View example sentences and word forms for Hatcheries.
Hatcheries
Hatcheries meaning
plural of hatchery
Example sentences (20)
Minnesota is set to spend historic sums on the environment after lawmakers agreed to a package of policy changes and programs to safeguard air and water, plant trees and renovate crumbling outdoor infrastructure such as fish hatcheries and boat ramps.
The farm, one of the state’s largest indoor fish hatcheries, conserves water with a recirculating aquaculture system designed by Smith, and grows trout and other fish with sustainable plant-based feeds.
These are Alaskan hatcheries, employing Alaskans, and benefiting Alaska communities.
They’re starting to do more research on the effects of hatcheries on wild stocks in the ocean.
Further, in a fillip to the State’s conservation efforts, some hatcheries this season were fitted with weather-monitoring devices to analyse the rise in temperatures and its effect on the turtles.
The concern is that those ponds are usually stocked with fish bought from both in-state and out-of-state private hatcheries.
The fingerlings are raised in local and state hatcheries.
The hatcheries therefore did a major cull of eggs that were already incubating, taking most of the financial hit as well.
Built in 1916, it has supplied trout eggs to other hatcheries in California and other western states.
Government says it will set up 18 fish hatcheries and nurseries countrywide worth 27 million kwacha to increase fish production.
Rainbow trout are raised at Ohio’s state fish hatcheries and measure 10-13 inches when they are stocked by the department’s Division of Wildlife.
The production deficit at Horn Point and other hatcheries around the Bay had a ripple effect for aquaculture, oyster restoration and even the public fishery.
Until habitat can be restored, hatcheries remain key to salmon recovery.
Workers at two game bird hatcheries have been filmed throwing live chicks into a meat grinder.
In addition to the direct economic benefits to fishermen, hatcheries are also attracting investment to the region.
The hatcheries will also stock a mix of "lunkers" ranging from three to 10 pounds.
Aquaculture Ammonia toxicity is believed to be a cause of otherwise unexplained losses in fish hatcheries.
A similar process is used in the salmon-farming section of this industry; juveniles are taken from hatcheries and a variety of methods are used to aid them in their maturation.
Colonies of some classes have various types of non-feeding specialist zooids, some of which are hatcheries for fertilized eggs, and some classes also have special zooids for defense of the colony.
Freshwater fishing, including salmon, trout and eel hatcheries and fish farms, citation takes up about 30% of Japan's fishing industry.