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1.
Aquaculture ; 562: 738822, 2023 Jan 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36124128

RESUMO

The COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc on the aquaculture and fisheries sector all around the world, with the impact being exacerbated in developing countries. This study is an endeavor to identify consequences of the COVID-19 on fisheries and aquaculture sectors based on primary data collected from Bangladesh as an empirical case study. The data were collected through face-to-face interviews with different supply chain actors while analyzed using descriptive statistics and a problem confrontation index. As results depicted, income and employment across fish farmers, fishers, and traders were severely hurt, with a drastic fall in the market demand, coupled with a severe drop in their fish consumption. As market demand declined, fish farmers must be stocked mature fish for an extra period, and feed costs raised, eventually increasing the overall production cost. Besides, inaccessibility to inputs also made fish production and catch more troublesome. The price of all the major cultured and captured species plunged, leading to a depressing return to farmers, while inputs price underwent a significant increase except for labor and fingerling. However, traders seemed to be the worst sufferers amid striking disruption in fish value chain, which ostracized the preponderance of the traders from the chain. Some of the prime obstacles that constrained the production and trading process were but not limited to higher transportation costs, labor shortage, inability to pay for the wage, and reduced consumer demand across fish farmers, fishers, and traders. Nevertheless, our article further identified a myriad of strategies that the fish farmers, fishers, and traders followed to heal the scar of the fisheries and aquaculture sector with hands-on actions.

2.
Mar Policy ; 135: 104873, 2022 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34840401

RESUMO

The recent COVID-19 emergency has shaped economic performance across all sectors, and the fisheries and aquaculture sector did not come out unscathed. The need to protect against risks has always been primary for economic operators, but COVID-19 has accentuated the need to obtain coverage for health risks. In this regard, the European Union has moved quickly with an amendment art. 35 of European Maritime and Fisheries Fund (Regulation [EU] No. 508/2014), including "public health crises" among the causes considered valid for compensation in mutual funds. In this paper, we analyze the evolution of Regulation 508, focusing on Article 35 and its most recent amendments, to understand if the new reform is adherent to the needs of the fisheries sector in Italy, one of the only two States that have documented in their Operational Plans the intention to implement mutual funds. The work involved an empirical analysis through the use of multivariate statistics carried out on 61 Italian stakeholders. Several company profiles were identified and then the likelihood of subscribing to a mutual fund was estimated based on their focus on health crises. The work underlines that the amendments meet the demands of the sector for improved mutual fund clauses, but it's not yet an attractive tool for the Italian market.

3.
Mar Policy ; 129: 104523, 2021 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34744258

RESUMO

The COVID-19 pandemic is a shock affecting all areas of the global food system. We tracked the impacts of COVID-19 and associated policy responses on the availability and price of aquatic foods and production inputs during 2020, using a high frequency longitudinal survey of 768 respondents in Bangladesh, Egypt, India, Myanmar, Nigeria. We found the following: (1) Aquatic food value chains were severely disrupted but most effects on the availability and accessibility of aquatic foods and production inputs were short-lived. (2) Impacts on demand for aquatic foods, production inputs, and labor have been longer lasting than impacts on their supply. (3) Retail prices of aquatic foods spiked briefly during March-May 2020 but trended down thereafter, whereas prices of production inputs rose. These trends suggest a deepening 'squeeze' on the financial viability of producers and other value chain actors. (4) Survey respondents adapted to the challenges of COVID-19 by reducing production costs, sourcing alternative inputs, diversifying business activities, leveraging social capital, borrowing, seeking alternative employment, and reducing food consumption. Many of these coping strategies are likely to undermine well-being and longer-term resilience, but we also find some evidence of proactive strategies with potential to strengthen business performance. Global production of aquatic food likely contracted significantly in 2020. The importance of aquatic food value chains in supporting livelihoods and food and nutrition security in Asia and Africa makes their revitalization essential in the context of COVID-19 recovery efforts. We outline immediate and longer-term policies and interventions to support this goal.

4.
Front Genet ; 13: 988488, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36386818

RESUMO

Sparidentex hasta (Valenciennes, 1830) of the Sparidae family, is an economically important fish species. However, the genomic studies on S. hasta are limited due to the absence of its complete genome. The goal of the current study was to sequence, assemble, and annotate the genome of S. hasta that will fuel further research related to this seabream. The assembled draft genome of S. hasta was 686 Mb with an N50 of 80 Kb. The draft genome contained approximately 22% repeats, and 41,201 genes coding for 44,555 transcripts. Furthermore, the assessment of the assembly completeness was estimated based on the detection of ∼93% BUSCOs at the protein level and alignment of >99% of the filtered reads to the assembled genome. Around 68% of the predicted proteins (n = 30,545) had significant BLAST matches, and 30,473 and 13,244 sequences were mapped to Gene Ontology annotations and different enzyme classes, respectively. The comparative genomics analysis indicated S. hasta to be closely related to Acanthopagrus latus. The current assembly provides a solid foundation for future population and conservation studies of S. hasta as well as for investigations of environmental adaptation in Sparidae family of fishes. Value of the Data: This draft genome of S. hasta would be very applicable for molecular characterization, gene expression studies, and to address various problems associated with pathogen-associated immune response, climate adaptability, and comparative genomics. The accessibility of the draft genome sequence would be useful in understanding the pathways and functions at the molecular level, which may further help in improving the economic value and their conservation.

5.
Sci Total Environ ; 783: 146998, 2021 Aug 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34088130

RESUMO

On 11 March 2011, a catastrophic earthquake and subsequent tsunami hit the Pacific coast of northern Japan, devastating many of the towns, villages and coastal ecosystems located along the shoreline. To assess the impacts of the disaster, we investigated temporal dynamics of fish and epibenthic megafaunal community structure in relation to changes in a range of physical, biological and anthropogenic variables between 2007 and 2018 in Onagawa Bay. Commercially important fish such as greenlings, Japanese anchovy, flatfishes, rockfishes were consistently abundant in both larval and adult fish assemblages. While abundance, species richness, and Shannon index H' for adult fish and epibenthic megafaunal assemblages increased significantly soon after the disaster to peak values towards the end of the study period, the same metrics did not change accordingly for larval fish assemblages. Temporal dynamics of larval fish community clearly demonstrated significant seasonal variation along with changes in large-scale environmental conditions such as temperature and nutrients. However, anthropogenic components such as decline in human population, reduction in fishing pressure and the recovery of aquaculture operations significantly explained the observed post-disaster change in adult fish and epibenthic megafaunal communities. The pelagic and benthic components of Onagawa Bay appeared to have responded to the 2011 disaster very differently, and this study suggests the post-disaster recovery and dynamics of the coastal ecosystems may be regulated by how human societies respond to the impacts of a tsunami catastrophe through their influences on benthic habitat of ecosystems.


Assuntos
Desastres , Terremotos , Animais , Ecossistema , Humanos , Japão , Tsunamis
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