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Fish farming

Fish farming or pisciculture involves commercial breeding of fish, most often for food, in fish tanks or artificial enclosures such as fish ponds. It is a particular type of aquaculture, which is the controlled cultivation and harvesting of aquatic animals such as fish, crustaceans, molluscs and so on, in natural or pseudo-natural environments. A facility that releases juvenile fish into the wild for recreational fishing or to supplement a species' natural numbers is generally referred to as a fish hatchery. Worldwide, the most important fish species produced in fish farming are carp, catfish, salmon and tilapia.[1]

A fish farm on the coast of Euboea island, in South Euboean Gulf, Greece

Global demand is increasing for dietary fish protein, which has resulted in widespread overfishing in wild fisheries, resulting in significant decrease in fish stocks and even complete depletion in some regions. Fish farming allows establishment of artificial fish colonies that are provided with sufficient feeding, protection from natural predators and competitive threats, access to veterinarian service, and easier harvesting when needed, while being separate from and thus do not usually impact the sustainable yields of wild fish populations. While fish farming is practised worldwide, China alone provides 62% of the world's farmed fish production.[2] As of 2016, more than 50% of seafood was produced by aquaculture.[3] In the last three decades, aquaculture has been the main driver of the increase in fisheries and aquaculture production, with an average growth of 5.3 percent per year in the period 2000–2018, reaching a record 82.1 million tonnes in 2018.[4]

World capture fisheries and aquaculture production by production mode, from FAO's Statistical Yearbook 2021[5]

Farming carnivorous fish such as salmon, however, does not always reduce pressure on wild fisheries, such farmed fish are usually fed fishmeal and fish oil extracted from wild forage fish. The 2008 global returns for fish farming recorded by the FAO totaled 33.8 million tonnes worth about US$60 billion.[6]

Although fish farming for food is the most widespread, another major fish farming industry provides living fish for the aquarium trade. The vast majority of freshwater fish in the aquarium trade originate from farms in Eastern and Southern Asia, eastern Europe, Florida and South America that use either indoor tank systems or outdoor pond systems, while farming of fish for the marine aquarium trade happens at a much smaller scale.[7][8]

Major species edit

Top 15 cultured fish species by weight, according to FAO statistics for 2013 [1]
Species Environment Tonnage
(millions)
Value
(US$ billions)
Grass carp Freshwater 5.23 6.69
Silver carp Freshwater 4.59 6.13
Common carp Freshwater 3.76 5.19
Nile tilapia Freshwater 3.26 5.39
Bighead carp Freshwater 2.90 3.72
Catla (Indian carp) Freshwater 2.76 5.49
Crucian carp Freshwater 2.45 2.67
Atlantic salmon Marine 2.07 10.10
Roho labeo Freshwater 1.57 2.54
Milkfish Marine 0.94 1.71
Rainbow trout
  • Freshwater
  • Brackish
  • Marine
0.88 3.80
Wuchang bream Freshwater 0.71 1.16
Black carp Freshwater 0.50 1.15
Northern snakehead Freshwater 0.48 0.59
Amur catfish Freshwater 0.41 0.55

Categories edit

Aquaculture makes use of local photosynthetic production (extensive) or fish that are fed with external food supply (intensive).

Extensive aquaculture edit

 
Salmon farming in the sea (mariculture) at Loch Ainort, Isle of Skye, Scotland

Extensive aquaculture is the other form of fish farming. Extensive aquaculture is more basic than intensive aquaculture in that less effort is put into the husbandry of the fish. Extensive aquaculture is done in the ocean, natural and man-made lakes, bays, rivers, and Fiords. Fish are contained within these habitats by multiple mesh enclosures which also function as trapping nets during harvest (Figure 3) (4). Since fish are susceptible to the elements, site placement is essential to ensuring rapid growth of the targeted species. The drawback of these facilities is that they depend on the surrounding area for good water quality in order to reduce mortality and increase the survivorship and growth rate of the fish (19). Fish chosen for extensive aquaculture are very hardy and often do well in high densities. Seaweed, prawns, mussels, carp, tilapia, tuna and salmon are the most prominent forms of extensive aqua cultured seafood. Extensive aquaculture facilities have negative impacts on the environment as well. Natural habitats are destroyed in the development of man made ponds used for extensive aquaculture. In the Philippines, shrimp aquaculture is responsible for the destruction of thousands of acres of mangrove fields which serve as nurseries and living habitats for many marine organisms. Benthic habitats are being depleted due to the high amount of organic waste produced by the fish which settles below their pens(4). Phytoplankton and algae breakdown fecal matter and residual fish meal reducing the amount of available oxygen in the water column, which chokes and kills the Benthic organisms. Another serious problem acquainted with extensive aquaculture is the introduction of invasive species into ecosystems (10). Escaped fish increase the competition between organisms for limited resources. Also, when foreign fish interbreed with wild species, they upset the genetic variability of the species, making them more prone to disease and infection. The high density of fish in these mesh tanks is very tempting for predators of the sea and air (19). To protect the harvest from predators protective netting is set up at a high cost. Often times predatorial fish and mammals like seals, sharks, and tuna get caught in these barrier nets and die. Some farmers protect their stocks from predatorial birds such as pelicans and albatross by shooting these sometimes endangered creatures.

Intensive aquaculture edit

Optimal water parameters for cold- and warm-water fish in intensive aquaculture[9]
Parameter Optimal value
Acidity pH 6–9
Arsenic < 440 µg/L
Alkalinity > 20 mg/L (as CaCO3)
Aluminium < 0.075 mg/L
Ammonia (non-ionized) < 0.02 mg/L
Cadmium
Calcium > 5 mg/L
Carbon dioxide < 5–10 mg/L
Chloride > 4.0 mg/L
Chlorine < 0.003 mg/L
Copper
  • < 0.0006 mg/L in soft water
  • < 0.03 mg/L in hard water
Gas supersaturation
  • < 100% total gas pressure
  • < 103% for salmonid eggs/fry
  • < 102% for lake trout
Hydrogen sulfide < 0.003 mg/L
Iron < 0.1 mg/L
Lead < 0.02 mg/L
Mercury < 0.0002 mg/L
Nitrate < 1.0 mg/L
Nitrite < 0.1 mg/L
Oxygen
  • 6 mg/L for coldwater fish
  • 4 mg/L for warmwater fish
Selenium < 0.01 mg/L
Total dissolved solids < 200 mg/L
Total suspended solids < 80 NTU over ambient levels
Zinc < 0.005 mg/L

In these kinds of systems fish production per unit of surface can be increased at will, as long as sufficient oxygen, fresh water and food are provided. Because of the requirement of sufficient fresh water, a massive water purification system must be integrated in the fish farm. One way to achieve this is to combine hydroponic horticulture and water treatment, see below. The exception to this rule are cages which are placed in a river or sea, which supplements the fish crop with sufficient oxygenated water. Some environmentalists object to this practice.

 
Expressing eggs from a female rainbow trout

The cost of inputs per unit of fish weight is higher than in extensive farming, especially because of the high cost of fish feed. It must contain a much higher level of protein (up to 60%) than cattle feed and a balanced amino acid composition, as well. These higher protein-level requirements are a consequence of the higher feed efficiency of aquatic animals (higher feed conversion ratio [FCR], that is, kg of feed per kg of animal produced). Fish such as salmon have an FCR around 1.1 kg of feed per kg of salmon[10] whereas chickens are in the 2.5 kg of feed per kg of chicken range. Fish do not use energy to keep warm, eliminating some carbohydrates and fats in the diet, required to provide this energy. This may be offset, though, by the lower land costs and the higher production which can be obtained due to the high level of input control.

Aeration of the water is essential, as fish need a sufficient oxygen level for growth. This is achieved by bubbling, cascade flow, or aqueous oxygen. Catfish in genus Clarias can breathe atmospheric air and can tolerate much higher levels of pollutants than trout or salmon, which makes aeration and water purification less necessary and makes Clarias species especially suited for intensive fish production. In some Clarias farms, about 10% of the water volume can consist of fish biomass.

The risk of infections by parasites such as fish lice, fungi (Saprolegnia spp.), intestinal worms (such as nematodes or trematodes), bacteria (e.g., Yersinia spp., Pseudomonas spp.), and protozoa (such as dinoflagellates) is similar to that in animal husbandry, especially at high population densities. However, animal husbandry is a larger and more technologically mature area of human agriculture and has developed better solutions to pathogen problems. Intensive aquaculture has to provide adequate water quality (oxygen, ammonia, nitrite, etc.) levels to minimize stress on the fish. This requirement makes control of the pathogen problem more difficult. Intensive aquaculture requires tight monitoring and a high level of expertise of the fish farmer.

 
Controlling roes manually

Very-high-intensity recycle aquaculture systems (RAS, also Recirculating Aquaculture Systems), where all the production parameters are controlled, are being used for high-value species. By recycling water, little is used per unit of production. However, the process has high capital and operating costs. The higher cost structures mean that RAS is economical only for high-value products, such as broodstock for egg production, fingerlings for net pen aquaculture operations, sturgeon production, research animals, and some special niche markets such as live fish.[11][12]

Raising ornamental coldwater fish (goldfish or koi), although theoretically much more profitable due to the higher income per weight of fish produced, has been successfully carried out only in the 21st century. The increased incidences of dangerous viral diseases of koi carp, together with the high value of the fish, has led to initiatives in closed-system koi breeding and growing in a number of countries. Today, a few commercially successful intensive koi-growing facilities are operating in the UK, Germany, and Israel.

Some producers have adapted their intensive systems in an effort to provide consumers with fish that do not carry dormant forms of viruses and diseases.

In 2016, juvenile Nile tilapia were given a food containing dried Schizochytrium in place of fish oil. When compared to a control group raised on regular food, they exhibited higher weight gain and better food-to-growth conversion, plus their flesh was higher in healthy omega-3 fatty acids.[13][14]

Fish farms edit

Within intensive and extensive aquaculture methods, numerous specific types of fish farms are used; each has benefits and applications unique to its design.

Cage system edit

 
Giant gourami is often raised in cages in central Thailand.

Fish cages are placed in lakes, bayous, ponds, rivers, or oceans to contain and protect fish until they can be harvested.[15] The method is also called "off-shore cultivation"[16] when the cages are placed in the sea. They can be constructed of a wide variety of components. Fish are stocked in cages, artificially fed, and harvested when they reach market size. A few advantages of fish farming with cages are that many types of waters can be used (rivers, lakes, filled quarries, etc.), many types of fish can be raised, and fish farming can co-exist with sport fishing and other water uses.[15]

Cage farming of fishes in open seas is also gaining in popularity. Given concerns of disease, poaching, poor water quality, etc., generally pond systems are considered simpler to start and easier to manage. Also, the past occurrences of cage-failures leading to escapes, have raised concern regarding the culture of non-native fish species in dam or open-water cages. On August 22, 2017, there was a massive failure of such cages at a commercial fishery in Washington state in Puget Sound, leading to release of nearly 300,000 Atlantic salmon in non-native waters. This is believed to risk endangering the native Pacific salmon species.[17]

Marine Scotland has kept records of caged fish escapes since 1999. They have recorded 357 fish escape incidents with 3,795,206 fish escaping into fresh and salt water. One company, Dawnfresh Farming Limited has been responsible for 40 incident and 152,790 Rainbow Trout escaping into freshwater lochs.[18]

Though the cage-industry has made numerous technological advances in cage construction in recent years, the risk of damage and escape due to storms is always a concern.[15]

Semi-submersible marine technology is beginning to impact fish farming. In 2018, 1.5 million salmon are in the middle of a year-long trial at Ocean Farm 1 off the coast of Norway. The semi-submersible US$300 million project is the world's first deep-sea aquaculture project, and includes 61-meter (200 ft)-high by 91-meter (300 ft)-diameter pen made from a series of mesh-wire frames and nets. It is designed to disperse wastes better than more conventional farms in sheltered coastal waters, therefore supporting higher fish packing density.[19]

Copper-alloy nets edit

Recently, copper alloys have become important netting materials in aquaculture. Copper alloys are antimicrobial, that is, they destroy bacteria, viruses, fungi, algae, and other microbes. In the marine environment, the antimicrobial/algaecidal properties of copper alloys prevent biofouling, which can briefly be described as the undesirable accumulation, adhesion, and growth of microorganisms, plants, algae, tube worms, barnacles, mollusks, and other organisms.[20]

The resistance of organism growth on copper alloy nets also provides a cleaner and healthier environment for farmed fish to grow and thrive. Traditional netting involves regular and labor-intensive cleaning. In addition to its antifouling benefits, copper netting has strong structural and corrosion-resistant properties in marine environments.[21]

Copper-zinc brass alloys are deployed in commercial-scale aquaculture operations in Asia, South America, and USA (Hawaii). Extensive research, including demonstrations and trials, are being implemented on two other copper alloys: copper-nickel and copper-silicon. Each of these alloy types has an inherent ability to reduce biofouling, cage waste, disease, and the need for antibiotics, while simultaneously maintaining water circulation and oxygen requirements. Other types of copper alloys are also being considered for research and development in aquaculture operations.[22]

In Southeast Asia, the traditional cage farming platform is called kelong.[23]

Open net pen system edit

The open net pens system is a method that takes place in natural waters, such as rivers, lakes, near the coast or offshore. The breeders rear the fish in large cages floating in the water.[24] The fish are living in natural water but are isolated with a net. Because the only barrier separating the fish from the surrounding environment is a net, this allows the water to flow from the ‘natural’ surrounding through the fish farms.

The site of the fish farm is crucial for the farm to be a success or not. Before any fish farm is settled, it is highly recommended to be selective with the site location of the farm. The site must be examined on some essential elements. Important conditions on the location are:[25]

  1. A good interchange of water and also a high replacement of bottom water.
  2. At all depths should be a good current condition. This is necessary because the organic particles should be able to be carried away using the current.
  3. A gravel and sand bottom are qualified for fish farming, although bottoms with silt and mud are not qualified. These should be avoided.
  4. A net should be at least 10 metres (33 ft) or more above the bottom, so depth is important.

Despite these important site conditions, the open net pen method was very popular in Norway and China. This is because of the cost friendliness and efficiency of this method.[26]

Negative external effects edit

Because of the ocean's water flow and other reasons, open net pen culture is seen as a high-risk method for the environment.[27] The flow allows chemicals, parasites, waste and diseases to spread in the enclosed environment, and this is not beneficial for the natural environment. Another negative consequence is the high escape rate of the cultured fish from these open net pens. These escaped fish also pose a high risk to the surrounding ecosystems.

The amount of organic waste produced by fish farms is also alarming. A salmon farm in Scotland, for instance, is estimated to produce as much organic waste as equivalent to a town of people between 10,000 and 20,000 people each year.[28]

Today 50% of the world's seafood is farm-raised.[29]

Irrigation ditch or pond systems edit

 
These fish-farming ponds were created as a cooperative project in a rural village in the Congo.

These use irrigation ditches or farm ponds to raise fish. The basic requirement is to have a ditch or pond that retains water, possibly with an above-ground irrigation system (many irrigation systems use buried pipes with headers).[30]

Using this method, water allotments can be stored in ponds or ditches, usually lined with bentonite clay. In small systems, the fish are often fed commercial fish food, and their waste products can help fertilize the fields. In larger ponds, the pond grows water plants and algae as fish food. Some of the most successful ponds grow introduced strains of plants, as well as introduced strains of fish.[31]

Control of water quality is crucial. Fertilizing, clarifying, and pH control of the water can increase yields substantially, as long as eutrophication is prevented and oxygen levels stay high. Yields can be low if the fish grow ill from electrolyte stress.[32]

Composite fish culture edit

The composite fish culture system is a technology developed in India by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research in the 1970s. In this system, of both local and imported fish, a combination of five or six fish species is used in a single fish pond. These species are selected so that they do not compete for food among them by having different types of food habitats.[33][34] As a result, the food available in all the parts of the pond is used. Fish used in this system include catla and silver carp (surface feeders), rohu (a column feeder), and mrigal and common carp (bottom feeders). Other fish also feed on the excreta of the common carp, and this helps contribute to the efficiency of the system which in optimal conditions produces 3000–6000 kg of fish per hectare per year.[35]

One problem with such composite fish culture is that many of these fish breed only during monsoon. Even if fish are collected from the wild, they can be mixed with other species, as well. Thus, a major problem in fish farming is the lack of availability of good-quality stock. To overcome this problem, ways have now been worked out to breed these fish in ponds using hormonal stimulation. This has ensured the supply of pure fish stock in desired quantities.[36]

Integrated recycling systems edit

 
Aerators in a fish farm (Ararat plain, Armenia)

One of the largest problems with freshwater pisciculture is that it can use a million gallons of water per acre (about 1 m3 of water per m2) each year. Extended water purification systems allow for the reuse (recycling) of local water.

The largest-scale pure fish farms use a system derived (admittedly much refined) from the New Alchemy Institute in the 1970s. Basically, large plastic fish tanks are placed in a greenhouse. A hydroponic bed is placed near, above or between them. When tilapia are raised in the tanks, they are able to eat algae, which naturally grow in the tanks when the tanks are properly fertilized.[37]

The tank water is slowly circulated to the hydroponic beds, where the tilapia waste feeds commercial plant crops. Carefully cultured microorganisms in the hydroponic bed convert ammonia to nitrates, and the plants are fertilized by the nitrates and phosphates.Other wastes are strained out by the hydroponic media, which double as an aerated pebble-bed filter.[38]

This system, properly tuned, produces more edible protein per unit area than any other. A wide variety of plants can grow well in the hydroponic beds. Most growers concentrate on herbs (e.g. parsley and basil), which command premium prices in small quantities all year long. The most common customers are restaurant wholesalers.[39]

Since the system lives in a greenhouse, it adapts to almost all temperate climates, and may also adapt to tropical climates. The main environmental impact is discharge of water that must be salted to maintain the fishes' electrolyte balance. Current growers use a variety of proprietary tricks to keep fish healthy, reducing their expenses for salt and wastewater discharge permits. Some veterinary authorities speculate that ultraviolet ozone disinfectant systems (widely used for ornamental fish) may play a prominent part in keeping the tilapia healthy with recirculated water.[citation needed]

A number of large, well-capitalized ventures in this area have failed. Managing both the biology and markets is complicated. One future development is the combination of integrated recycling systems with urban farming as tried in Sweden by the Greenfish Initiative.[40][41]

Classic fry farming edit

This is also called a "flow through system" .[42] Trout and other sport fish are often raised from eggs to fry or fingerlings and then trucked to streams and released. Normally, the fry are raised in long, shallow, concrete tanks, fed with fresh stream water. The fry receive commercial fish food in pellets. While not as efficient as the New Alchemists' method, it is also far simpler and has been used for many years to stock streams with sport fish. European eel (Anguilla anguilla) aquaculturalists procure a limited supply of glass eels, juvenile stages of the European eel which swim north from the Sargasso Sea breeding grounds, for their farms. The European eel is threatened with extinction because of the excessive catch of glass eels by Spanish fishermen and overfishing of adult eels in, e.g., the Dutch IJsselmeer. Although European eel larvae can survive for several weeks, the full life cycle has not yet been achieved in captivity.[43]

Issues edit

Mean eutrophying emissions (water pollution) of different foods per 100g of protein[44]
Food types Eutrophying emissions (g PO43-eq per 100g protein)
Beef
365.3
Farmed fish
235.1
Farmed crustaceans
227.2
Cheese
98.4
Lamb and mutton
97.1
Pork
76.4
Poultry
48.7
Eggs
21.8
Groundnuts
14.1
Peas
7.5
Tofu
6.2
Mean greenhouse gas emissions for different food types[45]
Food types Greenhouse gas emissions (g CO2-Ceq per g protein)
Ruminant meat
62
Recirculating aquaculture
30
Trawling Fishery
26
Non-recirculating aquaculture
12
Pork
10
Poultry
10
Dairy
9.1
Non-trawling fishery
8.6
Eggs
6.8
Starchy roots
1.7
Wheat
1.2
Maize
1.2
Legumes
0.25

Feeding edit

Mean acidifying emissions (air pollution) of different foods per 100g of protein[44]
Food types Acidifying emissions (g SO2eq per 100g protein)
Beef
343.6
Cheese
165.5
Pork
142.7
Lamb and mutton
139.0
Farmed crustaceans
133.1
Poultry
102.4
Farmed fish
65.9
Eggs
53.7
Groundnuts
22.6
Peas
8.5
Tofu
6.7

The issue of feeds in fish farming has been a controversial one. Many cultured fishes (tilapia, carp, catfish, many others) can be raised on a strictly herbivorous diet. Top-level carnivores (most salmonidae species in particular) on the other hand, depend on fish feed, of which a large portion is usually derived from wild-caught fish (anchovies, menhaden, etc.). Vegetable-derived proteins have successfully replaced fish meal in feeds for carnivorous fishes, but vegetable-derived oils have not successfully been incorporated into the diets of carnivores. Research is underway to try to change this, such that even salmon and other carnivores could be successfully fed with vegetable products. The F3 Challenge (Fish-Free Feed Challenge),[46] as explained by a report from Wired in February 2017, "is a race to sell 100,000 metric tons of fish food, without the fish. Earlier this month, start-ups from places like Pakistan, China, and Belgium joined their American competition at the Google headquarters in Mountain View, California, showing off feed made from seaweed extracts, yeast, and algae grown in bioreactors."[47]

Not only do the feeds for carnivorous fish, like certain salmon species, remain controversial due to the containment of wild caught fish like anchovies, but they are not helping the health of the fish, as is the case in Norway. Between 2003 and 2007, Aldrin et al. examined three infectious diseases in Norwegian salmon fish farms—heart and skeletal muscle inflammation, pancreas disease, and infectious salmon anemia.[48]

In 2014, Martinez-Rubio et al. conducted a study in which cardiomyopathy syndrome (CMS), a severe cardiac disease in Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), was investigated pertaining the effects of functional feeds with reduced lipid content and increased eicosapentaenoic acid levels in controlling CMS in salmon after infection with Piscine Myocarditis Virus (PMCV). Functional feeds are defined as high-quality feeds that beyond purposes of nutrition, they are formulated with health promoting features that could be beneficial in supporting disease resistance, such as CMS. Choosing a clinical nutrition approach using functional feeds could potentially move away from chemotherapeutic and antibiotic treatments, which could lower the costs of disease treatment and management in fish farms. In this investigation three fishmeal-based diets were served—one made of 31% lipid and the other two made of 18% lipid (one contained fishmeal and the other krill meal. Results demonstrated a significant difference in the immune and inflammatory responses and pathology in heart tissue as the fish were infected with PMCV. Fish fed with functional feeds with low lipid content demonstrated milder and delayed inflammatory response and therefore, less severe heart lesions at earlier and later stages after PMCV infection.[49]

Stocking density edit

Secondly, farmed fish are kept in concentrations never seen in the wild (e.g. 50,000 fish in a 2-acre (8,100 m2) area.[50]). However, fish tend also to be animals that aggregate into large schools at high density. Most successful aquaculture species are schooling species, which do not have social problems at high density. Aquaculturists feel that operating a rearing system above its design capacity or above the social density limit of the fish will result in decreased growth rate and increased feed conversion ratio (kg dry feed/kg of fish produced), which results in increased cost and risk of health problems along with a decrease in profits. Stressing the animals is not desirable, but the concept of and measurement of stress must be viewed from the perspective of the animal using the scientific method.[51]

Parasites and disease edit

Sea lice, particularly Lepeophtheirus salmonis and various Caligus species, including C. clemensi and C. rogercresseyi, can cause deadly infestations of both farm-grown and wild salmon.[52][53] Sea lice are ectoparasites which feed on mucus, blood, and skin, and migrate and latch onto the skin of wild salmon during free-swimming, planktonic nauplii and copepodid larval stages, which can persist for several days.[54][55][56] Large numbers of highly populated, open-net salmon farms can create exceptionally large concentrations of sea lice; when exposed in river estuaries containing large numbers of open-net farms, many young wild salmon are infected, and do not survive as a result.[57][58] Adult salmon may survive otherwise critical numbers of sea lice, but small, thin-skinned juvenile salmon migrating to sea are highly vulnerable. On the Pacific coast of Canada, the louse-induced mortality of pink salmon in some regions is commonly over 80%.[59] In Scotland, official figures show that more than nine million fish were lost to disease, parasites, botched treatment attempts and other problems on fish farms between 2016 and 2019.[60] One of the treatments for parasite infestations involved bathing fish in hydrogen peroxide,[61] which can harm or kill farmed fish if they are in a weak condition or if the chemical concentration is too strong.

A 2008 meta-analysis of available data shows that salmon farming reduces the survival of associated wild salmon populations. This relationship has been shown to hold for Atlantic, steelhead, pink, chum, and coho salmon. The decrease in survival or abundance often exceeds 50%.[62]

Diseases and parasites are the most commonly cited reasons for such decreases. Some species of sea lice have been noted to target farmed coho and Atlantic salmon.[63] Such parasites have been shown to have an effect on nearby wild fish. One place that has garnered international media attention is British Columbia's Broughton Archipelago. There, juvenile wild salmon must "run a gauntlet" of large fish farms located off-shore near river outlets before making their way to sea. The farms allegedly cause such severe sea lice infestations that one study predicted in 2007 a 99% collapse in the wild salmon population by 2011.[64] This claim, however, has been criticized by numerous scientists who question the correlation between increased fish farming and increases in sea lice infestation among wild salmon.[65]

Because of parasite problems, some aquaculture operators frequently use strong antibiotic drugs to keep the fish alive, but many fish still die prematurely at rates up to 30%.[66] Additionally, other common drugs used in salmonid fish farms in North America and Europe include anesthetic, chemotherapeutic, and anthelmintic agents.[67] In some cases, these drugs have entered the environment.[68] Additionally, the residual presence of these drugs in human food products has become controversial. Use of antibiotics in food production is thought to increase the prevalence of antibiotic resistance in human diseases.[69] At some facilities, the use of antibiotic drugs in aquaculture has decreased considerably due to vaccinations and other techniques.[70] However, most fish-farming operations still use antibiotics, many of which escape into the surrounding environment.[71]

The lice and pathogen problems of the 1990s facilitated the development of current treatment methods for sea lice and pathogens, which reduced the stress from parasite/pathogen problems. However, being in an ocean environment, the transfer of disease organisms from the wild fish to the aquaculture fish is an ever-present risk.[72]

 
A North American lake trout fishing farm on Lake Titicaca near Copacabana, Bolivia. Since their introduction in the 1930s, trout have been an invasive species endangering the local fish population.[73]

Ecosystem impacts edit

The large number of fish kept long-term in a single location contributes to habitat destruction of the nearby areas.[74] The high concentrations of fish produce a significant amount of condensed faeces, often contaminated with drugs, which again affects local waterways.

Aquaculture not only impacts the fish on the farm, but it also influences other species, which in return are attracted to or repelled by the farms.[75] Mobile fauna, such as crustaceans, fish, birds, and marine mammals, interact with the process of aquaculture, but the long-term or ecological effects as a result of these interactions is still unknown. Some of these fauna may be attracted or demonstrate repulsion.[75] The attraction/repulsion mechanism has various direct and indirect effects on wild organisms at individual and population levels. The interactions that wild organisms have with aquaculture may have implications on the management of fisheries species and the ecosystem in relation to how the fish farms are structured and organized.[75]

Siting edit

If aquaculture farms are placed in an area with strong current, pollutants can be flushed out of the area fairly quickly.[citation needed] This helps manage the pollution problem and also aids in overall fish growth. Concern remains that resultant bacterial growth fertilised by fish faeces strips the water of oxygen, reducing or killing off the local marine life. Once an area has been so contaminated, fish farms are typically moved to new, uncontaminated areas. This practice has angered nearby fishermen.[76]

Other potential problems faced by aquaculturists include the obtaining of various permits and water-use rights, profitability, concerns about invasive species and genetic engineering depending on what species are involved, and interaction with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

Genetic modification edit

In regards to genetically modified, farmed salmon, concern has been raised over their proven reproductive advantage and how it could potentially decimate local fish populations, if released into the wild. Biologist Rick Howard did a controlled laboratory study where wild fish and GMO fish were allowed to breed.[77] In 1989, AquaBounty Technologies developed the AquAdvantage salmon. The concerns and critiques of cultivating this GMO fish in aquaculture are that the fish will escape and interact with other fish ultimately leading to the reproduction with other fishes. However, the FDA, has determined that while net pens would not be the most appropriate to prevent escapes, raising the salmon in Panama waters would effectively prevent escape because the water conditions there would fail to support long-term survival of any escaped salmon.[78] Another method of preventing Aqua Advantage fish from impacting the ecosystems in the case they escape suggested by the FDA was to create sterile triploid females. This way concerns on reproducing with other fishes would be out of the question.[78] The GMO fish crowded out the wild fish in spawning beds, but the offspring were less likely to survive. The colorant used to make pen-raised salmon appear rosy like the wild fish has been linked with retinal problems in humans.[76]

Labeling edit

In 2005, Alaska passed legislation requiring that any genetically altered fish sold in the state be labeled.[79] In 2006, a Consumer Reports investigation revealed that farm-raised salmon is frequently sold as wild.[80]

In 2008, the US National Organic Standards Board allowed farmed fish to be labeled as organic provided less than 25% of their feed came from wild fish. This decision was criticized by the advocacy group Food & Water Watch as "bending the rules" about organic labeling.[81] In the European Union, fish labeling as to species, method of production and origin has been required since 2002.[82]

Concerns continue over the labeling of salmon as farmed or wild-caught, as well as about the humane treatment of farmed fish. The Marine Stewardship Council has established an Eco label to distinguish between farmed and wild-caught salmon,[83] while the RSPCA has established the Freedom Food label to indicate humane treatment of farmed salmon, as well as other food products.[82]

Indoor fish farming edit

Other treatments such as ultraviolet sterilization, ozonation, and oxygen injection are also used to maintain optimal water quality. Through this system, many of the environmental drawbacks of aquaculture are minimized including escaped fish, water usage, and the introduction of pollutants. The practices also increased feed-use efficiency growth by providing optimum water quality.[84]

One of the drawbacks to recirculating aquaculture systems is the need for periodic water exchanges. However, the rate of water exchange can be reduced through aquaponics, such as the incorporation of hydroponically grown plants[85] and denitrification.[86] Both methods reduce the amount of nitrate in the water, and can potentially eliminate the need for water exchanges, closing the aquaculture system from the environment. The amount of interaction between the aquaculture system and the environment can be measured through the cumulative feed burden (CFB kg/M3), which measures the amount of feed that goes into the RAS relative to the amount of water and waste discharged. The environmental impact of larger indoor fish farming system will be linked to the local infrastructure, and water supply. Areas which are more drought-prone, indoor fish farms might flow out wastewater for watering agricultural farms, reducing the water affliction.[87]

From 2011, a team from the University of Waterloo led by Tahbit Chowdhury and Gordon Graff examined vertical RAS aquaculture designs aimed at producing protein-rich fish species.[88][89] However, because of its high capital and operating costs, RAS has generally been restricted to practices such as broodstock maturation, larval rearing, fingerling production, research animal production, specific pathogen-free animal production, and caviar and ornamental fish production. As such, research and design work by Chowdhury and Graff remains difficult to implement. Although the use of RAS for other species is considered by many aquaculturalists to be currently impractical, some limited successful implementation of RAS has occurred with high-value product such as barramundi, sturgeon, and live tilapia in the US,[90][91][92][93][94] eels and catfish in the Netherlands, trout in Denmark[95] and salmon is planned in Scotland[96] and Canada.[97]

Slaughter methods edit

Tanks saturated with carbon dioxide have been used to make fish unconscious. Their gills are then cut with a knife so that the fish bleed out before they are further processed. This is no longer considered a humane method of slaughter. Methods that induce much less physiological stress are electrical or percussive stunning and this has led to the phasing out of the carbon dioxide slaughter method in Europe.[98]

Inhumane methods edit

According to T. Håstein of the National Veterinary Institute (Oslo, Norway), "Different methods for slaughter of fish are in place and it is no doubt that many of them may be considered as appalling from an animal welfare point of view."[99] A 2004 report by the EFSA Scientific Panel on Animal Health and Welfare explained: "Many existing commercial killing methods expose fish to substantial suffering over a prolonged period of time. For some species, existing methods, whilst capable of killing fish humanely, are not doing so because operators don't have the knowledge to evaluate them."[100] Following are some less humane ways of killing fish.

  • Air asphyxiation amounts to suffocation in the open air. The process can take upwards of 15 minutes to induce death, although unconsciousness typically sets in sooner.[101]
  • Ice baths or chilling of farmed fish on ice or submerged in near-freezing water is used to dampen muscle movements by the fish and to delay the onset of post-death decay. However, it does not necessarily reduce sensibility to pain; indeed, the chilling process has been shown to elevate cortisol. In addition, reduced body temperature extends the time before fish lose consciousness.[102]
  • CO2 narcosis
  • Exsanguination without stunning is a process in which fish are taken up from water, held still, and cut so as to cause bleeding. According to references in Yue,[103] this can leave fish writhing for an average of four minutes, and some catfish still responded to noxious stimuli after more than 15 minutes.
  • Immersion in salt followed by gutting or other processing such as smoking is applied to eel.[104]

More humane methods edit

Proper stunning renders the fish unconscious immediately and for a sufficient period of time such that the fish is killed in the slaughter process (e.g. through exsanguination) without regaining consciousness.

  • Percussive stunning involves rendering the fish unconscious with a blow on the head.
  • Electric stunning can be humane when a proper current is made to flow through the fish brain for a sufficient period of time. Electric stunning can be applied after the fish has been taken out of the water (dry stunning) or while the fish is still in the water. The latter generally requires a much higher current and may lead to operator safety issues. An advantage could be that in-water stunning allows fish to be rendered unconscious without stressful handling or displacement.[105] However, improper stunning may not induce insensibility long enough to prevent the fish from enduring exsanguination while conscious.[100] Whether the optimal stunning parameters that researchers have determined in studies are used by the industry in practice is unknown.[105]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • "Dead Loss: The high cost of poor farming practices and mortalities on salmon farms". Just Economics. February 2021. Retrieved 12 February 2021.
  • Benson, Tess. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2011-06-12.
  • Yue, Stephanie. "An HSUS Report: The Welfare of Farmed Fish at Slaughter" (PDF). Humane Society of the United States. Retrieved 2011-06-12.
  • European Food Safety Authority (2004). "Opinion of the Scientific Panel on Animal Health and Welfare on a request from the Commission related to welfare aspects of the main systems of stunning and killing the main commercial species of animals". The EFSA Journal. 2 (7): 45. doi:10.2903/j.efsa.2004.45.
  • Håstein, T (2004), "Animal welfare issues relating to aquaculture", (PDF), pp. 219–231, archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-03-25, retrieved 2011-06-12
  • Jhingran VG (1987) Introduction to Aquaculture Nigerian Institute for Oceanography and Marine Research, FAO, Rome.
  • D. R. (1993). Aquaculture Training Manual (2nd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-85238-194-6.
  • Manci, Bill. . Archived from the original on 2014-07-01. Retrieved 2013-11-07.

External links edit

  • FAO Fisheries Department and its SOFIA report on fisheries and aquaculture
  • Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform Coalition of environmental groups, scientists and First Nations opposed to current salmon farming practices
  • The Pure Salmon Campaign website 2010-05-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • Tropical Fish Farming in Florida
  • Nature's Subsidies to Shrimp and Salmon Farming

fish, farming, pisciculture, involves, commercial, breeding, fish, most, often, food, fish, tanks, artificial, enclosures, such, fish, ponds, particular, type, aquaculture, which, controlled, cultivation, harvesting, aquatic, animals, such, fish, crustaceans, . Fish farming or pisciculture involves commercial breeding of fish most often for food in fish tanks or artificial enclosures such as fish ponds It is a particular type of aquaculture which is the controlled cultivation and harvesting of aquatic animals such as fish crustaceans molluscs and so on in natural or pseudo natural environments A facility that releases juvenile fish into the wild for recreational fishing or to supplement a species natural numbers is generally referred to as a fish hatchery Worldwide the most important fish species produced in fish farming are carp catfish salmon and tilapia 1 A fish farm on the coast of Euboea island in South Euboean Gulf GreeceGlobal demand is increasing for dietary fish protein which has resulted in widespread overfishing in wild fisheries resulting in significant decrease in fish stocks and even complete depletion in some regions Fish farming allows establishment of artificial fish colonies that are provided with sufficient feeding protection from natural predators and competitive threats access to veterinarian service and easier harvesting when needed while being separate from and thus do not usually impact the sustainable yields of wild fish populations While fish farming is practised worldwide China alone provides 62 of the world s farmed fish production 2 As of 2016 more than 50 of seafood was produced by aquaculture 3 In the last three decades aquaculture has been the main driver of the increase in fisheries and aquaculture production with an average growth of 5 3 percent per year in the period 2000 2018 reaching a record 82 1 million tonnes in 2018 4 World capture fisheries and aquaculture production by production mode from FAO s Statistical Yearbook 2021 5 Farming carnivorous fish such as salmon however does not always reduce pressure on wild fisheries such farmed fish are usually fed fishmeal and fish oil extracted from wild forage fish The 2008 global returns for fish farming recorded by the FAO totaled 33 8 million tonnes worth about US 60 billion 6 Although fish farming for food is the most widespread another major fish farming industry provides living fish for the aquarium trade The vast majority of freshwater fish in the aquarium trade originate from farms in Eastern and Southern Asia eastern Europe Florida and South America that use either indoor tank systems or outdoor pond systems while farming of fish for the marine aquarium trade happens at a much smaller scale 7 8 Contents 1 Major species 2 Categories 2 1 Extensive aquaculture 2 2 Intensive aquaculture 3 Fish farms 3 1 Cage system 3 1 1 Copper alloy nets 3 2 Open net pen system 3 2 1 Negative external effects 3 3 Irrigation ditch or pond systems 3 3 1 Composite fish culture 3 4 Integrated recycling systems 3 5 Classic fry farming 4 Issues 4 1 Feeding 4 2 Stocking density 4 3 Parasites and disease 4 4 Ecosystem impacts 4 5 Siting 4 6 Genetic modification 4 7 Labeling 5 Indoor fish farming 6 Slaughter methods 6 1 Inhumane methods 6 2 More humane methods 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksMajor species editSee also List of commercially important fish species Top 15 cultured fish species by weight according to FAO statistics for 2013 1 Species Environment Tonnage millions Value US billions Grass carp Freshwater 5 23 6 69Silver carp Freshwater 4 59 6 13Common carp Freshwater 3 76 5 19Nile tilapia Freshwater 3 26 5 39Bighead carp Freshwater 2 90 3 72Catla Indian carp Freshwater 2 76 5 49Crucian carp Freshwater 2 45 2 67Atlantic salmon Marine 2 07 10 10Roho labeo Freshwater 1 57 2 54Milkfish Marine 0 94 1 71Rainbow trout Freshwater Brackish Marine 0 88 3 80Wuchang bream Freshwater 0 71 1 16Black carp Freshwater 0 50 1 15Northern snakehead Freshwater 0 48 0 59Amur catfish Freshwater 0 41 0 55Categories editAquaculture makes use of local photosynthetic production extensive or fish that are fed with external food supply intensive Extensive aquaculture edit nbsp Salmon farming in the sea mariculture at Loch Ainort Isle of Skye ScotlandExtensive aquaculture is the other form of fish farming Extensive aquaculture is more basic than intensive aquaculture in that less effort is put into the husbandry of the fish Extensive aquaculture is done in the ocean natural and man made lakes bays rivers and Fiords Fish are contained within these habitats by multiple mesh enclosures which also function as trapping nets during harvest Figure 3 4 Since fish are susceptible to the elements site placement is essential to ensuring rapid growth of the targeted species The drawback of these facilities is that they depend on the surrounding area for good water quality in order to reduce mortality and increase the survivorship and growth rate of the fish 19 Fish chosen for extensive aquaculture are very hardy and often do well in high densities Seaweed prawns mussels carp tilapia tuna and salmon are the most prominent forms of extensive aqua cultured seafood Extensive aquaculture facilities have negative impacts on the environment as well Natural habitats are destroyed in the development of man made ponds used for extensive aquaculture In the Philippines shrimp aquaculture is responsible for the destruction of thousands of acres of mangrove fields which serve as nurseries and living habitats for many marine organisms Benthic habitats are being depleted due to the high amount of organic waste produced by the fish which settles below their pens 4 Phytoplankton and algae breakdown fecal matter and residual fish meal reducing the amount of available oxygen in the water column which chokes and kills the Benthic organisms Another serious problem acquainted with extensive aquaculture is the introduction of invasive species into ecosystems 10 Escaped fish increase the competition between organisms for limited resources Also when foreign fish interbreed with wild species they upset the genetic variability of the species making them more prone to disease and infection The high density of fish in these mesh tanks is very tempting for predators of the sea and air 19 To protect the harvest from predators protective netting is set up at a high cost Often times predatorial fish and mammals like seals sharks and tuna get caught in these barrier nets and die Some farmers protect their stocks from predatorial birds such as pelicans and albatross by shooting these sometimes endangered creatures Intensive aquaculture edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Optimal water parameters for cold and warm water fish in intensive aquaculture 9 Parameter Optimal valueAcidity pH 6 9Arsenic lt 440 µg LAlkalinity gt 20 mg L as CaCO3 Aluminium lt 0 075 mg LAmmonia non ionized lt 0 02 mg LCadmium lt 0 0005 mg L in soft water lt 0 005 mg L in hard waterCalcium gt 5 mg LCarbon dioxide lt 5 10 mg LChloride gt 4 0 mg LChlorine lt 0 003 mg LCopper lt 0 0006 mg L in soft water lt 0 03 mg L in hard waterGas supersaturation lt 100 total gas pressure lt 103 for salmonid eggs fry lt 102 for lake troutHydrogen sulfide lt 0 003 mg LIron lt 0 1 mg LLead lt 0 02 mg LMercury lt 0 0002 mg LNitrate lt 1 0 mg LNitrite lt 0 1 mg LOxygen 6 mg L for coldwater fish 4 mg L for warmwater fishSelenium lt 0 01 mg LTotal dissolved solids lt 200 mg LTotal suspended solids lt 80 NTU over ambient levelsZinc lt 0 005 mg LIn these kinds of systems fish production per unit of surface can be increased at will as long as sufficient oxygen fresh water and food are provided Because of the requirement of sufficient fresh water a massive water purification system must be integrated in the fish farm One way to achieve this is to combine hydroponic horticulture and water treatment see below The exception to this rule are cages which are placed in a river or sea which supplements the fish crop with sufficient oxygenated water Some environmentalists object to this practice nbsp Expressing eggs from a female rainbow troutThe cost of inputs per unit of fish weight is higher than in extensive farming especially because of the high cost of fish feed It must contain a much higher level of protein up to 60 than cattle feed and a balanced amino acid composition as well These higher protein level requirements are a consequence of the higher feed efficiency of aquatic animals higher feed conversion ratio FCR that is kg of feed per kg of animal produced Fish such as salmon have an FCR around 1 1 kg of feed per kg of salmon 10 whereas chickens are in the 2 5 kg of feed per kg of chicken range Fish do not use energy to keep warm eliminating some carbohydrates and fats in the diet required to provide this energy This may be offset though by the lower land costs and the higher production which can be obtained due to the high level of input control Aeration of the water is essential as fish need a sufficient oxygen level for growth This is achieved by bubbling cascade flow or aqueous oxygen Catfish in genus Clarias can breathe atmospheric air and can tolerate much higher levels of pollutants than trout or salmon which makes aeration and water purification less necessary and makes Clarias species especially suited for intensive fish production In some Clarias farms about 10 of the water volume can consist of fish biomass The risk of infections by parasites such as fish lice fungi Saprolegnia spp intestinal worms such as nematodes or trematodes bacteria e g Yersinia spp Pseudomonas spp and protozoa such as dinoflagellates is similar to that in animal husbandry especially at high population densities However animal husbandry is a larger and more technologically mature area of human agriculture and has developed better solutions to pathogen problems Intensive aquaculture has to provide adequate water quality oxygen ammonia nitrite etc levels to minimize stress on the fish This requirement makes control of the pathogen problem more difficult Intensive aquaculture requires tight monitoring and a high level of expertise of the fish farmer nbsp Controlling roes manuallyVery high intensity recycle aquaculture systems RAS also Recirculating Aquaculture Systems where all the production parameters are controlled are being used for high value species By recycling water little is used per unit of production However the process has high capital and operating costs The higher cost structures mean that RAS is economical only for high value products such as broodstock for egg production fingerlings for net pen aquaculture operations sturgeon production research animals and some special niche markets such as live fish 11 12 Raising ornamental coldwater fish goldfish or koi although theoretically much more profitable due to the higher income per weight of fish produced has been successfully carried out only in the 21st century The increased incidences of dangerous viral diseases of koi carp together with the high value of the fish has led to initiatives in closed system koi breeding and growing in a number of countries Today a few commercially successful intensive koi growing facilities are operating in the UK Germany and Israel Some producers have adapted their intensive systems in an effort to provide consumers with fish that do not carry dormant forms of viruses and diseases In 2016 juvenile Nile tilapia were given a food containing dried Schizochytrium in place of fish oil When compared to a control group raised on regular food they exhibited higher weight gain and better food to growth conversion plus their flesh was higher in healthy omega 3 fatty acids 13 14 Fish farms editWithin intensive and extensive aquaculture methods numerous specific types of fish farms are used each has benefits and applications unique to its design Cage system edit nbsp Giant gourami is often raised in cages in central Thailand Fish cages are placed in lakes bayous ponds rivers or oceans to contain and protect fish until they can be harvested 15 The method is also called off shore cultivation 16 when the cages are placed in the sea They can be constructed of a wide variety of components Fish are stocked in cages artificially fed and harvested when they reach market size A few advantages of fish farming with cages are that many types of waters can be used rivers lakes filled quarries etc many types of fish can be raised and fish farming can co exist with sport fishing and other water uses 15 Cage farming of fishes in open seas is also gaining in popularity Given concerns of disease poaching poor water quality etc generally pond systems are considered simpler to start and easier to manage Also the past occurrences of cage failures leading to escapes have raised concern regarding the culture of non native fish species in dam or open water cages On August 22 2017 there was a massive failure of such cages at a commercial fishery in Washington state in Puget Sound leading to release of nearly 300 000 Atlantic salmon in non native waters This is believed to risk endangering the native Pacific salmon species 17 Marine Scotland has kept records of caged fish escapes since 1999 They have recorded 357 fish escape incidents with 3 795 206 fish escaping into fresh and salt water One company Dawnfresh Farming Limited has been responsible for 40 incident and 152 790 Rainbow Trout escaping into freshwater lochs 18 Though the cage industry has made numerous technological advances in cage construction in recent years the risk of damage and escape due to storms is always a concern 15 Semi submersible marine technology is beginning to impact fish farming In 2018 1 5 million salmon are in the middle of a year long trial at Ocean Farm 1 off the coast of Norway The semi submersible US 300 million project is the world s first deep sea aquaculture project and includes 61 meter 200 ft high by 91 meter 300 ft diameter pen made from a series of mesh wire frames and nets It is designed to disperse wastes better than more conventional farms in sheltered coastal waters therefore supporting higher fish packing density 19 Copper alloy nets edit Main article Copper alloys in aquaculture Recently copper alloys have become important netting materials in aquaculture Copper alloys are antimicrobial that is they destroy bacteria viruses fungi algae and other microbes In the marine environment the antimicrobial algaecidal properties of copper alloys prevent biofouling which can briefly be described as the undesirable accumulation adhesion and growth of microorganisms plants algae tube worms barnacles mollusks and other organisms 20 The resistance of organism growth on copper alloy nets also provides a cleaner and healthier environment for farmed fish to grow and thrive Traditional netting involves regular and labor intensive cleaning In addition to its antifouling benefits copper netting has strong structural and corrosion resistant properties in marine environments 21 Copper zinc brass alloys are deployed in commercial scale aquaculture operations in Asia South America and USA Hawaii Extensive research including demonstrations and trials are being implemented on two other copper alloys copper nickel and copper silicon Each of these alloy types has an inherent ability to reduce biofouling cage waste disease and the need for antibiotics while simultaneously maintaining water circulation and oxygen requirements Other types of copper alloys are also being considered for research and development in aquaculture operations 22 In Southeast Asia the traditional cage farming platform is called kelong 23 Open net pen system edit The open net pens system is a method that takes place in natural waters such as rivers lakes near the coast or offshore The breeders rear the fish in large cages floating in the water 24 The fish are living in natural water but are isolated with a net Because the only barrier separating the fish from the surrounding environment is a net this allows the water to flow from the natural surrounding through the fish farms The site of the fish farm is crucial for the farm to be a success or not Before any fish farm is settled it is highly recommended to be selective with the site location of the farm The site must be examined on some essential elements Important conditions on the location are 25 A good interchange of water and also a high replacement of bottom water At all depths should be a good current condition This is necessary because the organic particles should be able to be carried away using the current A gravel and sand bottom are qualified for fish farming although bottoms with silt and mud are not qualified These should be avoided A net should be at least 10 metres 33 ft or more above the bottom so depth is important Despite these important site conditions the open net pen method was very popular in Norway and China This is because of the cost friendliness and efficiency of this method 26 Negative external effects edit Because of the ocean s water flow and other reasons open net pen culture is seen as a high risk method for the environment 27 The flow allows chemicals parasites waste and diseases to spread in the enclosed environment and this is not beneficial for the natural environment Another negative consequence is the high escape rate of the cultured fish from these open net pens These escaped fish also pose a high risk to the surrounding ecosystems The amount of organic waste produced by fish farms is also alarming A salmon farm in Scotland for instance is estimated to produce as much organic waste as equivalent to a town of people between 10 000 and 20 000 people each year 28 Today 50 of the world s seafood is farm raised 29 Irrigation ditch or pond systems edit nbsp These fish farming ponds were created as a cooperative project in a rural village in the Congo These use irrigation ditches or farm ponds to raise fish The basic requirement is to have a ditch or pond that retains water possibly with an above ground irrigation system many irrigation systems use buried pipes with headers 30 Using this method water allotments can be stored in ponds or ditches usually lined with bentonite clay In small systems the fish are often fed commercial fish food and their waste products can help fertilize the fields In larger ponds the pond grows water plants and algae as fish food Some of the most successful ponds grow introduced strains of plants as well as introduced strains of fish 31 Control of water quality is crucial Fertilizing clarifying and pH control of the water can increase yields substantially as long as eutrophication is prevented and oxygen levels stay high Yields can be low if the fish grow ill from electrolyte stress 32 Composite fish culture edit The composite fish culture system is a technology developed in India by the Indian Council of Agricultural Research in the 1970s In this system of both local and imported fish a combination of five or six fish species is used in a single fish pond These species are selected so that they do not compete for food among them by having different types of food habitats 33 34 As a result the food available in all the parts of the pond is used Fish used in this system include catla and silver carp surface feeders rohu a column feeder and mrigal and common carp bottom feeders Other fish also feed on the excreta of the common carp and this helps contribute to the efficiency of the system which in optimal conditions produces 3000 6000 kg of fish per hectare per year 35 One problem with such composite fish culture is that many of these fish breed only during monsoon Even if fish are collected from the wild they can be mixed with other species as well Thus a major problem in fish farming is the lack of availability of good quality stock To overcome this problem ways have now been worked out to breed these fish in ponds using hormonal stimulation This has ensured the supply of pure fish stock in desired quantities 36 Integrated recycling systems edit Main article Aquaponics nbsp Aerators in a fish farm Ararat plain Armenia One of the largest problems with freshwater pisciculture is that it can use a million gallons of water per acre about 1 m3 of water per m2 each year Extended water purification systems allow for the reuse recycling of local water The largest scale pure fish farms use a system derived admittedly much refined from the New Alchemy Institute in the 1970s Basically large plastic fish tanks are placed in a greenhouse A hydroponic bed is placed near above or between them When tilapia are raised in the tanks they are able to eat algae which naturally grow in the tanks when the tanks are properly fertilized 37 The tank water is slowly circulated to the hydroponic beds where the tilapia waste feeds commercial plant crops Carefully cultured microorganisms in the hydroponic bed convert ammonia to nitrates and the plants are fertilized by the nitrates and phosphates Other wastes are strained out by the hydroponic media which double as an aerated pebble bed filter 38 This system properly tuned produces more edible protein per unit area than any other A wide variety of plants can grow well in the hydroponic beds Most growers concentrate on herbs e g parsley and basil which command premium prices in small quantities all year long The most common customers are restaurant wholesalers 39 Since the system lives in a greenhouse it adapts to almost all temperate climates and may also adapt to tropical climates The main environmental impact is discharge of water that must be salted to maintain the fishes electrolyte balance Current growers use a variety of proprietary tricks to keep fish healthy reducing their expenses for salt and wastewater discharge permits Some veterinary authorities speculate that ultraviolet ozone disinfectant systems widely used for ornamental fish may play a prominent part in keeping the tilapia healthy with recirculated water citation needed A number of large well capitalized ventures in this area have failed Managing both the biology and markets is complicated One future development is the combination of integrated recycling systems with urban farming as tried in Sweden by the Greenfish Initiative 40 41 Classic fry farming edit This is also called a flow through system 42 Trout and other sport fish are often raised from eggs to fry or fingerlings and then trucked to streams and released Normally the fry are raised in long shallow concrete tanks fed with fresh stream water The fry receive commercial fish food in pellets While not as efficient as the New Alchemists method it is also far simpler and has been used for many years to stock streams with sport fish European eel Anguilla anguilla aquaculturalists procure a limited supply of glass eels juvenile stages of the European eel which swim north from the Sargasso Sea breeding grounds for their farms The European eel is threatened with extinction because of the excessive catch of glass eels by Spanish fishermen and overfishing of adult eels in e g the Dutch IJsselmeer Although European eel larvae can survive for several weeks the full life cycle has not yet been achieved in captivity 43 Issues editSee also Aquaculture of salmon Issues Mean eutrophying emissions water pollution of different foods per 100g of protein 44 Food types Eutrophying emissions g PO43 eq per 100g protein Beef 365 3Farmed fish 235 1Farmed crustaceans 227 2Cheese 98 4Lamb and mutton 97 1Pork 76 4Poultry 48 7Eggs 21 8Groundnuts 14 1Peas 7 5Tofu 6 2Mean greenhouse gas emissions for different food types 45 Food types Greenhouse gas emissions g CO2 Ceq per g protein Ruminant meat 62Recirculating aquaculture 30Trawling Fishery 26Non recirculating aquaculture 12Pork 10Poultry 10Dairy 9 1Non trawling fishery 8 6Eggs 6 8Starchy roots 1 7Wheat 1 2Maize 1 2Legumes 0 25Feeding edit Mean acidifying emissions air pollution of different foods per 100g of protein 44 Food types Acidifying emissions g SO2eq per 100g protein Beef 343 6Cheese 165 5Pork 142 7Lamb and mutton 139 0Farmed crustaceans 133 1Poultry 102 4Farmed fish 65 9Eggs 53 7Groundnuts 22 6Peas 8 5Tofu 6 7The issue of feeds in fish farming has been a controversial one Many cultured fishes tilapia carp catfish many others can be raised on a strictly herbivorous diet Top level carnivores most salmonidae species in particular on the other hand depend on fish feed of which a large portion is usually derived from wild caught fish anchovies menhaden etc Vegetable derived proteins have successfully replaced fish meal in feeds for carnivorous fishes but vegetable derived oils have not successfully been incorporated into the diets of carnivores Research is underway to try to change this such that even salmon and other carnivores could be successfully fed with vegetable products The F3 Challenge Fish Free Feed Challenge 46 as explained by a report from Wired in February 2017 is a race to sell 100 000 metric tons of fish food without the fish Earlier this month start ups from places like Pakistan China and Belgium joined their American competition at the Google headquarters in Mountain View California showing off feed made from seaweed extracts yeast and algae grown in bioreactors 47 Not only do the feeds for carnivorous fish like certain salmon species remain controversial due to the containment of wild caught fish like anchovies but they are not helping the health of the fish as is the case in Norway Between 2003 and 2007 Aldrin et al examined three infectious diseases in Norwegian salmon fish farms heart and skeletal muscle inflammation pancreas disease and infectious salmon anemia 48 In 2014 Martinez Rubio et al conducted a study in which cardiomyopathy syndrome CMS a severe cardiac disease in Atlantic salmon Salmo salar was investigated pertaining the effects of functional feeds with reduced lipid content and increased eicosapentaenoic acid levels in controlling CMS in salmon after infection with Piscine Myocarditis Virus PMCV Functional feeds are defined as high quality feeds that beyond purposes of nutrition they are formulated with health promoting features that could be beneficial in supporting disease resistance such as CMS Choosing a clinical nutrition approach using functional feeds could potentially move away from chemotherapeutic and antibiotic treatments which could lower the costs of disease treatment and management in fish farms In this investigation three fishmeal based diets were served one made of 31 lipid and the other two made of 18 lipid one contained fishmeal and the other krill meal Results demonstrated a significant difference in the immune and inflammatory responses and pathology in heart tissue as the fish were infected with PMCV Fish fed with functional feeds with low lipid content demonstrated milder and delayed inflammatory response and therefore less severe heart lesions at earlier and later stages after PMCV infection 49 Stocking density edit Secondly farmed fish are kept in concentrations never seen in the wild e g 50 000 fish in a 2 acre 8 100 m2 area 50 However fish tend also to be animals that aggregate into large schools at high density Most successful aquaculture species are schooling species which do not have social problems at high density Aquaculturists feel that operating a rearing system above its design capacity or above the social density limit of the fish will result in decreased growth rate and increased feed conversion ratio kg dry feed kg of fish produced which results in increased cost and risk of health problems along with a decrease in profits Stressing the animals is not desirable but the concept of and measurement of stress must be viewed from the perspective of the animal using the scientific method 51 Parasites and disease edit Sea lice particularly Lepeophtheirus salmonis and various Caligus species including C clemensi and C rogercresseyi can cause deadly infestations of both farm grown and wild salmon 52 53 Sea lice are ectoparasites which feed on mucus blood and skin and migrate and latch onto the skin of wild salmon during free swimming planktonic nauplii and copepodid larval stages which can persist for several days 54 55 56 Large numbers of highly populated open net salmon farms can create exceptionally large concentrations of sea lice when exposed in river estuaries containing large numbers of open net farms many young wild salmon are infected and do not survive as a result 57 58 Adult salmon may survive otherwise critical numbers of sea lice but small thin skinned juvenile salmon migrating to sea are highly vulnerable On the Pacific coast of Canada the louse induced mortality of pink salmon in some regions is commonly over 80 59 In Scotland official figures show that more than nine million fish were lost to disease parasites botched treatment attempts and other problems on fish farms between 2016 and 2019 60 One of the treatments for parasite infestations involved bathing fish in hydrogen peroxide 61 which can harm or kill farmed fish if they are in a weak condition or if the chemical concentration is too strong A 2008 meta analysis of available data shows that salmon farming reduces the survival of associated wild salmon populations This relationship has been shown to hold for Atlantic steelhead pink chum and coho salmon The decrease in survival or abundance often exceeds 50 62 Diseases and parasites are the most commonly cited reasons for such decreases Some species of sea lice have been noted to target farmed coho and Atlantic salmon 63 Such parasites have been shown to have an effect on nearby wild fish One place that has garnered international media attention is British Columbia s Broughton Archipelago There juvenile wild salmon must run a gauntlet of large fish farms located off shore near river outlets before making their way to sea The farms allegedly cause such severe sea lice infestations that one study predicted in 2007 a 99 collapse in the wild salmon population by 2011 64 This claim however has been criticized by numerous scientists who question the correlation between increased fish farming and increases in sea lice infestation among wild salmon 65 Because of parasite problems some aquaculture operators frequently use strong antibiotic drugs to keep the fish alive but many fish still die prematurely at rates up to 30 66 Additionally other common drugs used in salmonid fish farms in North America and Europe include anesthetic chemotherapeutic and anthelmintic agents 67 In some cases these drugs have entered the environment 68 Additionally the residual presence of these drugs in human food products has become controversial Use of antibiotics in food production is thought to increase the prevalence of antibiotic resistance in human diseases 69 At some facilities the use of antibiotic drugs in aquaculture has decreased considerably due to vaccinations and other techniques 70 However most fish farming operations still use antibiotics many of which escape into the surrounding environment 71 The lice and pathogen problems of the 1990s facilitated the development of current treatment methods for sea lice and pathogens which reduced the stress from parasite pathogen problems However being in an ocean environment the transfer of disease organisms from the wild fish to the aquaculture fish is an ever present risk 72 nbsp A North American lake trout fishing farm on Lake Titicaca near Copacabana Bolivia Since their introduction in the 1930s trout have been an invasive species endangering the local fish population 73 Ecosystem impacts edit The large number of fish kept long term in a single location contributes to habitat destruction of the nearby areas 74 The high concentrations of fish produce a significant amount of condensed faeces often contaminated with drugs which again affects local waterways Aquaculture not only impacts the fish on the farm but it also influences other species which in return are attracted to or repelled by the farms 75 Mobile fauna such as crustaceans fish birds and marine mammals interact with the process of aquaculture but the long term or ecological effects as a result of these interactions is still unknown Some of these fauna may be attracted or demonstrate repulsion 75 The attraction repulsion mechanism has various direct and indirect effects on wild organisms at individual and population levels The interactions that wild organisms have with aquaculture may have implications on the management of fisheries species and the ecosystem in relation to how the fish farms are structured and organized 75 Siting edit If aquaculture farms are placed in an area with strong current pollutants can be flushed out of the area fairly quickly citation needed This helps manage the pollution problem and also aids in overall fish growth Concern remains that resultant bacterial growth fertilised by fish faeces strips the water of oxygen reducing or killing off the local marine life Once an area has been so contaminated fish farms are typically moved to new uncontaminated areas This practice has angered nearby fishermen 76 Other potential problems faced by aquaculturists include the obtaining of various permits and water use rights profitability concerns about invasive species and genetic engineering depending on what species are involved and interaction with the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea Genetic modification edit In regards to genetically modified farmed salmon concern has been raised over their proven reproductive advantage and how it could potentially decimate local fish populations if released into the wild Biologist Rick Howard did a controlled laboratory study where wild fish and GMO fish were allowed to breed 77 In 1989 AquaBounty Technologies developed the AquAdvantage salmon The concerns and critiques of cultivating this GMO fish in aquaculture are that the fish will escape and interact with other fish ultimately leading to the reproduction with other fishes However the FDA has determined that while net pens would not be the most appropriate to prevent escapes raising the salmon in Panama waters would effectively prevent escape because the water conditions there would fail to support long term survival of any escaped salmon 78 Another method of preventing Aqua Advantage fish from impacting the ecosystems in the case they escape suggested by the FDA was to create sterile triploid females This way concerns on reproducing with other fishes would be out of the question 78 The GMO fish crowded out the wild fish in spawning beds but the offspring were less likely to survive The colorant used to make pen raised salmon appear rosy like the wild fish has been linked with retinal problems in humans 76 Labeling edit In 2005 Alaska passed legislation requiring that any genetically altered fish sold in the state be labeled 79 In 2006 a Consumer Reports investigation revealed that farm raised salmon is frequently sold as wild 80 In 2008 the US National Organic Standards Board allowed farmed fish to be labeled as organic provided less than 25 of their feed came from wild fish This decision was criticized by the advocacy group Food amp Water Watch as bending the rules about organic labeling 81 In the European Union fish labeling as to species method of production and origin has been required since 2002 82 Concerns continue over the labeling of salmon as farmed or wild caught as well as about the humane treatment of farmed fish The Marine Stewardship Council has established an Eco label to distinguish between farmed and wild caught salmon 83 while the RSPCA has established the Freedom Food label to indicate humane treatment of farmed salmon as well as other food products 82 Indoor fish farming editOther treatments such as ultraviolet sterilization ozonation and oxygen injection are also used to maintain optimal water quality Through this system many of the environmental drawbacks of aquaculture are minimized including escaped fish water usage and the introduction of pollutants The practices also increased feed use efficiency growth by providing optimum water quality 84 One of the drawbacks to recirculating aquaculture systems is the need for periodic water exchanges However the rate of water exchange can be reduced through aquaponics such as the incorporation of hydroponically grown plants 85 and denitrification 86 Both methods reduce the amount of nitrate in the water and can potentially eliminate the need for water exchanges closing the aquaculture system from the environment The amount of interaction between the aquaculture system and the environment can be measured through the cumulative feed burden CFB kg M3 which measures the amount of feed that goes into the RAS relative to the amount of water and waste discharged The environmental impact of larger indoor fish farming system will be linked to the local infrastructure and water supply Areas which are more drought prone indoor fish farms might flow out wastewater for watering agricultural farms reducing the water affliction 87 From 2011 a team from the University of Waterloo led by Tahbit Chowdhury and Gordon Graff examined vertical RAS aquaculture designs aimed at producing protein rich fish species 88 89 However because of its high capital and operating costs RAS has generally been restricted to practices such as broodstock maturation larval rearing fingerling production research animal production specific pathogen free animal production and caviar and ornamental fish production As such research and design work by Chowdhury and Graff remains difficult to implement Although the use of RAS for other species is considered by many aquaculturalists to be currently impractical some limited successful implementation of RAS has occurred with high value product such as barramundi sturgeon and live tilapia in the US 90 91 92 93 94 eels and catfish in the Netherlands trout in Denmark 95 and salmon is planned in Scotland 96 and Canada 97 Slaughter methods editMain article Fish welfare at slaughter Tanks saturated with carbon dioxide have been used to make fish unconscious Their gills are then cut with a knife so that the fish bleed out before they are further processed This is no longer considered a humane method of slaughter Methods that induce much less physiological stress are electrical or percussive stunning and this has led to the phasing out of the carbon dioxide slaughter method in Europe 98 Inhumane methods edit According to T Hastein of the National Veterinary Institute Oslo Norway Different methods for slaughter of fish are in place and it is no doubt that many of them may be considered as appalling from an animal welfare point of view 99 A 2004 report by the EFSA Scientific Panel on Animal Health and Welfare explained Many existing commercial killing methods expose fish to substantial suffering over a prolonged period of time For some species existing methods whilst capable of killing fish humanely are not doing so because operators don t have the knowledge to evaluate them 100 Following are some less humane ways of killing fish Air asphyxiation amounts to suffocation in the open air The process can take upwards of 15 minutes to induce death although unconsciousness typically sets in sooner 101 Ice baths or chilling of farmed fish on ice or submerged in near freezing water is used to dampen muscle movements by the fish and to delay the onset of post death decay However it does not necessarily reduce sensibility to pain indeed the chilling process has been shown to elevate cortisol In addition reduced body temperature extends the time before fish lose consciousness 102 CO2 narcosis Exsanguination without stunning is a process in which fish are taken up from water held still and cut so as to cause bleeding According to references in Yue 103 this can leave fish writhing for an average of four minutes and some catfish still responded to noxious stimuli after more than 15 minutes Immersion in salt followed by gutting or other processing such as smoking is applied to eel 104 More humane methods edit Proper stunning renders the fish unconscious immediately and for a sufficient period of time such that the fish is killed in the slaughter process e g through exsanguination without regaining consciousness Percussive stunning involves rendering the fish unconscious with a blow on the head Electric stunning can be humane when a proper current is made to flow through the fish brain for a sufficient period of time Electric stunning can be applied after the fish has been taken out of the water dry stunning or while the fish is still in the water The latter generally requires a much higher current and may lead to operator safety issues An advantage could be that in water stunning allows fish to be rendered unconscious without stressful handling or displacement 105 However improper stunning may not induce insensibility long enough to prevent the fish from enduring exsanguination while conscious 100 Whether the optimal stunning parameters that researchers have determined in studies are used by the industry in practice is unknown 105 Gallery edit nbsp Fish farming in the fjords of southern Chile nbsp Houseboat rafts with cages under for rearing fish near Mỹ Tho Vietnam nbsp Transport boats moored at fish processing plant Mỹ Tho nbsp Communal Zapotec fish farm in Ixtlan de Juarez Mexico nbsp Fish farming traditionally takes place in purpose built tanks in the Skardu region in northern Pakistan nbsp Pisciculture Complex outside Rio Branco Brazil nbsp Fish farm Hogtind in Norway with feeding bargeSee also edit nbsp Agriculture and Agronomy portalAquaculture of catfish Aquaculture of salmonids Kelong Rice fish systemReferences edit a b World aquaculture production of fish crustaceans molluscs etc by principal species in 2013 FAO Yearbook of Fisheries Statistics 2014 Fishfarming Aquaculture Consulting Aquaculture Articles Aquaculture Consultancy Fisheries News 2014 11 08 Archived from the original on 2014 11 08 Retrieved 2022 08 02 Aquaculture Office of Basic Questions about Aquaculture Office of Aquaculture www nmfs noaa gov Retrieved 2016 06 09 World Food and Agriculture Statistical Yearbook 2020 Rome FAO 2020 doi 10 4060 cb1329en ISBN 978 92 5 133394 5 S2CID 242794287 World Food and Agriculture Statistical Yearbook 2021 2021 doi 10 4060 cb4477en ISBN 978 92 5 134332 6 S2CID 240163091 Retrieved 2021 12 13 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help FAO Fisheries amp Aquaculture www fao org Retrieved 2022 08 02 Tlusty M 2002 The benefits and risks of aquacultural production for the aquarium trade Aquaculture 205 3 4 203 219 doi 10 1016 S0044 8486 01 00683 4 Leingang A 25 October 2021 An introduction to ornamental aquaculture TheFishSite Retrieved 19 March 2023 Stress and Physiology Archived 2011 08 16 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Fish at Slaughter PDF Humane Society of the United States Retrieved 2011 06 12 European Food Safety Authority 2004 Opinion of the Scientific Panel on Animal Health and Welfare on a request from the Commission related to welfare aspects of the main systems of stunning and killing the main commercial species of animals The EFSA Journal 2 7 45 doi 10 2903 j efsa 2004 45 Hastein T 2004 Animal welfare issues relating to aquaculture Proceedings of the Global Conference on Animal Welfare an OIE Initiative PDF pp 219 231 archived from the original PDF on 2012 03 25 retrieved 2011 06 12 Jhingran VG 1987 Introduction to Aquaculture Nigerian Institute for Oceanography and Marine Research FAO Rome D R 1993 Aquaculture Training Manual 2nd ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 0 85238 194 6 Manci Bill Fish Farming News Aquaculture production reaches new heights Archived from the original on 2014 07 01 Retrieved 2013 11 07 External links edit nbsp Look up fish farm in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fish farming NOAA Aquaculture Website FAO Fisheries Department and its SOFIA report on fisheries and aquaculture Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform Coalition of environmental groups scientists and First Nations opposed to current salmon farming practices Ethical concerns about the conditions on fish farms The Pure Salmon Campaign website Archived 2010 05 27 at the Wayback Machine Tropical Fish Farming in Florida Nature s Subsidies to Shrimp and Salmon Farming Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fish farming amp oldid 1190387117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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