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Aquaculture

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 4

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Aquaculture

Big idea: Aquaculture is fish farming — raising aquatic organisms in controlled environments. It now provides over 50% of fish for human consumption and is the fastest-growing food production sector.

Advantages of aquaculture

  • Reduces pressure on wild fish stocks
  • More efficient protein production than land animals
  • Reliable, year-round supply
  • Can be done in many locations (coastal, inland, urban)
  • Provides employment in rural/coastal areas

Disadvantages of aquaculture

  • Pollution — waste, antibiotics, and chemicals contaminate water
  • Disease — crowded conditions spread parasites and diseases
  • Escapees — farmed fish escape and compete with/breed with wild populations
  • Feed issues — carnivorous fish (salmon) need wild-caught fish as feed
  • Habitat destruction — mangrove removal for shrimp farms
Aquaculture is not automatically sustainable! Farming herbivorous fish (tilapia, carp) is more sustainable than farming carnivores (salmon) that need fish meal.

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