Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies

Oyster production has historically taken place in intertidal zones, and shellfish farms already occupy large extents of the French intertidal space. The expansion of French shellfish aquaculture within intertidal areas is therefore spatially limited, and moving production to the subtidal offshore en...

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Main Authors: Laurent Barillé, Anthony Le Bris, Philippe Goulletquer, Yoann Thomas, Philippe Glize, Frank Kane, Lynne Falconer, Patrice Guillotreau, Brice Trouillet, Stéphanie Palmer, Pierre Gernez
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02514120/document
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:hal:journl:hal-02514120 2023-05-15T17:54:22+02:00 Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies Laurent Barillé Anthony Le Bris Philippe Goulletquer Yoann Thomas Philippe Glize Frank Kane Lynne Falconer Patrice Guillotreau Brice Trouillet Stéphanie Palmer Pierre Gernez https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02514120/document unknown https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02514120/document preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:42:55Z Oyster production has historically taken place in intertidal zones, and shellfish farms already occupy large extents of the French intertidal space. The expansion of French shellfish aquaculture within intertidal areas is therefore spatially limited, and moving production to the subtidal offshore environment is considered to be a possible solution to this problem. Finding new sites along the French Atlantic coast was studied here from the perspective of small oyster companies run by young farmers, who are interested in offshore bivalve aquaculture expansion compatible with their investment capacity. In assessing the feasibility of such offshore production, we considered three main issues: (1) bivalve growth potential and (2) technical feasibility and conflicting uses, both within a spatial framework, as well as (3) the steps and barriers of the administrative licensing process. Oyster spat in an experimental offshore cage showed significantly faster growth, in terms of both weight and length, compared to those in an intertidal cage, mainly due to lower turbidity and full-time feeding capacity (i.e., constant immersion in the water). A combination of Earth Observation data and bivalve ecophysiological modelling was then used to obtain spatial distribution maps of growth potential, which confirmed that offshore sites have better potential for oyster growth than the traditionally oyster-farmed intertidal sites overall, but that this is highly spatially variable. Small-scale producers indicated two technical factors constraining where farms could be located: bathymetry must be between 5 and 20 m and the distance from a harbor no more than five nautical miles. These were included along with maps of various environmental and socioeconomic constraints in a Spatial Multi-Criteria Evaluation (SMCE). Touristic traffic and bottom trawling by fisherman were found to be the two other most restrictive variables. The GIS-based SMCE developed in this study showed that there is almost 400 km 2 of highly-to very highly-suitable area within which to develop offshore aquaculture using simple, low-cost bottom-cage techniques, and can be used to assist the shellfish industry in the Marine Spatial Planning decision-making process, still in progress in this coastal area. However, the complexity of the administrative processes necessary to obtain an offshore license is perceived as a stronger barrier by farmers owning small companies than site selection, technical feasibility, and required investments, and will be crucial to address in order to realistically proceed to offshore cultivation. The process demonstrated here, and the results are relevant to other coastal and offshore locations throughout the world and can be adapted for other species. Pacific oyster,Site selection,Off-shore aquaculture,Remote sensing,Dynamic energy budget (DEB) model Report Pacific oyster RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description Oyster production has historically taken place in intertidal zones, and shellfish farms already occupy large extents of the French intertidal space. The expansion of French shellfish aquaculture within intertidal areas is therefore spatially limited, and moving production to the subtidal offshore environment is considered to be a possible solution to this problem. Finding new sites along the French Atlantic coast was studied here from the perspective of small oyster companies run by young farmers, who are interested in offshore bivalve aquaculture expansion compatible with their investment capacity. In assessing the feasibility of such offshore production, we considered three main issues: (1) bivalve growth potential and (2) technical feasibility and conflicting uses, both within a spatial framework, as well as (3) the steps and barriers of the administrative licensing process. Oyster spat in an experimental offshore cage showed significantly faster growth, in terms of both weight and length, compared to those in an intertidal cage, mainly due to lower turbidity and full-time feeding capacity (i.e., constant immersion in the water). A combination of Earth Observation data and bivalve ecophysiological modelling was then used to obtain spatial distribution maps of growth potential, which confirmed that offshore sites have better potential for oyster growth than the traditionally oyster-farmed intertidal sites overall, but that this is highly spatially variable. Small-scale producers indicated two technical factors constraining where farms could be located: bathymetry must be between 5 and 20 m and the distance from a harbor no more than five nautical miles. These were included along with maps of various environmental and socioeconomic constraints in a Spatial Multi-Criteria Evaluation (SMCE). Touristic traffic and bottom trawling by fisherman were found to be the two other most restrictive variables. The GIS-based SMCE developed in this study showed that there is almost 400 km 2 of highly-to very highly-suitable area within which to develop offshore aquaculture using simple, low-cost bottom-cage techniques, and can be used to assist the shellfish industry in the Marine Spatial Planning decision-making process, still in progress in this coastal area. However, the complexity of the administrative processes necessary to obtain an offshore license is perceived as a stronger barrier by farmers owning small companies than site selection, technical feasibility, and required investments, and will be crucial to address in order to realistically proceed to offshore cultivation. The process demonstrated here, and the results are relevant to other coastal and offshore locations throughout the world and can be adapted for other species. Pacific oyster,Site selection,Off-shore aquaculture,Remote sensing,Dynamic energy budget (DEB) model
format Report
author Laurent Barillé
Anthony Le Bris
Philippe Goulletquer
Yoann Thomas
Philippe Glize
Frank Kane
Lynne Falconer
Patrice Guillotreau
Brice Trouillet
Stéphanie Palmer
Pierre Gernez
spellingShingle Laurent Barillé
Anthony Le Bris
Philippe Goulletquer
Yoann Thomas
Philippe Glize
Frank Kane
Lynne Falconer
Patrice Guillotreau
Brice Trouillet
Stéphanie Palmer
Pierre Gernez
Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies
author_facet Laurent Barillé
Anthony Le Bris
Philippe Goulletquer
Yoann Thomas
Philippe Glize
Frank Kane
Lynne Falconer
Patrice Guillotreau
Brice Trouillet
Stéphanie Palmer
Pierre Gernez
author_sort Laurent Barillé
title Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies
title_short Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies
title_full Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies
title_fullStr Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies
title_full_unstemmed Biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small French oyster-farming companies
title_sort biological, socio-economic, and administrative opportunities and challenges to moving aquaculture offshore for small french oyster-farming companies
url https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02514120/document
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Pacific oyster
genre_facet Pacific oyster
op_relation https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02514120/document
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