National Marine Fisheries Service

09/23/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 09/23/2024 07:20

Celebrating Aquaculture Week: Farming from Tide to Table

Welcome to National Aquaculture Week, when we celebrate increasing our access to fresh seafood while protecting coastal resources. Seafood farming, if done responsibly as it is in the United States, is one of the most environmentally sustainable ways to produce food and protein. Marine aquaculture can expand and stabilize the U.S. seafood supply in the face of environmental change and economic uncertainty.

Celebrate Aquaculture Week by learning about members of the aquaculture community who provide valuable jobs and increase access to fresh, sustainably sourced American seafood. Aquaculture is more than seafood production. It is about ecosystem stewardship, coastal communities, and economic opportunities.

Tide-to-Table Profiles

Check out new profiles below featuring growers across the country to learn more about the love they have for their communities, the food they grow, and the people they feed.

DJ's Oyster Company, Growing a New Kind of Oyster in Texas

David Aparicio is an oyster farmer demonstrating resilience after a hurricane in Palacios, Texas.

Read about DJ's Oyster Company

More Aquaculture Features

NOAA Fisheries and USDA's Agricultural Research Service to Breed Better Oysters

NOAA Fisheries and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Service opened a new Northeast Oyster Breeding Center in Milford, Connecticut.

Learn more about the new oyster-breeding center

Video: Swinomish Indian Tribal Community Clam Garden

NOAA helped the Swinomish Indian Tribal Community build the first modern clam garden in the United States. It will provide food for the community, and provide environmental diversity that's important in the face of climate change.

Watch the video

Podcast: Planet NOAA Podcast Episode 8-SEA-stainability

Aquaculture-or farmed seafood-is making the way we live, work and eat more sustainable. Break down the inner workings of NOAA'S aquaculture and sustainability science with Chief Scientist Dr. Sarah Kapnick and special guests.

Listen to the podcast

Podcast: Seaweed-The Miracle Macroalgae with Major Economic and Environmental Value

Discover the versatility of seaweed and the contributions of seaweed farming-or seaweed aquaculture-to working waterfronts and environmental sustainability.

Listen to the podcast

Story Map: Farming from Tide to Table-Aquaculture Recipes and Stories from Across the United States

Explore the map to learn about aquaculture growers across the country, and pick up a few new recipes!

View the story map