| Literature DB >> 29761051 |
Owen R Liu1, Renato Molina1,2, Margaret Wilson1, Benjamin S Halpern1,3,4.
Abstract
An estimated two billion people worldwide currently suffer from micronutrient malnutrition, and almost one billion are calorie deficient. Providing adequate nutrition is a growing global challenge. Seafood is one of the most important sources of both protein and micronutrients for many, yet production from wild capture fisheries has stagnated. In contrast, aquaculture is the world's fastest-growing food production sector and now supplies over half of all seafood consumed globally. Mariculture, or the farming of brackish and marine species, accounts for roughly one-third of all aquaculture production and has received increasing attention as a potential supplement for wild-caught marine fisheries. By analyzing global patterns in seafood reliance, malnutrition levels, and economic opportunity, this study identifies where mariculture has the greatest potential to improve human nutrition. We calculate a mariculture opportunity index for 117 coastal nations by drawing on a diverse set of seafood production, trade, consumption, and nutrition data. Seventeen primary variables are combined into country-level scores for reliance on seafood, opportunity for nutritional improvement, and opportunity for economic development of mariculture. The final mariculture opportunity score identifies countries with high seafood reliance combined with high nutritional and economic opportunity scores. We find that island nations in Southeast Asia and the Caribbean are consistently identified as countries with high mariculture opportunity. In other regions, nutritional and economic opportunity scores are not significantly correlated, and we discuss the implications of this finding for crafting appropriate development policy. Finally, we identify key challenges to ameliorating malnutrition through mariculture development, including insufficient policy infrastructure, government instability, and ensuring local consumption of farmed fish. Our analysis is an important step towards prioritizing nations where the economic and nutritional benefits of expanding mariculture may be jointly captured.Entities:
Keywords: Aquaculture; Global analysis; Mariculture; Nutrition; Public policy; Seafood
Year: 2018 PMID: 29761051 PMCID: PMC5949058 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Schematic of mariculture opportunity score calculation for each nation.
Categories of metrics consolidated for clarity, with total number of raw variables in parentheses. See Eqs. (2)–(5) for score calculation.
Figure 2(A) Final mariculture opportunity scores for the entire world, with (B) detail for the Caribbean region.
Gray indicates countries which were removed from the analysis (see ‘Methods’) or no data were available. World borders dataset from thematicmapping.org, obtained under a Creative Commons license.
Figure 3Results of global analysis of nutritional opportunity, seafood reliance, and economic opportunity.
Individual countries (n = 117) scatter along economic and nutritional opportunity scores on the x and y axes, respectively, where each point indicates the performance of a given country. Scores are scaled from zero to one (see ‘Methods’), such that countries in the upper right quadrant have both a high economic and nutritional opportunity for mariculture development. Size and opacity of country points scale with each country’s seafood reliance score, while color indicates a country’s geographic region. Countries referred to in the Discussion are labeled.