Naogaon: What started as an experiment in a single pond in Naogaon is emerging as a model for rural innovation, showing how careful management and mixed farming methods can redefine livelihoods in Bangladesh’s remote districts. Traditionally known for carp and other freshwater fish, Naogaon is witnessing the first successful cultivation of giant freshwater shrimp, or galda chingri, a species mostly farmed in Khulna, in the district’s ponds.
According to United News of Bangladesh, Raju Sardar, a student and fish farmer in Dighirpar village of Sadar upazila, has drawn attention by integrating galda with carp species in his pond. His approach, combining careful water monitoring, balanced feeding and regular pond maintenance, has encouraged other farmers to explore the high-value species. Since Raju began the initiative, at least 30 to 40 farmers in and around the area have started cultivating galda shrimp using the mixed farming method.
Raju, who has long practised carp polyculture, said conventional methods yielded limited profits, prompting him to explore alternatives. In June last year, he joined a demonstration programme titled ‘Giant freshwater shrimps farming under improved management’ conducted by a local development organisation’s agriculture unit. He initially received 500 galda fry through the program and, undeterred by scepticism from others, invested in an additional 1,000 fry.
The integrated farming approach proved successful: within months, shrimps grew rapidly, with each kilogram now containing only seven to eight shrimps, a benchmark for freshwater cultivation. Raju projects a harvest of 120 to 130 kilograms of galda shrimps, which could fetch between Tk 1.20 lakh and Tk 1.40 lakh at market rates of Tk 800-1,000 per kilogram. When combined with carp production, the mixed system nearly doubles income from the same pond.