Responsible Aquaculture in 2050: Valuing Local Conditions and Human Innovations Will Be Key to Success

Abstract: 

As aquaculture production expands, we must avoid mistakes made during increasing intensification of agriculture. Understanding environmental impacts and measures to mitigate them is important for designing responsible aquaculture production systems. There are four realistic goals that can make future aquaculture operations more sustainable and productive: (1) improvement of management practices to create more efficient and diverse systems at every production level; (2) emphasis on local decisionmaking, human capacity development, and collective action to generate pro- ductive aquaculture systems that fit into societal constraints and demands; (3) development of risk management efforts for all systems that reduce disease problems, eliminate antibiotic and drug abuse, and prevent exotic organism introduction into local waters; and (4) creation of systems to better identify more sustainably grown aquaculture products in the market and promote them to individual consumers. By 2050, seafood will be predominantly sourced through aquaculture, including not only finfish and invertebrates but also seaweeds.

Author(s): 
James S. Diana,
Hillary S. Egna
Thierry Chopin
Mark S. Peterson
Ling Cao
Robert Pomeroy
Marc Verdegem
William T. Slack
Felipe Cabello
Melba G. Bondad-Reantaso
Keywords: 
human capacity development
integrated multitrophic aquaculture
best management practices
recirculating aquaculture systems
responsible aquaculture
Article Source: 
April 2013 / Vol. 63 No. 4 • BioScience
Category: 
Aquaculture methods
Processing methods