Fisheries - މަސްވެރިކަން

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    Technical Report
    Management of the grouper fishery of the Maldives
    (International Coral Reef Symposium އިންޓަރނޭޝަނަލް ކޯރަލް ރީފް ސިމްޕޯޒިއަމް, 2012) Sattar, Shahaama A.; ޝަހާމާ އޭ. ސައްތާރު; Najeeb, Ahmed; އަހުމަދު ނަޖީބް; Islam, Fahmeeda; ފަހުމީދާ އިސްލާމް; Afzal, Mariyam Shidha; މަރިޔަމް ޝިދާ އަފްޒަލް; Wood, Elizabeth; އެލަޒަބަތު ވުޑް
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    ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ހުއިފިލަނޑާގެ މަސްވެރިކަން މެނޭޖްކުރުމުގެ ޕްލޭން
    (ދިވެހި ސަރުކާރުގެ ގެޒެޓް, 2020-12-08) ރައީސުލްޖުމްހޫރިއްޔާގެ އޮފީސް; Raeesuljumhooriyyaage Office
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    Baseline report on fisheries practices in Laamu atoll
    (Ministry of Climate Change, Environment, and Energy މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ކްލައިމެޓް ޗޭންޖް އެންވަރޮމެންޓް އެންޑް އެނާޖީ, 2024) Ministry of Climate Change, Environment, and Energy; މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ކްލައިމެޓް ޗޭންޖް އެންވަރޮމެންޓް އެންޑް އެނާޖީ
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    އިންޑިޔާ ކަނޑުގެ ދިރުންތަކަށް ހުރި ދަންތުރަ
    (އޮލިވް ރައިޑްލީ ޕުރޮޖެކްޓް) އޮލިވް ރައިޑްލީ ޕުރޮޖެކްޓް; Olive Ridely Project
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    Fishermen in Minicoy (Maliku) : the production of Maldive fish as a sustainable economy
    (2022) Heidemann, Frank; ހައިޑެމަން ފްރޭންކް
    The people of Minicoy (Maliku), the southernmost island of the Lakshadweep, produce Maldive fish, a delicacy widely known in India, Sri Lanka and beyond. Maldive fish, locally hikimas, is a cooked and dried tuna fillet that is as hard as wood and can be used for several years after processing. For many centuries it has been an essential part of the diet of seafarers, the pioneers of pre-colonial globalisation in the Indian Ocean. Maliku fishermen catch bait fish in the lagoon and skipjack tuna in the open ocean within a radius of 25 miles. Hikimas is produced by local women in their homes for export and partly for their own consumption. Despite the motorisation of fishing boats and other modernisations, fishing with pole and line and the production of hikimas proved to be a most sustainable form of catching and processing fish. It remained basically unchanged since it was first documented in the fourteenth century. I shall argue that fishing on Maliku is more than an economic activity, as it is a central aspect of producing home and belonging also for other occupational groups, particularly seamen, the largest professional group. Fishing and hikimas production are most inclusive economies with transparent distribution of surplus and wealth, and therefore contribute to a society that is often described as “egalitarian”.
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    The status of fisheries in the republic of Maldives
    (Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, 1997) Mohamed Faiz
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    އަންނަން އޮތް ޖީލުތަކަށް މަސް 2017
    (2017) ޢަދުނާން ޢަލީ ( ތަރުޖަމާކުރީ); ޑޮކްޓަރ ޢަބުދުالله ނަސީރު ކ.ޭ ޖ.ީ މުޙައްމަދު (ތަރުޖަމާކުރީ); އެފ.ް ޖ.ީ މުޙައްމަދު (ތަރުޖަމާކުރީ); Ali, Adhunaan (Translator); Mohamed, Dr. Abdullah Naseer K. G. (Translator); Mohamed, F . G (Translator)
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    ލޭނު މަސްވެރިކަން : މަސްވެރިކަމުގެ ހުނަރު 1
    (މިނިސްޓްރީ އޮފް ފިޝަރީޒް އެގްރިކަލްޗަރ އެނޑް މެރިން ރިސޯސަސް, 2024) މުޙައްމަދު މަނިކު; Manik, Mohammed
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    Report for the Maldives pole & line skipjack and yellowfin tuna fisheries
    (Maldives Seafood Processors & Exporters Association (MSPEA), 2017-01-31) Kiseleva, Anna; Akroyd, Jo; Stokes, Kevin
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    Other
    ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގެ ދިރޭކުދިމަހުގެ މަސްވެރިކަން މެނޭޖްކުރުމުގެ ޕުލޭން
    (ްރައީސުލްޖުމްހޫރިއްޔާގެ އޮފީސ, 2020-12-10) ްރައީސުލްޖުމްހޫރިއްޔާގެ އޮފީސ; Raeesuljumhooriyyaa ge Office