Improving coastal livelihoods through sustainable aquaculture practices - a report to the collaborative APEC Grouper Research and Development Network


Autoria(s): Haylor, G.; Briggs, M.R.P.; Pet-Soede, L.; Tung, H.; Yen, N.T.H.; Adrien, B.; O’Callaghan, B.; Gow, C.; DeVantier, L.; Cheung, C.; Santos, R.; Pador, E.; De la Torre, M.; Bulcock, P.; Savage, W.
Data(s)

2003

Resumo

Wild-harvest fisheries for live reef fish are largely over-exploited or unsustainable because of over-fishing and the widespread use of destructive fishing practices such as blast and cyanide fishing. Sustainable aquaculture – such as that of groupers – is one option for meeting the strong demand for reef fish, as well as potentially maintaining or improving the livelihoods of coastal communities. This report from a short study by the STREAM Initiative draws on secondary literature, media sources and four diverse case studies from at-risk reef fisheries, to frame a strategy for encouraging sustainable aquaculture as an alternative to destructive fishing practices. It was undertaken as a component of the APEC-funded project Collaborative Grouper Research and Development Network (FWG/01/2001) to better understand how recent technical advances in grouper culture and other complementary work – including that of the Asia-Pacific Marine Finfish Aquaculture Network (APMFAN) hosted by NACA – could better support the livelihoods of poor coastal communities. (PDF contains 49 pages)

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aquaticcommons.org/2544/1/Report-APECGrouperResearch_opt.pdf

Haylor, G. and Briggs, M.R.P. and Pet-Soede, L. and Tung, H. and Yen, N.T.H. and Adrien, B. and O’Callaghan, B. and Gow, C. and DeVantier, L. and Cheung, C. and Santos, R. and Pador, E. and De la Torre, M. and Bulcock, P. and Savage, W. (2003) Improving coastal livelihoods through sustainable aquaculture practices - a report to the collaborative APEC Grouper Research and Development Network. Bangkok, Thailand, Support to Regional Aquatic Resources Management (STREAM), 48pp.

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Support to Regional Aquatic Resources Management (STREAM)

Relação

http://aquaticcommons.org/2544/

Palavras-Chave #Aquaculture #Sociology
Tipo

Monograph or Serial Issue

NonPeerReviewed