Giant clams offer small holders throughout the Indo-Pacific with good prospects for commercial culture to satisfy their increasing dependence on the cash economy. Two species appear promising for an emerging village-based export industry in Solomon Islands. These species are Tridacna crocea, the preferred species for the aquarium market, and T. derasa, the species that has the best potential for the seafood market. In this paper, a bioeconomic model is used in a normative analysis to explore optimal-management strategies for village farmers producing these clams. The normative study provides a benchmark against which current practices can be evaluated
Local interest in and the potential contribution of giant clam culture to village economy in Ono-i-L...
Reports the result of a survey of villagers on the islands of Lakeba, Tuvuca, Cicia, Balavu and two ...
The giant clam Tridacna maxima has been largely overexploited in many tropical regions over the past...
Giant clams offer small holders throughout the Indo-Pacific with good prospects for commercial cultu...
Giant-clam farming is undertaken by coastal villagers in Solomon Islands as part of a research and d...
The economics of growing Tridacna gigas giant clams inter-tidally is examined on the basis of experi...
Estimates the internal rate of return on costs of investment in a ‘standard’ giant clam farm involve...
The paper considers the economics of giant clam mariculture in the South Pacific, with special atten...
The technical possibility of farming giant clams has been established by the Micronesian Mariculture...
Among a variety of shellfish and sea molluscs, giant clams (Tridacna spp.) have provided an importan...
There is increasing competition for the use of the coastal zone as economic development proceeds. Th...
The paper estimates the internal rate of return of investment in a giant clam farm involved in the o...
Retailers in Southeast Queensland of supplies for saltwater aquariums were surveyed in August 1989 w...
The carrying capacity of a 2.4 ha Manila clam Venerupis philippinarum farm, using mechanised harvest...
This paper examines the status of and the potential demand for giant clams in four coastal villages ...
Local interest in and the potential contribution of giant clam culture to village economy in Ono-i-L...
Reports the result of a survey of villagers on the islands of Lakeba, Tuvuca, Cicia, Balavu and two ...
The giant clam Tridacna maxima has been largely overexploited in many tropical regions over the past...
Giant clams offer small holders throughout the Indo-Pacific with good prospects for commercial cultu...
Giant-clam farming is undertaken by coastal villagers in Solomon Islands as part of a research and d...
The economics of growing Tridacna gigas giant clams inter-tidally is examined on the basis of experi...
Estimates the internal rate of return on costs of investment in a ‘standard’ giant clam farm involve...
The paper considers the economics of giant clam mariculture in the South Pacific, with special atten...
The technical possibility of farming giant clams has been established by the Micronesian Mariculture...
Among a variety of shellfish and sea molluscs, giant clams (Tridacna spp.) have provided an importan...
There is increasing competition for the use of the coastal zone as economic development proceeds. Th...
The paper estimates the internal rate of return of investment in a giant clam farm involved in the o...
Retailers in Southeast Queensland of supplies for saltwater aquariums were surveyed in August 1989 w...
The carrying capacity of a 2.4 ha Manila clam Venerupis philippinarum farm, using mechanised harvest...
This paper examines the status of and the potential demand for giant clams in four coastal villages ...
Local interest in and the potential contribution of giant clam culture to village economy in Ono-i-L...
Reports the result of a survey of villagers on the islands of Lakeba, Tuvuca, Cicia, Balavu and two ...
The giant clam Tridacna maxima has been largely overexploited in many tropical regions over the past...