Journal Article10.1016/J.AQUACULTURE.2009.04.017
Evaluating the economic potential of horizontally integrated land-based marine aquaculture
Stuart W. Bunting,Muki Shpigel +1 more
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TL;DR: Findings suggest that bioeconomic modelling can contribute to the optimisation of horizontally integrated aquaculture systems, helping elucidate promising scenarios and identify key constraints and priorities for targeted research and development.
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About: This article is published in Aquaculture. The article was published on 01 Sep 2009. The article focuses on the topics: Integrated multi-trophic aquaculture & Aquaculture.
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Citations
Searching for Solutions in Aquaculture: Charting a Sustainable Course
TL;DR: A review of potential solutions to a range of resource and environmental problems in aquaculture, including novel culture systems, alternative feed strategies, and species choices, and identifying easily adoptable solutions and promising technologies worth further investment.
The development of halophyte-based agriculture: past and present
TL;DR: This review critically analyses past and present halophyte-based production systems in the context of genetics, physiology, agrotechnical issues and product value.
247
Growth of Tetraselmis suecica in a tubular photobioreactor on wastewater from a fish farm
TL;DR: This study shows the feasibility of an integrated multi-trophic aquaculture approach where wastewater from the fish farms is used to produce feed for juvenile shellfish at high productivity and constant quality.
119
The economics of Integrated Multi‐Trophic Aquaculture: where are we now and where do we need to go?
Duncan Knowler,Thierry Chopin,Rober Martínez‐Espiñeira,Amir Neori,A. M. Nobre,Anthony A. Noce,Gregor Reid +6 more
TL;DR: It is found that adopting IMTA raises the assimilative capacity of the farm and that IMTA substantively reduces the environmental cost of aquaculture, and that the presence of positive public attitudes towards IMTA, as expressed by a willingness to pay a premium for its products, can further increase the profitability of adoptingIMTA.
112
Constructed wetland with Salicornia as a biofilter for mariculture effluents
TL;DR: The results demonstrate the effectiveness of N, P and total suspended solid (TSS) removal from mariculture effluent by a CW operating with Salicornia persica as a biofilter for effluent water drained from a semi-open recirculating mariculture system was studied in southern Israel.
97
References
Green grow the fishes?oh? Environmental attributes in marketing aquaculture products
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the relevant issues of environmental attributes, explores the ways in which these may interact with future production, and explores how these may impact future aquaculture processes and products.
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The promise of the blue revolution. Aquaculture can maintain living standards while averting the ruin of the oceans.
TL;DR: The authors argue that farmed fish is fatty, dyed, polluting and stuffed with antibiotics, and that it is unsustainable and must be reared in the wild to meet the growing shortfall as the world's wild fisheries become more and more exhausted.
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Assessing the Stakeholder Delphi for Facilitating Interactive Participation and Consensus Building for Sustainable Aquaculture Development
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a study concerning strategies to limit negative aquaculture wastewater impacts, including institutional, managerial, socioeconomic, and technological subcategories, using stakeholder Delphi, drawing on knowledge and experience of participants.
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Outdoor phytoplankton continuous culture in a marine fish–phytoplankton–bivalve integrated system: combined effects of dilution rate and ambient conditions on growth rate, biomass and nutrient cycling
TL;DR: The results showed that diatom biomass can collapse and it is hypothesize that this was the consequence of an increase in cellular sinking rates due to cell aggregation under nutrient or light stress.
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