Investment in black tiger genetics would allow Vietnam to dominate market

Vietnam’s shrimp farmers moved away from black tiger (monodon) and over to vannamei because the productivity of the latter species made much more financial sense for them.
However, there remains a market for black tiger, despite the fact that fewer and fewer farmers produce it globally, said Minh Phu chairman Le Van Quang.
“Some buyers want black tiger, and they only want black tiger. Demand is greater than supply, and that puts prices at around $4 or $5 per kilogram higher than those for vannamei,” he said.
“If Vietnam invested in the genetics behind black tiger, make it tempting to farm this species again by improving productivity, we’ll get more supply, and prices will come back to maybe $2/kg higher,” he suggested.
“That way, we can still dominate the world’s black tiger market.”
In 2016, black tiger shrimp made up 59% of Vietnam’s shrimp sales to China, according to data presented by Le Hang, deputy director of the Vietnamese Association of Seafood Exporters and Processors’ training and trade promotion center.
Có thể bạn quan tâm
Phần mềm

Phối trộn thức ăn chăn nuôi

Pha dung dịch thủy canh

Định mức cho tôm ăn

Phối trộn phân bón NPK

Xác định tỷ lệ tôm sống

Chuyển đổi đơn vị phân bón

Xác định công suất sục khí

Chuyển đổi đơn vị tôm

Tính diện tích nhà kính

Tính thể tích ao hồ