2000
DOI: 10.1016/s0044-8486(99)00378-6
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A sustainable integrated system for culture of fish, seaweed and abalone

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Cited by 218 publications
(131 citation statements)
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“…The high magnitude of the measured size effect shows that the combination of different organisms coming from different trophic levels cultivated together did not minimise differences between controls and farmed areas with respect to monoculture. Such a result is quite puzzling but is very likely strongly divergent due to the low number of studies analysed from very different types of papers (Costa-Pierce 1998, Neori et al 2000, Wahab et al 2003 which resulted from the low accessibility of other data meeting all the requirements of reliability to be analysed with meta-analytic procedures. Thus, although reliable papers used in this meta-analysis were very few and highly heterogeneous, I…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The high magnitude of the measured size effect shows that the combination of different organisms coming from different trophic levels cultivated together did not minimise differences between controls and farmed areas with respect to monoculture. Such a result is quite puzzling but is very likely strongly divergent due to the low number of studies analysed from very different types of papers (Costa-Pierce 1998, Neori et al 2000, Wahab et al 2003 which resulted from the low accessibility of other data meeting all the requirements of reliability to be analysed with meta-analytic procedures. Thus, although reliable papers used in this meta-analysis were very few and highly heterogeneous, I…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…and Pyropia/Porphyra, which are well-established aquaculture species and whose nutrient uptake abilities are high compared to most other seaweeds (e.g. Chopin Kang et al 2014;Martinez-Aragon et al 2002;Neori et al 2000Neori et al , 2004Msuya and Neori 2008;Abreu et al 2013;Sutherland et al 2011). However, in the case of eco-intensification of offshore aquaculture operations, the macroalgae species additionally needs to be robust enough to withstand a high energy environment (Buck and Buchholz 2005).…”
Section: Ecosystem Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ammonia-N could be removed by biofiltration with microalga, effectively converting from ammonia-N to nitrate less toxic for the aquafarming fishery products [6][7][8][9] . The biofilter systems employing macroalga have reported that 70-95 % of ammonia-N in the effluent could be removed using Gracilaria chilensis in salmon aquaculture ponds 10,11 and some research activities were reported on the application of Ulva lactuca to the farming of Oreochromis spilurus to control the water quality in the aquaculture 12 .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%