Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://umt-ir.umt.edu.my:8080/handle/123456789/21723
Title: World aquaculture diversity: origins and perspectives
Authors: Benedetto Sicuro
Keywords: aquaculture diffusion
aquaculture diversity
dominance
H index
Pareto principle
vicariance
Issue Date: Jan-2021
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd
Abstract: Aquaculture diversity is universally considered one of the main aspects that make aquaculture different from land animal farming. A retrospective analysis on 68 years of FAO data on world aquaculture production shows that this aquaculture diversity study is the most powerful and exhaustive theoretical tool to investigate aquaculture origin, evolution and connections with the surrounding world. Aquaculture diversity investigated with Shannon index and Pareto principle shows its thermodynamic nature and reveals an unexpectable regularity that sheds new light on aquaculture, thus putting aquaculture in a perfect theoretical context together with fisheries. Species dominance, vicariance and redundancy must be considered for a functional description of aquaculture diversity. Aquaculture diversity is not biological diversity as an aquaculture species is not necessarily a biological species. Aquaculture diversity shows that aquaculture is a modern colonization of aquatic domain and it has recently reached its maximum value that is 428 11 species, of which 29 1 will produce 80% of global annual production. A temporal and geographical analysis of global aquaculture diversity reveals an original and hopefully enlightening vision of modern aquaculture and its perspectives.
URI: http://umt-ir.umt.edu.my:8080/handle/123456789/21723
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