Sustainable aquaculture through the One Health lens
Stentiford, GD; Bateman, IJ; Hinchliffe, S; et al.Bass, D; Hartnell, R; Santos, EM; Delvin, M; Taylor, N; Verner-Jeffreys, D; Van Aerle, R; Peeler, EJ; Higman, WA; Smith, L; Baines, R; Behringer, D; Katsiadaki, I; Froehlich, HE; Tyler, CR
Date: 3 August 2020
Article
Journal
Nature Food
Publisher
Nature Research
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Aquaculture is predicted to supply the majority of aquatic dietary protein by 2050. For aquaculture
to deliver significantly enhanced volumes of food in a sustainable manner, appropriate account
needs to be taken of its impacts on environmental integrity, farmed organism health and welfare
and human health. Here, we explore ...
Aquaculture is predicted to supply the majority of aquatic dietary protein by 2050. For aquaculture
to deliver significantly enhanced volumes of food in a sustainable manner, appropriate account
needs to be taken of its impacts on environmental integrity, farmed organism health and welfare
and human health. Here, we explore increased aquaculture production through the One Health lens
and define a set of success metrics – underpinned by evidence, policy and legislation – that must be
embedded into aquaculture sustainability. We provide a framework for defining, monitoring and
averting potential negative impacts of enhanced production – and consider interactions with land-based food systems. These metrics will inform national and international science and policy
strategies to support improved aquatic food system design.
Economics
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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