TitleAquaculture Production and Biodiversity Conservation
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsDiana, JS
JournalBioScience
Volume59
Issue1
Pagination27 - 38
Date Published2009
ISBN Number0006-3568
ISSN0006-3568
Keywordseutrophication, Fish meal, fishery harvests, Food production, invasive species
Abstract

This overview examines the status and trends of seafood production, and the positive and negative impacts of aquaculture on biodiversity conservation. Capture fisheries have been stabilized at about 90 million metric tons since the late 1980s, whereas aquaculture increased from 12 million metric tons in 1985 to 45 million metric tons by 2004. Aquaculture includes species at any trophic level that are grown for domestic consumption or export. Aquaculture has some positive impacts on biodiversity; for example, cultured seafood can reduce pressure on overexploited wild stocks, stocked organisms may enhance depleted stocks, aquaculture often boosts natural production and species diversity, and employment in aquaculture may replace more destructive resource uses. On the negative side, species that escape from aquaculture can become invasive in areas where they are nonnative, effluents from aquaculture can cause eutrophication, ecologically sensitive land may be converted for aquaculture use, aquaculture species may consume increasingly scarce fish meal, and aquaculture species may transmit diseases to wild fish. Most likely, aquaculture will continue to grow at significant rates through 2025, and will remain the most rapidly increasing food production system.

URLhttps://academic.oup.com/bioscience/article/59/1/27/306930/Aquaculture-Production-and-Biodiversity
Notice of Publication Number

NOP 09-247 (English)