Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use: result from a prototype production facility

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use : result from a prototype production facility. / Gedefaw Abate, Tenaw; Nielsen, Rasmus; Nielsen, Max; Drillet, Guillaume; Jepsen, Per Meyer; Hansen, Benni Winding.

In: Aquaculture, Vol. 436, 2015, p. 72-79.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gedefaw Abate, T, Nielsen, R, Nielsen, M, Drillet, G, Jepsen, PM & Hansen, BW 2015, 'Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use: result from a prototype production facility', Aquaculture, vol. 436, pp. 72-79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2014.10.012

APA

Gedefaw Abate, T., Nielsen, R., Nielsen, M., Drillet, G., Jepsen, P. M., & Hansen, B. W. (2015). Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use: result from a prototype production facility. Aquaculture, 436, 72-79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2014.10.012

Vancouver

Gedefaw Abate T, Nielsen R, Nielsen M, Drillet G, Jepsen PM, Hansen BW. Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use: result from a prototype production facility. Aquaculture. 2015;436:72-79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aquaculture.2014.10.012

Author

Gedefaw Abate, Tenaw ; Nielsen, Rasmus ; Nielsen, Max ; Drillet, Guillaume ; Jepsen, Per Meyer ; Hansen, Benni Winding. / Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use : result from a prototype production facility. In: Aquaculture. 2015 ; Vol. 436. pp. 72-79.

Bibtex

@article{899f2e25657b4222aa8976fe18a82d79,
title = "Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use: result from a prototype production facility",
abstract = "During the last three decades, it has been shown that copepods are a superior live feed for marine finfish larvae compared to other commonly used live feed items, such as Artemia and rotifers. The use of copepods, which have a better biochemical composition, increases survival rate, improves growth condition, reduces mal-pigmentation and allows breeding of {\textquoteleft}new{\textquoteright} marine finfish species. However, copepods are not yet commercially produced and therefore not widely used in the aquaculture industry. One of the bottlenecks for large-scale production has been lack of economic knowledge on the feasibility of producing copepods for commercial application. This is the first empirical study to investigate the economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use. To this end, a standard cost-benefit analysis based on a prototype production facility of Acartia tonsa (Dana) eggs at Roskilde University, Denmark, is employed. The result reveals that commercial production of copepods is economically feasible considering the existing market prices on both copepods and competing live feed items such as rotifers. The study provides valuable information for businesses who consider investing in live feed production for marine finfish aquaculture. Furthermore, the study also highlights the economic benefits of production and utilization of copepods on productivity and species diversification in marine finfish aquaculture.",
author = "{Gedefaw Abate}, Tenaw and Rasmus Nielsen and Max Nielsen and Guillaume Drillet and Jepsen, {Per Meyer} and Hansen, {Benni Winding}",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1016/j.aquaculture.2014.10.012",
language = "English",
volume = "436",
pages = "72--79",
journal = "Aquaculture",
issn = "0044-8486",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use

T2 - result from a prototype production facility

AU - Gedefaw Abate, Tenaw

AU - Nielsen, Rasmus

AU - Nielsen, Max

AU - Drillet, Guillaume

AU - Jepsen, Per Meyer

AU - Hansen, Benni Winding

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - During the last three decades, it has been shown that copepods are a superior live feed for marine finfish larvae compared to other commonly used live feed items, such as Artemia and rotifers. The use of copepods, which have a better biochemical composition, increases survival rate, improves growth condition, reduces mal-pigmentation and allows breeding of ‘new’ marine finfish species. However, copepods are not yet commercially produced and therefore not widely used in the aquaculture industry. One of the bottlenecks for large-scale production has been lack of economic knowledge on the feasibility of producing copepods for commercial application. This is the first empirical study to investigate the economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use. To this end, a standard cost-benefit analysis based on a prototype production facility of Acartia tonsa (Dana) eggs at Roskilde University, Denmark, is employed. The result reveals that commercial production of copepods is economically feasible considering the existing market prices on both copepods and competing live feed items such as rotifers. The study provides valuable information for businesses who consider investing in live feed production for marine finfish aquaculture. Furthermore, the study also highlights the economic benefits of production and utilization of copepods on productivity and species diversification in marine finfish aquaculture.

AB - During the last three decades, it has been shown that copepods are a superior live feed for marine finfish larvae compared to other commonly used live feed items, such as Artemia and rotifers. The use of copepods, which have a better biochemical composition, increases survival rate, improves growth condition, reduces mal-pigmentation and allows breeding of ‘new’ marine finfish species. However, copepods are not yet commercially produced and therefore not widely used in the aquaculture industry. One of the bottlenecks for large-scale production has been lack of economic knowledge on the feasibility of producing copepods for commercial application. This is the first empirical study to investigate the economic feasibility of copepod production for commercial use. To this end, a standard cost-benefit analysis based on a prototype production facility of Acartia tonsa (Dana) eggs at Roskilde University, Denmark, is employed. The result reveals that commercial production of copepods is economically feasible considering the existing market prices on both copepods and competing live feed items such as rotifers. The study provides valuable information for businesses who consider investing in live feed production for marine finfish aquaculture. Furthermore, the study also highlights the economic benefits of production and utilization of copepods on productivity and species diversification in marine finfish aquaculture.

U2 - 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2014.10.012

DO - 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2014.10.012

M3 - Journal article

VL - 436

SP - 72

EP - 79

JO - Aquaculture

JF - Aquaculture

SN - 0044-8486

ER -

ID: 127712602