Multistakeholder partnership in implementing cage fish culture as a livelihood venture for rural youth: A case study in Kerala State, south India
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Abstract
Rural development is a process of implementing location-specific sustainable models
utilising ecosystem services with participation of local people. Ezhikkara is a coastal
village surrounded by brackishwater creeks and Pokkali paddy-shrimp fields located in
Paravur Taluk of Ernakulam District, Kerala, south India. To address the employment issues
among rural youth, Ernakulam Krishi Vigyan Kendra (KVK) of ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries
Research Institute (ICAR-CMFRI), initiated cage fish culture in the Veerampuzha public water
body in association with Pallikkal Service Cooperative Bank (PSCB). Local youth were trained
in the technical aspects of cage fish culture and the bank provided financial support for
implementing cage fish farming. The fish produced were marketed directly to the customers
through farmgate markets. Farmers sold live fish directly at the farm gate by attracting
consumers through advertisements floated by the KVK. They were sufficiently educated to
fix uniform pricing to avoid farmer-farmer competition in direct marketing. An online fish
delivery mechanism by pre-bookings through a mobile application was also established.
The cage fish culture got wide acceptance among the rural youth as an alternate income
source. The main challenges faced during the implementation of cage fish culture was
the presence of invasive black mussel (Mytella strigata), annual flooding and the massive
accumulation of weed plant Eichhornia crassipes. This experience unravels the requirement
of continuous technical backstopping for marginalised communities to successfully
implement technology-based farming models as alternate livelihood sources.
Keywords:
Asian seabass, Aquaculture, Cage fish culture, Live fish, Marketing
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