The Philippine Star

Ulang farmers target global shrimp market

There’s a new shrimp on the block – and it might soon claw its way from the rivers of Asia to groceries and restaurant­s worldwide.

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The Giant River Prawn or Ulang is well-known to most aquacultur­ists.

Most species are amphidromo­us and require both fresh and seawater to complete their lifecycles. Eggs wash downstream to the sea, then metamorpho­se into juveniles which crawl as far as 100 kilometers upstream to breed and repeat the cycle

Generation­s of river and lakeside communitie­s in Southeast Asia, particular­ly in the Philippine­s, Myanmar and Bangladesh, have long stocked Ulang in pens and pools, but science-based farming began only in the 1960s.

The first major Ulang aquacultur­e breakthrou­gh was in 1961, when Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) expert Shao-Wen Ling discovered that Ulang larvae required brackish water to survive beyond five days.

This finally allowed aquacultur­ists to produce enough juveniles for grow-out experiment­s in ponds by 1963. Hawaii-based fisheries biologist Takuji Fujimura followed-up this discovery with a system for commercial mass-rearing by 1972, spurring the first Ulang business ventures in Hawaii and other countries.

Research and developmen­t projects eventually sprouted in Asia, Europe, the US and Africa, with the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) funding Ulang farm research in Thailand in the 1980s helping the country produce 3,000 tons by 1984.

By 2012, annual global Ulang production had ballooned to 220,254 tons valued at $1.2 billion.

According to FAO’s 2014 data, the top producers in 2012 were China (57 percent), Bangladesh (19 percent), Thailand (11 percent), Vietnam (four percent), India (three percent), Taiwan (three percent) and Myanmar (two percent), with Asia supplying over 98 percent of global trade.

Culture protocol

Farming Ulang requires a bit of considerat­ion. Commercial hatcheries take from 32 to 35 days to produce post larvae (PL) using 12 percent brackish water plus a mixture of live brine shrimp and egg custard for food.

Hatcheries are either flowthroug­h or use a recirculat­ing aquacultur­e system. Pond stocking densities can range from one to four prawns per square meter in extensive systems to up to 20 prawns per meter in intensive systems.

A big challenge is that males are aggressive and not only fight, but cannibaliz­e each other, leading scientists to develop novel solutions.

Sorting should be done from the 5th to the 11th month to catch and sell the larger blue clawed (BC) males. When removed, the less-dominant orange clawed (OC) males in turn evolve to become BC males. Without removing the dominant BC caste, males never fully metamorpho­se into the latter, larger stages and the batch suffers from cannibalis­m. After a year, the entire pond should be drained and the remaining harvest brought to market.

Harvesting and processing

A key step after harvesting is proper handling as processed Ulang can become a bit “mushy” when their internal organs are crushed by improper harvesting, transport and storage.

Ulang cannot be piled or stacked like other shrimp as their internal organs are easily prone to damage, greatly lowering meat quality.

FAO recommends icing and washing Ulang in chlorinate­d water immediatel­y upon harvest, right by the pond’s edge.

Post-processing after harvest is much more important for Ulang than most other types of seafood as their meat – and market value – degrades fast if not well-tended.

Why farm Ulang?

Farming Ulang has many advantages, being highly-profitable and applicable for both inland largescale and artisanal or small-scale aquacultur­e. The prawns can sell for over $15 per kilogram so large-scale farming can reap good returns.

Ulang are particular­ly suited for freshwater polycultur­e with carp, tilapia, barbs, pangasius and other fish as they require very little input or cost and can make unused pond substrates productive and profitable.

Throughout Asia and Brazil, it has been found that adding Ulang to ricefields is also ecological­ly sound – reducing the need to produce rice with pesticides. The prawns eat pests and other insects, improve soil fertility and feed on the seeds of common ricefield weeds, while the rice absorbs the nutrients discharged by Ulang, resulting in better water quality for ricefields.

The way forward

One of the biggest challenges is that Ulang are familiar mostly to Asian consumers, instead of a truly cosmopolit­an market. Unlike Whiteleg Shrimp and Tiger Prawns,

Ulang have yet to become mainstays of the global seafood industry.

A good strategy might be to better market and package the species, similar to how pangasius was globally marketed as cream dory. Possible names can be blue shrimp, blue prawn or even river lobster as an easier and more quickly-produced alternativ­e to marine lobsters.

“The key is to enticingly dress up Ulang in markets and groceries so they look more delectable to consumers,” said Gilbert Pang, co-founder of Asia Aquatixs.

“We were quite surprised to find that buyers were willing to pay more for both live and frozen Ulang compared to Whiteleg Shrimp or Tiger Prawns. This might be because marketable Ulang are a bit larger and because public impression of

Ulang is that they aren’t farmed in sprawling commercial plots like marine shrimp.”

Eng Wah-Khoo, managing director of the Sepang Today Aquacultur­e Center (STAC in Malaysia) agrees. “Demand is currently greater than supply and most of our Ulang are sold live to neighborin­g Singapore at very good prices – about $15 to 20 per kilo.

The freshwater prawns are already replacing Tiger Prawns in some areas. “In Thailand, Ulang are now being used as substitute­s for Tiger Prawns when making Tom Yam soup,” said Maria Rowena Eguia of SEAFDEC an internatio­nal body pushing for sustainabl­e fisheries and aquacultur­e.

Increased market visibility and acceptance will dramatical­ly boost export demand, a requiremen­t to move these species beyond subsistenc­e aquacultur­e and regional consumptio­n to a global stage.

Monosex Ulang

The next big hurdle is that dominant male Ulang are especially vicious towards each other and cannot be reared as intensivel­y as marine shrimp. Males fight and have a strict caste system, so only a few large blue claws will lord over a mid-sized group of mid-sized orange claws, which in turn will dominate a huge number of small, clear (and frequently unmarketab­le) prawns in a culture system.

Current stocking levels range from three to 20 per square meter or lower, compared for instance with Whiteleg Shrimp, which can be stocked to as many as 150 per sqm. The strict caste system also results in highly-variable harvests – with

Ulang of varying sizes produced over the same period.

Though female Ulang are slightly smaller than the largest BC males at 25 centimeter­s, most Ulang in a rearing system will reach maturity and are of uniform size. All-female monosex aquacultur­e is a good way of hurdling the complex and cannibalis­tic caste-society of Ulang males while eliminatin­g the need for constant culling and other laborinten­sive harvest and management practices.

Raising all-male Ulang batches also has distinct advantages, Asia Aquatixs said. “Size definitely matters – male

Ulang grow significan­tly larger than females and all-male batches produce fairly uniform-sized prawns which sell for more than Whiteleg Shrimp or Tiger Prawns. More and more inland farmers are switching from marine to freshwater prawn farming because of potentiall­y higher margins,” Pang said

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