Litcius/Paper detail

Sustainability impacts of ecosystem approaches to small-scale aquaculture in Bangladesh

Rodolfo Dam Lam, Benoy Kumar Barman, Denise P. Lozano Lazo, Zohura Khatun, Lutfa Parvin, Afrina Choudhury, Cristiano Rossignoli, Alice Karanja, Alexandros Gasparatos

2022Sustainability Science28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This study explores the sustainability impacts of adopting an ecosystem approach in underutilized homestead ponds (ecoponds) operated by women in Bangladesh. Households with ecoponds have significantly higher fish productivity, fish diversity, and income generation potential compared to households with similar underutilized ponds. Furthermore, certain dimensions of women’s empowerment are improved at the individual and household level (e.g., control of income and productive assets), without, however, addressing wider structural inequalities. Food security impacts are rather inconclusive, as despite the higher consumption of more diverse fish species among ecopond households, there is no significant effect on overall dietary diversity.

Topics & Concepts

SustainabilityProductivityFood securityEmpowermentAquacultureEcosystemNatural resource economicsConsumption (sociology)Sustainable developmentEcosystem servicesScale (ratio)Diversity (politics)BusinessFish <Actinopterygii>FisheryEnvironmental resource managementEcologyGeographyEconomicsEconomic growthBiologyAgricultureCartographySociologySocial scienceAnthropologyChild Nutrition and Water AccessAgricultural Innovations and PracticesMicrofinance and Financial Inclusion
Sustainability impacts of ecosystem approaches to small-scale aquaculture in Bangladesh | Litcius