Aquaculture Practices and Knowledge Level of Fish Farmers in Purulia District of West Bengal

Authors

  • Nilanjan Rej M F Sc Scholar
  • Shyam Sundar Dana Professor
  • Abdul Hannan Mondal Ph.D. Scholar
  • Moumita Ray Sarkar Assistant Professor, Department of Fishery Extension, West Bengal University of Animal and Fishery Sciences, Kolkata-700094, West Bengal, India
  • Dipam Ray M.F.Sc. Scholar
  • Arif Ahammed M F Sc Scholar
  • Ritika Karjee Ph.D. Scholar

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48165/

Keywords:

Constraints, Fish farmer, Knowledge level, Purulia District

Abstract

The study was conducted in the Purulia district of West Bengal during 2024–25, aimed to assess the state of aquaculture and the knowledge level of fish farmers. 120 fish farmers were individually interviewed to collect primary data. Most ponds were earthen (90.83%), rain-fed (68.33%), and seasonal (56.67%), with water retention for 6 to 9 months. Indian major carp were farmed by 86.67 per cent of the respondents through polyculture systems. Only 15 per cent used commercial feed, and 77.5 per cent monitored fish growth throughout the culture period. It was also revealed that 38.33 per cent had a medium level of knowledge, while 34.17 per cent had a low level of knowledge about recommended fish farming practices. It was further found that education, occupation, farming experience, mass media exposure, extension agency contacts, and economic motivation had strong relationships with the respondents’ knowledge level (p<0.01). The majority of respondents faced constraints such as inadequate technical support for scientific fish farming (RBQ: 86.09) and high costs of input materials and skilled labour (RBQ: 85.4). A concerted educational effort with follow-up, stronger extension services, input subsidies, better water retention infrastructure, and mass media awareness is urgently needed in the area. 

 

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Published

2025-06-30