Integrating seaweeds into marine aquaculture systems:: A key toward sustainability

被引:493
作者
Chopin, T
Buschmann, AH
Halling, C
Troell, M
Kautsky, N
Neori, A
Kraemer, GP
Zertuche-González, JA
Yarish, C
Neefus, C
机构
[1] Univ New Brunswick, Ctr Coastal Studies & Aquaculture, St John, NB E2L 4L5, Canada
[2] Univ New Brunswick, Ctr Environm & Mol Algal Res, St John, NB E2L 4L5, Canada
[3] Univ Los Lagos, Dept Acuicultura, Osorno, Chile
[4] Stockholm Univ, Dept Syst Ecol, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden
[5] Royal Swedish Acad Sci, Beijer Int Inst Ecol Econ, S-10405 Stockholm, Sweden
[6] Israel Oceanog & Limnol Res, Natl Ctr Mariculture, IL-88112 Elat, Israel
[7] SUNY Coll Purchase, Div Nat Sci, Purchase, NY 10577 USA
[8] Univ Autonoma Baja California, Inst Invest Oceanol, Ensenada, Baja California, Mexico
[9] Univ Connecticut, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Stamford, CT 06901 USA
[10] Univ New Hampshire, Dept Plant Biol, Off Biometr, Durham, NH 03824 USA
关键词
assimilative capacity; bioremediation; coastal health; environmental impacts; integrated aquaculture; integrated coastal management; nutrification; salmon; seaweeds; sustainability;
D O I
10.1046/j.1529-8817.2001.01137.x
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
The rapid development of intensive fed aquaculture (e.g. finfish and shrimp) throughout the world is associated with concerns about the environmental impacts of such often monospecific practices, especially where activities are highly geographically concentrated or located in suboptimal sites whose assimilative capacity is poorly understood and, consequently, prone to being exceeded. One of the main environmental issues is the direct discharge of significant nutrient loads into coastal waters from open-water systems and with the effluents from land-based systems. In its search for best management practices, the aquaculture industry should develop innovative and responsible practices that optimize its efficiency and create diversification, while ensuring the remediation of the consequences of its activities to maintain the health of coastal waters. To avoid pronounced shifts in coastal processes, conversion, not dilution, is a common-sense solution, used for centuries in Asian countries. By integrating fed aquaculture (finfish, shrimp) with inorganic and organic extractive aquaculture (seaweed and shellfish), the wastes of one resource user become a resource (fertilizer or food) for the others. Such a balanced ecosystem approach provides nutrient bioremediation capability, mutual benefits to the cocultured organisms, economic diversification by producing other value-added marine crops, and increased profitability per cultivation unit for the aquaculture industry. Moreover, as guidelines and regulations on aquaculture effluents are forthcoming in several countries, using appropriately selected seaweeds as renewable biological nutrient scrubbers represents a cost-effective means for reaching compliance by reducing the internalization of the total environmental costs. By adopting integrated polytrophic practices, the aquaculture industry should find increasing environmental, economic, and social acceptability and become a full and sustainable partner within the development of integrated coastal management frameworks.
引用
收藏
页码:975 / 986
页数:12
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