Fish farm
A fish farm is a place where fish are bred. In most cases, this is done for food. There are two basic types of fish farms:
- Those where the fish are raised in tanks
- Those where fish are raised in specially prepared areas of the oceans, lakes or rivers.
The most common fish species raised by fish farms are salmon, carp, tilapia, catfish and cod.[1]
There are many problems related to fish farming:
- Sometimes fish can escape. This is only an economic impact if the fish also occur naturally but can have a big impact if they do not.
- The fish in the farms need to be fed, for this other (smaller) fish need to be raised.
- Diseases and parasites may be a problem, because they spread much easier
- Fish farms have a bad effect on the surrounding habitat
Fish Farm Media
A fish farm on the coast of Euboea island, in South Euboean Gulf, Greece
World capture fisheries and aquaculture production by production mode, from FAO's Statistical Yearbook 2021
Controlling roes manually
Giant gourami is often raised in cages in central Thailand.
Fish cages in Lake Victoria, Uganda
Fish cages in Castro, Chile
Small fish pens in the Bued River in Pangasinan, Philippines
Patchwork of very large fish pens in Laguna de Bay, Philippines
These fish-farming ponds were created as a cooperative project in a rural village in the Congo.
References
- ↑ Fishery and Aquaculture Statistics: Aquaculture Production 2008 FAO Yearbook, Rome.