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Ben Coxworth August 7, 2013
3 PICTURES
Prawns raised on the Novacq fish-free feed additive (Photo: CSIRO) . View gallery (3 images)
When it comes to commercial aquaculture, a lot of people have some legitimate concerns fish farms can introduce
antibiotics, anti-algal chemicals and concentrated fish waste into the ocean; escaped fish can upset the local
ecological balance; and wild fish still need to be caught in large numbers, as a food source for some species of farmed
fish. While there have been recent efforts to address the first two concerns, the fish-in-the-fish-food problem is now
being taken on in two different research projects. These are aimed at replacing the fish content in fish feed with more
sustainable ingredients.
CSIRO plans to conduct more tests of the additive, and has licensed the technology to Australias Ridley AgriProducts.
It is hoped that Novacq will be commercially available within about a year.
Dr. Allen Place (left) and Dr. Aaron Watson, developers of the vegetarian fish feed (Photo: University of Maryland Center for Environmental
Science/Cheryl Nemazie)
Not only have test fish apparently thrived on the feed, but their flesh reportedly has PCB and mercury levels that are
100-fold lower than those found in fish consuming regular pellets containing wild-caught fish. According to co-creator
of the feed Dr. Allen Place, this would allow consumers to eat striped bass twice a week, as opposed to the once
every two weeks thats currently recommended.
Sources: CSIRO, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science's Institute for Marine and Environmental
Technology
Aquaculture uses proteins such as fish meal, meat, and soy protein to feed fish. However, insect based meal could also play a
major role in feeding fish in aquaculture, and could become a sustainable alternative to fish meals.
Finding sustainable feed for aquaculture production could be challenging for fish farmers, considering the cost and environmental
issues. Fish farmers often use fish meal, or pelleted feed that are made from other fish as a source of protein. Using wild caught fish to
feed farmed fish has always been a controversial issue.
The 2013 report by Food and Agriculture Organization of the U.N. (FAO) on
edible insects suggests that a bug-based diet will produce bigger and stronger livestock. The report pointed to several studies on fish and
Japanese quail. In this experiment ground crickets replaced up to 50 percent of the fish meal in their feed. The fish growing on insect meals
outperformed their counterpart fish growing on traditional commercial fish meal. The cricket fed fish showed higher growth rate and also
laid more eggs.
Conclusion:
Studies have found that certain insect based fish feed could be a sustainable and commercially viable substitute to fish meal. It could be a
cheaper and better alternative in many ways. However the insect farms are still in its early stages. Reaching industrial-scale production is
the next step, and new technology will need to play a role.
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Source: WorldWide Aquaculture
Tips on Feeding Your Fish Reduce Aquaculture Feed Costs | WorldWide Aquaculture
The Best Way to Feed Your Aquarium & Farmed Fish | WorldWide Aquaculture
Start Your Own Home Based Fish Farming Business for Profit | WorldWide Aquaculture
Fish nutritionist
Marty Riche
feeds juvenile
Florida
pompano during
studies to
determine
appropriate
feeds and
feedingmanagement
practiceas for
profitable inland
production of
saltwater fish.
(D1228-11)
Reducing reliance on captured marine fish proteins and oils for fish feeds is an important goal in aquaculture. But fish are picky about their
feed, and fish nutritionists need to find nutritious feeds, low in fishmeals and oils, that fish will eat.
A Growing Demand
Feed provides the nutrients required for building and sustaining life. If fish dont eat well, they wont grow and thrive. Commercial fish farms
rely on feeds that now include fishmeal as a major source of protein and oil. The protein- and lipid-rich feed pellets used for farmed fish
have traditionally been made in part from small, bony fish species, like menhaden, herring, and capelin.
Pet food and diets for swine and poultry have also traditionally used fishmeal and oil. And as more people around the globe turn to fish as a
source of lean protein, they drive the growth of aquaculture worldwide; aquaculture now supplies half of the seafood produced for human
consumption.
Thus, the demand for proteins and lipids for fish diets has increased while the supply of marine fishmeal has not increased, causing more
pressure and price increases on the limited supply of fishmeal. Replacements for fishmeal and fish oil are needed to support sustainable
aquaculture.
Agricultural Research Service (ARS) aquaculture scientists are working to develop fish feeds that dont include fishmeal. Since November
2007, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have been engaged in the
Alternative Feeds Initiative to accelerate development of other feeds for aquaculture. The initiatives purpose is to identify alternative
dietary ingredients that will reduce the amount of fishmeal and fish oil contained in aquaculture feeds while maintaining
the important human health benefits of farmed seafood.
Developing alternative ingredients that are produced in sufficient quantities to become standard components of diets is a Fish nutritionist
key research priority, requiring understanding of an ingredients nutritional value, its ability to blend with other ingredients, Rick Barrows
examines flax oil
its effect on pellet stability, and, of course, its appeal to fish.
that will be
Different Fish, Different Food
infused into
pellets for
Different species of fish not only have different nutritional requirements, but they also seem to have different palate
rainbow trout
requirements. In Hagerman, Idaho, ARS fish physiologist Rick Barrows is tasked with formulating and manufacturing
feed.
feeds for several fish species, including trout, salmon, white seabass, and yellowtail. Barrows and his ARS collaborators (D1429-3)
have developed many different formulations for these fish depending on their stage of development, from fry (baby fish) to
adults. Barrows produces the feed himself using a piece of food-manufacturing equipment called a cooking extruder.
My colleagues and I are open to looking at a variety of ingredients for fishmeal replacement, including plants, animal processing products,
and even single-cell organisms like yeast and bacteria, says Barrows. We conduct not only growth studies but also palatability studies to
ensure fish will eat the nutritious feed.
Feeding Salmon
William Wolters, research leader and director of the ARS National Cold Water Marine Aquaculture Center in Franklin, Maine, is
collaborating with Barrows to develop diets for Atlantic salmon using concentrated plant proteins. Protein levels in most grain and oilseed
sources are low and need to be concentrated to reach the high protein requirements of fish. Current studies are evaluating six experimental
diets, containing combinations of alternative proteins, and a fishmeal control diet being fed to fish in 15 tanks with automatic feeders.
Fishmeal-free
diet for
California
yellowtail
containing 30
percent
spirulina.
(D1942-1)
While the studies are still ongoing, it certainly seems that the modern alternative diets work better than previous alternative
diets, says Wolters. When top-performing low-fishmeal feeds in these studies are identified, they will be further evaluated
in two separate studies.
Salmon spend 1 years in the hatchery and then 1 to 2 years growing to adult size. According to the Maine
Aquaculture Association (MAA), there are about 1,300 acres of marine waters leased in the state for aquaculture purposes
600 acres for finfish. Salmon is a large commodity in Maine aquacultureannually producing between 25 and 35 million
pounds.
The issue of substitutes for fishmeal and oil as feed ingredients is a very important one that cuts across many finfish
species, says MAA executive director Sebastian Belle. The work that Dr. Wolters is doing on salmon feeds, in cooperation
with Dr. Barrows, is groundbreaking and, if successful, will be very helpful to domestic growers in meeting the challenge of
limited fishmeal and oil supplies. Worldwide, these supplies are limited, and as aquaculture increases we must find
alternative feed ingredients that satisfy the fishes nutritional needs while resulting in a product with the appropriate
nutritional qualities for humans.
Providing Nutrients for a Hungry Species
In Florida, there is interest in rearing saltwater Florida pompano in low-salinity water in order to diversify production to inland fish farms,
bringing pompano fish stocks closer to consumers. Pompano, an active, fast-growing fish, is one of Floridas highest valued fish. ARS fish
biologist Marty Riche, at the Harry K. Dupree Stuttgart National Aquaculture Research Centers facility in Fort Pierce, Florida, is developing
the alternative feeds for this species.
Riche uses various ingredients, like corn gluten meal, soy proteins, and poultry-processing coproducts, to develop feeds containing less
fishmeal.
Pompano are voracious eatersespecially larvae and juveniles, says Riche, so much so that they will eat beyond being satisfied. This
eating behavior is reflected in larval and juvenile growth.
Barrows, Riche, and other ARS researchers are developing a nutrient-availability database of different ingredients that have potential to
replace fishmeal. Nutrient availability describes how much of the ingredient is available to the animal for sustenance. There are currently
17 ingredients in the database for pompano, says Riche.
While fishmeal can largely be replaced without harming fish health, fish oils are not so easily replaced. Plant oils are now being identified
that could possibly replace or substantially reduce the use of fish oils in feed products, says Riche.
Serving Up Algae
Algae may have the potential to replace fishmeal completely in some fish feed and perhaps replace some of the fish oils. Under a
cooperative research agreement with Kent Bioenergy of San Diego, California, Barrows is investigating the usein fish feedof protein
coproducts that result from biodiesel production from algae.
Bioenergy production from algae is a growing industry: A few years ago there were 12 companies producing ethanol this way; last year
there were 100, and 350 are projected to be in existence by the end of 2010.
Barrows and corporate collaborator Carbon Capture Corporation in Imperial Valley, California, are using algae to create fishmeal-free diets
for California yellowtail and white seabass. We are finding that algal feeds could be competitively priced, contain fewer contaminants,
result in fewer nutrients in fish effluent, and be sustainable, says Barrows.
Sometimes palatability is a hurdle when feeding a new type of feed to fish. But, says Barrows, it appears that dried algae as fish feed
actually increases fish appetite. When we formulate a new feed, we test trout first in our palatability studies, since they are aggressive
eaters. If trout eat the feed, we then test it on other species.
This work is pivotal to the feed-manufacturing business. According to Barrows, ARS is exploring ingredients and combinations and
developing gateway formulas to prove the concept of fishmeal-free feeds. This eliminates the risk commercial feed developers would
usually carry. Now feed companies can use ARS fishmeal-free feed as a basis for their own fish-feed formulas.BySharon
Durham, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of Aquaculture, an ARS national program (#106) described atwww.nps.ars.usda.gov.
Rick Barrows is with the USDA-ARS Small Grains and Potato Germplasm Research Unit, Hagerman Fish Culture Experiment Station, 3059
National Fish Hatchery Rd., Hagerman, ID 83332; (208) 837-9096 ext. 1109.
William Wolters is with the USDA-ARS National Cold Water Marine Aquaculture Center, 25 Salmon Farm Rd., Franklin, ME 04634; (207)
422-2713.
Marty Riche is with the USDA-ARS Harry K. Dupree Stuttgart National Aquaculture Research Center, 5600 Hwy. U.S. 1 North, Fort Pierce,
FL 34946; (772) 465-2400, ext. 638.
"Finding Alternative Fish Feeds for Aquaculture" was published in the October 2010 issue of Agricultural Research magazine
Review
Nature 405, 1017-1024 (29 June 2000) | doi:10.1038/35016500
Abstract
Global production of farmed fish and shellfish has more than doubled in the past 15 years. Many people believe that
such growth relieves pressure on ocean fisheries, but the opposite is true for some types of aquaculture. Farming
carnivorous species requires large inputs of wild fish for feed. Some aquaculture systems also reduce wild fish
supplies through habitat modification, wild seedstock collection and other ecological impacts. On balance, global
aquaculture production still adds to world fish supplies; however, if the growing aquaculture industry is to sustain
its contribution to world fish supplies, it must reduce wild fish inputs in feed and adopt more ecologically sound
management practices.
The worldwide decline of ocean fisheries stocks has provided impetus for rapid growth in fish and shellfish farming, or
aquaculture. Between 1987 and 1997, global production of farmed fish and shellfish (collectively called 'fish') more than doubled
in weight and value, as did its contribution to world fish supplies 1. Fish produced from farming activities currently accounts for
over one-quarter of all fish directly consumed by humans. As the human population continues to expand beyond 6 billion, its
reliance on farmed fish production as an important source of protein will also increase.
Growth in aquaculture production is a mixed blessing, however, for the sustainability of ocean fisheries. For some types of
aquaculture activity, including shrimp and salmon farming, potential damage to ocean and coastal resources through habitat
destruction, waste disposal, exotic species and pathogen invasions, and large fish meal and fish oil requirements may further
deplete wild fisheries stocks2. For other aquaculture species, such as carp and molluscs, which are herbivorous or filter feeders,
the net contribution to global fish supplies and food security is great 3. The diversity of production systems leads to an underlying
paradox: aquaculture is a possible solution, but also a contributing factor, to the collapse of fisheries stocks worldwide.
Here we examine marine and freshwater fish farming activities around the world and ask: does aquaculture enhanceor
diminishthe available fish supply? This is an important scientific and policy issue, and one that also addresses the common
perception that aquaculture is an 'add on' to current ocean fish productivity. Many people believe that aquaculture production will
compensate for the shortfall in ocean harvests as ocean fisheries deteriorate, or that fish farming will restore wild populations by
relieving pressure on capture fisheries. We conclude that the compensation argument is correct for some aquaculture practices
but unfounded for others. We do not find evidence that supports the restoration argument.
Our analysis focuses on aquaculture trends in the past 1015 yearsa period of heightened ecological and economic integration
between capture fisheries and aquaculture activities. We limit our discussion to finfish, bivalves and crustaceans, which
collectively make up three-quarters of global aquaculture production by weight, and exclude seaweed production 1. Ocean
fisheries and aquaculture now share or compete for many coastal ecosystem services, including the provision of habitat and
nursery areas, feed and seed (larvae) supplies, and assimilation of waste products. Aquaculture and ocean fisheries are further
linked economically through competition in world markets for the sale of their products, and biologically through exotic species
invasions and pathogen transmission. Each of these connections is examined below.
As aquaculture production continues to increase and intensify, both its reliance and its impact on ocean fisheries are likely to
expand even further. The balance between farmed and wild-caught fish, as well as the total supply of fish available for human
consumption, will depend on future aquaculture practices. In the final section, we explore technological, management and policy
options for sustaining aquaculture production. We argue that farming can contribute to global (net) fish supplies only if current
trends in fish meal and fish oil use for aquaculture are reversed and policies are enforced to protect coastal areas from
environmental degradation.
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Within aquaculture's wide diversity of species and production practices, two distinct subsectors have emerged during the past
decade4. The first group includes commercial farms that primarily use intensive and semi-intensive methods to produce mediumto high-valued commodities for regional or global markets. The other group encompasses family and cooperative farms that rely
on extensive and semi-intensive practices to produce low-value species for household subsistence or local markets. Some
divisions between these sectors are becoming blurred. In China and other parts of Asia, for example, many small-scale farming
operations are intensifying as land and water resources become increasingly scarce and valuable 5.
Harvested weight and value for some of the most widely consumed aquaculture species are shown in Table 1. Asia accounts for
roughly 90% of global aquaculture production, and China alone contributes more than two-thirds of the total 1. Europe, North
America and Japan collectively produce just over one-tenth of global aquaculture output but consume the bulk of farmed seafood
that is traded internationally.
Table 1: Global weight and value for nine of the most widely consumed aquaculture species
Full table
The production of carp has increased markedly in Asia (mainly China) for local or regional consumption by relatively low-income
households. In contrast, increased volumes of salmon, shrimp and other high-value species have been marketed mainly in
industrialized countries. Farmed output and markets for other lower-value species, such as tilapia and milkfish, have increased in
both developing and industrialized countries. Most farmed molluscs are still consumed locally and regionally in China and in other
developing countries. However, production for global markets of certain species, including the Pacific cupped oyster, blue mussel,
New Zealand mussel and Yesso scallop, has increased in several developed countries 1.
Market dynamics affecting both the supply and demand for aquaculture products differ sharply among types of fish. Expanding
aquaculture production can alleviate pressure on wild fisheries stocks; for example, increasing the production of farmed fish that
compete directly with wild fish (such as shrimp, salmon and molluscs) reduces prices and creates conditions that can lower
investments in fishing fleets and fishing effort over time. Other farmed fish, such as tilapia, milkfish and channel catfish, provide
alternatives to ocean fish such as cod, hake, haddock and pollock. Because niche markets have started to develop for several
types of wild-caught fish, however, capture rates have remained high even as the production of viable substitutes has increased 4.
The ability of the aquaculture sector to replace or provide market alternatives for ocean catches depends significantly on the
economics and policies of fisheries. High fixed costs of fishing fleets, inelastic supplies of labour in the fishing industry, and
continued subsidies to the fisheries sector that approach 2025% of gross revenue globally 6 may mean that increased
aquaculture production will not result in lower catches of wild fish in the short term. In the case of salmon, increased farm
production has not resulted in reduced capture levels despite 3050% declines in international prices for four of the five main
species of wild salmon (chinook, coho, pink and chum) during the 1990s. Salmon catches worldwide actually rose by 27%
between 1988 and 1997 (ref.7). Similarly, despite rapid growth in alternative farmed fish like tilapia, wild capture of hake and
haddock remained relatively stable during the past decade 8. These examples show little obvious effect of aquaculture production
on capture rates of wild fish.
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Many intensive and semi-intensive aquaculture systems use 25 times more fish protein, in the form of fish meal, to feed the
farmed species than is supplied by the farmed product 11. In contrast, extensive and traditional systems use little or no fish meal,
although nutrient-rich materials are often added to the water to stimulate growth of algae and other organisms on which the fish
feed. Dietary requirements vary widely among fish species, depending on the aquaculture system, fish meal source and other
dietary components (Table 2).
Table 2: Wild fish inputs used in feed for the ten types of fish and shell fish most commonly farmed in 1997 *
Full table
About 80% of carp and 65% of tilapia worldwide are farmed without the use of modern compound feedsfeeds formulated from
multiple ingredients. In China, farmed production of carp and other omnivorous species is intensifying, however, and new
commercial feed mills are being developed to serve these industries 5, 12. More modern, intensive systems for herbivorous and
omnivorous finfish rely heavily on added feeds, because fish are stocked at high densities that cannot be supported by natural
food sources. Such systems, for example, US catfish farms, generally use compound feeds that contain high percentages of
protein supplements from soybean meal, cottonseed meal and peanut meal13. Compound feeds for herbivorous and omnivorous
finfish can also contain low to moderate levels of protein from fish and terrestrial animals.
In contrast, fish meal and fish oil are dominant ingredients in compound feeds for carnivorous finfish and marine shrimp. These
two ingredients supply essential amino acids (such as lysine and methionine) that are deficient in plant proteins and fatty acids
(eicosapentanoic acid (EPA) and docosahexanoic acid (DHA)) not found in vegetable oils 14. They also provide energy, which is
important because fish tend to convert carbohydrates to energy inefficiently 14.
Herbivorous, omnivorous and carnivorous finfish all require about the same quantity of dietary protein per unit weight. But
herbivorous and omnivorous freshwater finfish, such as carp, utilize plant-based proteins and oils better than carnivorous finfish,
and they require minimal quantities of fish meal to supply essential amino acids 14. Nevertheless, compound feeds for omnivorous
fish, such as tilapia, often contain about 15% fish meal, exceeding required levels 11. Manufacturers often over-formulate feeds, in
part because dietary information for particular species is insufficient.
Because of the high levels of fish meal and fish oil in aquaculture feeds, many species require more fish biomass as inputs than
the farmed fish produced. For the ten types of fish most commonly farmed, an average of 1.9 kg of wild fish is required for every
kilogram of fish raised on compound feeds (Table 2). Only three of the ten types of fishcatfish, milkfish and carprequire less
fish as inputs than is ultimately harvested. (Marine molluscs and many filter-feeding carp are not fed compound feeds at all.) In
contrast, carnivorous species require 2.55 times as much fish biomass as feed as is produced.
Although aquaculture has the fastest growing demand for fish meal and fish oil, fish are not the only animals fed diets containing
fish meal. The poultry and swine industries are the world's largest consumers of fish meal 15. The proportion of fish meal in
aquaculture feeds is, however, much higher than in poultry and livestock feeds, which on average contain only 23% fish meal
as a protein supplement. The production of a kilogram of pork or poultry typically uses large amounts of plant proteins, but only
a few hundred grams of fish, whereas production of a kilogram of carnivorous fish can use up to 5 kg of wild fish16.
The relative feed efficiency of fish farming is a complex subject that has not yet been fully analysed. Some aquaculture
proponents argue that even if farmed fish production requires more wild fish biomass than is ultimately harvested, it is still more
efficient than the production of commercially valuable carnivorous species in the wild 17. Assuming a canonical value of a 10%
energy flow between trophic levels18, producing 1 unit of predatory fish requires 10 units of food (largely small pelagic fish)
compared with 25 units to produce a unit of farmed fish. This comparison is subject to debate, because energy flows between
marine fish at different trophic levels are not well documented. Nevertheless, such efficiency comparisons bolster the logic for
using some small pelagic fish in fish feeds.
Regardless of the exact efficiency ratio used, however, the growing aquaculture industry cannot continue to rely on finite stocks
of wild-caught fish, a number of which are already classified as fully exploited, overexploited or depleted 8, 10. Taking efficiency
arguments to their logical conclusionthat ever increasing amounts of small pelagic fish should be caught for use in aquaculture
feeds to expand the total supply of commercially valuable fishwould clearly be disastrous for marine ecosystems. Such an
approach would also severely constrain the long-term growth of the aquaculture industry itself.
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Numbers refer to 1997 data and are in units of megatons (million metric tonnes) of fish. Thicker lines refer to direct flows of aquatic primary
production through capture fisheries and aquaculture to humans. Thin lines refer to indirect and minor flows. Red lines indicate negative
feedbacks on production base.
An estimated 8% of total aquatic primary production (137,000 Mt dry weight) is needed to sustain capture fisheries, seaweed
collection and aquaculture; this proportion ranges from 2% in the open ocean to 2435% in freshwater, shelf and upwelling
systems19. Global capture fisheries (plus aquatic plants) remove 123 Mt from the sea and lakes 20, of which 27 Mt is directly
discarded as bycatch21.
Capture fisheries landings (excluding discarded bycatch) amount to 96 Mt, of which 65 Mt of whole fish and 1 Mt of seaweeds are
consumed by humans. The remaining 30 Mt of fish catch plus another 2 Mt of processing scraps from aquaculture and fisheries
are used for fish meal production22. The fish meal industry has proposed that fishing vessels be encouraged to retain bycatch,
now discarded, for sale to producers of fish meal and fish oil 15.Sale of bycatch could prove undesirable, however, if it undermines
efforts to reduce bycatch rates or decreases in situ recycling of bycatch.
One-third of the fish used to make fish meal inputs, 10 Mt, is converted to aquaculture feeds20, 22. The remaining two-thirds of
the fish, 22 Mt, is used to make fish meal for chicken, pig and other animal feeds, although the share of aquaculture continues
to increase. The proportion of fish meal supplies used for farming fish rose from 10% in 1988 to 17% in 1994 and 33% in 1997
(refs22, 23,24).
Other feed inputs to aquaculture are derived from terrestrial agriculture or, in the case of filter-feeding molluscs, from planktonic
production. Pelagic and benthic microalgae are also consumed directly by herbivorous and omnivorous carp and tilapias and are
thus important in extensive and semi-intensive freshwater ponds common in the tropics. Mollusc farming and other extensive
aquaculture do not use compound feeds and do not therefore appropriate fisheries production directly.
Total aquaculture production of finfish, crustaceans and molluscs amounts to 29 Mt (plus 8 Mt of farmed seaweeds). However,
the net volume of fish flowing to human consumption through aquaculture is at maximum 19 Mt after ocean fisheries capture for
fish feeds is subtracted. The appropriation of aquatic productivity for fish feeds reduces supplies of wild fish that could potentially
be consumed directly. In southeast Asia, for example, small pelagic fishes, such as mackerel, anchovy and sardines, provide an
important protein source for people25, 26. Although some fish used for fishmeal and fish oil, such as menhaden, are distasteful to
humans, the demand for small pelagic fish for direct human consumption is likely to increase with population growth in the
developing world.
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pathogens that harm wild fish populations, and nutrient pollution (Fig. 2). The magnitude of such effects varies considerably
among aquaculture systems, but it can be great, as the following examples illustrate.
Figure 2: Ecological links between intensive fish and shrimp aquaculture and capture fisheries.
Thick blue lines refer to main flows from aquatic production base through fisheries and aquaculture to human consumption of seafood.
Numbers refer to 1997 data and are in units of megatons (million metric tonnes) of fish, shellfish and seaweeds. Thin blue lines refer to
other inputs needed for production. Hatched red lines indicate negative feedbacks.
Habitat modification.
Hundreds of thousands of hectares of mangroves and coastal wetlands have been transformed into milkfish and shrimp ponds.
This transformation results in loss of essential ecosystem services generated by mangroves, including the provision of nursery
habitat, coastal protection, flood control, sediment trapping and water treatment. Mangrove forests serve as nurseries that
provide food and shelter to many juvenile finfish and shellfish caught as adults in coastal and offshore fisheries 27, 28, 29, 30; in
southeast Asia, mangrove-dependent species account for roughly one-third of yearly wild fish landings excluding trash fish 31. A
positive relationship between finfish and shrimp landings and mangrove area has been documented in Indonesia, Malaysia and
the Philippines32, 33, 34. Mangroves are also linked closely to habitat conditions of coral reefs and seagrass beds 35, 36. Loss of
mangrove forests results in increased sediment transport onto downstream coral reefs. Fisheries capture from reefs contributes
about 10% of human fish consumption globally and much more in developing countries 37.
The loss in wild fisheries stocks due to habitat conversion associated with shrimp farming is large. We estimate that a total of
400 g of fish and shrimp are lost from capture fisheries per kilogram of shrimp farmed in Thai shrimp ponds developed in
mangroves (Box 1). If other fish and shellfish species caught in waterways adjoining mangrove areas are considered, the total
reduction increases to 447 g of wild fish biomass per kilogram of shrimp raised. If the full range of ecological effects associated
with mangrove conversion is accounted for, including reduced mollusc productivity in mangroves and losses to seagrass beds and
coral reefs, the net yield from these shrimp farms is loweven without considering the use of fish meal in aquaculture feeds.
Moreover, building aquaculture ponds in mangrove areas transforms fisheries from a common property resource available to
multiple users to a privatized farm resource.
Use of wild seed to stock aquaculture ponds.
Many aquaculture operations, especially extensive ponds, stock wild-caught rather than hatchery-reared finfish or shellfish postlarvae. Examples include farming of milkfish in the Philippines and Indonesia, tuna in South Australia, shrimp in south Asia and
parts of Latin America and eels in Europe and Japan. In these systems, aquaculture is not a true alternative to wild harvests, but
rather a means to raise wild fish to marketable size in captivity by lowering the high mortality rates characteristic of wild
populations.
If bycatch rates are high, collecting seedstock for aquaculture operations can have very large consequences for wild fisheries. For
example, milkfish constitute only 15% of total finfish fry collected inshore by seine net 38the remaining 85% are discarded and
left to die on the beach. The 1.7 billion wild fry stocked annually in Philippine milkfish ponds 39 thus result in a loss of about 10
billion fry of other finfish species. In India and Bangladesh, up to 160 fish and shrimp fry are discarded for every fry of the giant
tiger shrimp, Penaeus monodon, collected to stock shrimp ponds40, 41. The magnitude of annual fry bycatch is estimated at 62
million to 2.6 billion in three collecting centres in West Bengal, India 40.
Food web interactions.
Many small pelagic fisheries exploited for feed are over-fished and are strained by climatic variability associated with El Nio
Southern Oscillation events8, 10. The impact of pelagic fisheries depletion is thought to reduce available food supplies for marine
predators, including valuable species consumed by humans 42, 43, 44. In the North Sea, for example, over-exploitation of many
capelin, sandeel and Norway pout stocks, mainly for reduction to fishmeal, has been implicated in the declines of certain stocks
of other wild fish such as cod9, 45, 46, and changes in the distribution, populations sizes and reproductive success of various seal
and seabird colonies47, 48, 49. Similarly, a strong interaction between anchoveta and sea bird and mammal populations has been
well documented for the Peruvian upwelling system50.
Introduction of non-indigenous organisms.
In some cases, aquaculture affects stocks of wild and farmed fish through biological pollution. Atlantic salmonthe dominant
salmon species farmedfrequently escape from net pens. As much as 40% of Atlantic salmon caught by fishermen in areas of
the North Atlantic Ocean are of farmed origin51. In the north Pacific Ocean, over 255,000 Atlantic salmon have reportedly
escaped since the early 1980s and are caught by fishing vessels from Washington to Alaska 52. Increasing evidence suggests that
farm escapees may hybridize with and alter the genetic makeup of wild populations of Atlantic salmon which are genetically
adapted to their natal spawning grounds53. Such genetic alterations could exacerbate the decline in many locally endangered
populations of wild Atlantic salmon53, 54, 55.
Movement of stocks for aquaculture purposes can also increase the risk of spreading pathogens. The relationships between
farmed and wild fish and disease transfer are complex and often difficult to disentangle. In Europe, however, serious epidemics
of furunculosis and Gyrodactylus salaris in stocks of Atlantic salmon have been linked to movements of fish for aquaculture and
re-stocking56.
Since the early 1990s, Whitespot and Yellowhead viruses have caused catastrophic, multimillion-dollar crop losses in shrimp
farms across Asia. Both pathogens have recently appeared in farmed and wild shrimp populations in the United States 57, 58 and
the Whitespot virus has been reported in several countries in Central and South America (T. Flegel, personal communication; D.
V. Lightner, personal communication). The Whitespot virus has caused high mortalities in Texas shrimp farms 59 and may cause
mortality of wild crustaceans (Joint Subcommittee on Aquaculture Virus Working Group, personal communication). This virus is
thought to have been introduced into a Texas shrimp farm by release into nearby coastal waters of untreated wastes from plants
processing imported Asian tiger shrimp60, and by shipping of contaminated white shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei larvae
throughout the Americas (T. Flegel. personal communication).
Effluent discharge.
Untreated wastewater laden with uneaten feed and fish faeces may contribute to nutrient pollution near coastal ponds and
cages61, 62. Pollution problems are most severe in shallow or confined water bodies 63; they also tend to be serious in regions
where intensive aquaculture systems are concentrated. In many such areas, sedimentation of food particles and faecal pellets
under and around fish pens and cages negatively affects the biogeochemistry of benthic communities 64. Moreover, nitrogen
wastes (for example, ammonia and nitrite) that exceed the assimilative capacity of receiving waters lead to deterioration in
water quality that is toxic to fish and shrimp 65. Problems of effluent discharge from aquaculture have been widely discussed, but
management options for altering nitrogen biogeochemistry are based mostly on controlling the intensity of fish production in
monoculture and polyculture systems65. Aquaculturists have a stake in regulating nutrient pollution, because poor water quality
and high stocking densities often promote outbreaks of pathogens and subsequent declines in farm productivity.
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New initiatives by governments and international donor agencies are needed to further encourage farming of low trophic level
fish with herbivorous diets66, 67,68, 69. At the same time, more scientific research on the feed requirements of herbivores and
omnivores is required to lessen the impetus to add fish meal and fish oil to their feeds 69. Substituting vegetable oils for fish oils
in freshwater fish diets is technically possiblethe n-3 fatty acids in fish oil are not essential in such diets 70but the fatty acid
profile and thus flavour and marketability may be affected 71, 72. Moreover, some herbivorous fish appear to have more robust
immune systems when fish oil is included in their diet 73.
Reducing fish meal and fish oil inputs in feed.
Feed is the largest production cost for commercial aquaculture (for example, most farming of salmon, other marine finfish and
shrimp), and thus improving feed efficiency in industrial systems is already a priority. Moreover, fish meal prices have risen in
real terms in the past three decades and are likely to increase further with continued growth in demand. Increases in fish meal
and fish oil prices could undermine the profitability of many aquaculture enterprises 16.
Research to develop substitutes for these feed ingredients is now focused on commodities such as oilseeds (especially soybeans),
meat byproducts (such as blood meal and bone meal) and microbial proteins 74, 75. Already the fish meal content of some feeds
has been reduced considerably, for example in the salmon industry, albeit largely by substitution with cheaper fish oil.
Nevertheless, complete replacement of fish meal and fish oil in aquaculture feeds faces severe barriers. Especially for
carnivorous fishes, vegetable proteins have inappropriate amino-acid balance and poor protein digestibility, although inclusion of
meat byproducts can help overcome this problem74, 76.
Substitution of fish oil with cheaper vegetable oil in aquaculture feeds may also affect consumer demand, as evidence suggests
that the ratio of n-6:n-3 fatty acids in human diets is already too high 70, 77. There are, however, alternative sources of n-3 fatty
acids for humans, including molluscs and other types of seafood, and research is underway to increase the n-3 fatty-acid content
in poultry products and in oilseeds used for feed78, 79 (W. F. Kirk, personal communication). A move towards partial substitution of
plant and terrestrial animal proteins for fish proteins in feed is widely accepted within the aquaculture industry, but the urgency
of such efforts remains controversial. Because over-exploitation of pelagic fisheries has negative ecological and social
consequences, developing a strategy to replace fish meal and fish oil in feeds should become both a private and public-sector
priority.
Integrating production systems.
Polyculture systems have been used for centuries. Even today, four of the most widely cultivated fish species are produced
together in the same pond in China: silver carp (a phytoplankton filter feeder), grass carp (a herbivorous macrophyte feeder),
common carp (an omnivorous detritus bottom feeder) and bighead carp (a zooplankton filter feeder) 69, 80. This type of system
efficiently utilizes available food resources and water resources (that is, surface, pelagic and benthic) of the pond ecosystem,
with the consequent effects of reducing costs and increasing productivity.
Integrated systems can also be used for high-valued fish, such as salmon and shrimp, to reduce effluents, diversify products and
increase productivity. Several studies show that seaweed and mussels grow well in wastewater from intensive and semi-intensive
systems, thereby reducing nutrient and particulate loads to the environment 81, 82, 83, 84, 85. For example, in Chile salmon can be
farmed with Gracilaria chilensis (an agarophytic red alga) that removes large amounts of dissolved nitrogen and phosphorous
wastes from salmon cages86. The effluent output from salmon farming is used to produce a seaweed crop, and the added
revenue from the sale of the seaweed more than pays for the extra infrastructure needed for the integrated system. Policies that
require producers to internalize environmental costs of effluent discharge (for example, through mandatory sewage treatment)
can make such systems even more profitable. The marketability of molluscs raised in intensive fish farming areas is currently
constrained, however, by human health considerations that must be addressed to make these types of integrated system
economically viable.
Promoting environmentally sound aquaculture and resource management.
Long-term growth of the aquaculture industry requires both ecologically sound practices and sustainable resource management.
Such practices can be encouraged by regulating the siting of ponds in mangroves and other coastal wetlands, establishing fines
to minimize escapes from aquaculture netpens, enforcing strict biosafety measures for imported stock, and mandating treatment
and recirculation of wastewater. Many aquaculturists have adopted such practices in the absence of strict policy measures,
especially as environmental concerns have surfaced in recent years. In poor countries, however, these policies are often neither
economically and socially feasible, nor politically enforceable. Despite significant improvements in the industry, there remains a
considerable distance between ecologically sound technologies on the shelf and those actually implemented in the field. External
funding agenciessuch as development banksare strategically positioned to influence the development of aquacultural
technology, rehabilitation of ecosystems degraded by aquaculture and protection of coastal ecosystems.
How markets for resources are managed in the future will be a principal determinant of whether aquaculture depletes or
enhances net fish supplies. The absence of regulations or price disincentives on coastal pollution, for example, limits mollusc
farming and slows the adoption of non-polluting technologies by other marine aquaculture systems. Subsidies within the ocean
fisheries sector often prevent farmed fish from substituting for wild fish catch, at least until fisheries are fully depleted.
Perhaps the largest unknown for both the private and public sectors is the future availability of freshwater for aquaculture
production. Increasing scarcity of freshwater resources could severely limit the farming of herbivorous fish such as carps and
tilapia. With a more binding constraint on freshwater systems, there is even more pressure to develop marine aquaculture
systems that are ecologically and socially sound.
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Acknowledgements
We thank M. Williams, W. Falcon, V. Spruill, M. Drew, N. Wada, R. Kautsky, K. Jauncey, C. Tirado, R. Hoguet, R. Tatum and R.
Mitchell for comments and assistance, and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation for funding.
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1.
Stanford University, Institute for International Studies, Encina Hall 400E, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-6055, USA
2.
Environmental Defense, 257 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10010, USA
3.
Aquaculture Department, Southeast Asian Fisheries Development Center, Tigbauan, Iloilo , 5021, Philippines
4.
5.
6.
7.
World Wildlife Fund, 1250 24th Street NW, Washington DC 20037, USA
8.
Correspondence to: Rosamond L. Naylor1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to R.L.N. (e-mail: Email: roz@leland.stanford.edu).
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In a world of rapidly evolving technological advancements, theres one industry that deserves its fair share of attention: sustainable aquaculture. As
human populations continue to rise, the need for increased food productions stands a foremost concern for sustaining our futures growing appetite.
Like our ancestors before us, people are turning to the sea for the solution.
Its a relationship that goes back for centuries, mankind and the sea. For years, humans have harvested food from the ocean, providing us with the
rich and essential nutrients we need. Yet in recent decades, humankind has witnessed the decline of numerous ocean species, animals we once
believed to be so abundant we couldnt possibly alter their populations, let alone drive them to extinction. But thats exactly what were doing or
more precisely, thats the direction were headed. Experts say that over half the worlds wild caught fisheries are fully exploited, meaning that fish
are being caught at the maximum rate to simply keep the population stable. Even more, over thirty percent of fisheries are overexploited, meaning
that fish are being caught at a faster rate than they can reproduce, leading to the demise of the population and potentially the demise of the species
itself.
So it seems the solution to the looming food crisis lies not, then, in the ocean itself, but in reaping the oceans benefits through something humans
have been doing for quite some time, farming.
Aquaculture, otherwise known as fish farming, has been on the rise over the past few decades to meet the soaring demand for seafood. Farmed
marine species currently constitute over half the seafood consumed worldwide, a number likely to increase as human populations continue to boom
at a rate of over 100 million people per year. While farming fish and other marine species offers an alternative to overfishing wild populations, its not
a perfect system and many aspects of aquaculture need increased scientific knowledge and technological advancement to become a viable source
of food production in the coming years.
Current aquaculture methods are rife with environmental risks. The most common type of aquaculture is mariculture, the cultivation of marine
organisms in the ocean or within an enclosed section of the ocean. This includes open-net pens and cages that place farmed fish in direct contact
with natural coastal environments. As with many types of farmed animals, aquaculture faces challenges such as disease outbreak, feed production,
and waste removal. However, by farming in an open system, the challenges go beyond the farmed animals themselves and often pose enormous
risks to the surrounding environment. Infectious diseases among farmed fish can spread not only among cultured animals, but can also spread to
native populations, introducing non-native diseases into the environment or facilitating disease through unsanitary conditions in densely packed
farmed fish. Furthermore, non-native or genetically modified fishes can escape pens and potentially outcompete native species, threatening local
fish populations in that area.
Another major issue in farming fish sustainability involves the use of their feed. The most common fishes people eat also happen to be the oceans
top predatory fishes tuna and salmon. These fish are not only large, but they are also carnivorous and require a diet high in fats. In order to feed
and sustain these kinds of farmed fish, other fish species must be harvested from the ocean and therefore face pressures from overfishing. Current
methods utilize fish meal, which combines fish oil, wheat products, and chemicals into pellets that are then fed to cultivated fish. This also poses a
problem, as many carnivorous fish are not designed to metabolize large amounts of carbohydrates. The use of fish feed will continue to be an issue
in the struggle for sustainable aquaculture until we find a way to provide sustainable food to farmed fisheries.
In an attempt to alleviate the environmental impact of fish farming, some forward thinking aquaculturists have turned to closed-contained systems,
either solid-wall systems that float on the water or tank systems that operate entirely on land and perfecting their methods by successfully growing
fish that are herbivores. By separating farmed species from native populations, both systems protect the environment from accidental fish escapes,
limit the spread and transfer of disease and parasites between local and farmed fish, and decrease the amount of fish feed and waste excreted into
the local ecosystem.
While solid wall closed-containment systems provide a better alternative to current aquaculture methods, there are still concerns in regards to
sustainability and overall environmental impact. One of which includes the disposal of discharged water from the systems and their potential for
contaminants into the external environment. Another barrier to sustaining these systems is energy, the high cost of pumping water through the
system and maintaining the necessary electricity to meet the demands on a commercial scale.
However, innovative scientists from the University of Marylands Department of Marine Biotechnology have developed what they call a new
generation of aquaculture technology, a closed-contained system that operates entirely on land and expels zero waste into the environment. Dr.
Yonathan Zohar, one of the leading pioneers in the development of this technology, is a scientist and professor at the universitys Institute of Marine
and Environmental Technology (IMET) spearheading the project. Committed to creating a sustainable, low-impact aquaculture system from the
start, Zohar developed a system that recycles 99 percent of its water, with losses coming from evaporation. It brings in common household tap
water, adds the necessary salt components, controls temperature and pH, and does it all for each specific species of fish. It also filters waste
products from the fish through different microbial communities in order to detoxify the water and creates methane as a supplemental biofuel.
This land-based alternative aquaculture system provides fish a continuous supply of clean water, reducing the spread of pathogens, disease,
contaminants, and toxins. It also allows for fish to grow more efficiently, as they dont need to expend energy fighting currents like fish farmed in
open-net pens would likely experience and can instead convert more energy into biomass. Zohar and his team also addressed one of the biggest
obstacles in aquaculture, getting fish to reproduce at predictable cycles. By simulating environmental cues such as altering water temperature,
lighting, and salinity levels, and then providing fish a pellet they created that mimics the hormone to induce natural reproduction, they were able to
get predictable reproductive events.
The fish are clean, they grow faster, and they taste the same as fish you would eat from the ocean. A nearly self-sustaining system, its a
combination of the latest in scientific knowledge and technology. Zohars system eliminates many of the detrimental environmental impacts from
open-net pens and cages in coastal aquaculture production. Ultimately the goal would be to have such systems close to large urban areas where
the demand for fresh fish is very popular. The environmental footprint of transportation would be drastically reduced thus reducing the emission of
CO2. But like all growing industries, sustainable aquaculture still has many challenges to face.
It will take the continued efforts of scientists, government and policy-makers, and aquaculture industries to come together to solve these remaining
hurdles to a sustainable commercial fish farming. We need to be conscious and aware of the efforts being put forth by scientists such as Zohar to
invest in the advancements in aquaculture that address these major challenges in current fish farming practices. Our oceans can no longer provide
us with enough fish to feed our rising population. As my father said in 1973, With earth's burgeoning human populations to feed we must turn to the
sea with new understanding and new technology. We must farm it as we farm the land. The future of sustainable fish farming brings the sea to the
land and gives us the opportunity to domesticate and harvest the species we need without directly burdening the ocean we rely upon.
In an effort to move towards a sustainable future, it will take not only innovative thinking but also global knowledge to make effective decisions.
Aquaculture is a growing, and highly demanded industry. As the demand continues to grow, sustainability must remain a top priority and important
aspect of future production. While improved technology is a big step in the right direction, it also requires the demand of the consumer. We are a
part of the solution, and we can demand for a sustainable future.
Warm regards,
Jean-Michel Cousteau
President, Ocean Futures Society
with Jaclyn Mandoske
First Photo: Holly Lohuis, Jean-Michel Cousteau and the Ocean Futures Society were guests of Marine Harvest in
British Columbia where the team spent time underwater, filming their farmed Atlantic salmon. Carrie Vonderhaar,
Ocean Futures Society
Second Photo: The Ocean Futures Society expedition team spent time diving in the salmon farms of British
Columbia. Unfortunately many of these farms are extremely detrimental to rich, diverse marine ecosystem of the
Pacific Northwest. Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society
Third Photo: Dr. Alexandre Honczaryk, researcher at National Institute for Amazonia Research has developed closed
contained ponds in the heart of the Amazon and is growing fish from eggs and sperm of some of the favorite
Amazonian fish to consume. Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society
Fourth Photo: Closed contained fish farms are the future in fish farming. Jean-Michel firmly believes this is the
direction we need to invest resources, time and energy. Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society
Fifth Photo: While on expedition in the Amazon, Jean-Michel Cousteau and Holly Lohuis learn all about sustainable,
closed contained fish farms from Dr. Alexandre Honczaryk, researcher at National Institute for Amazonia Research.
Here Alex is showing Jean-Michel and Holly the eggs of a prized Amazonian fish, tambaqui, a herbivore that has been
easily overfished in much of the Amazon basin. Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society
(top)
3. Why use fishmeal and fish oil in the diets of farmed fish?
While fish and shrimp don't need fishmeal and oil in their diets, these ingredients have almost a perfect balance of the 40 or so essential nutrients that animals need to
be healthy and grow the same reason that seafood is so good for humans as well.
Fishmeal is a natural and well-balanced source of high-quality protein. As ingredients in aquaculture feed, fishmeal and fish oil supply essential amino acids and fatty
acids reflected in the normal diet of fish. Fish oil is a major natural source of the healthy omega-3 fatty acids eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid
(DHA). These fatty acids are not made by the fish, but become concentrated in fish further up the food chain from the marine phytoplankton (microscopic marine algae
and microbes) that do synthesize them.
Through research, we are learning that other combinations of ingredients can achieve the balance of the 40 essential nutrients. Affordable replacement ingredients for
fishmeal and fish oil are becoming increasingly common, which is leading to declining percentage on those ingredients in farmed fish diets.
Including ingredients like oils from phytoplankton maintain the nutrient requirements of the final product without depending on fish oil. The economics of using blended
oils is improving as fish oil prices rise and the technology to produce phytoplankton (and other replacement ingredients) improves.
(top)
(top)
(top)
(top)
The diet of farmed fish is currently not exclusively based on feeding fish
to fish. We understand that herbivorous fish can eat a feed mixture that
may contain plant proteins (e.g., soy, corn), vegetable oils, minerals, and
vitamins. We also know that in the wild, piscivorous fish (such as
salmon) eat other fish. However you may be surprised to learn that even
farmed piscivorous fish a great deal of the diet includes plant proteins,
oils, minerals, and vitamins as long as they achieve the nutrition
requirements of the fish. As research explores alternatives to replace
fishmeal and oil in the diets of farmed fish, the percentage of fish meal
and fish oil will continue to decrease while still providing the human
health benefits of eating seafood. What do you call a vegetarian salmon?
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11. Can some of the waste that results from processing fish
be used as fish food?
Yes. The use of fish processing waste (trimmings) for the production of fishmeal and oil may be used. For example, discarded by-catch in 1994 was estimated to total
17.9-39.5 million metric tons (mt). This is a potentially large source of fishmeal. More recent estimates of by-catch of 20 million mt are equivalent to 25% of the reported
annual harvest by marine capture fisheries. In Alaska alone, the fish processing industry generates about 1.2 million mt of by-product waste annually, from which high
quality fishmeal and oil suitable for aquatic feeds may be produced.
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samples to help ensure that feeds and the fish that consume them meet strict state and federal requirements. Formulated feed ingredients used in aquaculture are
regularly monitored to avoid possible contamination of feed with methyl mercury.
According to the FDA and EPA, studies show that for people eating the standard U.S. diet, the health benefits of omega-3 fatty acids far outweigh the potential
drawbacks of mercury toxicity due to fish consumption. Specific advisories are in effect for pregnant women, those trying to get pregnant, nursing women, and children.
See our FAQ on Seafood and Human Health for more information.
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14. Are antibiotics fed to fish to improve growth (or for any
reason other than disease)?
In the United States, antibiotics are not fed to fish for non-therapeutic reasons through their feed or any other mechanism. The use of antibiotics for non-therapeutic
purposes in aquaculture is prohibited by law. Incidentally, antibiotics do not improve growth or efficiency in fish (like they do in cows, swine, and chickens). However,
antibiotics have been known to be added to fish food in other countries.
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18. Why dont we just eat fish from these pelagic fisheries
(i.e. further down the food chain)?
To a certain extent, we do. Increasingly, species like mackerel, herring, sardines, and anchovies are sold for human consumption. As well, fish oil in the dietary
supplement industry is the fastest growing segment of that market. However, consumer demand for species such as salmon, grouper, cod, and tuna drives the market
for both farmed and wild fish. Pelagic fish (such as anchovy and menhaden) generally are in far less demand (especially in western countries) for direct human
consumption.
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Since 1998, NOAA has been supporting alternative feeds research through the National Marine Aquaculture Initiative, a competitive grants program. Through this
program, the agency has funded nutrition projects for a variety of marine fish species including black sea bass, cobia, cod, flounder, shrimp, snapper, sablefish and tuna.
This research generated information on use of probiotics, identification of dietary requirements, and use of alternative proteins and processing byproducts. Since the
1950s, NOAA Fisheries Service labs have worked on diet development for Atlantic and Pacific salmon, sablefish, black sea bass, lingcod, rockfish, and several other
marine species. NOAA labs helped develop methods for improved recovery and use of seafood processing waste and invasive species meals for use in aquaculture
feeds.
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Growth in worldwide population and the related increase in demand for all types of food. As landings from wild fisheries are limited to maintain healthy fish
populations, the expanded supply of seafood will have to come from aquaculture fed on alternative feeds. While this is a constraint, it also is an opportunity for the
United States to develop environmentally-responsible commercial aquaculture and work with partners to improve aquaculture practices around the world.
The technical challenge of alternative ingredients. The challenges for researchers are to develop alternative ingredients that fish will eat and that supply the
nutrition fish require to grow; and to make available alternative ingredients that are commercially viable. Current research, including that being done through the NOAAUSDA Alternative Feeds Initiative, is making great strides toward overcoming these challenges.
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Fisheries Service
We all know we need to eat healthy- even if we dont always do it- but fewer people are aware that they need to eat food that
also has a healthy diet. If our food is sick, we can get sick too; we eat what they eat. Luckily, there are people who look out
for that. Aquaculturists are concerned with healthy foods for their fish and shellfish. Fish bodies also need essential nutrients
and their food source is something every seafood lover should be concerned about. We already know that with wild-caught
fish we need to be informed about mercury levels and any other possible contaminants. Farm fish have slightly different
concerns when it comes to their food. Not only can it be unhealthy, but the amount that farm fish need to eat can have
massive and unsustainable reactions down the food chain.
When fish are farmed, they are often fed fishmeal and fish oil. Fishmeal is a mixed product created from forage fish, the
small fish we know as herring, anchovies, sardines and many others. Larger carnivorous fish such as tuna or salmon need to
eat several times their body weight in fishmeal to produce a profitable amount of meat. This can often lead to immense
consumption rates of fishmeal, which is very expensive for the aquaculture farm and puts a high fishing pressure on wildcaught forage fish. There has been a recent push in aquaculture to find cheaper and greener alternatives to fishmeal that
provide each fish with the essential nutrients they need while still producing healthy seafood for human consumption.
Whether or not they find one will have a massive impact on the entire seafood industry.
The demands of aquaculture
Aquaculture is one of the fastest growing food industries; it already supplies half of the worlds consumption of seafood.
Weve mentioned before that aquaculture could be the savior for seafood lovers by taking fishing pressure off of wild
populations. It allows us to enjoy those species whose commercial wild fisheries have collapsed like the abalone while the
wild population rebuilds itself. But in reality some fish farms only shift the pressure from larger fish to smaller fish. Forage
fish destined for fishmeal are wild-caught in countries such as Peru and Chile in reduction fisheries.
The amount of fishmeal and fish oil we dedicate to aquaculture has expanded exponentially over the last decade to meet the
growing demand and will only increase more unless alternatives are found. Researchers and the aquaculture industry have
fervently been searching for fishmeal substitutes that are both healthy for the fish and affordable. We are seeing great
promise with some of these substitutes, but there is still much work to be done.
There is a land-based example we can use. Fishmeal and fish oil have also been used as feed for swine and poultry farms for
decades. These industries have already developed alternative feeds that are now more commonly used and based on grains,
corn, and soybean. Terrestrial animals are naturally evolved herbivores and thus well suited for a vegetarian diet.
Aquaculture is a different story. Fish do not adapt as well to an entirely vegetarian diet, especially with terrestrial crops, and
tend to suffer from disease and low growth rates.
Forage fish do have an advantage. They reproduce quickly and are very resilient to fishing pressures. Many of the reduction
fisheries are managed well and successfully regulated. With quota and catch limit systems in place, the use of forage fish as
fishmeal could be sustainable. But the aquaculture industry continues to grow every year and it has become a very hungry
mouth to feed. With the aquaculture boom over the last 20 years, there are many concerns that the reduction fisheries are
depleting an essential food source for countless animals. It has the potential to collapse innumerable ocean ecosystems if not
managed properly.
Hungry fish
Aquaculture farms and environmentalists are motivated to find fishmeal alternatives. Fishmeal prices have risen
dramatically in the last two decades from $750/ton 20 years ago to more than $2,100/ton last year. 60-65% of the operating
costs of a fish farm is feed. With these costs, farming fish starts to become a very expensive venture.
But research is in favor of the aquaculture industry where diets were once formulated to contain 40% or more of fishmeal,
they are expected to drop to as little as 10% worldwide by 2020 with the addition of healthy alternatives. This means that fish
farms will need to buy less pure fishmeal and more cost-effective substitutes.
Research is not just limited to looking for fishmeal substitutes. Scientists are examining how farmed fish make use of feed,
different formulas, timing dietary needs with developmental stages and other strategies. They are attempting to analyze feed
use efficiency as a whole in order to calculate the perfect diet for different species.
Fishmeal alternatives
Farmed fish just like the human body need a specific mix of proteins, nutrients, vitamins and minerals to thrive.
Fishmeal is already a natural and well-balanced source of high-quality protein, containing the perfect ingredients for optimal
growth and health for both types of fish. Its the same reason that seafood is so good for humans!
Interestingly, fish tend to be picky eaters just like humans. Imagine being stuck in a tank with food you wont touch. Even if
the food is chock full of all the essential nutrients you could ever need, it isnt worth much if you wont eat it. The biggest
challenges to developing alternatives are finding feed that fish will eat, supplying the nutrients that fish need to grow, and
making alternative ingredients that are commercially plausible.
Research is now providing us with solutions to achieving the same balance without sourcing forage fish. Alternatives that are
currently being explored:
Leftover trimmings This solution is simple, effective, and reduces waste. Trimmings consists of the leftover bits
that are not used in fillets or steaks in the fish processing industry. These have all the nutritional benefits of fishmeal
and would normally go to waste. They are now contributing significantly as raw materials for fishmeal production.
Insects and worms The black soldier fly has proven to be a greener and cheaper alternative to fishmeal. With a
high level of protein (60-65%) and a great digestibility for salmon in studies (82.1%) this little fly has become an
area of strong interest for several large feed firms. The flies are raised on waste food or discarded scraps before
being processed into a protein meal, so there is little to no environmental damage.
A plant-based diet Soybeans, barley, rice, wheat gluten and many others are already in use. But these often dont
have all the essential nutrients and must be mixed with other feeds. Soybean has been known to cause enteritis in
fish. An interesting side effect of a plant-based diet is a change in the color of the fish meat. If consumers are used to
buying red trout fillets, they might find it a problem to now buy a yellow fillet, even if there is no difference in taste.
Seaweed - Algae has immense potential to become a viable alternative. Fast-growing and packed with nutrients,
algae is quickly becoming a strong area of interest for the aquaculture industry. One of the main concerns over
fishmeal alternatives is finding those that contain omega-3s. Fish do not produce omega-3s themselves, they
accumulate it in the food they eat. In fact, omega-3s originate with the many types of algae that are at the bottom of
the food chain. This is where algae could be amazing they have the potential to replace fish oils as well as fishmeal
in aquaculture use. Studies on trout and white seabass have been extremely promising, but no algae alternatives
have been commercially developed just yet.
It is interesting to note that some aquaculture farms do not need to search for fishmeal alternatives. Shellfish such as oysters,
abalone and clams are filter feedings and consume plankton. That means all farmers have to ensure is that their farms have a
steady flow of water from the ocean and their shellfish will feed themselves!
Support sustainable seafood farming
As one of the fastest-growing food industries in the world, aquaculture is rising quickly to meet the demand of the worlds
population of seafood consumers. The industry must learn and adapt quickly if it is to provide safe, healthy, profitable
seafood that has little impact on the environment. Support sustainable aquaculture by ordering your farmed fish from Pucci
Foods, a distributor that is committed to working with partners who practice sustainable seafood farming.
- See more at: http://puccifoods.com/pucciseafood-new/blog/frenzy-fishmeal-alternatives-aquaculture-industry-exploringgreener-cheaper-alternatives-fishmeal/#sthash.sdMvvoPe.dpuf