Available October 2010: The History of Aquaculture by Colin E. Nash
The Pacific Aquaculture Caucus Inc. (PACAQUA) announces the Wiley Blackwell Publication of The History of Aquaculture by Colin E. Nash Ph.D. Copies available in October 2010 through the PACAQUA web site.
Table of Contents
1. Fish and Shellfish as Food
2. Seeds in Antiquity (2000 BC–500 AD)
3. Subsistence Farming through the Middle Ages (500-1450)
4. The Slow Dawn of Science (1450-1900)
5. The Roots of Modern Aquaculture (1750-1880)
6. Farming the Sea (1880-1920)
7. Fifty Lost Years (1900-1950)
8. Aquaculture in a World at War (1935-1945)
9. Post-War Pioneering (1950-1970)
10. Uncontrolled Expansion (1965-1975)
11. The Rise of the Institutions (1970-1980)
12. Building Global Capacity (1980-2000)
13. Modern Times (twenty-first century)
This comprehensive book is fully illustrated with over 40 plates and 6 maps.
Author Colin E. Nash Ph.D.:
After earning his doctorate from the University of Leeds, Colin Nash served in a number of positions in the U.K., Hawaii, and the U.S. Mr. Nash was Director of the Aquaculture Development and Coordination Program at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations in Rome during the 1980s, followed by four years as the technical director of Cofrepêche, an international firm in France specializing in coastal management issues. After his return to the United States in 1998, Mr. Nash joined the aquaculture group at the NOAA Northwest Fisheries Science Center’s Manchester Research Station near Seattle. For 10 years he was the Editor-in-Chief of the first aquaculture journal, Aquaculture. He has published a number of papers on aquaculture, including, most recently, Guidelines for Ecological Risk Assessment of Marine Fish Aquaculture (NOAA Technical Memo, December 2005) and Achieving Policy Objectives to Increase the Value of the Seafood Industry in the United States: The Technical Feasibility and Associated Constraints (Food Policy, December 2004). In 2005, Mr. Nash was made an Honorary Member of the European Aquaculture Society.