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Bangladesh's Fisheries Department received the Edouard
Saouma Award for its implementation of a project that
improved rural pond-fish culture extension services
throughout the country.
Bangladesh's "Blue Revolution" has resulted in a 50
percent increase in aquaculture production, primarily
because of a new semi-intensive technology that uses locally
available feed ingredients and other inputs. With the help
of FAO, the government developed the technology and tested
it in different agroclimatic regions of the country.
Householders have at least doubled their income from raising
carp and other fish in traditional backyard pools.
An innovative extension approach was
also developed to disseminate the new technology on a mass
scale. An FAO pilot project taught the new methods to
hand-picked farmers who, in return for the training, trained
other fish farmers at no cost; a type of "trickle down"
extension service. The national government has used the
project as a model for a low-cost country-wide extension
service.
The new aquaculture technology directly benefits women and
children who care for and profit from the backyard ponds.
Thanks to the new system, aquaculture production from ponds
has gone up from an annual average of about 1 200 kg per
hectare before 1993 to about 1 800 kg per hectare in
1995/96. From 1990 to 1995/96, average per caput daily
availability of fish has increased from 20 to 27 kg.
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