Indonesia aims for sustainable fish farming with ‘aquaculture villages’ 
By Luh De Suriyani, M Ambari ID Source: mongabay 1/7/2022
Luh De Suriyani, M Ambari
ndonesia plans to have a network of 136 villages dedicated to aquaculture by the end of this year.
The initiative is part of the government’s efforts to boost exports of its world-renowned aquaculture commodities, namely shrimp, lobster, crab and seaweed.
Experts have welcomed the plan, but say it must be supported by sound environmental planning, particularly avoiding the clearing of mangrove forests and ensuring proper waste management.
Indonesia is one of the top exporters of farmed seafood, but fish farming in the country has long come at the expense of carbon-rich mangrove forests and other important coastal ecosystems.
 

The Indonesian government plans to have a network of dozens of villages with aquaculture farms by the end of the year, in a bid to spur the post-pandemic economic recovery by catering to global demand for farmed seafood.

Indonesia’s fisheries ministry said in December that it has established six of these so-called aquaculture villages and would add 130 more by the end of 2022. The villages will cultivate high-value aquaculture commodities, including shrimp, lobster, crab and seaweed.

“Boosting production of commodities for exports comes first,” TB Haeru Rahayu, the ministry’s director-general of aquaculture fisheries, said at an online event. He added the program would strengthen the country’s food security and create new jobs.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1776Report by Feds, Anglers Cites Offshore Wind Impacts on FishAssociated Press2023-03-31US
1777Они сражались с сазанамиohotniki2023-04-01RU
177823 вида рыб нежелательных (и даже опасных) к употреблениюtelegra2023-04-05RU
1779Scientists break new record after finding world's deepest fishuwa2023-04-03AU
1780Patrick Campeau Marks 17 Years as National Fishing Week Ambassadorkeepcanadafishing2022-11-28CA
1781New fish species found in urban mega city of Hangzhoucgtn2023-03-18CN
1782Saving the planet by eating one venomous lionfish at a timeFox News2023-03-19US
1783Is it safe to eat? Bangladesh fish exposed to hormones, antibiotics and toxic wastemongabay2023-03-21BD
1784Ruskin scientists help protect Bay Area’s multi-million dollar tropical fish industryFox News2023-03-22US
1785Chemists address a water sanitation chemical that is harmful to aquarium fishabc2023-03-17US
1786Angler comes face to face with giant bull shark, but what he does next wins praisemeaww2023-03-24AU
1787'Significant planning' underway to clean up massive fish kill in NSW's far westabc2023-03-19AU
1788Algae-farming fish help coral reefs bounce back from bleaching eventsnew scientist2023-03-19US
1789With assessment underway, Nova Scotia has quietly imposed a moratorium on fish farmingCBC News2023-03-20CA
1790This type of fishing doesn't involve hooks, bait or even fishIndianapolis Star2023-03-20US
1791North Korea removes fishing restrictions in the Yellow SeaRFA Korean2023-03-21KP
1792She thinks we're just fishingFOX Weather2023-03-23US
1793A fish can sense another’s fear, a study showskyma2023-03-23US
1794Police name 2 people recovered from St. Lawrence RiverCBC News2023-04-01CA
1795A big fish makes a huge splash in Red LakeCBC News2023-03-09CA
1796DFO slaps 3 B.C. men with combined $113K in illegal fishing finesGlobal News2023-03-17CA
1797Not enough fish in the seaknowablemagazine2023-03-22US
1798Idaho fisherman catches record pike weighing nearly 41 poundsFox News2023-03-27US
1799Fishermen plead guilty to charges in tournament cheating scandalfoxnews2023-03-31US
1800Study shows insect and poultry by-product meals boost growth and welfare of rainbow troutthefishsite2023-03-28IT

215 216 217 71 of [218 - pages.]