@article{article_1590329, title={Aquaculture in Africa: Challenges and Future Prospects}, journal={Acta Aquatica Turcica}, volume={21}, pages={256–265}, year={2025}, DOI={10.22392/actaquatr.1590329}, author={Kose, Musa}, keywords={Afrika, Su Ürünleri Yetiştiriciliği, Zorluklar, Gelecek Perspektifleri.}, abstract={Aquaculture in Africa has shown gradual growth, though progress remains slow due to differences in water availability, economic conditions, and access to fisheries across countries. Therefore, this study examines the challenges and prospects of the fish farming sector in Africa. Evaluating aquaculture performance should consider factors beyond production levels or GDP contribution, such as its role in food supply, population size, and natural resource availability. Egypt leads in aquaculture contribution to national fish supply, followed by Lesotho, which focuses on exports. Ethiopia, Guinea-Bissau, and Sudan have significant per capita fish supply gaps. Egypt also dominates in total production, with 2018 output surpassing all other African countries combined. Countries like Rwanda, Burundi, Lesotho, and Benin have shown strong production growth over the past decade, while Lesotho, South Africa, and Mauritius excel in high-value aquaculture production. The combination of reaching maximum yields in marine and inland fisheries, expanding markets, urbanization, and opportunities for private-sector growth presents immense potential for aquaculture development in Africa.}, number={3}, publisher={Isparta Uygulamalı Bilimler Üniversitesi}