Black Sea Aquaculture: Legacy, Challenges & Future Opportunities

Q4 Agricultural and Biological Sciences
F. Massa, I. Aydin, Davide Fezzardi, B. Akbulut, A. Atanasoff, A. T. Beken, V. Bekh, Yuliia Buhlak, I. Burlachenko, E. Can, S. Carboni, F. Caruso, M. Dağtekin, Kostiantyn Demianenko, H. Déniz, Dilek Fidan, Linda Fourdain, M. Frederiksen, A. Guchmanidze, Housam Hamza, J. Harvey, M. Nenciu, G. Nikolov, V. Niță, Muhammed Doğan Özdemir, E. Petrova-Pavlova, G. Popescu, F. Rad, Ş. S. Can, J. Theodorou, Behnan Thomas, Nicolò Tonachella, E. Tribilustova, I. Yakhontova, A. F. Yeşilsu, Güzel Yücel-Gier
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Responsible aquaculture, the farming of aquatic organisms, is a sustainable strategic sector for land and coastal communities. It significantly contributes to food security and enhancement of economic development; it provides employment opportunities and often contributes to the ecological services provided by the environment. According to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the contribution of aquaculture to the global food security is widely demonstrated by an astounding industry growth of 7.5% per year since 1970. In 2018, aquaculture reached the all-time highest production of 114.5 million tonnes in live weight with a total farm gate sale value of USD 263.6 billion. This makes aquaculture a key player within the Blue Growth concept and a strong contributor to some of its key Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). This is particularly true in geographical areas where dependence of local economies on fishery products is high, and yet access to sustainable landings is hampered by ecological barriers. One such area is represented by the Black Sea basin. Whilst the Black Sea annual capture fishery production has varied considerably since 1990 and its current landings are significant, growing attention is currently given to boost aquaculture development along the Black Sea bordering countries, with marine aquaculture being considered as an important contributor to the total fisheries production. Nonetheless, aquaculture development in this region is not homogenous and its development has, so far, been limited by environmental, economic, social, and more generally governance issues. This paper, for the first time, attempts to provide a comprehensive fresh outlook of the aquaculture sector in the Black Sea, stressing the importance of regional cooperation as an essential pillar to support the sustainable development of the industry. The paper addresses aquaculture in the Black Sea from different perspectives: it outlines the key characteristics of the Black Sea environment; it discusses the most common farmed aquatic species and the potential for new ones; it frames the national approaches to aquaculture development, sharing information about success stories, while shedding light on the main challenges and priorities ahead. This collective endeavour will represent a helpful contribution to Black Sea riparian countries to answer the many questions they have, and expectations they hold from the aquaculture sector.
黑海水产养殖:遗产、挑战和未来机遇
负责任的水产养殖,即水生生物养殖,是陆地和沿海社区的可持续战略部门。它大大有助于粮食安全和促进经济发展;它提供了就业机会,并经常为环境提供的生态服务做出贡献。根据联合国粮食及农业组织(FAO)的数据,自1970年以来,水产养殖对全球粮食安全的贡献以每年7.5%的惊人增长得到了广泛证明。2018年,水产养殖达到了历史最高产量1.145亿吨活重,农场门前总销售额为2636亿美元。这使得水产养殖成为蓝色增长概念中的关键参与者,也是其一些关键可持续发展目标(SDG)的有力贡献者。在当地经济对渔业产品的依赖程度很高,但生态屏障阻碍了可持续上岸的地理区域尤其如此。黑海盆地就是这样一个地区。虽然自1990年以来,黑海的年度捕捞渔业产量变化很大,目前的上岸量也很大,但目前人们越来越关注促进黑海沿岸国家的水产养殖发展,海洋水产养殖被认为是渔业总产量的重要贡献者。尽管如此,该地区的水产养殖发展并不同质,到目前为止,其发展受到环境、经济、社会和更普遍的治理问题的限制。本文首次试图对黑海水产养殖业提供一个全面的新视角,强调区域合作作为支持该行业可持续发展的重要支柱的重要性。本文从不同的角度论述了黑海的水产养殖:概述了黑海环境的主要特征;它讨论了最常见的养殖水生物种以及新物种的潜力;它阐述了各国水产养殖发展的方法,分享了成功案例的信息,同时阐明了未来的主要挑战和优先事项。这一集体努力将有助于黑海沿岸国家回答他们对水产养殖部门的许多问题和期望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Aquaculture Studies
Aquaculture Studies Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Animal Science and Zoology
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
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