Half
of Fish Globally Consumed Raised on Fish Farms
Aquaculture,
once a fledgling industry, now accounts for 50 percent of the fish
consumed globally, according to a new report by an international
team of researchers. And while the industry is more efficient than
ever, it is also putting a significant strain on marine resources
by consuming large amounts of feed made from wild fish harvested
from the sea, the authors conclude. Their findings are published
in the Sept. 7 online edition of the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
"Aquaculture
is set to reach a landmark in 2009, supplying half of the total
fish and shellfish for human consumption," the authors wrote.
Between 1995 and 2007, global production of farmed fish nearly tripled
in volume, in part because of rising consumer demand for long-chain
omega-3 fatty acids. Oily fish, such as salmon, are a major source
of these omega-3s, which are effective in reducing the risk of cardiovascular
disease, according to the National Institutes of Health.
"The
huge expansion is being driven by demand," said lead author
Rosamond L. Naylor, a professor of environmental Earth system science
at Stanford University and director of the Stanford Program on Food
Security and the Environment. "As long as we are a health-conscious
population trying to get our most healthy oils from fish, we are
going to be demanding more of aquaculture and putting a lot of pressure
on marine fisheries to meet that need."
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Fishmeal
and fish oil
To
maximize growth and enhance flavor, aquaculture farms use large
quantities of fishmeal and fish oil made from less valuable wild-caught
species, including anchoveta and sardine. "With the production
of farmed fish eclipsing that of wild fish, another major transition
is also underway: Aquaculture's share of global fishmeal and fish
oil consumption more than doubled over the past decade to 68 percent
and 88 percent, respectively," the authors wrote.
In
2006, aquaculture production was 51.7 million metric tons, and about
20 million metric tons of wild fish were harvested for the production
of fishmeal. "It can take up to 5 pounds of wild fish to produce
1 pound of salmon, and we eat a lot of salmon," said Naylor,
the William Wrigley Senior Fellow at Stanford's Woods Institute
for the Environment and Freeman Spogli Institute for International
Studies.
One
way to make salmon farming more environmentally sustainable is to
simply lower the amount of fish oil in the salmon's diet. According
to the authors, a mere 4 percent reduction in fish oil would significantly
reduce the amount of wild fish needed to produce 1 pound of salmon
from 5 pounds to just 3.9 pounds. In contrast, reducing fishmeal
use by 4 percent would have very little environmental impact, they
said.
"Reducing
the amount of fish oil in the salmon's diet definitely gets you
a lot more bang for the buck than reducing the amount of fishmeal,"
Naylor said. "Our thirst for long-chain omega-3 oils will continue
to put a lot of strain on marine ecosystems, unless we develop commercially
viable alternatives soon."
Naylor
and her co-authors pointed to several fish-feed substitutes currently
being investigated, including protein made from grain and livestock
byproducts, and long-chain omega-3 oils extracted from single-cell
microorganisms and genetically modified land plants. "With
appropriate economic and regulatory incentives, the transition toward
alternative feedstuffs could accelerate, paving the way for a consensus
that aquaculture is aiding the ocean, not depleting it," the
authors wrote.
Vegetarian
fish
Fishmeal
and fish oil are important staples at farms that produce carnivorous
fish, including salmon, trout and tuna. But vegetarian species,
such as Chinese carp and tilapia, can be raised on feed made from
plants instead of wild-caught fish. That's one reason why farm-raised
vegetarian fish have long been considered environmentally friendly.
In
the early 1990s, vegetarian fish farms began adding small amounts
of fishmeal in their feed to increase yields. However, between 1995
and 2007, farmers actually reduced the share of fishmeal in carp
diets by 50 percent and in tilapia diets by nearly two-thirds, according
to the PNAS report. Nevertheless, in 2007, tilapia and carp farms
together consumed more than 12 million metric tons of fishmealmore
than 1.5 times the amount used by shrimp and salmon farms combined.
"Our
assumption about farmed tilapia and carp being environmentally friendly
turns out to be wrong in aggregate, because the sheer volume is
driving up the demand," Naylor said. "Even the small amounts
of fishmeal used to raise vegetarian fish add up to a lot on a global
scale." Removing fishmeal from the diet of tilapia and carp
would have a very positive impact on the marine environment, she
added.
Regulating
fisheries
On
the policy front, Naylor pointed to California's Sustainable Oceans
Act and the proposed National Offshore Aquaculture Act, which call
for reductions in the use of fishmeal and fish oil in feeds. She
also applauded plans by the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric
Administration to develop a comprehensive national policy that addresses
fisheries management issues posed by aquaculture. "No matter
how much is done from the demand side, it is essential that there
be regulation on the supply side as well," Naylor said. "You
won't prevent the collapse of anchoveta, sardine and other wild
fisheries unless those fisheries are carefully regulated."
###
Other
co-authors of the PNAS study are Ronald W. Hardy, University of
Idaho; Dominique P. Bureau and Katheline Hua, University of Guelph
(Canada); Alice Chiu, Stanford; Matthew Elliott, Sea Change Management;
Anthony P. Farrell, and Ian Forster, Centre for Aquaculture and
Environmental Research (Canada); Delbert M. Gatlin, Texas A&M
University and the Norwegian Center of Excellence; Rebecca J. Goldburg,
Pew Charitable Trusts; and Peter D. Nichols, Commonwealth Scientific
and Industrial Research Organization (Australia).
The
PNAS report was supported by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation.
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