Related items
Showing items related by metadata.
-
ProjectFactsheetEnhancing Aquaculture Development and Aquaculture and Fisheries Post-Harvest Value Chains in Central Asia - GCP/SEC/013/TUR 2024
Also available in:
No results found.In Central Asia, the aquaculture and fisheries sectors remain largely underdeveloped. Despite recent increases in production over the past ten years, their contribution to national economies remains limited. However, these sectors tend to feature small-scale enterprises and traditional fishing communities, and therefore make significant contributions to livelihoods, rural poverty alleviation and food security. In recent years fish consumption in the region has been slowly increasing, a trend that has been attributed to enhanced aquaculture production, which, while increasing the availability of fish products has also lowered prices. Governments across the region are recognizing the potential for the aquaculture sector to support economic growth, improve livelihoods and food security, and as a result, they are starting to prioritize sector development. Despite the potential for aquaculture development across the region, the current growth of the sector in many countries remains limited. In view of this, the project was implemented as a regional programme to support aquaculture development and aquaculture and fisheries post-harvest value chains in seven countries (Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Türkiye, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan). -
ProjectFactsheetEnhancing Biosecurity Governance to Support Sustainable Aquaculture Production in Egypt - TCP/EGY/3705 2023
Also available in:
No results found.Aquaculture, or the farming of fish, crustaceans and molluscs is one of the fastest expanding food sectors Despite this, the sector faces biosecurity issues posed by the spread of exotic, endemic or emerging diseases, and aggravated by significant commercial exchanges of animal products, a lack of pathogen knowledge and effective aquatic animal health management, and rapid ecosystem changes If not addressed properly, these challenges will have a severe impact on yields, as well as on earnings and investment in the sector Every three to five years, a transboundary aquatic animal disease ( emerges and quickly spreads, resulting in considerable production losses However, detecting and identifying an outbreak often takes time, delaying the implementation of monitoring systems and interventions. -
ProjectFactsheetSeed Potato Multiplication to Improve Food Security of The People of Paekam County, Ryanggang Province, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea - TCP/DRK/3701 2021
Also available in:
No results found.Ryanggang Province is one of the least developed regions in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea While food security remains a major concern throughout the country, it is particularly challenging in the northern uplands of Ryanggang Province because of the low agricultural productivity and increased vulnerability to the adverse impacts of climate change Moreover, the region is facing problems associated with degenerated varieties of potato and fruit trees, degenerated livestock breeds, post harvest losses and a lack of farm equipment and machinery Low agricultural production and productivity affect the supply of food for the public distribution system, and ultimately, the nutritional status of the population According to the 2012 Nutrition Survey, chronic malnutrition ranges from 33 to 39 percent in the northern provinces of the country A major constraint to increasing the productivity of potato crops in Ryanggang Province is the availability of good quality, disease free, high yielding seed varieties When seed potatoes are multiplied conventionally using tubers, new varieties become rapidly degenerated as a result of the progressive accumulation of viruses and pathogens over several cycles of asexual reproduction Additionally, the large scale import of seed potatoes in the late 1990 s to manage the outbreak of late blight introduced new diseases into the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, including 8 of the 22 known virus and virus like potato diseases The implications of potato disease for food security are substantial, as viral infection has the potential to reduce yields by up to 80 percent.
Users also downloaded
Showing related downloaded files
No results found.