Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/26181
Title: Jellyfish blooms perception in Mediterranean finfish aquaculture
Authors: Bosch-Belmar, Mar
Azzurro, Ernesto
Pulis, Kristian
Milisenda, Giacomo
Fuentes, Verónica
Daly-Yahia, Ons Kéfi
Micallef, Anton
Deidun, Alan
Pirainoa, Stefano
Keywords: Fish culturists
Jellyfish blooms
Fish culture -- Environmental aspects
Fish culturists -- Mediterranean Region
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: Pergamon Press
Citation: Bosch-Belmar, M., Azzurro, E., Pulis, K., Milisenda, G., Fuentes, V., Yahia, O. K. D., ... & Piraino, S. (2017). Jellyfish blooms perception in Mediterranean finfish aquaculture. Marine Policy, 76, 1-7.
Abstract: In recent years, negative impacts of jellyfish blooms (JB) on marine human activities have been increasingly reported. Aquaculture has been affected by jellyfish outbreaks, mostly documented through repeated episodes of farmed salmon mortalities in Northern Europe; however, the valuation of JB consequences on the aquaculture sector still remains poorly quantified. This study aims to provide the first quantitative evaluation effects of JB on finfish aquaculture in the Mediterranean Sea and to investigate the general awareness of JB impacts among Mediterranean aquaculture professional workers. The aquaculture workers' perception about JB was assessed through a structured interview-based survey administered across 21 aquaculture facilities in central and western Mediterranean. The workers' awareness about JB impacts on aquaculture differed among countries. Italian and Spanish fish farmers were better informed about jellyfish proliferations and, together with Tunisian farmers, they all recognized the wide potential consequences of JB on sea bream and sea bass aquaculture. On the contrary, the majority of Maltese respondents considered JB as a non-significant threat to their activity, mostly based on off-shore tuna farming. This study for the first time shows that JB may negatively affect different Mediterranean aquaculture facilities from Tunisia (Sicily Channel) and Spain (Alboran Sea), by increasing farmed fish gill disorders and mortality, clogging net cages, or inflicting painful stings to field operators, with severe economic consequences. Available knowledge calls for the development of coordinated preventive plans, adaptation policies, and mitigation countermeasures across European countries in order to address the JB phenomenon and its impacts on coastal water activities.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/26181
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