Hatchery and nursery operations form the foundation of successful aquaculture by producing high-quality seed stock. NAQDA operates state-of-the-art facilities and provides technical support for private sector hatcheries to ensure sustainable supply of fingerlings, post-larvae, and juveniles for all major cultured species.
From broodstock management to larval rearing, our comprehensive approach ensures genetic quality, disease-free seed, and optimal survival rates for Sri Lankan aquaculture development.
NAQDA Hatcheries
Annual Production
Broodstock Management Programs
Disease-Free Stock
Freshwater & Marine Species
Post-Larvae Production
M. rosenbergii Production
Holothuria scabra
Support Systems
Broodstock Management Facilities
Selection and maintenance of healthy, genetically superior parent stock with proper nutrition and environmental conditions
Hormonal induction or environmental manipulation to trigger spawning, egg collection, and fertilization
Controlled incubation with optimal temperature, oxygen, and water flow for maximum hatching success
Critical phase with live feed management, water quality control, and disease prevention protocols
Weaning to artificial feed, grading for size uniformity, and conditioning for grow-out conditions
Health certification, packing with oxygen, and transport to aquaculture operators with survival guarantees
| Species | Type | Cycle | Size at Sale | Annual Output |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tilapia (O. niloticus) | Freshwater | 30 days | 2-3 cm | 10 million |
| Catla (Catla catla) | Freshwater | 45 days | 3-5 cm | 5 million |
| Rohu (Labeo rohita) | Freshwater | 45 days | 3-5 cm | 5 million |
| Seabass (Lates calcarifer) | Marine | 45 days | 2.5 cm | 2 million |
| Milkfish (Chanos chanos) | Brackish | 30 days | 2 cm | 3 million |
| Species | Stage | Cycle | Size | Annual Output |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| P. vannamei (Whiteleg) | PL-10 | 20 days | 8-10 mm | 100 million |
| P. monodon (Tiger) | PL-15 | 25 days | 12-15 mm | 20 million |
| M. rosenbergii (Prawn) | PL | 35 days | 7-8 mm | 5 million |
| Mud Crab (Scylla spp.) | Crablet | 30 days | 10 mm CW | 1 million |
Reliable seawater/freshwater source with treatment systems
24/7 electricity with generator backup for aeration
Covered hatchery halls, laboratories, feed storage
Water quality testing and disease diagnostic facility
Temperature regulation for tropical species broodstock management
Quarantine areas, disinfection systems, restricted access
| System | Purpose | Method | Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filtration | Remove particles | Sand, cartridge, bag filters | All incoming water |
| UV Sterilization | Pathogen control | 254nm UV lamps | Larval rearing water |
| Ozonation | Disinfection | Ozone generators | Broodstock systems |
| Aeration | Oxygen supply | Blowers, diffusers | All culture tanks |
| Temperature Control | Optimal conditions | Heaters, chillers | Broodstock Management tanks |
| RAS | Water recycling | Biofilters, protein skimmers | Intensive systems |
Rs. 2,500,000
Buildings & tanksRs. 200,000
500 breedersRs. 800,000
Aeration, filtersRs. 1,200,000
Labor, feed, powerRs. 2,000,000
@ Rs.2/fry67% Annual
After year 2Fundamentals of seed production, water quality, nutrition management protocols
Hormonal induction, selective broodstock management, genetic improvement
Microalgae, rotifer, and artemia production techniques
Biosecurity, diagnosis, treatment, and prevention strategies
SPF/SPR concepts, health certification, transport methods
Financial planning, marketing, and supply chain management
Quality fingerlings and PL from NAQDA centers
Genetically improved parent stock
Comprehensive hatchery management courses
Disease diagnosis and water testing
Subsidies up to 50% for infrastructure
Quality certification for seed producers
Learn hatchery and nursery management through expert guides
Complete guide to establishing and managing a fish hatchery
28 minsSelection, care, and broodstock management of quality broodstock
22 minsHormone administration and spawning techniques for various species
25 minsManaging larvae and producing live feed cultures
20 minsRaising fry to fingerling stage in nursery systems
18 minsMaintaining optimal water parameters in hatchery systems
16 minsGet comprehensive hatchery operation guides and protocols
Download ResourcesCommon questions about hatchery and nursery operations
Essential requirements include: 1) Reliable water source with good quality (bore well/river), 2) Land area of 0.5-2 acres minimum, 3) Broodstock holding tanks (10-20 units), 4) Broodstock Management tanks/hapas, 5) Larval rearing tanks, 6) Aeration system and backup power, 7) Water filtration and UV treatment, 8) Laboratory for water testing, 9) Feed storage facility. Initial investment: LKR 2-5 million for small-scale operation.
Select healthy, mature fish (2-3 years old) with good growth history, no deformities, and from diverse genetic sources. Maintain 1:1 or 1:2 male:female ratio. Feed high-protein diet (35-40%) with vitamins. Keep in separate tanks at lower density (1-2 kg/m³). Monitor health monthly, replace 20% annually. Condition before broodstock management with temperature and photoperiod manipulation. Record individual performance for selective broodstock management.
Common techniques: 1) Hormone injection - Ovaprim (0.5ml/kg), HCG (1000-2000 IU/kg), or carp pituitary extract (3-5mg/kg), 2) Environmental manipulation - temperature increase, water flow simulation, 3) Stripping method for controlled fertilization. Timing crucial: inject evening, spawn next morning. Success rate 70-90% with proper technique. Different species require specific protocols and hormone dosages.
Essential live feeds: 1) Microalgae (Chlorella, Spirulina) - culture in transparent tanks with nutrients, 2) Rotifers - feed on algae, production output at 200-500/ml, 3) Artemia - hatch cysts in salt water (28ppt) with aeration, production output after 24hrs, 4) Moina/Daphnia - culture in manured water. Nutrition Management sequence: microalgae → rotifers → artemia → formulated feed. Maintain cultures continuously for reliable supply.
Critical parameters: Temperature 26-30°C (species-specific), pH 7.0-8.0, DO >6mg/L (use aeration), Ammonia <0.02mg/L, Nitrite <0.1mg/L, Hardness 50-150mg/L, Alkalinity 80-120mg/L. Use biofilters for recirculation systems. Change 20-30% water daily in larval tanks. UV sterilization recommended. Monitor parameters twice daily during critical stages. Maintain backup water source.
Nursery management: Prepare culture system with lime (250kg/ha) and organic manure (1000kg/ha). Stock fry at 200,000-300,000/ha for 30-45 days. Feed 100% body weight initially, reduce to 5% as they grow. Use fine mesh feed (0.5-1mm). Provide supplementary aeration. Partial production process at 3-5cm size. Expected survival 60-80%. Grade fingerlings before sale to ensure uniform size.
Common issues: 1) Bacterial infections - treat with antibiotics (oxytetracycline), 2) Fungal infections - use methylene blue or salt treatment, 3) Parasites - formalin baths (200ppm), 4) Viral diseases - no treatment, prevent through quarantine. Prevention: maintain water quality, avoid overcrowding, quarantine new stock, disinfect equipment, provide balanced nutrition, remove dead fish immediately. Prophylactic treatments during stress periods.
Small hatchery (0.5 acre) can produce 1-2 million fingerlings/year. Investment: LKR 2-3 million. Operating cost: LKR 100,000/month. Revenue: Fingerlings sell at LKR 1-3 each depending on size/species. Annual profit: LKR 1-2 million. ROI: 18-24 months. Success factors: consistent quality, reliable water/power, skilled labor, market linkages. Government provides 50% subsidy for hatchery establishment.
Best practices: Maintain minimum 50 broodstock management pairs, rotate broodstock from different sources every 2-3 years, avoid inbreeding by tracking parentage, select for desired traits (growth, disease resistance), maintain backup populations, exchange broodstock with other hatcheries. Use tagging systems for individual identification. Follow 1:1:1 mating protocol (one male, one female, one spawn) when possible.
Recommended species: 1) Tilapia - easy broodstock management, high demand, 2) Indian/Chinese carps - government support programs, 3) Freshwater prawn (M. rosenbergii) - high value, export potential, 4) Ornamental fish - profitable niche market, 5) Indigenous species (Etroplus) - conservation programs. Choose based on market demand, technical expertise, water availability, and investment capacity.
NAQDA assistance includes: 50% subsidy for infrastructure (up to LKR 1.5 million), free technical training programs, quality broodstock supply, water testing services, disease diagnosis support, market linkages with aquaculture operators, certification for seed quality, assistance in project proposals for bank loans. Regional centers provide ongoing extension support. Priority given to women and youth entrepreneurs.
Strategies: 1) Maintain controlled environment (indoor facilities), 2) Manipulate photoperiod (14L:10D) and temperature, 3) Keep multiple broodstock batches at different stages, 4) Use hormonal treatments for off-season broodstock management, 5) Maintain backup power for critical systems, 6) Store milt for artificial fertilization, 7) Plan production calendar based on market demand. This ensures continuous supply and better price realization.
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