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Rural aquaculture: Assessment of its contribution to household income and farmers’ perception in selected districts, Tanzania

Deogratias Pius Mulokozi, Francis Pius Mmanda, Paul Onyango, Torbjörn Lundh, Rashid Tamatamah, Håkan Berg

2020Aquaculture Economics & Management56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rural fish farming is being promoted as a good source of protein and income diversification to fight poverty and inequality. However, its actual contribution to these rural households and local community at large is little known. Through interviews with 89 farmers’ and 6 key informants, we examined the contribution of rural fish farming to local farmers’ household income and investigate farmers’ perceptions, opportunities, and constraints towards fish farming in six districts of Tanzania. Results indicated that fish farming contributed on average 13% to household incomes and that it explained 5% of the variation of the household income while 84% of the variation was due to non-fish sources. The majority (79%) of the farmers wanted to continue with fish farming, 9% planned to quit, and 12% had not decided whether to continue or not. Conclusively, much higher aquaculture contribution towards rural development could be obtained if appropriate measures are taken.

Topics & Concepts

TanzaniaAquacultureSocioeconomicsHousehold incomeAgricultural economicsGeographyRural areaBusinessEconomicsFisheryFish <Actinopterygii>Political scienceBiologyArchaeologyLawAgricultural Systems and Practices