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Journal, magazine, bulletinFAO Aquaculture Newsletter 34 - December 2005 2005
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No results found.FAO Aquaculture Newsletter (FAN) is issued three times a year in the form of printed newsletter by the FAO Fisheries and Aquaculture Department. It presents articles and views from the FAO aquaculture programme and highlights various aspects of aquaculture as seen from the perspective of both headquarters and the field programme. Articles are contributed by FAO staff from within and outside the Department, from FAO regional offices and field projects, by FAO consultants and, occasionally, by inv itation from other sources. FAN is distributed free of charge to all FAO member countries and has a current circulation of about 1 500 copies. It is also available online at: http://www.fao.org/fishery/publications/fan/ -
Journal, magazine, bulletinFAO Aquaculture Newsletter 37 - July 2007 2007
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No results found.FAN 37 editorial talks about Information: a must for responsible aquaculture. Four articles highlighted the different aspects of information (information sharing via aquatic commons, improving information on inland fisheries, global gateway to GIS/remote sensing/mapping and aquatic animal biosecurity information). FAN 37 also brings TCP news/updates (TCP/ HAI/2903, TCP/BiH/3101, TCP/URU/3101), FAO workshops and FAO supported meetings on sea cucumber conservation and management, ecosystem approac h to aquaculture, aquaculture certification, use of wild fish as feed, use of wild fish for aquaculture, bivalve aquaculture, aquaculture insurance, EIFAC symposium on social, ecological and economic interactions in inland fisheries and aquaculture and RECOFI Working Group on Aquaculture. -
Book (stand-alone)Farming Nigeria's waters. A compilation of the news letters of the Aquaculture and inland fisheries project, vol. 1, nos. 1-21, Oct. 2003 - Jun. 2005 2005
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No results found.This Newsletter compilation under the title Farming Nigeria Water is yet another commendable output from the Aquaculture and Inland Fisheries Project of the National Special Programme for Food Security in Nigeria. The various editions of the Newsletter have taken us through a broad spectrum of outstanding, contentious and contemporary issues of Aquaculture and Inland Fisheries Development in Nigeria. This could not have come at a better time than now that a renewed vigour is being invested in increasing domestic fish production in order to bridge the ever-widening gap between fish demand and supply. This gap is as wide as about one million metric tonnes per year.
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