Development of Aquaculture : An Ecosystems Perspective
Includes bibliographical references (p. 254-265).Meeting the demands expected to be placed on aquaculture this decade and in the next century will be a formidable task. Providing the necessary inputs (ponds, seed, water, information, processing, marketing, etc.) will require an enormous worldwide in...
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Format: | Electronic |
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Auburn University Libraries
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Online Access: | http://aurora.auburn.edu/handle/11200/49127 |
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Electronic |
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Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station Reports |
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Auburn University Digital Library |
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Auburn University Libraries |
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Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station Reports |
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Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station Reports Development of Aquaculture : An Ecosystems Perspective Shell, E. W. (Eddie Wayne) |
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Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station Reports Aquaculture Fish ponds Aquatic ecology Ecosystem management Fish culture |
description |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 254-265).Meeting the demands expected to be placed on aquaculture this decade and in the next century will be a formidable task. Providing the necessary inputs (ponds, seed, water, information, processing, marketing, etc.) will require an enormous worldwide investment. Deploying those inputs on such a large scale will require an extremely effective planning process and implementation strategy. It is the primary purpose of this book to detail the inputs required and discuss the deployment of those inputs to advance aquaculture worldwide. The author proposes to examine the nature of aquaculture as it affects development and to expand on the importance of advancing aquaculture and to discuss various aspects of aquacultural development using the general development process in biological systems as a model. Aquaculture is presented as a dynamic ecosystem, a "web" or matrix of interconnected and interdependent physical, chemical, biological, psychological, sociological, economic, and political processes. |
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Development of Aquaculture : An Ecosystems PerspectiveShell, E. W. (Eddie Wayne)AquacultureFish pondsAquatic ecologyEcosystem managementFish cultureIncludes bibliographical references (p. 254-265).Meeting the demands expected to be placed on aquaculture this decade and in the next century will be a formidable task. Providing the necessary inputs (ponds, seed, water, information, processing, marketing, etc.) will require an enormous worldwide investment. Deploying those inputs on such a large scale will require an extremely effective planning process and implementation strategy. It is the primary purpose of this book to detail the inputs required and discuss the deployment of those inputs to advance aquaculture worldwide. The author proposes to examine the nature of aquaculture as it affects development and to expand on the importance of advancing aquaculture and to discuss various aspects of aquacultural development using the general development process in biological systems as a model. Aquaculture is presented as a dynamic ecosystem, a "web" or matrix of interconnected and interdependent physical, chemical, biological, psychological, sociological, economic, and political processes.2018-02-26T14:48:23Z2018-02-26T14:48:23Z1993-12http://hdl.handle.net/11200/49127application/pdfAuburn, Ala. : Alabama Agricultural Experiment Station, Auburn University |
title |
Development of Aquaculture : An Ecosystems Perspective |
titleStr |
Development of Aquaculture : An Ecosystems Perspective |
author |
Shell, E. W. (Eddie Wayne) |
author_facet |
Shell, E. W. (Eddie Wayne) |
id |
AcesPamph49127 |
url |
http://aurora.auburn.edu/handle/11200/49127 |
_version_ |
1790441781246033920 |