Americans love seafood—especially salmon. Fishermen and Indigenous peoples on this continent have long revered salmon as a cultural touchstone with phenomenal life histories and deep connections to ...
As stocks of wild fish in the sea were reduced from overfishing, aquaculture or fish farming expanded significantly to the point that in about 2020, the total tonnage of farm raised fish surpassed ...
Did you know that aquaculture is the fastest-growing food production sector In the world? This is as a result of seafood being one of those rare types of food that is very useful to humans and at the ...
Overfishing has put exorbitant stress on our oceans. But there is a solution: Aquaculture—otherwise known as fish farming—is the practice of growing and harvesting fish in a controlled, regulated and ...
DNV has teamed up with Ocean Sovereign to obtain French registration for the deployment of a unique fish farming superyacht. Ocean Ark’s patented advanced self-cleaning trimaran superstructure was ...
One of Ocean Era's geodesic cages floats in the water near Kona, Hawaii. Ocean Era hopes to launch a similar test project near Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Rick Decker, courtesy of Ocean Era) The ...
Americans are eating more and more seafood. It’s not surprising: Seafood tastes great and is generally heart-healthy. But after decades of mismanagement of our wild-capture fisheries, much of what we ...
Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily. In 2022, fish farms produced an unprecedented 131 million tons of seafood, officially ...
Companies are using AI tools and software to make the ocean cleaner and safer for aquatic wildlife. This includes tech that helps keep plastic out of the ocean and restore coral reefs. This article is ...
GALVESTON -- John Ericcson lost a fortune in the '80s oil bust, but the former well driller today sees a way to profit from oil again -- by reusing retired platforms in the Gulf of Mexico to grow fish ...
“This is St. Peter’s fish, the fish Jesus fed the multitudes,” he says, his raspy voice resonating like a preacher’s. Unlike Jesus, however, Martin does not give his fish away. Each day he sells ...