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Sustainable aquatic food production

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 4

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Sustainable aquatic food production

Big idea: Sustainable fishing means harvesting at or below maximum sustainable yield (MSY) — taking only what can regenerate. This requires science-based quotas, protected areas, and responsible practices.

Management strategies for capture fisheries

  • Fishing quotas — limits on how much can be caught
  • Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) — no-take zones allow stocks to recover
  • Closed seasons — no fishing during breeding periods
  • Gear restrictions — mesh size limits, bans on destructive methods
  • Catch certification — traceability to prevent IUU fish entering markets
  • Consumer labels — MSC certification guides sustainable choices

Sustainable aquaculture practices

  • Farming herbivorous/omnivorous species (lower on food chain)
  • Integrated multi-trophic aquaculture (IMTA) — waste from one species feeds another
  • Recirculating systems — filters and reuses water
  • Reducing antibiotic use through better husbandry
  • Locating farms to minimize wild population interaction
Sustainable management means use is less than or equal to regeneration rate. Link harvest to MSY, then give several specific strategies for fisheries and aquaculture with brief explanations (one clear point per strategy).

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