Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 13 de 13
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Nature ; 591(7851): 551-563, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33762770

ABSTRACT

The sustainability of aquaculture has been debated intensely since 2000, when a review on the net contribution of aquaculture to world fish supplies was published in Nature. This paper reviews the developments in global aquaculture from 1997 to 2017, incorporating all industry sub-sectors and highlighting the integration of aquaculture in the global food system. Inland aquaculture-especially in Asia-has contributed the most to global production volumes and food security. Major gains have also occurred in aquaculture feed efficiency and fish nutrition, lowering the fish-in-fish-out ratio for all fed species, although the dependence on marine ingredients persists and reliance on terrestrial ingredients has increased. The culture of both molluscs and seaweed is increasingly recognized for its ecosystem services; however, the quantification, valuation, and market development of these services remain rare. The potential for molluscs and seaweed to support global nutritional security is underexploited. Management of pathogens, parasites, and pests remains a sustainability challenge industry-wide, and the effects of climate change on aquaculture remain uncertain and difficult to validate. Pressure on the aquaculture industry to embrace comprehensive sustainability measures during this 20-year period have improved the governance, technology, siting, and management in many cases.


Subject(s)
Aquaculture/history , Food Supply/history , Sustainable Development/history , Animal Feed , Animals , Animals, Wild , Fisheries , Fishes , Fresh Water , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Internationality , Oceans and Seas , Shellfish
3.
PLoS One ; 14(2): e0211194, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30811412

ABSTRACT

Ancient systems of mariculture were foundations of social-ecological systems of many coastal Indigenous Peoples. However, since such systems either do not leave tangible remains in the archaeological record, and/or are hard to date, we know little about their development and use. Clam gardens, traditional mariculture features located within the intertidal zone along the Northwest Coast of North America, are composed of a rock wall positioned at the low tide mark and a flattened terrace on the landward side of the wall. Because these features are largely composed of rock and sediment, and have complex formation histories, they can be difficult to age. On northern Quadra Island, British Columbia, we identify three variations in clam garden form, constructed in different geomorphological settings, each of which require different sampling approaches to obtain ages on construction and ongoing use. To age the clam gardens, we consider radiocarbon dating of invertebrates that inhabit beach deposits (both pre- and post-garden construction), and the relationship of the gardens and clam samples to the local sea level history and taphonomic processes. Within our study area, we find clam gardens have been in use for 3500 years, likely corresponding to other social and ecological changes of the time. These data allow us to formulate guidelines on samples most suitable to constrain the age of initial and on-going wall construction and use of clam gardens, which can be extrapolated to dating other ancient mariculture features in other regions. Such dating programs are the foundation for understanding the long-term development of traditional marine management practices and how they are situated in broader social-ecological systems.


Subject(s)
Aquaculture/history , Shellfish/history , American Indian or Alaska Native/history , Animals , Aquaculture/methods , Bivalvia , British Columbia , Ecosystem , History, Ancient , Humans , North America , Pacific Ocean , Population Groups/history , Radiometric Dating
4.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 14086, 2018 09 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30237483

ABSTRACT

Past fish provenance, exploitation and trade patterns were studied by analyzing phosphate oxygen isotope compositions (δ18OPO4) of gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) tooth enameloid from archaeological sites across the southern Levant, spanning the entire Holocene. We report the earliest evidence for extensive fish exploitation from the hypersaline Bardawil lagoon on Egypt's northern Sinai coast, as indicated by distinctively high δ18OPO4 values, which became abundant in the southern Levant, both along the coast and further inland, at least from the Late Bronze Age (3,550-3,200 BP). A period of global, postglacial sea-level stabilization triggered the formation of the Bardawil lagoon, which was intensively exploited and supported a widespread fish trade. This represents the earliest roots of marine proto-aquaculture in Late Holocene coastal domains of the Mediterranean. We demonstrate the potential of large-scale δ18OPO4 analysis of fish teeth to reveal cultural phenomena in antiquity, providing unprecedented insights into past trade patterns.


Subject(s)
Aquaculture/history , Commerce/history , Oxygen Isotopes/analysis , Tooth/chemistry , Animals , Archaeology , History, Ancient , Mediterranean Region , Sea Bream , Seafood
5.
Hist Philos Life Sci ; 40(1): 3, 2017 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29138998

ABSTRACT

In the 1950s, embryology in socialist China underwent a series of changes that adjusted the disciplinary apparatus to suit socialism and the national goal of self-reliance. As the Communist state called on scientists to learn from the Soviets, embryologists' comprehensive view on heredity, which did not contradict Trofim Lysenko (1898-1976)'s doctrines, provided a space for them to advance their discipline. Leading scientists, often trained abroad in the tradition of experimental embryology, rode on the tides of Maoist ideology and repositioned their research. Some of their creative realignment of previous research questions, materials, and traditions to Marxist philosophy and agricultural objectives generated productive programs. In particular, Tong Dizhou (1902-1979) translated Engels's dialectics of nature into a research question about cytoplasmic inheritance. His continuing investigation on it led to the first goldfish "clone" through a nuclear transplantation experiment; Zhu Xi and his associates transferred a goldfish model in embryology into studies on improving carp aquaculture, leading to a rare success in the Great Leap Forward of 1958. These directions for embryology continued well into the 1960s. At a time when global embryology was diversifying and began to be molecularized, eventually forming "developmental biology," socialist embryology took shape in China with a different set of epistemic and practical commitments. The history of its development challenges and enriches our understanding of the concrete process of change in one discipline under Mao, showing ways in which scientists creatively adapted state-sanctioned ideologies and visions to do productive work outside the framework of molecular biology during the Cold War.


Subject(s)
Aquaculture/history , Embryology/history , Socialism/history , China , Communism/history , History, 20th Century
6.
J Hist Biol ; 50(2): 393-423, 2017 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27052510

ABSTRACT

"Red tide" has become a familiar shorthand for unusual changes in the color of ocean waters. It is intimately related both to blooms of creatures like dinoflagellates and to the devastating effects they pose to coastal fisheries. This essay tracks the early twentieth century emergence of discolored water as an aquacultural problem, known in Japan as akashio, and its trans-oceanic transformation into the terms and practices of "red tide" in the post-World War II United States. For Japan's "Pearl King" Mikimoto Kokichi and his contacts in diverse marine scientific communities, the years-long cycle of guarding and cultivating a pearl oyster went together with the ascription of moral qualities to tiny creatures that posed a threat to farmed bayscapes of pearl monoculture. As akashio, discolored water went from curiosity to marine livestock pest, one that at times left dead pearl oysters in its wake. Red tide arose from the sustained study of the mechanisms by which changes in the biological and chemical composition of seawater might become deadly to exclusively-claimed shellfish along Japanese coastlines, but came to be seen as a way to understand aquatic manifestations of harm in other parts of the littoral world.


Subject(s)
Aquaculture/history , Dinoflagellida , Harmful Algal Bloom , Pinctada , Animal Diseases/history , Animal Diseases/transmission , Animals , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Japan , Seawater
7.
Zoolog Sci ; 30(10): 783-93, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24125642

ABSTRACT

During the 18th and 19th centuries, studies of how pearls are formed were conducted mainly in Europe. The subsequent pearl culturing experiments conducted worldwide in the early 20th century, however, failed to develop into a pearl industry. In Japan, however, Kokichi Mikimoto succeeded in culturing blister pearls in 1893 under the guidance of Kakichi Mitsukuri, a professor at Tokyo Imperial University (now the University of Tokyo) and the first director of the Misaki Marine Biological Station, Graduate School of Science, University of Tokyo. This success and subsequent developments laid the foundation for the pearl farming industry, developed new demand for cultured pearls in the European jewelry market, and initiated the full-scale industrialization of pearl culturing. In addition, research at the Misaki Marine Biological Station resulted in noteworthy advances in the scientific study of pearl formation. Today, pearls are cultured worldwide, utilizing a variety of pearl oysters. The pearl farming industry, with its unique origins in Japan, has grown into a global industry. Recently, the introduction of genome analysis has allowed cultured pearl research to make rapid progress worldwide in such areas as the dynamics of mother-of-pearl layer formation and biomineralization. This signals another new era in the study of pearls.


Subject(s)
Aquaculture/history , Jewelry/history , Pinctada/physiology , Animals , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Japan , Pinctada/genetics
8.
Bioessays ; 35(9): 838-9, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23943287

ABSTRACT

2013 marks the 50th annual Drew festival in Uto City, Japan, celebrating the work of University of Manchester botanist, Dr. Kathleen Drew-Baker. Her insight into the reproductive biology of algae was the key to efficient farming of the seaweed "nori" which is a familiar component of Japanese food.


Subject(s)
Seaweed/physiology , Aquaculture/history , Aquaculture/methods , Food, Organic , History, 20th Century , Humans , Japan
9.
Lat Am Res Rev ; 46: 55-81, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22180929

ABSTRACT

The United Nations describes aquaculture as the fastest-growing method of food production, and some industry boosters have heralded the coming of a sustainable blue revolution. This article interprets the meteoric rise and sudden collapse of Atlantic salmon aquaculture in southern Chile (1980-2010) by integrating concepts from commodity studies and comparative environmental history. I juxtapose salmon aquaculture to twentieth-century export banana production to reveal the similar dynamics that give rise to "commodity diseases"­events caused by the entanglement of biological, social, and political-economic processes that operate on local, regional, and transoceanic geographical scales. Unsurprisingly, the risks and burdens associated with commodity diseases are borne disproportionately by production workers and residents in localities where commodity disease events occur. Chile's blue revolution suggests that evaluating the sustainability of aquaculture in Latin America cannot be divorced from processes of accumulation.


Subject(s)
Aquaculture , Conservation of Natural Resources , Economics , Fisheries , Food Supply , Animals , Aquaculture/economics , Aquaculture/education , Aquaculture/history , Chile/ethnology , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/history , Economics/history , Fisheries/economics , Fisheries/history , Food Supply/economics , Food Supply/history , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Salmon
10.
Environ Manage ; 44(1): 185-204, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19471999

ABSTRACT

An adaptation of the Drivers-Pressure-State-Impact-Response methodology is presented in this work. The differential DPSIR (DeltaDPSIR) was developed to evaluate impacts on the coastal environment and as a tool for integrated ecosystem management. The aim of the DeltaDPSIR is to provide scientifically-based information required by managers and decision-makers to evaluate previously adopted policies, as well as future response scenarios. The innovation of the present approach is to provide an explicit link between ecological and economic information related to the use and management of a coastal ecosystem within a specific timeframe. The application of DeltaDPSIR is illustrated through an analysis of developments in a Southwest European coastal lagoon between 1985 and 1995. The value of economic activities dependent on the lagoon suffered a significant reduction (ca. -60%) over that period, mainly due to a decrease in bivalve production. During that decade the pressures from the catchment area were managed (ca. 176 million Euros), mainly through the building of waste water treatment plants. Notwithstanding this, the ecosystem state worsened with respect to abnormal clam mortalities due to a parasite infection and to benthic eutrophication symptoms in specific problematic areas. The negative economic impacts during the decade were estimated between -565 and -315 million Euros, of which 9-49% represent the cost of environmental externalities. Evaluation of these past events indicates that future management actions should focus on reducing the limitation on local clam seeds, which should result in positive impacts to both the local socio-economy and biodiversity.


Subject(s)
Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/methods , Ecosystem , Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/statistics & numerical data , Animals , Aquaculture/economics , Aquaculture/history , Aquaculture/statistics & numerical data , Bathing Beaches/economics , Bathing Beaches/statistics & numerical data , Bivalvia/metabolism , Bivalvia/pathogenicity , Conservation of Natural Resources/legislation & jurisprudence , Dinoflagellida/microbiology , Eutrophication , Fisheries/economics , Fisheries/statistics & numerical data , Geography/economics , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , History, 20th Century , Industry/economics , Industry/statistics & numerical data , Nitrogen/analysis , Oceans and Seas , Phosphorus/analysis , Recreation/economics , Seawater/chemistry
11.
Agric Hist ; 82(2): 143-63, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19856533

ABSTRACT

Prior to the advent of scientific aquaculture in the mid-nineteenth century, English farming manuals of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries instructed American colonists in the "art of husbandry," imparting advice and passing on the best-known strategies for keeping and rearing fish in enclosed ponds. The development of such ponds in the New England and Mid-Atlantic colonies during the eighteenth century marked the culmination of a long process by which British-American colonists adapted to declines in natural fish populations brought on by over-fishing and disruption of habitat by water-powered mills. The development of private fishponds as an increasingly important component of American mixed husbandry practices in long-settled areas by the end of the eighteenth century illustrates early American farmers' ability to successfully adapt to self-wrought changes in their physical environment.


Subject(s)
Agriculture , Animal Husbandry , Aquaculture , Conservation of Natural Resources , Fisheries , Food Supply , Agriculture/economics , Agriculture/education , Agriculture/history , Animal Husbandry/economics , Animal Husbandry/education , Animal Husbandry/history , Animals , Aquaculture/economics , Aquaculture/education , Aquaculture/history , Conservation of Natural Resources/economics , Conservation of Natural Resources/history , Environmental Pollutants/economics , Environmental Pollutants/history , Fisheries/economics , Fisheries/history , Fishes , Food Supply/economics , Food Supply/history , History, 18th Century , Mid-Atlantic Region/ethnology , New England/ethnology , Rural Health/history , Rural Population/history , United States/ethnology
13.
Bol. Lima ; 9(51): 75-80, mayo 1987. ilus
Article in Spanish | LIPECS | ID: biblio-1107066

ABSTRACT

The present article reviews the history and present situation acuaculture. The author gives valuable recommendation of human activities in sweet water and salt water. In the present article the author tells of the recovery and restoration of a deteriorated canvas and its reltions to other paintings of the Peruvian Colonial school.


La presente reseña describe la historia y la situación actual de la acuicultura. A modo de conclusiones el autor formula valiosas recomendaciones referidas a las actividades en aguas dulces y marina.


Subject(s)
Animals , Aquaculture , Aquaculture/history , Human Activities , Peru , Fresh Water , Seawater
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...