Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes

In a world where the global population is expected to grow by another 2 billion to reach 9.6 billion people by 2050 and where more than 800 million continue to suffer from chronic hunger we must meet the huge challenge of feeding our planet while safeguarding its natural resources for future generat...

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Main Author: Nair, Rekha J
Format: Course Material
Language:English
Published: Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/
http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/1/11.%20Rekha%20J%20Nair.pdf
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author Nair, Rekha J
author_facet Nair, Rekha J
author_sort Nair, Rekha J
collection Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Kochi, India: Eprints@CMFRI
description In a world where the global population is expected to grow by another 2 billion to reach 9.6 billion people by 2050 and where more than 800 million continue to suffer from chronic hunger we must meet the huge challenge of feeding our planet while safeguarding its natural resources for future generations. (SOFIA, 2014). Global fish production has grown steadily in the last five decades, with food fish supply increasing at an average annual rate of 3.2 percent, outpacing world population growth at 1.6 percent. Cage culture systems employed by farmers are currently as diverse as the number of species currently being raised, varying from traditional family-owned and operated cage farming operations (typical of most Asian countries) to modern commercial large-scale salmon and trout cage farming operations in northern Europe and the America. Commercial cage culture has beenmainly restricted to the culture of higher-value (in marketing terms) compound-feed-fed finfish species, including salmon (Atlantic salmon, cohosalmon and Chinook salmon), most major marineand freshwater carnivorous fish species (including Japanese amberjack, red seabream, yellow croaker, European seabass, gilthead seabream, cobia, Rainbow trout, Mandarin fish, snakehead)and an ever increasing proportion of omnivorous freshwater fish species (including Chinese carps, tilapia, Colossoma, and catfish). However in southeast Asian countries, marine species being cultured are groupers and snappers.
format Course Material
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
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op_relation http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/1/11.%20Rekha%20J%20Nair.pdf
Nair, Rekha J (2015) Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes. [Teaching Resource]
publishDate 2015
publisher Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute
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spelling ftcmfri:oai:eprints.cmfri.org.in:10670 2025-01-16T21:04:23+00:00 Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes Nair, Rekha J 2015 text http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/ http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/1/11.%20Rekha%20J%20Nair.pdf en eng Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/1/11.%20Rekha%20J%20Nair.pdf Nair, Rekha J (2015) Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes. [Teaching Resource] Finfish Aquaculture Demersal Fisheries Teaching Resource NonPeerReviewed 2015 ftcmfri 2023-06-17T18:16:03Z In a world where the global population is expected to grow by another 2 billion to reach 9.6 billion people by 2050 and where more than 800 million continue to suffer from chronic hunger we must meet the huge challenge of feeding our planet while safeguarding its natural resources for future generations. (SOFIA, 2014). Global fish production has grown steadily in the last five decades, with food fish supply increasing at an average annual rate of 3.2 percent, outpacing world population growth at 1.6 percent. Cage culture systems employed by farmers are currently as diverse as the number of species currently being raised, varying from traditional family-owned and operated cage farming operations (typical of most Asian countries) to modern commercial large-scale salmon and trout cage farming operations in northern Europe and the America. Commercial cage culture has beenmainly restricted to the culture of higher-value (in marketing terms) compound-feed-fed finfish species, including salmon (Atlantic salmon, cohosalmon and Chinook salmon), most major marineand freshwater carnivorous fish species (including Japanese amberjack, red seabream, yellow croaker, European seabass, gilthead seabream, cobia, Rainbow trout, Mandarin fish, snakehead)and an ever increasing proportion of omnivorous freshwater fish species (including Chinese carps, tilapia, Colossoma, and catfish). However in southeast Asian countries, marine species being cultured are groupers and snappers. Course Material Atlantic salmon Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Kochi, India: Eprints@CMFRI
spellingShingle Finfish
Aquaculture
Demersal Fisheries
Nair, Rekha J
Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes
title Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes
title_full Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes
title_fullStr Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes
title_full_unstemmed Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes
title_short Taxonomy and Biology of Cultivable High Valued Marine Demersal Finfishes
title_sort taxonomy and biology of cultivable high valued marine demersal finfishes
topic Finfish
Aquaculture
Demersal Fisheries
topic_facet Finfish
Aquaculture
Demersal Fisheries
url http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/
http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/10670/1/11.%20Rekha%20J%20Nair.pdf