Understanding the application of digital technologies in aquaculture supply chains through a systematic literature review
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Toyin Adebayo, Iyabo; Ajibola, Segun; Ahmad, Ali; Cartujo Cassinello, Pedro; Muritala, Ibrahim; Elegbede, Isa O.; Cabral, Pedro; Martos, VanessaEditorial
Springer
Materia
Aquaculture Artificial intelligence Digital technologies
Fecha
2025-06-14Referencia bibliográfica
Adebayo, I.T., Ajibola, S., Ahmad, A. et al. Understanding the application of digital technologies in aquaculture supply chains through a systematic literature review. Aquacult Int 33, 397 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10499-025-02069-7
Patrocinador
European Union’s Horizon 2020- Marie Sklodowska-Curie-RISE (Project SUSTAINABLE, grant number 101007702)Resumen
The study conducts a systematic literature review of the application of digital technologies
in aquaculture supply chains (ASC) to identify key research clusters, examine collaborative
efforts in the field, and highlight emerging knowledge themes. The methodology comprises
a database search in Scopus and Web of Science over a 5-year period (2019–2023) following the PRISMA framework. Bibliometric analysis using Biblioshiny reveals that “Climate
Change,” “Aquaculture”, “Sustainability”, and “Food Security” were dominant keywords in
this field. Notably, the Sustainability cluster exhibits the highest Callon Centrality (2.819)
and Callon Density (63.378), underscoring significant research focus on integrating digital
technologies to enhance sustainability in ASC. Hungary emerges as the country with the
strongest international research collaboration. However, we identified weak collaboration
between African nations and the global research community. Five primary research themes
were identified; these include the role of digital technologies in ASC optimization, the disruption of fisheries supply chains due to the COVID-19 pandemic and the mitigating role
of digital innovations, the contribution of digital technologies to reducing food waste and
advancing the circular economy, the impact of climate change on fishes, and the challenges
and opportunities in applying digital solutions within ASC. Despite persistent challenges—
such as limited transmission bandwidth, network delays, and issues with low-power, longrange communication—significant opportunities exist to overcome these barriers through
technological advances and stronger global research collaboration. Such progress is vital
to transforming ASC into a more sustainable and competitive system. The study provides
actionable insights for stakeholders while laying a foundation for future research and governance in this evolving field.





