Scientists Outline Benefits of Marine Aquaculture
By AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
As
a major source of greenhouse-gas (GHG) emissions, food production has long
occupied an important place in the climate-change discussion. Writing in BioScience, Alice Jones of the University of Adelaide,
and an international team of scientists from the University and The Nature
Conservancy, discuss the potential of marine aquaculture, or mariculture, to
sustainably feed a growing human population.Matunuck Oyster Farm
Mariculture already constitutes 52% of the aquatic animal products people consume, say the authors, and these products may offer a way to deliver high-protein foodstuffs without the high carbon footprint of equivalent terrestrial products.
“The GHG
emissions per unit of protein produced by aquaculture generally compare
favorably with most livestock production,” said Jones and colleagues. A major
contributor to mariculture’s climate-friendly profile is that, unlike livestock
grazing, it doesn’t require substantial land-use change such as the razing of
rainforest to make room for cattle.
To further improve mariculture’s sustainability advantage, the authors describe ways that its emissions could be reduced. For instance, say Jones and colleagues, there are opportunities for supply chain improvements that would permit the transport of mariculture products to consumers with a considerably improved GHG footprint. Regional markets for mariculture would help, too, with the added benefit of greater food security.
At the mariculture sites themselves, opportunities to improve the carbon profile abound, for instance by “cofarming bivalves with seaweed, which can lead to a net reduction in CO2 emissions, and cofarming fed finfish with seaweed or bivalves.” Such measures, say the authors, would result in greater absorption of excess nutrients, reducing eutrophication and, ultimately, the degradation habitats that already store carbon.
The
authors conclude with the hope that their efforts to integrate mariculture with
its related environmental benefits, such as GHG abatement programs, can
“support the development of climate-friendly mariculture practices that
generate sustainable ecological, social, and economic outcomes.”
Reference:
“Climate-Friendly Seafood: The Potential for Emissions Reduction and Carbon
Capture in Marine Aquaculture” 25 January 2022, BioScience.
DOI: 10.1093/biosci/biab126