The use of natural resources differs from one country to another, according to factors that affect their existence, quality and quantity.
Rich countries have technology that allows them to generate sufficient production volumes to meet their needs and have a surplus to sell to other countries.
The intensive use of natural resources has led them to look for alternatives to replace them by creating synthetic products and to optimize quality by the organic production of food and raw materials.
Meanwhile, in many poor countries remain the traditional and obsolete techniques for the exploitation of natural resources such as slash-and-burn farming and farming in steep slopes and soils susceptible to erosion, which, together with deforestation of forests, promote the advance of desertification.
Fishing, meanwhile, is carried out in a comprehensive manner, without respecting bans or characteristics that the specimens must have and then they can be fished. These conditions limit their production.
FISHING IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY
FISHING IN A DEVELOPED COUNTRY