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Salmon Farming Problems Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform. An overview of environmental impacts of salmon farming. Fish farms drive wild salmon populations toward extinction Biology News Net. December 13, 2007. Salmonid parasites University of St Andrews Marine Ecology Research Group.
Sea Lice Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform. An overview of farmed- to wild-salmon interactive effects. Salmon Farming Problems Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform. An overview of environmental impacts of salmon farming. Fish farms drive wild salmon populations toward extinction Biology News Net. 13 December 2007.
Tilapia were once abundant in the fresh and brackish waters off the north coast of Singapore. Since the late-1980s however, populations of feral tilapia have declined. Recently introduced cichlid hybrids (red tilapia O. mossambicus x O. niloticus , possibly also O. honorum and O. aureus ) have crossbred with populations of Oreochromis ...
Placopecten magellanicus, previously listed as Pecten tenuicostatus and as Pecten grandis [2] and once referred to as the "giant scallop", common names Atlantic deep-sea scallop, deep sea scallop, North Atlantic sea scallop, American sea scallop, Atlantic sea scallop, or sea scallop, [3] is a commercially important pectinid bivalve mollusk native to the northwest Atlantic Ocean.
North American Journal of Aquaculture - coverage of breeding and raising aquatic animals; Journal of Aquatic Animal Health - coverage relating to fisheries health maintenance and the treatment of diseases; Marine and Coastal Fisheries - covers marine, coastal, and estuarine fisheries.
The aquaculture of salmonids is the farming and harvesting of salmonid fish under controlled conditions for both commercial and recreational purposes. Salmonids (particularly salmon and rainbow trout), along with carp and tilapia, are the three most important fish groups in aquaculture. [2]
The transfer of parasites from open-net cage salmon farming, especially sea lice, has reduced numbers of wild salmon. The European Commission (2002) concluded, "The reduction of wild salmonid abundance is also linked to other factors but there is more and more scientific evidence establishing a direct link between the number of lice-infested wild fish and the presence of cages in the same ...
Marine fish of the British Isles and northern France, farmed turbot in the UK and Ireland, and Greenland halibut (Reinhardtius hippoglossoides) in Greenland. [17] Farmed rainbow trout in Norway. [18] IV-a Marine fish of the Northwest Pacific (North America), North American north Atlantic coast, [19] Japan, and Korea [1] [20] IV-b