NEW STUDY INTO PERCEPTIONS OF SUSTAINABLE AQUACULTURE
New study into perceptions of sustainable aquaculture. Sustainable seafood and seaweed farming are environmentally friendly alternatives to land-based food. Unfamiliarity and outdated narratives about harmful aquaculture have hindered social acceptance of the aquaculture industry in the United States. A new study published by the Aquarium of the Pacific and collaborators from the School for the Environment at the University of Massachusetts Boston, University of Southern California Sea Grant Programme, and the Department of Environmental Studies and Sciences at Santa Clara University reveals how perceptions of seafood and seaweed farming can change in respondents and who they saw as the most trusted sources to deliver those messages.
“Our results suggest that sustainability themes, delivered by trusted sources, can convert naysayers regarding aquaculture into supporters,” said Dr. Peter Kareiva, who is an environmental scientist, an author on this study, and Aquarium of the Pacific president. The study focused on people residing in the western and northeastern coastal states of the U.S.—stakeholders who would need to live with an expanded marine farming industry.
Economic benefits and provision of jobs were not the benefits that survey respondents found most persuasive. What changed minds was messages emphasizing the environmental benefits of seafood and seaweed farming. These benefits include having a stable and well-managed ecofriendly alternative to land-based foods and providing a sustainable alternative to wild fisheries. Altogether, this work suggests that communicating the potential environmental benefits of seafood farming expansion in this nation has the potential to shift public perceptions.
Data also revealed that seafood farming received more favourable responses from surveyed individuals after watching Ocean to Table, a video series produced by the Aquarium of Pacific. This series highlights responsible U.S. marine aquaculture or ocean farming. Over half of the respondents who began with a negative opinion of seafood farming, shifted to a favourable opinion after watching one of these videos.
This study also asked respondents about what sources they most trusted when it came to aquaculture—scientists, seafood farmers, and aquariums/museum ranked highest. This paper, “Are all benefits equal? An exploratory analysis of coastal perspectives of seafood farming expansion in the United States,” is now published in The Journal of the World Aquaculture Society and is available here. This study was funded by the University of Southern California Sea Grant Program, World Wildlife Fund, and California Sea Grant Program.