La peche dans le fleuve Niger


Autoria(s): Daget, J.
Data(s)

1972

Resumo

The fish production of the River Niger can best be estimated from a country by country evaluation of the tonnage exported and that consumed locally. All exported and some locally consumed fish are preserved by smoking or sun drying, a process which entails a loss of weight. Coefficients to correct for this of between 2.6 to 4 have been calculated depending on the type of product. A further loss occurs due to handling and to insect attack, which may account for up to 40% of the production. Taking the above factors into account the productions estimated for the various countries of the Niger River basin are as follows: Guinea (3,600 t), Mali (90,000 t), Upper Volta and Ivory Coast (negligible), Niger (5,200 t), Dahomey (1,200 t), Nigeria (25,000 t), Cameroon (3,000 t). A total production of 128,000 t is, therefore, obtained for the basin as a whole, excluding the Kainji Reservoir. At this level of production, there have been no intimations of overfishing from any part of the basin, and there is unanimity that fishing could be intensified. On the basis of the estimates of existing production and local estimates of potential production it is possible that up to 200,000 t of fish could be produced annually from the basin as a whole.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/20502/1/special%20issue%20paper%203.pdf

Daget, J. (1972) La peche dans le fleuve Niger. African Journal of Tropical Hydrobiology and Fisheries, Special Issue 2, pp. 107-114.

Idioma(s)

fr

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/20502/

Palavras-Chave #Fisheries
Tipo

Article

NonPeerReviewed