It is a favorite food fish due to its tender and delicious meat. Recently, farming of C. macrocephalus has gained interest among catfish growers. Like other catfish species, it is resistant to diseases, can be stocked at high densities, and tolerates low water quality.
The catfishes C. macrocephalus and C. batrachus are almost similar in size and appearance, but differ by the shape of the occipital process in the head portion. The occipital process is blunt or rounded in C. macrocephalus and pointed in C. batrachus. C. macrocephalus also has small white spots along the sides of the body.

Broodstock Development and Management

Sexes are separate in catfish. Males have elongated urogenital papillae around the anus, whereas females have a simple round opening.
Catfish are carnivores, but can feed on small bottom dwelling animals, rice bran, kitchen refuse, fish meal, or formulated feeds. Broodstock fed a SEAFDEC-formulated diet with 43% protein had similar reproductive and larval quality as those fed “trash fish.”

Catfish mature at about 6-8 months of age. Larger mature females produce more eggs than smaller females. About 20-90 eggs/g body weight (BW) can be stripped from a gravid female after hormone injection.

Breeding
Captive C. macrocephalus contain eggs and sperm the whole year but do not spawn by themselves. Artificial propagation of C. macrocephalus involves inducing the gravid females to spawn by injection of different hormones, and manually stripping the eggs after several hours. Before females are stripped of eggs, male catfish are sacrificed. The male reproductive tract is then dissected and macerated to obtain the milt to fertilize the eggs. (click image to enlarge)

Success in induced spawning depends largely on knowledge of (i) the optimum dose of hormones to be used, and (ii) latency period, the time between injection of hormones and stripping of eggs. Induced spawning of C. macrocephalus can be done in any of the following ways:

Hatchery
Four to five days after hatching, catfish larvae are stocked at 30 per liter in bigger tanks. They are fed natural food organisms such as newly hatched brine shrimp Artemia for three days, and the water flea Moina for another four days. Thereafter, larvae can be weaned to formulated diets with 44% protein and particle size 150-200 ?m. The diet is given twice daily to two- to four-week old catfish fry at a feeding rate of 20% BW and to older fry at 5-10% BW.
Nursery

For further information, contact
Catfish Project
SEAFDEC Aquaculture Department
Tigbuan, Iloilo
Tel: (033) 335-1009, 336-2965, 336-2937
Fax: (033) 335-1008, 336-2891
Email: aqdchief@aq.seafdec.org.ph, d_chief@i-iloilo.com.ph
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