Fish farming

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    Majed Almehmadi

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    Overfishing Overfishing refers to the act of overexploiting fish such that they reduce to unacceptable limits. The problem occurs if humans harvest large fish quantities than they can be replaced via natural reproduction in a given water body. Although catching large amounts of fish appear profitable, it has dire social and economic consequences. Overfishing interrupts balance of the marine ecosystem. Similarly, majority of the coastal population depends on fishing as their source of livelihood

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    Fish are organisms that the world greatly relies upon. Making up a large chunk of the food chain, fish are a primary source of food for many land and sea animals. According to the FAO (Food and Agriculture Association of the United Nations), fish are a basal source of protein to about one billion people, and are extremely vital to poor and developing countries, supplying these countries’ people with 27% of their protein intake. Although fish are obviously an important staple to the earth’s food

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    Salmon Facts

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    Salmon Fish Facts. Various species of salmon span from Alaska and to the Pacific Ocean, with each species reproducing in the same fascinating way. The uncommonly high amount of omega-3 fatty acids found in salmon make it a popular nutritional choice for good health. While there’s been an increase in demand for salmon, there’s been a subsequent decrease in the wild salmon population; in an effort to reverse this decrease, salmon farms were created and now account for the majority of the world’s

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    Landforms In Australia

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    landforms to help support their economy through jobs, transportation and tourism. Jobs Along the Beaches Many people work on or around the beaches in Australia. One example of a thriving job is fishing. For example, (Australia.gov.au-The Beach), “Fish are a multibillion dollar industry for Australia… worth

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    net is a large net that is placed underwater for catching fish. Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, talked about destroying the ecosystem through farming, but he didn’t mention how it could happen through fishing, too. Fishermen should stop using drift nets to collect fish because they can catch the wrong species and destroy the ecosystem. Many anglers catch the wrong type of fish in their drift nets. This leads to those fish becoming endangered and even extinct. For example, "up to

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    The aquaculture industry has been plagued issues such as water pollution, fish disease outbreaks, destruction of coastal habitat and escapes that have tarnished its reputation and stimulated significant backlash against the industry. In response, the industry turned to placing marine farming systems miles offshore, in deeper waters with large currents to reduce the environmental risks associated with conventional aquaculture. Studies have shown when cited properly with adequate flushing rates, offshore

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    State History Paragraph The four main indian tribes of Florida are the Apalachee, Timucua, Calusa, and Ais. These tribes are unique in their location, food, and shelters they built. Found in Northwest Florida, the Apalachee, a farming people, primarily ate corn, beans, and squash, but their men also hunted for deer, bear, and other small game. They lived in round thatched houses on large mounds of earth built in well dispersed villages. The Timucua of Central Florida were a tribe of skilled hunters

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    Sustainable crop production is when you grow crops in a way where you don’t harm the environment. Which means they don’t get influenced by methods that harm the environment and stick to their eco-friendly practices, treat the workers fairly and will be able to support your local communities with healthy food. Sustainable crop production goes against “industrial crop production” because “industrial crop production” supports monocropping which means to grow only one type of crop in a crop-field year

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    Science monitor, “Logging near streams causes sediment, which damages gravel beds salmon need for spawning. Waste from mining and other industries, as well as urban development, pollutes the water. Farming diverts water and also produces chemical runoffs.” That means salmon and others pieces of fish as well as anything in that habitat is swimming in and/or drinking chemical runoff. And from the great salmon comprise by Ben Goldfarb, “overfishing and destruction from mining, logging and development

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    result in a trophic cascade, causing disruption to the food chain, the ecosystem structure and nutrient cycling. Since the fishing industry fishes down the web, the lower trophic levelled fish would be the next in line to become extinct. Their absence will also leave

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