Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish.

Sixty-five percent (301 million) of the people living on insufficient diets are located in the Far East. Their daily protein supply decreased from 51.3 g/person in 1961 to 50.7 g/person in 1971. Fish is an important source of protein in South-East Asia but consumption is limited by price, supply, di...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ismail, Mohamad Salleh, Zain, Asiah
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 1978
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17908/1/ID%2017908.pdf
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author Ismail, Mohamad Salleh
Zain, Asiah
author_facet Ismail, Mohamad Salleh
Zain, Asiah
author_sort Ismail, Mohamad Salleh
collection UPM
description Sixty-five percent (301 million) of the people living on insufficient diets are located in the Far East. Their daily protein supply decreased from 51.3 g/person in 1961 to 50.7 g/person in 1971. Fish is an important source of protein in South-East Asia but consumption is limited by price, supply, distribution and season, especially amongs the poor. Most fish comes from marine sources and in Malaysia, fish from aquaculture from less than one percent of the total, although there are 100000 acres of fresh water bodies suitable for aquaculture, in West Malaysia alone.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T07:41:47Z
format Conference or Workshop Item
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institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T07:41:47Z
publishDate 1978
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spelling upm.eprints-179082015-01-09T08:48:32Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17908/ Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish. Ismail, Mohamad Salleh Zain, Asiah Sixty-five percent (301 million) of the people living on insufficient diets are located in the Far East. Their daily protein supply decreased from 51.3 g/person in 1961 to 50.7 g/person in 1971. Fish is an important source of protein in South-East Asia but consumption is limited by price, supply, distribution and season, especially amongs the poor. Most fish comes from marine sources and in Malaysia, fish from aquaculture from less than one percent of the total, although there are 100000 acres of fresh water bodies suitable for aquaculture, in West Malaysia alone. 1978 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17908/1/ID%2017908.pdf Ismail, Mohamad Salleh and Zain, Asiah (1978) Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish. In: Indo-Pacific Fishery Commission Symposium on Fish Utilization Technology and Marketing in the IPFC Region, 8-11 Mar. 1978, Manila, Philippines. . Tilapia - Utilization Freshwater fishes
spellingShingle Tilapia - Utilization
Freshwater fishes
Ismail, Mohamad Salleh
Zain, Asiah
Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish.
title Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish.
title_full Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish.
title_fullStr Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish.
title_full_unstemmed Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish.
title_short Utilization of tilapia, a trash fresh water fish.
title_sort utilization of tilapia a trash fresh water fish
topic Tilapia - Utilization
Freshwater fishes
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/17908/1/ID%2017908.pdf
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