Hawaiʻi aquaculture high school student videos go global
The UH Sea Grant College Program organized a competition inviting high school students to submit videos addressing the theme of Hawaiian aquaculture.
The UH Sea Grant College Program organized a competition inviting high school students to submit videos addressing the theme of Hawaiian aquaculture.
The UH Hilo aquaculture center assisted in raising oysters, nature’s most efficient water filters, to restore native oysters and improve clarity in Hawaiʻi waters.
UH Hilo aquaculture center partners with Honolulu CC, Polynesian Voyaging Society to improve water quality with oysters.
The University of Hawaiʻi Sea Grant College Program received $1.4 million to explore new aquaculture opportunities.
Modeled on research trials conducted at UH Hilo’s Pacific Aquaculture and Coastal Resources Center, the project is using native shellfish species for water quality improvement at Pearl Harbor.
The University of Hawaiʻi and state agencies formed a partnership to raise Hawaiʻi’s global visibility in marine aquaculture and to capitalize on the commercial opportunities available worldwide.
UH Hilo and UH Mānoa received funding to develop aquaculture projects that support food security in Hawaiʻi.
UH West Oʻahu Professor Esther Widiasih has been granted $116,381 to study traditional Native Hawaiian sustainability.
UH Hilo has the only four-year aquaculture program in the state and the only facility dedicated to aquaculture and coastal management education, research and outreach to the community and industry.
The UH Sea Grant College Program received a $149,972 NOAA grant to develop new opportunities in shellfish farming for Hawaiʻi and the U.S. affiliated Pacific Islands.