Functional trait-based layers - an aquaculture siting tool for the Mediterranean Sea

被引:8
作者
Giacoletti, A. [1 ]
Lucido, G. D. [1 ]
Mangano, M. C. [2 ]
Sara, G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Palermo, Dipartimento Sci Terra & Mare DiSTeM, Lab Ecol, Viale Sci Ed 16, I-90128 Palermo, Italy
[2] Sicily Marine Ctr, Stn Zool Anton Dohrn, Dipartimento Ecol Marina Integrata EMI, Lungomare Cristoforo Colombo Complesso Roosevelt, I-90142 Palermo, Italy
关键词
Aquaculture; Environmental sustainability; Impact; Mediterranean Sea; DEB model; Dicentrarchus labrax; LENGTH-WEIGHT RELATIONSHIPS; GROWTH; FISHES;
D O I
10.1016/j.aquaculture.2020.736081
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
Aquaculture, the current fastest-growing food sector, is one of the major opportunities that could be reaped to cope with the increased demand for proteins from the sea and simultaneously generate economic growth while ensuring sustainable use of natural resources. The number of tools and approaches suggested to promote the selection of suitable areas focusing mostly on the management of potential conflicting uses at sea is rapidly increasing. However, to date, there is a lack of information regarding spatial planning according to a trait-based approach encompassing the functional and biological data of farmed species; a gap that may lead to selecting unsuitable areas for farming. To fill this gap, our study builds on a functional trait-based mechanistic approach based on the Dynamic Energy Budget (DEB) theory allowing to generated species and site-specific predictions of aquaculture performances and the related environmental impact. We applied this approach to a commercial species farmed in the Mediterranean Sea, namely, the European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax). We used three seeding sizes (1.5, 2, 2.5 g) to run model simulations and answer a crucial question for farm management, i.e. the selection of the best seeding size. A sensitivity analysis coupled with our simulations allowed to spatially represent the performance growth and environmental impact per seeding size across Mediterranean countries. The accuracy of the model's outcome was strengthened by using high-resolution satellite data over a wide area of investigation (c.a. 302,000 km(2)). The novel informative obtained layers combine both the modelling of aqua culture performance and related environmental impact to fill a lacking perspective within both AZAs (Allocated Zones for Aquaculture) and AZEs (Allowable Zones of Effect) concepts. Our approach allowed discriminating the best zones for European sea bass aquaculture at country level for each of the tested seeding sizes. High-resolution predictions of aquaculture performances and impact were provided for each of the nineteen Mediterranean coastal countries, zooming at Exclusive Economic Zone scale (EEZ). We highlighted pole-ward negative patterns with the best values in the Southern basin; Libya, Tunisia and Egypt in particular. Our spatial contextualization through high resolution mapped outcomes represents an effective and salient tool for stakeholders and policy makers, based on the translation of complex computational modelling results into easy-to-read maps. The highlighted patterns may provide scientific evidence for proactive capacity-building programmes at country level in the future.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 14 条
  • [1] Development of a GIS-Based Tool for Aquaculture Siting
    Puniwai, Noelani
    Canale, Lisa
    Haws, Maria
    Potemra, James
    Lepczyk, Christopher
    Gray, Steven
    ISPRS INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEO-INFORMATION, 2014, 3 (02) : 800 - 816
  • [2] Grounding trait-based root functional ecology
    Fort, Florian
    FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY, 2023, 37 (08) : 2159 - 2169
  • [3] Trait-based life strategies, ecological niches, and niche overlap in the nekton of the data-poor Mediterranean Sea
    Koutsidi, Martha
    Moukas, Catherine
    Tzanatos, Evangelos
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2020, 10 (14): : 7129 - 7144
  • [4] A functional trait-based assessment of urban street tree selection for Ethiopia
    Tamene, Gebretsadik
    Sjoman, Henrik
    Sang, asa Ode
    Yeshitla, Kumelachew
    Belay, Birhanu
    Tesfaye, Ergua
    Levinsson, Anna
    FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE CITIES, 2024, 6
  • [5] Testing the trait-based community framework: Do functional traits predict competitive outcomes?
    Funk, Jennifer L.
    Wolf, Amelia A.
    ECOLOGY, 2016, 97 (09) : 2206 - 2211
  • [6] Functional root trait-based classification of cover crops to improve soil physical properties
    Hudek, Csilla
    Putinica, Cristinel
    Otten, Wilfred
    De Baets, Sarah
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 2022, 73 (01)
  • [7] Selection and development of superior strains through functional trait-based approach in agarophytic red alga Gracilaria dura (Rhodophyta)
    Dawange, P. S.
    Mantri, V. A.
    Jaiswar, S.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY, 2023, 44 (06) : 795 - 803
  • [8] Functional trait-based potential invasiveness of exotic submerged macrophytes and their effects on sediment bacterial community
    Li, Xiaowei
    Chu, Qingshuai
    Tang, Na
    Abduro Ogo, Hirpa
    Xing, Wei
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2022, 849 (13) : 3061 - 3077
  • [9] Organic waste impact of capture-based Atlantic bluefin tuna aquaculture at an exposed site in the Mediterranean Sea
    Vezzulli, Luigi
    Moreno, Mariapaola
    Marin, Valentina
    Pezzati, Elisabetta
    Bartoli, Marco
    Fabiano, Mauro
    ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 2008, 78 (02) : 369 - 384
  • [10] A trait-based approach for assessing and mapping niche overlap between native and exotic species: the Mediterranean coastal fish fauna as a case study
    Elleouet, J.
    Albouy, C.
    Lasram, F. Ben Rais
    Mouillot, D.
    Leprieur, F.
    DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTIONS, 2014, 20 (11) : 1333 - 1344