Authors
Rosamond L Naylor, Rebecca J Goldburg, Jurgenne H Primavera, Nils Kautsky, Malcolm CM Beveridge, Jason Clay, Carl Folke, Jane Lubchenco, Harold Mooney, Max Troell
Publication date
2000/6/29
Source
Nature
Volume
405
Issue
6790
Pages
1017-1024
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Global production of farmed fish and shellfish has more than doubled in the past 15 years. Many people believe that such growth relieves pressure on ocean fisheries, but the opposite is true for some types of aquaculture. Farming carnivorous species requires large inputs of wild fish for feed. Some aquaculture systems also reduce wild fish supplies through habitat modification, wild seedstock collection and other ecological impacts. On balance, global aquaculture production still adds to world fish supplies; however, if the growing aquaculture industry is to sustain its contribution to world fish supplies, it must reduce wild fish inputs in feed and adopt more ecologically sound management practices.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RL Naylor, RJ Goldburg, JH Primavera, N Kautsky… - Nature, 2000