“…There has been considerable anthropological and agribusiness research undertaken in Solomon Islands as part of previous large-scale research projects [46,58,[64][65][66][67][68][69][70][71]. In our focus areas of Marovo Lagoon, Western Province, and the villages around the capital of Honiara on Guadalcanal, households are critically dependent on raw products obtained from the sea and forests (particularly fish and crustaceans, but also seaweed, ferns and mangrove shoots), and from crops grown in gardens, both for subsistence use (such as food and shelter) and for the generation of income, which in turn is spent on goods and services such as: imported food stuffs, especially rice and tinned fish [70,72]; material goods including fishing gear; school fees; meeting church obligations [65,69,70,73].…”