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  • Aquaculture  (1)
  • salmonids  (1)
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Environmental management 18 (1994), S. 663-676 
    ISSN: 1432-1009
    Keywords: Aquaculture ; Shrimp farming ; Colombia ; Sustainability ; Resource use ; Life support system ; Carrying capacity
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Energy, Environment Protection, Nuclear Power Engineering
    Notes: Abstract Shrimp farming in mangrove areas has grown dramatically in Asia and Latin America over the past decade. As a result, demand for resources required for farming, such as feed, seed, and clean water, has increased substantially. This study focuses on semiintensive shrimp culture as practiced on the Caribbean coast of Colombia. We estimated the spatial ecosystem support that is required to produce the food inputs, nursery areas, and clean water to the shrimp farms, as well as to process wastes. We also made an estimate of the natural and human-made resources necessary to run a typical semiintensive shrimp farm. The results show that a semiintensive shrimp farm needs a spatial ecosystem support—the ecological footprint—that is 35–190 times larger than the surface area of the farm. A typical such shrimp farm appropriates about 295 J of ecological work for each joule of edible shrimp protein produced. The corresponding figure for industrial energy is 40:1. More than 80% of the ecological primary production required to feed the shrimps is derived from external ecosystems. In 1990 an area of 874–2300 km2 of mangrove was required to supply shrimp postlarvae to the farms in Colombia, corresponding to a total area equivalent to about 20–50% of the country’s total mangrove area. The results were compared with similar estimates for other food production systems, particularly aquacultural ones. The comparison indicates that shrimp farming ranks as one of the most resource-intensive food production systems, characterizing it as an ecologically unsustainable throughput system. Based on the results, we discuss local, national, and regional appropriation of ecological support by the semiintensive shrimp farms. Suggestions are made for how shrimp farming could be transformed into a food production system that is less environmentally degrading and less dependent on external support areas.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-5117
    Keywords: biofilter ; environmental sustainability ; Gracilaria ; salmonids ; seaweeds ; tank cultivation
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Oncorhynchus kisutch, O. mykiss and Gracilaria chilensis cultivation in intensive tank systems is feasible. The environmental benefits associated with the development of integrated tank cultivation were established by analyzing previously published and unpublished data on fish production and food conversion efficiency, particle discharges in fish effluents, as well as biomass production, nutrient uptake efficiency data of Gracilaria, with special emphasis on ammonium. The results indicate that fish production can reach 30 kg m−3 during a production cycle, and food conversion can be maintained stably at 1.4 g food g fish−1 production during the entire cultivation period. The solid particle discharges can be as high as 2.1 g (dry) kg fish−1 day−1 during the spring and summer, when salmon cultivation reaches its highest densities. The nutrient that increases most in fish effluents is ammonium, reaching concentrations as high as 500 µg 1−1, also in spring and summer. Gracilaria production can reach production rates as high as 48.9 kg m−2 year−1 and is able to remove 50% of the dissolved ammonium in winter, increasing to 90–95% in spring. These results are integrated into an income-analysis model, adding the extra income for Gracilaria harvesting and internalizing the environmental benefits for a 100-ton salmon production unit, which indicates that an additional total revenue of over US$ 60 000, representing around 10% of the total income, is possible.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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