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Role of co-operative societies in black clam fishery and trade in Vembanad Lake

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Relation http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/8858/
 
Title Role of co-operative societies in black clam fishery and trade in Vembanad Lake
 
Creator Suja, N
Mohamed, K S
 
Subject Clam
Fishing Villages
Fish Marketing
 
Description Lime shells and live clams are distributed in
large quantities in the backwaters and estuaries
of Kerala. Vembanad, the largest lake of Kerala,
also holds a vast resource of lime shells and live
clam, comprising several species. The major
species that account for the clam fishery of
Vembanad Lake is the black clam Villorita
cyprinoides. The lime shells that contribute to the
fishery are broadly classified as the ‘white shells’
and the ‘black shells’. The so-called ‘white shells’
are sub-soil deposits of fossilized shells and are
known to extend upto 7 feet below the lake bottom.
The black shells are obtained from the living
population of V. cyprinoides, which contribute more
than 90% of the clams from this lake.
 
Publisher Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute
 
Date 2011
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Language en
 
Identifier http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/8858/1/6-8.pdf
Suja, N and Mohamed, K S (2011) Role of co-operative societies in black clam fishery and trade in Vembanad Lake. Marine Fisheries Information Service (207). pp. 6-8.