Addressing aquaculture-fisheries interactions through the implementation of the ecosystem approach to aquaculture (EAA


Autoria(s): Soto, Doris; White, Patrick; Dempster, Tim; De Silva, Sena S.; Flores, Alejandro; Karakassis, Yanni; Knapp, Gunnar; Martinez, Javier; Miao, Weimin; Sadovy, Yvonne; Thorstad, Eva; Wiefels, Ronald
Contribuinte(s)

Subasinghe, R.

Arthur, J.R.

Bartley, D.M.

De Silva, S.S.

Halwart, M.

Hishamunda, N.

Mohan, C.V.

Sorgaloos, P.

Data(s)

01/01/2012

Resumo

This review addresses how the ecosystem approach to aquaculture (EAA) can optimize aquaculture-fisheries interactions considering different spatial scales from farm, aquaculture zone and watershed through to the global market. Aquaculture and fisheries are closely related subsectors with frequent interactions, largely due to the sharing of common ecosystems and natural resources. Interactions are also born from the flow of biomass from fisheries to aquaculture through fish-based feeds (e.g. fishmeal, fish oil and trashfish), through the collection of wild seed and brookstock, and genetic resources and biomass transfer from aquaculture to fisheries through culture-based fisheries (CBF) and escapees. Negative effects include modification of habitats affecting fisheries resources and activities (e.g. mangrove clearing for shrimp ponds, seabed disturbances through anchoring of aquaculture cages or pens, damage to seagrasses, alteration to reproductive habitats, biodiversity loss). Eutrophication of waterbodies due to excess nutrient release leading to anoxia and fish mortality can also impact negatively on biodiversity and wild fish stocks. Release of diseases and chemicals also imposes some threats on fisheries. Yet there could be beneficial impacts; for example, aquaculture is increasingly contributing to capture fisheries through CBF and could contribute to restore overfished stocks. Aquaculture can offer alternative livelihoods to fisherfolk, providing increased opportunity to them and also to their families, and especially to women. Aquaculture-increased production and marketing can also enhance and indirectly improve processing and market access to similar fishery products. The ecosystem approach to aquaculture (EAA) is a strategy for the management of the sector that emphasizes intersectoral complementarities by taking into account the interactions between all the activities within ecologically meaningful boundaries and acknowledging the multiple services provided by ecosystems. The main objective of this review is to understand the status of aquaculture-fisheries interactions associated with the biological, technological, social, economic, environmental, policy, legal and other aspects of aquaculture development and to analyze how these interactions are or could be addressed with an EAA. Therefore, the review involves aspects of scoping, identification of issues, prioritizing, devising management tools and plans for minimizing negative effects and optimizing positive ones within the context of social-ecological resilience, at different relevant geographical scales. Many of the management measures suggested in this review must involve not only EAA but also an ecosystem approach to fisheries (EAF), especially to deal with issues such as fishery of wild seed and the management of fisheries to produce fishmeal/oil for pelleted feeds or for direct feeding with wet fish. The implementation of EAA and EAF should help to overcome the sectoral and intergovernmental fragmentation of resource management efforts and assist in the development of institutional mechanisms and private-sector arrangements for effective coordination among various sectors active in ecosystems in which aquaculture and fisheries operate and between the various levels of government. Ecosystem-based management involves a transition from traditional sectoral planning and decision-making to the application of a more holistic approach to integrated natural resource management in an adaptive manner.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30052891

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

[The Conference]

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30052891/soto-addressingaqua-2012.pdf

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30052891/soto-addressingaqua-evid-2012.pdf

http://www.fao.org/docrep/015/i2734e/i2734e.pdf

Palavras-Chave #aquaculture-fisheries interactions #ecosystem approach to aquaculture #culture-based fisheries #food security #integrated management #stakeholder participation
Tipo

Conference Paper