EVALUATING LAND AND WATER
RESOURCES FOR FRESHWATER AQUACULTURE POTENTIAL
Fred S.
Conte, Department of Animal Science, University of California, Davis
When evaluating a site for freshwater aquaculture
potential,
the total land and water resources of the site will be among the
determining
factors. Additional criteria include what other farming or industrial
activities
are sharing the resources and how the landowner wants to partition the
resources for various activities. Assessing the profitability of a
proposed
facility that is the sole monetary generator on a property is different
from the assessment of an integrated operation where cash flow is
generated
from the production of several commodities.
Extension personnel working through the
USDA-sponsored
Western Regional Aquaculture Consortium are producing an extensive
publication
entitled Evaluation of a Freshwater Site for Aquaculture Potential.
It will be available through California Cooperative Extension in early
1992. The following are some of the criteria examined by the
publication
and information potential growers should ask themselves before
investing
in an aquaculture project.
Resource Apportionment
1. What is the present objective of the venture:
recreational
fishing or aesthetics, commercial fee fishing or a commercial
production
facility?
2. Is the site to be exclusively an aquaculture
venture?
What other activities might occur on the property?
3. Will aquaculture be integrated with other
agriculture
activities, and if so, what are they?
Water Supply
4. What is the source of the water supply? Is the
water
supply from a reservoir, pumped well, artesian well, or a running
stream?
5. How many water sources are on the property? What
is
the capacity, volume, or flow rate of each? Does it vary seasonally?
6. What is the temperature of the water source and
the
annual variation and range?
7. Is it possible to secure the necessary water
permits
for the needed volume of water, or is a permit necessary? Is a water
discharge
permit needed? Will the discharged water impact a natural body of water
such as a stream, river, or wetland? Will the discharge impact other
private,
state, or federal properties?
8. Has a chemical water test been conducted on the
water
source to assess its compatibility with fish culture?
9. What pumped wells are on the property? What are
their
volumes, depth, and location? What are their draw-down rates?
10. What is the distance between the water source
and
the proposed facility site? What is the elevation and fall between the
water source and the prospective production site?
11. What other use demands have to be considered for
the
water source? Is the aquaculture operation to receive first-use water?
Can the discharge water be used for other agriculture activities and if
so, what?
Land and Related Considerations
12. Where is the land located? How much land is
available
for the fish farming operation?
13. What are the elevation of the land and the
associated
climatic conditions such as annual temperature fluctuation and
snowfall?
Is the prospective site subject to flooding?
14. How close is the property to public roads, and
what
is the carrying capacity of the public roads and the roads on the
property
seasonally?
15. Does the property allow for on-site, live-in
management
and allow observation of the facility from the living area?
16. Is electricity available at the production site?
What
are the electrical rates in that area; can agricultural rates be
obtained?
17. What support structures are available at the
site
(houses, barns, storage facilities, etc.)? Can they be shared with
other
agricultural pursuits?
18. Are ponds, raceways, or tanks being considered?
If
ponds are planned, what is the soil profile of the site? Get a soil
analysis
of the site based on a representative core sample taken at the site.
19. Are other activities being conducted on or
adjacent
to the property that use agricultural chemicals? If so, what chemicals
are used, and how are those chemicals applied?
20. Have agricultural crops or other activities been
conducted
at the site that may have resulted in toxic chemical accumulation in
the
soil? If so, what chemicals are potentially present?