enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fish processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_processing

    This 16th-century fish stall shows many traditional fish products. The term fish processing refers to the processes associated with fish and fish products between the time fish are caught or harvested, and the time the final product is delivered to the customer. Although the term refers specifically to fish, in practice it is extended to cover ...

  3. Fishing industry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_industry

    Fishing industry. Double-rigged shrimp trawler hauling in the nets. The fishing industry includes any industry or activity that takes, cultures, processes, preserves, stores, transports, markets or sells fish or fish products. It is defined by the Food and Agriculture Organization as including recreational, subsistence and commercial fishing ...

  4. Fishery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishery

    Fishery can mean either the enterprise of raising or harvesting fish and other aquatic life [ 1] or, more commonly, the site where such enterprise takes place ( a.k.a., fishing grounds ). [ 2] Commercial fisheries include wild fisheries and fish farms, both in freshwater waterbodies (about 10% of all catch) and the oceans (about 90%).

  5. Bioeconomics (fisheries) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bioeconomics_(fisheries)

    Bioeconomics is closely related to the early development of theories in fisheries economics, initially in the mid-1950s by Canadian economists Scott Gordon (in 1954) [1] and Anthony Scott (1955). Their ideas used recent achievements in biological fisheries modelling, primarily the works by Schaefer in 1954 and 1957 on establishing a formal ...

  6. Natural resource economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_resource_economics

    Natural resource economics is a transdisciplinaryfield of academic research within economicsthat aims to address the connections and interdependence between human economies and natural ecosystems. Its focus is how to operate an economywithin the ecological constraints of earth's natural resources.[3]

  7. Fisheries science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisheries_science

    Fisheries science is the academic discipline of managing and understanding fisheries. [1] It is a multidisciplinary science, which draws on the disciplines of limnology, oceanography, freshwater biology, marine biology, meteorology, conservation, ecology, population dynamics, economics, statistics, decision analysis, management, and many others in an attempt to provide an integrated picture of ...

  8. Fishing industry in Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fishing_industry_in_Russia

    The coastline of the Russian Federation is the fourth longest in the world after the coastlines of Canada, Greenland, and Indonesia.The Russian fishing industry has an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of 7.6 million km 2 including access to twelve seas in three oceans, together with the landlocked Caspian Sea and more than two million rivers.

  9. Fisheries management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fisheries_management

    Fisheries management. The goal of fisheries management is to produce sustainable biological, environmental and socioeconomic benefits from renewable aquatic resources. Wild fisheries are classified as renewable when the organisms of interest (e.g., fish, shellfish, amphibians, reptiles and marine mammals) produce an annual biological surplus ...