AQUACULTURE WITH ITS ENVIRONMENT - PROSPECTS FOR SUSTAINABILITY

被引:128
|
作者
FOLKE, C
KAUTSKY, N
机构
[1] Department of Systems Ecology, Stockholm University
[2] The Beijer International Institute of Ecological Economics, The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, S-10405 Stockholm
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0964-5691(92)90059-T
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
0707 ;
摘要
The rapid expansion of intensive one-species aquaculture has generated severe environmental as well as socio-economic problems. A major reason is that Western-oriented aquaculture has been managed as an isolated part of its supporting environment. In this paper, the authors compare the use of industrial energy for various aquaculture, fisheries and agriculture systems and analyze the connection between resource use, methods of culturing and environmental impacts. The characteristics of one-species aquaculture, such as intensive throughput-based salmon cage-farming and shrimp pond-farming, are found to be similar to those of stressed ecosystems. Among these characteristics are a very inefficient resource use and generation of by-products that are stored or exported. Because of the problems with these monocultures, there is a great need for Western-oriented aquaculture to redirect the industry's present behavior towards a path of synergy between development and environment. A challenge is to find ecological economic ways to integrate culturing activities in coastal areas. Based on principles of ecological engineering, Chinese integrated systems are synthesized, intensive mangrove-destructing shrimp farming is opposed to integrated shrimp farming, and how a coastal culturing system of seaweeds, mussels and salmon could be developed is suggested. Such systems aim at increased efficiency, reduced resource use, avoidance of chemicals and medicals, less waste generation and the recycling of nutrients and materials. The authors conclude that the more a cultivation system recognizes and mimics natural ecosystem functions the less resource inputs are required and the less environmental effects can be expected. A successful aquaculture system does not have wastes, only by-products, to be used as positive contributors to the surrounding ecosystems and the economy.
引用
收藏
页码:5 / 24
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Environment Scotland: Prospects for sustainability
    Dawson, AH
    [J]. GEOGRAPHY, 2000, 85 : 183 - 183
  • [2] Prospects for a heterodox economics of the environment and sustainability
    Douai, Ali
    Mearman, Andrew
    Negru, Ioana
    [J]. CAMBRIDGE JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2012, 36 (05) : 1019 - 1032
  • [3] Environment Scotland: prospects for sustainability.
    Hunter, CJ
    [J]. SCOTTISH GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL, 1999, 115 (03): : 263 - 264
  • [4] Prospects of development of aquaculture in Russia and its regions
    Kalinina, Lyudmila
    Zelenskaya, Inga
    Trufanova, Sofya
    Kalinin, Nicolay
    [J]. 1ST INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON WATER RESOURCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (WREM 2018), 2019, 81
  • [5] Can aquaculture overcome its sustainability challenges?
    DeWeerdt S.
    [J]. Nature, 2020, 588 (7837) : S60 - S62
  • [6] Aquaculture and the environment: the supply of and demand for environmental goods and services by Asian aquaculture and the implications for sustainability
    Beveridge, MCM
    Phillips, MJ
    Macintosh, DJ
    [J]. AQUACULTURE RESEARCH, 1997, 28 (10) : 797 - 807
  • [7] Environment, sustainability and regulation in commercial aquaculture: The case of Chilean salmonid production
    Barton, JR
    [J]. GEOFORUM, 1997, 28 (3-4) : 313 - 328
  • [8] Functional role of piRNAs in animal models and its prospects in aquaculture
    Lite, Christy
    Sridhar, Vasisht Varsh
    Sriram, Swati
    Juliet, Melita
    Arshad, Aziz
    Arockiaraj, Jesu
    [J]. REVIEWS IN AQUACULTURE, 2021, 13 (04) : 2038 - 2052
  • [9] PROSPECTS FOR AQUACULTURE IN INDIA
    PARULEKAR, AH
    DALAL, SG
    [J]. RESEARCH AND INDUSTRY, 1978, 23 (01): : 1 - 3
  • [10] Advancing the sustainability of aquaculture
    Nie, Pin
    Hallerman, Eric
    [J]. REVIEWS IN AQUACULTURE, 2021, 13 (02) : 781 - 782