
Important mahseers:
Tor tor(Hamilton): head shorter than depth of
the body
Attains a length of 1.5m
Occurs along the foothills of Himalayas from
Kashmir to Assam & in R.Narmada & R.Tapti
Prolonged breeding season
IMPACTS OF INTRODUCTION OF EXOTICS
Schizothoracineslosing ground in Dallake in kashmir
due to highly fecund Common carp
Both have identical feeding habits –feeding on
detritus and benthos
Brown troutsalso prey upon younger stages of
Schizothoracines
Common carp & Silver carps introduced in
Gobindsagar& Pong reservoirs & in Dal& Kumaon
lakes now dominates the catches
FISHERIES
Divided into two:
1.Subsistence Fishery
2.Recreational Fishery
Commercial fishery is on a limited scale –low
fish production because of low biological
productivity
HIMALAYAS –2 ZONES
1. Rithron Zone
2.Potamon Zone
RITHRON ZONE
Monthly mean temperature: 17.3°C
High concentration of DO: 10.1 mg/l
Fast current: 0.9 –1.8 m/s
Turbulent water
Rocky substratum with sand & silt patches
& some pools
Stenothermic fishes –brown trout & snow
trout
POTAMON ZONE
Higher mean water temperature: 22.1°C
DO: 8 mg/l
Current velocity: 0.5 -0.7 m/s
Subsratum –boulders, stones, gravel & patches of
aquatic vegetation
Fish fauna is eurythermic/warm-stenothermic
SPORT & RECREATIONAL FISHERY
Tor putitora,Tor tor & Salmo trutta
Trout : in J&K,Himachal Pradesh and to a lesser in
the Central & East Himalayas
Permitted to be caught in the rod & line using
both artificial & live baits
Mahseer : Tor putitora,Tor tor, & Tor mosal
Wide range distribution in the Himalayan rivers
MAHSEER FISHING
5 principal ways for Mahseer fishing
Fly fishing
Spinning
Live bait fishing
Gram fishing
Paste fishing
•North –Western Himalayas:
•8 species of fish –commercial importance
•Relative occurrence in catches:
•Schizothoraxrichardsonii–64 %
•S.esocinus–6.8%
•Garragotyla–5.7%
•Tor putitora–3.9%
•Labeodero–0.2%
•Other fishes –8.5%
S.esocinuscontributed 53.2 % of the total
catch in the coldwater stretches of the Indus
river & 21.9% in the Jhelum river(1998)
GEARS USED
•Cast nets, drag nets, stake nets, bag nets
•Traps, nooses,harpoons
•Poison:
Sap of Euphorbia rogleana
Powdered seed of Xanthoxylumalatum
Powdered seed of Cascariatormentosa
LAKES
Wular, Dal,Manasbal-situated in Kashmir valley
at an altitude of 1537-1587m asl
Schizothoracines: S.niger,S.micropogon,
S.curvirostris,S. planifrons,S.esocinus
Labeo dero,L.dyocheilus,C.latus,Puntius
conchonius,Glyptothorax kashmeriensis
1959-Common carp –introduced in Kashmir to
augment fish production
•Kumaonlakes-Khurpatal, Nainital, Sattal,
Bhimtal& Naukuchiatal-in Uttar Pradesh
•Bhimtal–largest lake-72 ha
•Naukuchiatal–deepest(40-80m)
•Except Khurpatal–infested with aquatic
macrophytes
•Nainital–polluted
•Silver carp & Grass carp –introduced in
Bhimtallake in 1985-’86
•Lakes Zumsar& Gadsarhave an endemic
Schizothoracine–Diptychusmaculatus
RESERVOIRS
Himachal pradesh –3 reservoirs
Gobindsagar –Sutlej river at 560m(16867ha)
Pong –Beas river at 436m(24529ha)
Pandoh –Beas river 987m(200 ha)
GOBINDSAGAR RESERVOIR
•1978 : Sutlej –Beas link completed : divert Beas
water into Gobindsagarto augment the power
generation & irrigation capacity of the reservoir
•Blending of cool Beas water & warmer Sutlej water
in the reservoir –unique pattern in thermal and
oxygen regime,& dissolved chemical components :
impact on biota
•Prior to dam construction, upper reaches of Sutlej
had 30 species of fish
Dominant Species: Tor putitora,Labeodero,
L.dyocheilus, Schizothorax& Aorichthys
seenghala
1961-62: Gobindsagarstocked with IMCs
followed by a regular stocking of Common
carp
1979 –appearance of silver carp & its
establishment -change in catch structure:
Silver carp dominated all other species
Today, introduced Silver carp & Common carp
dominate the total catch
Other commercially important species: Catla, Tor
putitora,L.rohita, Mrigal,L.calbasu, A.seenghala,
S.plagiostomus
Total fish catch increasing but percentage
contribution of indigenous Tor putitora has been
decreasing
PONG RESERVOIR
Shallow water body with lower productivity than
Gobindsagar
Fish fauna dominated by catfishes,minorcarps,etc
Stocking of Common carp & IMCs altered the catch
structure –
Rohu,A.seenghala,L.calbasu,T.putitora,Mrigal,W.att
u,Commoncarp,L.dero,Catla& Channaspp.
Maximum annual yield –33.2kg/ha recorded in
1987-’88
IMPACT
Construction of Gobindsagar& Pong reservoirs –
perinnealsource of fish supply for people of HP &
adjoining states
Certain species –adverslyaffected:
Tor putitora-no longer able to migrate to Kangra
valley due to dam at Pong
Lucklyself-reproducing stocks were established
within the new limits
Schizothoracineswere also seriously affected
PANDOH RESERVOIR
•Small, forms part of Beas –Sutlej link, diverting
Beas water to Sutlej basin
•Water temperature is cool, 16.5 -10.5°C.
•Used for occassionalrecreation/sport fishing
•Brown trout,L.dero,L.dyocheilus,T.putitora,…
AQUACULTURE
Very recent in origin,Still in developing stage
Earlier restricted to Government farms/
hatcheries-to maintain some broodstocks for
annual seed production of Brown trout –to
maintain sport fishing population
EXOTIC SPECIES CULTURE
Effort for trout culture in uplands –initiated since
1863
Sir Francis Day (1863)–made an unsuccessful
attempt to introduce eyed eggs & fry of Brown
trout & Lock-leven trout in the Nilgiri hills
Mr. F.T.Michell (1900)–succeeed in introuction
of eyed eggs of Brown trout in the Harwan
hatchery in J&K
RAINBOW TROUT
Has better growth & maximum cultivable traits
amongst coldwater species
But farming needs high investment-pond
construction,procurement of
seed,feed,maintenance of fish health & quality
water requirement
Rearing & breeding –in trout farms at Kokernag
in J&K and Patlikuhl in HP
BROWN TROUT
Methodology for reduction in mortality at
different stages-ova,alevin,fry & fingerling
Percentage survival raised to 80% from 20%
between green egg to early fry stage
TROUT PRODUCTION
25 trout hatcheries -1.5-2.0 million trout seeds per
year-for farm rearing & stocking in streams for
angling
Maximum from J&K and HP
current prductionof rainbow trout: 300-5OO T
potential to increase many folds if:
The losses from disease can be controlled
Other financial assistance including management
support,marketingfacility & processing is extended to
hill states
CARPS
3 strains of exotic carps:
Cyprinus carpio var. communis –scale carp
Cyprinus carpio var. nudus –leather carp
Cyprinus carpio var. specularis –mirror carp
Introduced in the Himalayan lakes to provide faster
growing fish in hills
MONOCULTURE OF EXOTIC CARPS
In village ponds of Kashmir
Using kitchen refuse & other runoff from the
village as a source of input
MIXED CULTURE
IMCs do not grow well in uplands, so Chinese
carps have been taken as candidate species
Feasible fish farming techniques for hill region by
DCFR(NRCCWF)
Polyculture including Common carp,Silver carp
& Grass carp –2 or 3-4 fish/m².
INDUCED BREEDING
DCFR has succeeded in induced breeding of
Silver carp & Grass carp at high altitudes at
1600m asl
6-7 years to mature in high altitudes
Advanced maturity by hormonal feeding of brood
stock
Bred by injecting Ovaprim @ 1.3-1.6 ml/kg in 2-
3 doses during 14-16 hours at 22-23°C.
Helps seed production during suitable growing
period(April-October)
INDIGENOUS SPECIES CULTURE
•Different species of: snow trouts(Schizothoraichthysesocinus,
S.progastus,Schizothoraxrichardsonii,S. nigerandS. curvifrons)
•mahseers(Tor putitoraandTor tor)
•Tor putitora,S. progastusandS. richardsoniiare
preferred-wide range of distribution in the Himalayas
•Anthropogenic & environmental stresses-decline in
fishery
•Succeeded in artificial propogation–to restore fishery
•Pure healthy seeds of Schizothoraichthys
niger,S.esocinus,S.micropogon& S.richardsonii
DEVELOPMENT ISSUES
J&K and HP –significant progress in capture
fisheries –sport fishery & aquaculture
North-Eastern states –development is in very low
level
Arunachal Pradesh & Sikkim has gained some
momentum
Cold water fishery contribute to food & nutrition
in hill regions
So need due importance in terms of finance
infrastructure & modern institutional backup
facilities
POSSIBLE MEASURES FOR FISHERIES
DEVELOPMENT
Horizontal & vertical expansion of fish culture
activities:suitablewater bodies should be
identified & brought under any one of the three
pronged farming practices-
1. Trout farming :-suitable above 1500m aslat
4-20°C
2.Polyculture:-700-1500m asl,Chinese carps
3.eco-climatic conditions below 500m asl-
composite culture of IMCs & Chinese carps
CONTD…
paddy cum fish culture: initiated in Arunachal &
Manipur need to be expanded to other hills also
Production enhancement in lentic systems:
By intensive culture practices-rational stocking &
harvesting,cage & pen culture based on
autochthonus productivity of water body
Development of ornamental fishery:
N.E hills –number of ornamental fish species
Collection,breeding & rearing –provide lucrative
profession
CONSERVATION & MANAGEMENT
•Increased use of river water for irrigation,
hydropower production,municipal& industrial
purpose & inputs of pollutants-affects fish
stocks
•Stock enhancement –by regular releases of
hatchery produced fingerlings
•Better estimates of carrying capacity-better
regulation of recreational fishing,stockingrates
can also be determined
CONTD…
Increased demand for trout fishing in
Himalayas –authorities enforced a reduction
in bag limit & closed certain streams
Study on recapture of tagged fish –needed to
estimate the percentage return of stocked fish
Need to improve infrastructure for
recreational fishing –attract more tourists
In Kashmir 273km of streams available for
trout fishing,HP-184km,UP-150km
FUTURE PERSPECTIVES
Now at 4% growth in farming, production of
brown trout is 150 T –can be increased to
200T
Domestic demand is 800T –so steps must be
taken to increase production
Further promote feed industry & preservation
units at high altitudes
Also short & long duration transportation of
trouts will come into operation
CONTD..
Establishment of carp hatcheries in lower
altitudes –to meet the demand of local farmers
Tremendous potential for running water fish
culture based on exotic carps-should be
encouraged by providing knowhow & seed to
farmers
Contd…
Approach for overall fisheries development:
Expansion of fish culture activities in all potential
areas
Integrated aquaculture
Stock diversification
Implementation of suitable production
enhancement measures in lakes & reservoirs
Development of ornamental fishery
Promotion of fishery based eco-tourism at suitable
states
PENINSULAR INDIA
Western ghats
Aravali range
Vindhya mountain
Satpura mountain
WESTERN GHATS
Western ghat area
Three major drainage system.
Rivers and streams do not show zonetion of
water parameter.
102 Fish species found in Western Ghats area
Various spp of cyprinidae are dominant
Exotic varity of spp are also found
SEED PRODUCTION
Since 1970 the Tata Electric Companies (TEC)
fish seed farm at Lonavla, Maharashtra.
1970s-bothT. khudreea ndT. torwere
successfully bred using hypophysation
Successful artificial breeding ofTor putitora,
a Himalayan species, was achieved in the
same fish farm in 1995 and 1996
"Rehabilitation and Development of Mahseer
Fishery in the Rivers and Reservoirs of Western
Ghats“-project of the Department of Fisheries,
Karnataka-1987
Indian trout (Raiamas bola) -have excellent potential
to become a sport fish in streams & rivers of the
Western Ghats where mahseer is not common
Subsistence fishery based on the captured of medium-
sized fish, Barilius gatensis,Puntius carnaticus
,P.sarana,Labeospp., Cirrhinus fulungee
,Crossocheilus latius,Garraspp.,Mystus
malabaricus,M. vittatus,Xenentodon cancila,Channa
gachua&Mastacembelus armatus
LAKES
Ooty (2500 m altitude, 34.0 ha) in Nilgiris
the Kodaikanal (2285 m, 26 ha)
the Berijam in the Palni Hills
All 3 situated in the state of Tamil Nadu
Two smaller lakes, the Devicolam (6.0 ha) and
the Letchmi Elephant (2.0 ha) are in the
Munnar High Range
Lake Yercaud (1340 m, 8 ha) in Shevaroy
Hills
.
COMMON SPECIES
Danio spp,Rasbora daniconius,Gambusia
affinis, rainbow trout and common carp
RESERVOIRS
Lonavla & Walwahn-Maharashtra
V.V. Sagar, K.R. Sagar & Tungabhadra -
Malnad area of Karnataka
Mettur, Upper Bhawani, Mukurti, Parson's
Valley, Avalanche, Emarold, Pykara,
Sandynulla & Glenmorgan -Tamil Nadu
Kundallay & Maddupatty -High Range of
Kerala.
Lonavla, Walwahn, Upper Bhawani, Mukurti,
Parson's Valley, Avalanche, Emarold, Pykara,
Sandynulla, Glenmorgan, Kundally & Madupatty-
important for their commercial & sport fisheries
for trout, mahseer & common carp
AQUACULTURE
•Introduction and development of aquaculture of
trout in MunnarHigh Range, Kerala, attempedin
1909 with the importation of eyed eggs of brown
trout(not succeed)
•preference was switched over to the rainbow
brought in from Sri Lanka
•by 1941 a trout farm was established at
Eravikolam, followed one at Rajamallay
•More recently, these hatcheries in High Range
were taken over by the Tata Tea Company.
aquaculture of mahseer (Tor khudree) –in
Lonavla in a privately owned hatchery of the
Tata Electric Companies
brood stock is collected from the Walwahn
reservoirs during July-August using gill nets
main objective of the aquaculture of rainbow
trout in the Western Ghats-to meet the
requirements of the sport and recreational
fishery
INTRODUCTION OF EXOTICS
Trout in Nilgiris: first attempt to transplant
trout in Tamilnadu, India
Sir Francis Day –2 attempts to introduce
Brown trout in 1863 & 1866 –unsuccessful
1906 –Wilson succeeded in transplanting &
culture in a scientific manner
Mirror carp introduced in 1939 in Niligiri
from Ceylon .
•Trout in Kodaihills: first in Kodaikanallake in 1894 –but
unsuccessful
•1943 –Freeman transplanted fingerlings of Rainbow trout
from MunnarHigh Range Angling Association
•Tenchintroduced in 1874 Ootylake from England by Mac
•Carrassiussp was introduced in 1874 from Central America
in Ootylake
Trout in Kashmir: first attempt in 1900-brown trout but
unsuccessful.
Mr. F.T.Michell (1900)–succeeed in introuction of eyed eggs
of Brown trout in the Harwan hatchery in J&K
5 species of trouts & salmons introduced in Kashmir –
Brown,Rainbow,Eastern brook,the Splake(hybrid of Lake trout
& Brook trout) & the Sebago salmon
Brown & Rainbow trouts acclimatized well both in streams &
farms
Eastern Brook trout –low fecundity & viability of fertilized
eggs –hinder its spread
Trout in HP : first attempted in 1909-brown
trout itroduced in beas rver in kullu velly.
Rainbow trout from Kashmir in 1919
Culture abandoned due to susceptibility to
infections
Trout in Kumaon Himalayas: 1910, trout
spp
Do not prove success because of high
summer temperatures
TROUT HATCHERIES
Avalanche Hatchery: at an altitude of 2280m
First to built in the country
7 stocking ponds, 20 uncemented nurseries
Water supply from near by stream
Stripping season: September to February
Survival from green egg to fry: 16.91-67.44%
AVALANCHE HATCHERY
Rajamallay Hatchery: small, at an altitude of
2295m asl
4 nursery & 6 stocking ponds
Stripping season: October -January
Hatcheries at Achhabal, Laribal & Harwan:
In Kashmir
Achhabal-water supply from a spring, Laribal
& Harwan from streams
Achhabal –one of the largest & biggest in the
state
Stripping season: Mid-November to end-
December
contd…
Barrot Hatchery:
At an altitude of 2068m in HP
water supply from a spring
Stripping season same as in Kashmir: Mid-
November to end December
Contd…
Kulu Hatcheries:
Mahili & Patlikuhl
At an altitude of 1462m
Fed by streams
Hatching troughs have individual water
supply
CONSERVATION & MANAGEMENT
Conserving the spawning ground of trout
Studying the carrying capacity of trout streams
to make sport fishery attactive
Conserving masheers and snowtrouts to save
them from extinction
Improving existence trout hatchery
Evolving dry, compound pelleted feeds for trout.
CONTD..
•Improving existance stock of brown and
rainbow trouts to produce healthy disease
resistance stock.
•Increasing selectivity of fast growing rainbow
trout strains to increase trout production on
commercial lines.
•Establishing farms and hatcheries for extensive
production of mahaseer and snow trout.
CONTD…
Regulations for trout fishing need to be revised-
to ensure a high and sustained fish yield to
anglers
finances and manpower should be made
available-for better management
protection of spawning fish from poachers and
of spawning beds
REFERENCES
•Cold water fisheries of India: V.G.Jhingran&
K.L.Sehgal
•http://www.ct.gov/dep/lib/dep/water/water_quality
_management/monitoringpubs/coldwater.pdf
•Fish & fisheries of India: V.G.Jhingran
•Twenty five years of research on coldwater
fisheries in India: K.L.Sehgal
•Handbook of fisheries & aquaculture: ICAR
2011
•http://www.fao.org
•http://agritech.tnau.ac.in