Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Aquaculture - Shrimp Farming Super-Intensive - USA

PRLog (Press Release)– Mar 08, 2011– Shrimp Farming

History  1. The cultivation of shrimp for commercial sale started in the 1950s and experienced a boom in the early 1980s, according to aquaculture farming consultants AquaSol. From the start, the production method of choice was semi-intensive operations—which use large amounts of land for ponds and nurseries where shrimp develop. Water is continuously drained and redistributed again, which puts a strain on this resource. Super-intensive farming evolved as a means of using smaller tracts of land whereby water was recirculated, as opposed to drained and replenished.

Structure  2. Super-intensive operations are often referred to as "raceway" systems, as they resemble racing strips—far longer than they are wide. These nurseries for nurturing shrimp until they may be harvested are enclosed and covered like greenhouses, according to U.S. Marine Shrimp Farming Program. These structures are also equipped with systems whereby water is filtered and recirculated, doing away with the need to dump out old water and replace it with fresh, according to WSMRC. The density of the shrimp populations in super-intensive systems means that water quality must be monitored carefully.

Disease  3. If you are a semi-intensive shrimp farmer, you may have encountered diseases that killed off or impaired the quality of the shrimp you produced, according to AquaSol. In fact, it was two serious disease outbreaks that prompted those in the aquaculture community to look for a better way to sustain healthy shrimp. Through technological advancements such as recirculating systems, and enhanced monitoring of temperatures in greenhouse raceway nurseries, super-intensive systems have slashed the frequency of viral and bacterial diseases, like white spot syndrome virus, according to AquaSol.

Production  4. It will cost to upgrade a semi-intensive system, but WSMRC reports you'll also yield a larger, healthier harvest of shrimp. In addition, according to USMSFP, adding stock that grows faster than average can offset some of the costs associated with technological improvements, as these shrimp will be harvested more quickly than other strains.

Geography  5. In the past you had to be located in more rural areas to sustain the big farms needed for semi-intensive operations. Because super-intensive operations don't require as many natural resources to keep them going, you can now start a farm near a big city or even inland, away from access to seas, according to AquaSol. This has opened up the market for additional food supplies in urban areas.


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Penny Millionaire Trading Service Scam Alert

PRLog (Press Release)– Mar 08, 2011– Could a single part-time employee run a $193 million company? (or is this just another stock scam….?)

Here's a perfect example of how ludicrous the stock scam industry really is.

Willow Creek Enterprises (WLOCD) is a roughly $193 million company on paper. It's staffed by a single, part-time employee who works out of a rent-an-office for $249 a month.

While it was busy being promoted as an exploration-stage mining company, the SEC filings reveal some very interesting information that somehow was left out of all the press releases and stock promotions:

   * Willow Creek Enterprises had $0 in cash – down from a whopping $330 a year before due to bank charges and accounting fees.    * Willow Creek Enterprises had $0 in assets.    * Willow Creek Enterprises had $66,666 in liabilities (the devil IS in these details!)

And since they're an exploration-stage mining company, they reported on their 10-K form filed Dec 2010 that they plan to spend $35,000 for exploration over the next 12 months.

So this $193 million mining company plans on spending a whopping $35,000 on exploring mines? That's ridiculous on the surface, but considering they had zero, zip, zilch cash on hand, that could be considered an ambitious plan after all.

The crime here is how many investors get suckered into these stocks because of promotions, articles and press releases touting these sucker stocks as legitimate companies.

That's why Tim Sykes exposes and shorts these scamsters.

If you took Tim's advice on January 18th, 2011 to short Willow Creek Enterprises, you made 86% or so in just 3 weeks! Or $860 for every $1,000 you had in the trade.

And that's just part of what Tim does for you in his Penny Millionaire trading service. If you haven't checked it out yet, click here to find out all about this unique service…

http://forexprofitmultiplier.info/tim-sykes-penn y-stock- ...

If you're serious about growing your wealth in 2011, you owe it to yourself and your portfolio to check this thing out.

As far as I know, there's not a better, more experienced or more successful microcap stock trader around.

Think about it.

   * He turned $12,415 into $1.65 million before he even graduated from college — all by investing in stocks under $5.    * He ran a hedge fund for three years that was Barclays Ratings' #1 ranked short bias hedge fund the entire time. Tim focused entirely on stocks under $5.    * He's been #1 out of over 50,000 traders on Covestor.com for the past four years in a row by trading tiny stocks exclusively.    * His recent track record is one of the most impressive I've seen — 197% in 2008… 141% in 2009… and 55% in 2010.  Because of Tim's total transparency, I'm easily able to verify that his record is 100% real.

As I've mentioned before, returns like that are enough to turn $25,000 into $3,077,152 in just six years.

Of course, the hype artists claim they can do that in a few weeks or months — but if that were true, we'd all be wealthy and spending our summers in the Hamptons!

Bottom line: You need to check out Tim Sykes' new program for yourself before it sells out.

Click here for all the details about the Microcap Millionaire program

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