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Potential Benefits of Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (Gift) in Aquaculture : A Review


Affiliations
1 Department of Zoology, Barasat Govt. College, Kolkata-700124, India
2 Department of Zoology, Barasat College, 1 Kalyani Road, Kolkata-700126, India
     

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Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (GIFT) under review is the product of the world’s first selective breeding programme for tropical fish. The project began in 1988 by comparing the performance of existing Asian niloticus farmed strains and imported wild strains (Ghana, Egypt, Kenya, and Senegal). Tilapia strains from different sources are combined in 8 x 8 diallel model and produce 64 crosses. All 64 possible pure- and crossbreeds among and within the four African and four Asian strains were measured in different test environments. Best combinations are then used to establish the base population. The GIFT project eventually yielded genetic improvements of 7.1 % genetic change over nine generations of fish or a 64% cumulative increase in tilapia growth over the base population. The advantages of this strain are that they grow quickly, survive well, ease of farming, low production cost, high survival, can tolerate lower oxygen quantity and lower water quality.

Keywords

GIFT, Super Tilapia, Diallel Model, Cross Breeds, Farming.
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  • Potential Benefits of Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (Gift) in Aquaculture : A Review

Abstract Views: 230  |  PDF Views: 1

Authors

Ankita Mondal
Department of Zoology, Barasat Govt. College, Kolkata-700124, India
Tirthankar Dalui
Department of Zoology, Barasat College, 1 Kalyani Road, Kolkata-700126, India

Abstract


Genetically Improved Farmed Tilapia (GIFT) under review is the product of the world’s first selective breeding programme for tropical fish. The project began in 1988 by comparing the performance of existing Asian niloticus farmed strains and imported wild strains (Ghana, Egypt, Kenya, and Senegal). Tilapia strains from different sources are combined in 8 x 8 diallel model and produce 64 crosses. All 64 possible pure- and crossbreeds among and within the four African and four Asian strains were measured in different test environments. Best combinations are then used to establish the base population. The GIFT project eventually yielded genetic improvements of 7.1 % genetic change over nine generations of fish or a 64% cumulative increase in tilapia growth over the base population. The advantages of this strain are that they grow quickly, survive well, ease of farming, low production cost, high survival, can tolerate lower oxygen quantity and lower water quality.

Keywords


GIFT, Super Tilapia, Diallel Model, Cross Breeds, Farming.