Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam

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Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam. / Le Minh, Hanh; Phan, Van Thi; Nghia, Nguyen Huu; Jepsen, Martin Rudbeck.

In: Aquaculture International, Vol. 25, No. 2, 2017, p. 881-891.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Le Minh, H, Phan, VT, Nghia, NH & Jepsen, MR 2017, 'Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam', Aquaculture International, vol. 25, no. 2, pp. 881-891. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10499-016-0083-0

APA

Le Minh, H., Phan, V. T., Nghia, N. H., & Jepsen, M. R. (2017). Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam. Aquaculture International, 25(2), 881-891. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10499-016-0083-0

Vancouver

Le Minh H, Phan VT, Nghia NH, Jepsen MR. Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam. Aquaculture International. 2017;25(2):881-891. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10499-016-0083-0

Author

Le Minh, Hanh ; Phan, Van Thi ; Nghia, Nguyen Huu ; Jepsen, Martin Rudbeck. / Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam. In: Aquaculture International. 2017 ; Vol. 25, No. 2. pp. 881-891.

Bibtex

@article{16a549dcfe424dbda55903cacb012556,
title = "Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam",
abstract = "Whilst a range of studies address the aquaculture livelihoods in southern Vietnam{\textquoteright}s Mekong Delta, the role of aquaculture in northern Vietnam remains less described. We, therefore, conducted interviews with 199 households in the two northern provinces Quang Ninh and Nghe An in 2014 to analyse the dependence on aquaculture in these two provinces and amongst farmers specializing in shrimp and freshwater fish production, respectively. Further, we tested the ability of different socio-economic variables to explain the observed reliance on aquaculture using an ANCOVA model. The study identifies a substantial reliance on aquaculture of farmers in the study area with at least half of their income generated by aquaculture. Our analyses highlight that the educational background of farmers explain their engagement in aquaculture better than how long they have worked as aquaculture farmers. Freshwater fish farmers were shown to rely less on aquaculture as it is only generating a supplementary income. In contrast, the shrimp farmers are not only those having the highest share of income from aquaculture but also earning their main living from aquaculture. The fact that both shrimp and fish farmers have diverse sources of income shows the unstable or risky nature of aquaculture livelihoods in the study area. Our findings suggest that policies promoting aquaculture should focus on training of farmers whilst acknowledging that a diverse income portfolio increases livelihood resilience to external shocks such as extreme weather events, diseases and fluctuating market prices.",
keywords = "Aquaculture, Freshwater fish farming, Livelihood, Shrimp farming, Vietnam",
author = "{Le Minh}, Hanh and Phan, {Van Thi} and Nghia, {Nguyen Huu} and Jepsen, {Martin Rudbeck}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1007/s10499-016-0083-0",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
pages = "881--891",
journal = "Aquaculture International",
issn = "0967-6120",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Dependency on aquaculture in northern Vietnam

AU - Le Minh, Hanh

AU - Phan, Van Thi

AU - Nghia, Nguyen Huu

AU - Jepsen, Martin Rudbeck

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Whilst a range of studies address the aquaculture livelihoods in southern Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, the role of aquaculture in northern Vietnam remains less described. We, therefore, conducted interviews with 199 households in the two northern provinces Quang Ninh and Nghe An in 2014 to analyse the dependence on aquaculture in these two provinces and amongst farmers specializing in shrimp and freshwater fish production, respectively. Further, we tested the ability of different socio-economic variables to explain the observed reliance on aquaculture using an ANCOVA model. The study identifies a substantial reliance on aquaculture of farmers in the study area with at least half of their income generated by aquaculture. Our analyses highlight that the educational background of farmers explain their engagement in aquaculture better than how long they have worked as aquaculture farmers. Freshwater fish farmers were shown to rely less on aquaculture as it is only generating a supplementary income. In contrast, the shrimp farmers are not only those having the highest share of income from aquaculture but also earning their main living from aquaculture. The fact that both shrimp and fish farmers have diverse sources of income shows the unstable or risky nature of aquaculture livelihoods in the study area. Our findings suggest that policies promoting aquaculture should focus on training of farmers whilst acknowledging that a diverse income portfolio increases livelihood resilience to external shocks such as extreme weather events, diseases and fluctuating market prices.

AB - Whilst a range of studies address the aquaculture livelihoods in southern Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, the role of aquaculture in northern Vietnam remains less described. We, therefore, conducted interviews with 199 households in the two northern provinces Quang Ninh and Nghe An in 2014 to analyse the dependence on aquaculture in these two provinces and amongst farmers specializing in shrimp and freshwater fish production, respectively. Further, we tested the ability of different socio-economic variables to explain the observed reliance on aquaculture using an ANCOVA model. The study identifies a substantial reliance on aquaculture of farmers in the study area with at least half of their income generated by aquaculture. Our analyses highlight that the educational background of farmers explain their engagement in aquaculture better than how long they have worked as aquaculture farmers. Freshwater fish farmers were shown to rely less on aquaculture as it is only generating a supplementary income. In contrast, the shrimp farmers are not only those having the highest share of income from aquaculture but also earning their main living from aquaculture. The fact that both shrimp and fish farmers have diverse sources of income shows the unstable or risky nature of aquaculture livelihoods in the study area. Our findings suggest that policies promoting aquaculture should focus on training of farmers whilst acknowledging that a diverse income portfolio increases livelihood resilience to external shocks such as extreme weather events, diseases and fluctuating market prices.

KW - Aquaculture

KW - Freshwater fish farming

KW - Livelihood

KW - Shrimp farming

KW - Vietnam

U2 - 10.1007/s10499-016-0083-0

DO - 10.1007/s10499-016-0083-0

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:84994344824

VL - 25

SP - 881

EP - 891

JO - Aquaculture International

JF - Aquaculture International

SN - 0967-6120

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 169098900