4.6 Article

Thinking outside the box: embracing social complexity in aquaculture carrying capacity estimations

Journal

ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE
Volume 78, Issue 1, Pages 435-442

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/icesjms/fsaa063

Keywords

aquaculture; aquaculture management; carrying capacity; seafood farming; sustainability

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, Humboldt Tipping) [01LC1823D/01LC1823E]

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The concept of aquaculture carrying capacity (CC) should be multidimensional, iterative, inclusive, and just, with a broad evaluative scope considering historical, cultural, and socio-economic concerns. To develop sustainable aquaculture, guidelines should be based on a multi-criteria, multi-stakeholder approach to frame a safe operating space.
With ever-expanding marine aquaculture, calls for sustainable development become louder. The concept of aquaculture carrying capacity (CC) emerged 30 years ago to frame development, though so far, most studies have focused on the production and ecological components, leaving aside the social perspective. Often, estimations are carried out a posteriori, once aquaculture is already in place, hence ignoring relevant voices potentially opposing the onset of aquaculture implementation. We argue that CC should be multidimensional, iterative, inclusive, and just. Hence, the evaluative scope of CC needs to be broadened by moving from industry-driven, Western-based approaches towards an inclusive vision taking into consideration historical, cultural, and socio-economic concerns of all stakeholders of a given area. To this end, we suggest guidelines to frame a safe operating space for aquaculture based on a multi-criteria, multi-stakeholder approach, while embracing the social-ecological dynamics of aquaculture settings by applying an adaptive approach and acknowledging the critical role of place-based constraints. Rather than producing a box-checking exercise, CC approaches should proactively engage with aquaculture-produced outcomes at multiple scales, embracing complexity, and uncertainty. Scoping CC with the voices of all relevant societal groups, ideally before aquaculture implementation, provides the unique opportunity to jointly develop truly sustainable aquaculture.

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