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College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences

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Aquaculture News

  1. May 14, 2015

    Aquaculture Research Recently Received two Grant Awards Dr. Hanping Wang was awarded $119,986 from NOAA-Sea Grant (Ohio) for developing superior neomale broodstocks and genetically fast-growing monosex female populations in yellow perch. Dr. Hanping Wang and his collaborators were awarded $155,000 from USDA-North Central Region Aquaculture Center for Establishing largemouth bass strains for rapid growth to market size in the north central region.
  2. Jul 3, 2014

    The success of the Aquaculture Boot Camp program at OSU South Centers in Piketon is gaining attention now that the second class is mid-way through their course. Watch a video and read the full story from the Columbus Dispatch!
  3. Jun 20, 2014

    Steven Mims of Kentucky State University and Renee Koerner of Big Fish Farms show a female paddlefish. Mims, an expert on paddlefish aquaculture, inspired Koerner to set up her business of raising the fish for their eggs, to be sold as caviar. Read the article featured in the Columbus Dispatch.
  4. Sep 28, 2013

    Two-year on-station and on-farm tests of genetically improved yellow perch were conducted on three sites at different latitudes in North Central Region. The aim of the project was to assess production parameters of selected yellow perch lines as compared to fish from local brood stock at commercial densities in ponds. 3rd generation of selected yellow perch lines from OCARD were used for the tests. This is an important step for commercialization of genetically improved strains.

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$2M grant awards to fund two meaningful aquaculture projects

 

Dr. Hanping Wang at the Ohio Center for Aquaculture Research and Development (OCARD) at The Ohio State University South Centers, in partnership with Dr. Gary Gao of the Specialty Crops team and University of New Hampshire, has been awarded approximately $1 million from a very competitive program of the USDA - the Urban, Indoor, and other Emerging Agriculture (UIE). This funded project is for the development of sustainable aquaponics model systems to enhance resiliency of urban, indoor, and emerging food systems using monosex and genetically improved fish with a variety of plants and DNA-based analyses of the structure and function of microbe communities in aquaponic systems.

The program received more than 200 proposals and funded just 10 large projects this year, with each having an approximate value of $1 million. South Centers was among the recipients with the funding rate of around 5%. Dr. Hanping Wang is the Principal Investigator (PI), and Dr. Gary Gao serves as Co-PI of the project. This project is expected to contribute to: 1) enhancing UIE sustainability and satisfying human food and fiber needs; 2) enhancing quality of life and access to safe nutritious food for urban and peri-urban communities, and society as a whole; 3) reducing barriers to land access: and 4) sustaining the economic viability of urban farm operations.

Additionally, Dr. Hanping Wang and his collaborators in North Carolina State University have been awarded $1 million from NOAA to develop striped bass seedstock production technologies and related outreach activities.

As one of the National Sea Grant Aquaculture Hubs, this StriperHub project will conduct broodstock and seedstock production research and develop feeding strategies/ protocols and culture manual/methods for striped bass industry. The project will help address the seafood deficit in the United States by developing striped bass as a candidate aquaculture species and expanding hybrid striped bass aquaculture to strengthen the domestic seafood industry and boost the economies of coastal, great lake, and rural communities.

There is a growing interest in striped bass aquaculture within the Great Lake Region (GLR) and North Central Region (NCR). This project adds a new aquaculture research species to OCARD. South Centers’ own Dr. Hanping Wang is leading and coordinating research and outreach efforts of the StriperHub in the GLR and NCR.

OCARD has been competitive in winning research grants at the national level over the past 20 years. This success can be attributed to the efforts of our aquaculture team, with their nationally recognized aquaculture genetics program at Piketon and impact of our quality research and publications, plus the support of other teams and supporting staff at South Centers.

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