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Michelle Mbeo (centre), Gilbert Mbeo (right) and Ronald Cruz (left), at
the Lake View Fisheries hatchery in Mfangano Islands. They produce
200,000 monosex tilapia fingerlings monthly, which they hatch and rear
in cages in Lake Victoria. PHOTO | ELIZABETH OJINA | NATION MEDIA GROUP
By ELIZABETH OJINA
The water rises up and down creating beautiful waves as the wind blows soothingly from the lake.
Standing
on the shores of Lake Victoria at Ramba Beach on Mfangano Island, Homa
Bay County, one appreciates the beautiful work of nature.
It is on this magnificent beach that a family has taken cage fish rearing to a new level.
Jutting
out of the waters are two circular cages, which Thomas Wafula, the cage
manager at Lake View Fisheries Ltd that owns them, says are made from
High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE) material in a technology mostly applied
in mariculture.
Wafula is dressed in a black wetsuit, a mask and a scuba tank ready to begin work on inspecting the cages.
After a 10-minute motorboat ride, he reaches the two cages.
Soon, he plunges inside the waters of one of the cages and after
about five minutes, he re-emerges showing a thumb sign, an indication
that all is fine.
“I do this every day in both cages to
inspect them, feed the fish and check on how they are doing. We feed
the fish three times a day, at 9am, 2pm and 5pm,” says Wafula, noting
that besides the circular cages, the farm also has a tilapia hatchery,
two metal cages and 31 ponds.
With a capacity of 25
tonnes, the circular cages that are covered with a green net, have a
diameter of 20 metres and depth of 6 metres.
“Each
cage has four nets in total. One that holds the fish, another that keeps
water predators at bay, the third one holds feeds so that they do not
spill out while finally the outer one covers the cage, preventing
predators like birds,” explains Wafula.
The farm keeps a total of about 200,000 fish in the cages, half of the figure in each.
“We
start by hatching the fingerlings using the re-circulation technology
from a breeding stock of 2,000 tilapia that produce over 100,000
mono-sex fingerlings in a month,” says Dr Gilbert Mbeo, 34, one of the
directors of Lake View Fisheries, noting they sell the fingerlings to
farmers from Sh5 to Sh10, depending on the size.
BIG CAPACITY
Ronald Cruz, an aquaculture expert and the farm manager, says they collect the tilapia breeding stock from various fish farms in the region and from the lake.
Ronald Cruz, an aquaculture expert and the farm manager, says they collect the tilapia breeding stock from various fish farms in the region and from the lake.
“Once the fries are about a month old, we
transfer them to the nursery where we feed them with mash and small
pellets for two months until they reach 5g. We then transfer them to the
circular and metal cages.”
He notes the circular cages
have large capacity compared to square ones. “The HDPE cages can
withstand strong ocean or lake waves that often damage such structures,”
he offers.
The farm stocked the circular cages, which
cost about Sh1 million each and were erected in the lake in February,
with mono-sex tilapia fingerlings in April and they expect to harvest in
September at 400g when they would have matured.
According
to Cruz, they mainly feed the fish on floating pellets which they
import from Israel due to low quality feeds in the market, making them
mature at six months, instead of eight.
They have been
harvesting from earthen ponds and the other two square cages measuring
4m by 4m, with a stock density of 7,000 fish each.
“We
sell the fish at Sh300 per kilo. On the other hand, processed fish from
which intestines and scales have been removed, goes for Sh600 a kilo,”
offers Dr Mbeo, adding they sell the fish to hotels and traders in
Mbita, Kisumu, Kakamega and Nairobi.
They harvest using
hand nets that are cast inside the cages and ponds, an exercise that is
normally done very early in the morning when the fish are mobile.
“Our
first harvest from the two square cages was in February where we got
10,000 tilapia fish,” says Cruz, noting they plan to increase the total
number of cages to 52 with targeting production capacity of 10,000
tonnes of fish in the next five years.
PIONEER AQUACULTURE ENTERPRISE
Lake
View, according to Dr Mbeo who works as a neurologist in the US, but
was recently in the country on holiday, spends Sh500,000 on feeds per
month both for the hatchery and cages.
“We use approximately 250 and 400 20kg bags in the hatchery and cages respectively.”
Dr
Mbeo says he and his sister started the agribusiness in 2013 on
small-scale out of passion for fish, and have managed to turn it into a
pioneer commercial aquaculture enterprise using latest technology.
“We
visited Mfangano Island, our ancestral home, sometimes in 2010 and went
back to the US with several ideas to pursue. My brother, Gilbert, has
always been passionate about fish farming,” chips in Michelle Mbeo, the
co-director, who works at an information technology firm in the US.
Through research, the siblings have learned a lot about pond and cage fish farming.
“We realised that in a small area in the lake, we can keep a large number fish using the cages compared to the ponds,” says Michelle, 35, adding they have 31 employees and they do a lot of video-conferencing to know what is happening on the farm.
“We realised that in a small area in the lake, we can keep a large number fish using the cages compared to the ponds,” says Michelle, 35, adding they have 31 employees and they do a lot of video-conferencing to know what is happening on the farm.
Their
efforts are paying off as the company was recently ranked third under
the Small and Medium-Size Enterprise category during the Green
Innovation Awards by National Environment Trust Fund, a state
corporation charged with spurring sustainable development. She admits
that keeping fish in cages is an expensive venture.
DWINDLING STOCK
“We started the fish venture with a capital of about Sh100,000, then mainly keeping fish in ponds. We then brought in our parents and pumped in more cash from our savings to go into cage farming,” says Michelle, noting expensive feeds are one of their biggest challenges.
“We started the fish venture with a capital of about Sh100,000, then mainly keeping fish in ponds. We then brought in our parents and pumped in more cash from our savings to go into cage farming,” says Michelle, noting expensive feeds are one of their biggest challenges.
They
later injected more money that went into getting right licences and
permits from National Environment and Management Agency, community
sensitisation, construction of a hatchery, more fish ponds,
administration block, training staff and buying necessary machinery and
feeds.
Dr Tsuma Jembe, a senior Research Scientist at
Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute, says cages curb
over-fishing rampant in the lake, which has led to dwindling tilapia
stocks.
“When using cages, one should watch the depth
of the water, circulation of water currents, temperatures, and oxygen
level to enable fish to breathe. Watch for the maritime routes. That way
you don’t block vessels,” he explains, noting farmers need licences and
permits to practice cage fish farming.
****
Other side
Diseases to watch out for
Diseases to watch out for
- Bacterial tail and fin rot are common diseases which attack fish reared in both ponds and under the cage system.
- Fin rot is associated with polluted and unsanitary conditions in hatcheries.
- Though bacteria are the causative agent of tail and fin rot, pathogenic protozoans and fungi may be involved.
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