Telangana govt to launch 150 mobile fish outlets
By Mohammed Hussain Ahmed| Posted by Sameer | Updated: 4th April 2021 1:29 pm IST
Hyderabad: The minister for Animal Husbandry and Fisheries T Srinivas Yadav said on Friday that the state government will launch 150 mobile fish outlets to have one outlet in each division.
The minister, during the question-answer session in the state Assembly, said that the state is promoting fish culture in a big way.
The fish seed were supplied with 100% subsidy in 2016-17 to all big and small water bodies, ponds and lakes.
“From 2016-17 till 2020-21, the fish seeds valued at 260.68 cr were supplied to 59,932 small and big water bodies, lakes, and ponds,” the Minister said.
Horoskop dzienny na niedzielę 4 kwietnia 2021 roku dla każdego znaku zodiaku Wróżba na dziś dla Barana, Byka, Bliźniąt, Raka, Lwa, Panny
nto.pl - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nto.pl Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Horoskop codzienny na niedzielę 4 kwietnia 2021 roku dla każdego znaku zodiaku Wróżba na dziś dla Barana, Byka, Bliźniąt, Raka, Lwa, Panny
nto.pl - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from nto.pl Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SunStar April 03, 2021 THE most difficult is not the making but the imagining. In the second imposition of the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) over Cavite, as with the rest of the so-called “NCR Plus bubble,” I am learning from kites.
“Tabanog” in my native Cebu is “saranggola” in Tagalog and “burarul” in Kapampangan. Our neighbor D., who hails from Pampanga, refers to the shape of the kite he makes in our tree-lined street during long, still afternoons.
As soon as the 5 a.m. curfew lifts, I go out to sweep leaf litter from the street and come upon pieces of what became “guryon,” a large kite named after the Spanish sparrow, or “sapi-sapi,” a kite with a tail.
Print article In late March, Gov. Mike Dunleavy threw down a rhetorical gauntlet, announcing that after more than 60 years of statehood, Alaska is exercising its right to manage all navigable waterways in the state including those that flow through federal land. It’s a gambit that’s backed by recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings, and although its impact for ordinary Alaskans is mostly symbolic, it may wake federal authorities up to unfulfilled promises made to the state decades ago. The assertion that Alaska can manage all navigable waterways in the state, as well as the lands underneath them, has its roots in recent Supreme Court case law in particular, the John Sturgeon case. The court’s unanimous 2019 ruling established that the state has those management rights even for rivers that pass through federal lands. Fortunately, that ruling threaded a needle in preserving another landmark decision important to Alaska the Katie John decision, which found that land management