In this issue:
- Progressive women carp farmers of Haldia, Purba Medinipur, West Bengal, India.
- Captive breeding of Ompok bimaculatus (pabda): An indigenous catfish of North East India.
- Reaching out to the unreached through diversified aquaculture in Nagaland.
- Fish cooperatives: Development and performance through sustainable development goals for food and feed ecosystems.
- NACA Newsletter.
In this issue:
- How welfare assessments of farmed white leg shrimp (Penaeus vannamei) can benefit the whole industry
- Thai Fish Project: A path towards a sustainable aquaculture
- Nationally-recognised ornamental fish breeder Kripan Sarkar - a man to remember
- Tilapia parvovirus disease: An emerging threat for the tilapia aquaculture industry
- Naihati fish seed market as state-of-the-art for sustainable support services to fish growers, buyers and traders
- NACA Newsletter
The Thai Fish Project began in 2019, and involves around 200 research members and multiple institutions in Thailand and Japan. The project aims to promote domestication and wise use of two Thai native aquatic species, namely the Asian sea bass Lates calcarifer and banana shrimp Penaeus merguiensis through increasing productivity, reducing the impact of infectious diseases, and preserving genetic resources. The project also encompasses several specific research topics to ensure that it comprehensively addresses the concerns on safeguarding the food security and enhancing the environmental sustainability as much as possible. This article describes the main research activities, outputs and future expectations of the Thai Fish Project.
Eight thematic reviews prepared as preparation for the Global Conference on Aquaculture Millennium +20 (GCA +20) have been published in a Special Issue of the Journal of the World Aquaculture Society "Aquaculture for Food and Sustainable Development". A group of experts prepared advanced working drafts of each thematic review and the key findings from each theme were presented and discussed by expert panels during the GCA +20. Participants were then invited to provide their feedback and perspectives on the reviews and their key messages for consideration in finalisation of the papers. The reviews are available for free download.
The document provides an overall vision and framework intended to accelerate aquaculture transformation in Asia and the Pacific region through innovations and investment, and to provide guidance to partners from the public, private and development communities to actively engage with the region in transforming aquaculture to more efficient, inclusive, resilient and sustainable food systems. The document served as background information for discussion in the High-Level Meeting on Aquaculture Transformation in Asia and the Pacific Region, 22–23 November 2022, organised by the FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific and the Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific. The document is broadly aligned with FAO’s Blue Transformation Roadmap, paying specific attention to the context and needs of aquaculture within Asia and the Pacific region. The Paper translates the Roadmap into a vision and priority actions for aquaculture transformation in the region by 2030.