Alessandro Lovatelli
In October 2001, Mr Alessandro Lovatelli once again joined the FAO, taking up the professional post of Fisheries Resources Officer (Aquaculture) at the Inland Water Resources and Aquaculture Service (FIRI), one of the two services attached to the Fishery Resources Division. Mr Lovatelli, a trained marine biologist and aquaculturist, obtained his Bachelor (BSc) and Master of Science (MSc) degrees at the universities of Southampton and Plymouth (UK), respectively. His first experience with FAO dates back to 1987 when he worked as the bivalve expert attached to the FAO/UNDP Regional Seafarming Development and Demonstration Project. The project was then under the Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific (NACA) before it became an independent inter-governmental organization. His next FAO assignment took him to Mexico, where he worked on a regional aquaculture development project (AQUILA) which was funded by the Government of Italy. From 1993 to 1997, Mr Lovatelli worked in Viet Nam, Somalia and then again in Southeast Asia. In Viet Nam, he headed the aquaculture and fisheries component of a large European Union (EU) project developing, among other activities, 10 regional aquaculture demonstration, training and extension centres. Following this, he moved to Somalia, working as the lead aquaculture and fisheries consultant for the European Commission (EC). During the one-year consultancy, Mr Lovatelli provided the Commission with technical advice towards assisting the fisheries sector through the EC Rehabilitation Programme for Somalia. Following an additional year in Viet Nam as one of the Team Leaders under the Danish-funded Fisheries Master Plan Project, Mr Lovatelli was recruited by FAO as the Aquaculture Advisor attached to the FAO-EASTFISH project based in Copenhagen. His next �jump� was not too long, i.e. from Denmark to Italy. His main activities currently focus on marine aquaculture development, transfer of farming technologies, coastal resources management and development of human resources. These activities have a global span and will benefit from his extensive working experience in numerous Southeast Asian, Caribbean, Central American, East African, and Central and Eastern European countries. With regards to the Mediterranean region in particular, Mr Lovatelli was recently nominated as the new Technical Secretary of the Committee on Aquaculture under the General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM). His direct telephone number is +39 06 57056448, and his email address is [email protected]
Raymon van Anrooy
José Aguilar-Manjarrez
Dr José Aguilar-Manjarrez has been appointed Fishery Resources Officer (Inland Fisheries GIS) in the Inland Water Resources and Aquaculture Service (FIRI) at FAO HQ, effective 1 August 2001.
Dr Aguilar-Manjarrez brings with him many years of experience on aquaculture planning and management using Geographical Informa-tion Systems (GIS). His experience with GIS began with the use of GIS for aquaculture site selection in Tabasco State, Mexico as the basis of his MSc dissertation from 1991 to 1992 at the Institute of Aquaculture (IOA) in Scotland. He then carried out a PhD dissertation from 1992 to 1996 at the IOA by developing GIS-based models for planning and management of coastal aquaculture in Sinaloa State, Mexico.
From 1996 to 1998, he worked with FIRI, first as a visiting scientist with focus on the use of GIS for estimating fish farming potential in Africa, and later as a consultant on spatial modelling of inland fishery potential. From November 1998 to July 2001, he worked with WAICENT, designing and developing FAO�s GIS map repository and carriying out a GIS study to assess locations that have potential for the production of bambara groundnut across the world.
Prior to joining FAO, from 1990 to 1991 he worked in Mexico City as an aquaculture consultant at a private consulting company with focus on environmental impact studies of navigation ports and shrimp farming site selection for the states of Sinaloa, Chiapas and Veracruz. He then worked at the Bank of Mexico (FIRA), also as an aquaculture consultant developing feasibility study reports for shrimp farming in Sinaloa.
Dr Aguilar�s technical responsibilities in FIRI will focus largely on developing methodologies, technical guidelines and draft technical papers, reviews and training materials on inland fishery management and GIS applications to inland fisheries and aquaculture. Readers can contact Dr Aguilar at: [email protected]