Aquaculture Week 2022

Aquaculture Week 2022

Aquaculture Features

Aquaculture: Policy and Possibilities

Aquaculture is important for nutrition, for local jobs, for climate-ready food systems, and for collaboration between wild capture and aquaculture to put U.S. seafood back on U.S. plates. In this Dive In With NOAA Fisheries podcast, we talk with Dr. Michael Rubino, NOAA Fisheries’ Senior Advisor for Seafood Strategy and formerly the director of the Office of Aquaculture. He’s been thinking a lot about farmed seafood’s place in the greater industry, and how technology and innovation have made it safer and more sustainable. Recently, he published an article about aquaculture policy considerations outlining some opportunities and challenges facing it in the future. 

Listen to the podcast

Sustainable Seafood from Tide to Table

The Tide to Table series profiles members of the aquaculture community, who provide valuable jobs and increase access to fresh, sustainably sourced seafood in the United States. 

Learn more about sustainable seafood from the Tide to Table series

Tide to Table: Carteret Community College Aquaculture Technology

Carteret Community College’s aquaculture program is teaching sustainable marine science and business skills to future growers in North Carolina.

Carteret Community College's aquaculture program

NOAA Fisheries Releases FY22 Alaska Aquaculture Accomplishments Report

Alaska Regional Office and Alaska Fisheries Science Center continue coordinated efforts to prioritize projects and actions to support the growing Alaska aquaculture industry.

NOAA Fisheries FY22 Alaska Aquaculture Accomplishments Report

Tide to Table: Swell Oyster Co.

Swell Oyster Co. is developing an oyster flavor profile that has never been tasted before, on the first and only oyster farm in Hampton Harbor, New Hampshire. They are a company of firsts run by “two surfers who love the ocean.”

Swell Oyster Co.

"No Shell Left Behind" Video

The Oyster Recovery Partnership is rebuilding habitats in the waters of the Chesapeake Bay. It is working to reverse poor water quality through a Shell Recycling Alliance to help restore wild oyster reefs.

Watch "No Shell Left Behind"

Tide to Table: Barrier Beauties

Barrier Beauties is breaking new ground in East Galveston Bay—founder Hannah Kaplan was the first aquaculture grower to file an application with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. Only recently legalized for permitting in Texas, oyster aquaculture drew Kaplan’s interest because of its substantial positive effects on the environment.

Barrier Beauties

Webinar: 'North Carolina’s Shellfish Aquaculture Industry: Climate Resilience and Engagement Best Practices'

Developing a resilient North Carolina shellfish aquaculture industry includes factoring in climate change and establishing best practices for communication and engagement.

Register via WebEx

Enhancing Aquaculture Literacy

NOAA Fisheries, the National Sea Grant Office, and the NOAA Office of Education have partnered on a new aquaculture literacy webpage to enhance public understanding of aquaculture. Aquaculture literacy refers to an individual or a community’s familiarity with information about aquaculture and related environmental, economic, and social topics. 

Aquaculture Literacy

Tide to Table: Alaska Shellfish Farms

Millions of acres of untouched wilderness surround the Kachemak Bay growing area of Alaska Shellfish Farms. Located in Halibut Cove, Alaska, the bay is fed by glaciers that merge with the northern Pacific Ocean to create ideal growing conditions for the oysters, mussels, and varieties of seaweed cultivated on site.

Alaska Shellfish Farms

Hawaiian Fishpond Kicks Off State’s First Sea Cucumber Aquaculture

This NOAA-supported project finds an environmentally restorative export product in Hawaiian sea cucumbers.

Original source can be found here. 

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