Shinoj, P and Johnson, B and Muktha, M and Swathi Lekshmi, P S and Anuraj, A and Divu, D and Ramachandran, C and Padua, Shelton and Geetha, R and Vinuja, S V and Baiju, K K and Preethi, V P and Suresh, V V R and Gopalakrishnan, A and Jain, Rajni (2025) Small-scale mariculture in India: Status, impact and potential. In: Impact of Technologies and Policies on Marine and Inland Fish Culture Systems in India. ICAR- Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Kochi, pp. 33-66. ISBN 978-93-342-3364-3
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Impact of Technologies and Policies on Marine and Inland Fish Culture Systems in India_2025_Johnson B.pdf Download (2MB) |
Abstract
Capture fisheries, finfish, and bivalve mariculture constitute the primary components of the blue economy. These sectors contribute approximately 17% of global edible meat production (Costello et al., 2020). By 2050, the intensification of mariculture (36-74% increase in yield) facilitated by technological advancements and policy reforms can enhance food production from the sea by 21-44 million tons (Edwards et al., 2019; Costello et al., 2020, Divu et al., 2020).
Item Type: | Book Section |
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Subjects: | Aquaculture Aquaculture > Mariculture Marine Fisheries |
Divisions: | CMFRI-Kochi > Marine Capture > Fishery Resources Assessment, Economics and Extension Division Subject Area > CMFRI > CMFRI-Kochi > Marine Capture > Fishery Resources Assessment, Economics and Extension Division CMFRI-Kochi > Marine Capture > Fishery Resources Assessment, Economics and Extension Division Subject Area > CMFRI-Kochi > Marine Capture > Fishery Resources Assessment, Economics and Extension Division |
Depositing User: | Arun Surendran |
Date Deposited: | 09 Sep 2025 06:42 |
Last Modified: | 09 Sep 2025 06:42 |
URI: | http://eprints.cmfri.org.in/id/eprint/19158 |
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