fish culture: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples
C1/C2Formal, Technical, Academic, Professional
Quick answer
What does “fish culture” mean?
The breeding, rearing, and management of fish for commercial, conservation, or recreational purposes.
Audio
Pronunciation
Definition
Meaning and Definition
The breeding, rearing, and management of fish for commercial, conservation, or recreational purposes.
The practice of cultivating fish populations under controlled conditions, often in enclosures such as ponds, tanks, or sea cages, as distinct from commercial fishing in wild stocks. It is a subset of aquaculture.
Dialectal Variation
British vs American Usage
Differences
Both varieties use the term. 'Fish farming' is perhaps more common in everyday British English, while 'aquaculture' is a dominant superordinate term in American technical contexts.
Connotations
In both, it carries a neutral-to-technical connotation. In environmental discourse, it may be contrasted with 'capture fisheries'.
Frequency
Slightly higher frequency in American technical and academic texts, but overall a low-frequency specialist term in both varieties.
Grammar
How to Use “fish culture” in a Sentence
[Verb] fish culture: to practice/develop/study fish culture[Adjective] fish culture: intensive/sustainable/commercial fish culture[Preposition] in fish culture: advances in fish cultureVocabulary
Collocations
Examples
Examples of “fish culture” in a Sentence
verb
British English
- The estate aims to fish-culture trout for the local market.
- They have been fish-culturing carp in those ponds for decades.
American English
- The company will fish-culture tilapia in indoor tanks.
- We are licensed to fish-culture endangered species for restocking.
Usage
Meaning in Context
Business
Refers to the commercial production sector, e.g., 'Investing in sustainable fish culture offers long-term profitability.'
Academic
Used in biology, environmental science, and agricultural studies, e.g., 'The paper examines nitrogen cycles in recirculating fish culture systems.'
Everyday
Rare. Might be simplified to 'fish farming', e.g., 'He works in fish culture down by the reservoirs.'
Technical
Precise term in agricultural extension, fisheries management, and development reports, e.g., 'The manual covers broodstock management for tropical fish culture.'
Vocabulary
Synonyms of “fish culture”
Vocabulary
Antonyms of “fish culture”
Watch out
Common Mistakes When Using “fish culture”
- Using 'fish culture' to refer to the culinary traditions surrounding fish (that is 'food culture' or 'cuisine').
- Misspelling as 'fishculturing' as one word (it is typically two words or hyphenated as a compound modifier: 'fish-culture techniques').
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
No. 'Fishing' typically refers to catching wild fish. 'Fish culture' refers to breeding and raising fish in controlled environments.
'Aquaculture' is the broader term for cultivating all aquatic organisms (fish, shellfish, seaweed). 'Fish culture' is a specific type of aquaculture focused only on fish.
Yes. Marine fish culture, often called 'mariculture', uses sea cages or pens in sheltered coastal waters.
Yes, 'pisciculture' is a direct synonym, but it is a more formal, scientific, and less commonly used term.
The breeding, rearing, and management of fish for commercial, conservation, or recreational purposes.
Fish culture is usually formal, technical, academic, professional in register.
Fish culture: in British English it is pronounced /ˈfɪʃ ˌkʌltʃə/, and in American English it is pronounced /ˈfɪʃ ˌkʌltʃɚ/. Tap the audio buttons above to hear it.
Phrases
Idioms & Phrases
- “No specific idioms. The term is technical.”
Learning
Memory Aids
Mnemonic
Think: Just as AGRICULTURE is the cultivation of the land for crops, FISH CULTURE is the 'cultivation' of water for fish.
Conceptual Metaphor
FARMING (applied to an aquatic environment); CULTIVATION (of a living aquatic resource).
Practice
Quiz
What is the most precise superordinate term for 'fish culture'?