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Many People Think That Buying Farmed Salmon Saves Wild Fish. Think Again. |
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"To date, conclusive evidence shows that three Pacific salmon-bearing
systems currently support presumably wild-spawned juvenile Atlantic salmon.
Juvenile Atlantic salmon have also been found in four additional rivers,
but analyses suggest these fish escaped from fresh water hatcheries on
the same river system in which they were found. While only seven rivers
have been identified as holding juvenile Atlantic salmon, it must be noted
that less than one percent of potential rearing habitat on Vancouver Island
alone has been surveyed."
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"In Norway the most serious disease effects to date have been the
introductions to wild populations of lethal parasites and diseases from
cultured fish. In recent years more than 30 (now 41 - ed.) of Norway's
500 salmon populations have become so infected by the parasite Gyrodactylus
salaries that they have had to be completely destroyed
Efforts by
Norwegian authorities to prevent the further spread of the parasite to
rivers and hatcheries have involved a rotenone treatment program (total
poisoning of rivers to kill all fish, infected as well as uninfected)." "Infectious salmon anemia (ISA) is a contagious viral disease, first
detected on Norway salmon farms in 1984
It was assumed that ISA
was confined to Norway until it started appearing on New Brunswick (Canada)
salmon farms in 1996. Since then, the virus has also been found on salmon
farms in Scotland (May 1998) and in Chile (March 2000). By 1998 the disease
had spread to so many farms in New Brunswick that 25% of the industry
was temporarily shut down and over 1.2 million farmed salmon were slaughtered
in an effort to control the disease
In October, 1999, biologists
with the Atlantic Salmon Federation discovered wild Atlantic salmon infected
with the ISA virus in New Brunswick's Megaguadavic River (ASF 1999). This
was the first documentation of wild salmon containing the deadly virus.
The biologists also discovered escaped farmed salmon with ISA in the river." |
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"The most publicized challenge is competition from farmed salmon,
which accounted for 58 percent of global salmon production last year,
up from around 10 percent just 15 years ago. U.S. imports of farmed Atlantic
salmon jumped from 289 million pounds in 2000 to 358 million pounds in
2001, and prices have plunged considerably over the last several months." |
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Dye! |
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"Almost 100 percent of all farmed salmon is artificially colored
with either canthaxanthin or astaxanthin, a process sometimes euphemistically
called 'color finishing.' Responding to an ever-increasing demand for
salmon--which must, however, be pink -- several major chemical companies
produce canthaxanthin and astaxanthin for color finishing. Swiss chemical
giant Hoffman La Roche synthetically produces canthaxanthin and an astaxanthin
called Carophyll Pink from petrochemicals and provides customers with
its SalmoFan -- much like an artist's color wheel but in various shades
of pink--to help salmon farmers and buyers create and/or order a color
that sells well." "Astaxanthin is the major carotenoid responsible for the pink-red
pigmentation of fish and crustaceans. Aquatic animals (meaning farm-raised
aquatic animals -ed.) cannot synthesize astaxanthin and therefore it must
be supplemented in the diet
Consumer research has suggested that
consumers will pay more for redder salmon, acknowledging that a redder
salmon commands a premium price." (from Hoffman-La Roche promotional
materials -ed.) |
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Selling authenticity short |
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"At a panel discussion on 3 November, at the West Coast Seafood
Show in Los Angeles, Executive Chef Daniel Long of Bon Appetit Management
Company said: 'To be perfectly honest, it [farmed salmon] is crap. Wild
salmon is much better. I think we need to push salmon back to being a
seasonal thing.'" |
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--Reifenberg, A. (2000). "Taste Test: Wild vs Farmed Salmon." The Wall Street Journal, 5 January, NW3. |
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Poop! |
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"Nutrient loading from aquaculture can be significant on a local
scale. A salmon farm of 200,000 fish releases an amount of nitrogen, phosphorus,
and fecal matter roughly equivalent to the nutrient waste in the untreated
sewage from 20,000, 25,000, and 65,000 people, respectively (Hardy, 2000b)." |
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Treating the ocean like a cesspool |
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"A wide body of literature documents raised levels of organic matter
underneath cage operations (Beveridge, 1996), which change the chemical
and biological structure of the sediment. Effects reported from salmon-farming
include a dead zone under pens in severe cases, surrounded by a ring of
decreased animal diversity. Impacts can extend roughly 500 feet (150 m)
from the site (Beveridge, 1996), although 100 feet (30 m) is a more usual
limit (EAO, 1998)." |
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Epidemics! |
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"In 1998, salmon farmers in BC used a total of 6.4 metric tonnes
of antibiotics for their salmon production (Sheppard, M.E., 2000)." |
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"A near collapse of pink salmon runs in the Broughton Archipelago, where more than three million fish failed to return to spawning rivers this fall, is being blamed on fish farms in the area. "Close to 30 farms, which raise Atlantic salmon in open sea pens, have clustered in the bays and inlets on the approaches to spawning streams in the region, on the mainland coast off northern Vancouver Island. "Alexandra Morton, a biologist who has long been a critic of fish farms, said yesterday the farms have created a perfect winter breeding ground for sea lice, which flourish in the farms because of the concentration of fish and artificial lighting. "She held a press conference yesterday with the Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform, a coalition of 10 organizations opposed to open-ocean fish farms on the B.C. coast. "'In the spring, there are clouds of literally billions of lice larvae coming out of these farm pens,' Ms. Morton said. "'Sea lice are natural in the environment. They infect the farmed fish and then they explode in numbers over the winter because the conditions are just right. They moved back to the wild stocks last spring, just when the pinks were migrating through. "'This is not a theory. I've done the science on this.'" --Hume, M. (2002). "B.C. salmon runs near collapse, biologist says." National Post, 25 September, A6. See also Salmon Farms, Sea Lice and Wild Salmon, a report by the Watershed Watch Salmon Society, 2001, p. 10. |
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A wild world in peril |
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"In B.C., sealice are often treated using ivermectin. A high proportion
of the administered chemical is excreted unchanged by the salmon, and
accumulates in marine sediment beneath and in the vicinity of the fish
farm... The lethal effect of ivermectin on the polychaetes is particularly
interesting. This large class of marine worms is often a crucial part
of many marine food chains. They also are key to the decomposition of
accumulated organic matter, such as fish feces and uneaten feed that accumulates
under salmon farms. The worms constantly turn over the marine sediment
allowing oxygenated water to reach aerobic decomposing bacteria. Without
these worms, the marine sediment can become depleted in oxygen and proper
decomposition cannot occur." |
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"Not surprisingly, investigators have shown that antibiotics can
significantly alter the microbial community found in marine sediment.
Not only can the total amount of bacteria be reduced, but also the relative
abundance among the different species is altered. Sediment dwelling bacteria
provide a number of key services, in particular the cycling of nutrients
such as nitrogen, phosphorous and sulfur. Measurements reveal that antibiotics
found in marine sediment near salmon farms lower the conversion rates
for sulphates and nitrates." |
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"The use of antibiotics, however, is arguably a health risk for
people and farmed fish, since it promotes the spread of antibiotic-resistance
in both human and fish pathogens. At least a few types of bacteria associated
with fish, such as Streptococcus, can be pathogenic to humans (Weinstein
et al., 1997). If strains of these bacteria develop higher levels of resistance
to antibiotics, infections by these bacteria may be difficult to treat.
More generally, resistance can potentially spread to other types of bacteria,
including human pathogens, through gene transfer mechanisms special to
bacteria (Dixon, 2000).... A U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) literature review indicates that certain antibiotic resistance genes
in Salmonella-bacteria that can cause severe food poisoning in people-might
have emerged following antibiotic use in Asian aquaculture (Angulo, 1999)." |
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Toxins! |
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"Fish meal and fish oil are the most heavily contaminated feed materials" |
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"This pilot study examined five commercial salmon feeds, four farmed
salmon (one Atlantic, three chinooks) and four wild salmon (one chinook,
one chum, two sockeyes) from the Pacific Coast for PCBs (112 congeners),
polybrominated diphenylethers (PBDEs ¯ 41 congeners), 25 organochlorine
pesticides (OPs), 20 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and methyl
and inorganic mercury. The farmed salmon showed consistently higher levels
of PCBs, PBDEs, OPs (except toxaphene) than the wild salmon. The mean
concentrations in pg/g were 51,216 vs 5302 for total PCBs; 2668 vs 178
for total PBDEs; 41,796 vs 12,164 for total OPs (except toxaphene). The
farmed salmon levels are likely a consequence of the elevated level of
contamination found in the commercial salmon feed (mean concentrations
in pg/g were 65,535 for total PCBs; 1889 for total BPDEs; 48,124 for total
OPs except toxaphene)." "The health significance of human exposure to PCBs and dioxins has
been subject of extensive discussions. The most recent assessment of the
risks for human health from PCBs and dioxins has been performed in 1998
1 , when a WHO consultation group agreed on a tolerable daily intake (TDI)
of PCDDs/PCDFs ("dioxins") and dioxin-like PCBs in the range
of 1 - 4 pg Toxic Equivalents (TEQ)/kg body weight, stressing that the
upper range of the TDI of 4 pg TEQ/kg should be considered as a maximum
tolerable intake on a provisional basis and that the ultimate goal is
to reduce human intake levels below 1 pg TEQ/kg bw/day." |
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Oligopoly! |
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"With all the consolidation going on, it is now estimated that just
four companies - Stolt, Marine Harvest, Pan Fish and Heritage - produce
more than half of the farmed salmon sold annually in North America." |
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Less Food! |
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"In 1999, global production of farmed salmon reached 871,200 tons." "Although aquaculture is sometimes promoted as an alternative to capture fisheries, some types of aquaculture use huge quantities of wild-caught fish as feed in the form of fish-meal and fish oil, and thus indirectly affect marine ecosystems thousands of miles from fish farms (Naylor et al., 2000). Fish-meal and fish oil are produced primarily from processing small, oily fish such as anchovies, sardines, and menhaden, which are caught for this purpose. A huge quantity of these 'forage' fish -roughly a third of the global catch- is turned into fish-meal and fish oil each year (FAO, 2000b). Salmon, eels, striped bass, and many other marine and brackish water species are carnivores, and they rely on large amounts of fish meal and fish oil in their diets 2000). "Many industry experts expect that within a decade, the global aquaculture
industry will use two-thirds of world fish-meal production, and there
may already be a serious fish oil shortage (Starkey, 2000)." |
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"It can be argued that if humans were to eat wild salmon, this too
would represent a loss of wild fish, since they are after all carnivorous.
This is true; given the high global human population, eating lower on
the food chain will result in more food overall. But if the comparison
is strictly between eating wild or eating farmed salmon, it is more sustainable
to eat wild. When we fish for wild salmon we are taking part in a predator-prey
relationship that is influenced by the many ecological factors that affect
wild salmon supply. The complex checks and balances of nature are such
that salmon represent a certain amount of the marine biomass. As the many
factors that determine this biomass fluctuate, the amount of salmon also
fluctuates in a very complex way. This puts a cap on how much salmon is
available for our consumption. If we overfish, if there are global weather
changes or if the organisms that wild salmon feed on are not as plentiful
for some reason, there is less salmon for us to use, until the system
can recover. But when we farm salmon, we are artificially setting a production
level that is mainly determined by market rather than ecological forces.
Rather than fluctuating with nature's checks and balances, the production
level is relatively steady and can grow as demand grows. The salmon biomass,
and that of the organisms that salmon use for food, is no longer ecosystem-based.
The salmon farm becomes a sink for other ocean biomass and we determine
how much of that biomass should be salmon." |
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Emptying the oceans |
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"Figure 37 shows that, in 1999, 4 percent of the stocks appeared
to be underexploited, 21 percent were moderately exploited, 47 percent
fully exploited, 18 percent overexploited, 9 percent depleted and 1 percent
recovering."
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Where's Your Wild Salmon Come From? |
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Seven-year averages for landings of Pacific salmon are totaled from these
sources:
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What's the Big Idea? |
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Lichatowich, J. (1999). Salmon Without Rivers. Island Press: Washington D.C., p. 8. |
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Daly, H. (1996). Beyond Growth. Beacon Press: Boston, p. 59. |
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Facts & Footnotes Compiled by Howard Silverman () with Seth Zuckerman.
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