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Donnie Dann's
Conservation Alerts
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Donnie Dann's Conservation Alerts
donniebird@yahoo.com
Once and Healthy Fish
Volume 13 Number 5 September, 2009
Most nutritionists, researchers and other
scientists agree that omega-3-rich seafood is one of the most
nourishing of all foods. A variety of studies have shown that in most
individuals fish could help fight cancer, cardiovascular disease,
immune function, brain health, rheumatoid arthritis, etc. Cold water
oily fish including sardines, herring, mackerel and anchovies are
excellent sources but salmon, the fish chosen by most Americans, is
near or at the top of the list.
Prior to the early 1960’s, when salmon farming began in Norway, the
only choice was the wild caught variety. Undammed rivers stocks were
abundant in the Pacific, but it was largely a seasonal delicacy, and
one relished for its incomparable taste and nutritional value. The
Atlantic salmon fishery had been in decline for over 100 years for a
variety of reasons, including dams, overfishing, increased levels of
pollutants and higher water temperatures. The EPA has designated the
Atlantic salmon Endangered; thus, Atlantic salmon on a restaurant menu
is farmed.
This was all before the era of factory trawlers, which has further
contributed to drastic reductions in the wild stocks almost
everywhere. For that big picture see my newsletter of May 2007,
(attached for reference). (web editor note: not attached)
So what if salmon are farmed? Just what is salmon farming and what are the implications?
- The salmon raised on a farm was
probably born in a plastic tray instead of leaping up rocky streams;
the first 3 years of its life were spent like a marine couch potato.
- These
young fish are vaccinated to survive the diseases that ravish it and
the tens of thousands of others where it lives, in acres of net-covered
pens tethered offshore.
- It was likely dosed with antibiotics to ward off infection or fed pesticides to protect it from bloodsucking sea lice.
- It was fed a diet of synthetic pigment to avoid what would otherwise be its color of unappetizing pale gray
- If
all this was not bad enough to the farmed variety and their human
consumers, the same parasitic sea lice in the pens prey on and infect
juvenile wild salmon when they swim past on their way from inland
rivers to the ocean.
- Escapees
from the pens interbreed and hybridize with wild fish and spread
parasites, pollution, and infectious diseases, and they genetically
weaken wild fish populations
- Their
waste and uneaten feed smother the sea floor beneath these farms,
generating bacteria that consume oxygen vital to shellfish and other
bottom-dwelling sea creatures
- According
to a new analysis by government advisors in Britain, among 100
different worst-case examples of fruit, vegetables, meat and other
foodstuffs polluted by pesticides over the past five years, farmed
Atlantic salmon comes out worst. Every fish sample in the batch tested
by scientists was found to contain at least three toxic chemicals.
Perhaps the direst of all these consequences is that these farms worsen
the problem they were hoping to eliminate: filling the demand from
growing world populations for seafood and allowing wild stocks to
regenerate. This is because the captive salmon, which are carnivores,
require a diet of fish, unlike vegetarian catfish that are fed grain on
farms (for the good and the bad in farm raised catfish see: http://www.grist.org/article/2009-08-07-farm-raised-catfish).
Some 2.4 pounds of wild fish are required to produce one pound of
farmed salmon.. That means grinding up a lot of sardines, anchovies,
mackerel, herring and other fish is required to produce the oil and
meal compressed into pellets of salmon chow. This does not take the
strain off wild fisheries but adds to it.
There is a silver lining for salmon lovers in this dreary farmed fish
story, and it’s in Alaska. The healthiest populations and habitats are
there and the Alaska Salmon Fishery recently received the Marine
Stewardship Council's award for sustainability. Because these
fisheries are so well-managed, fresh-caught, wild salmon are available
nearly eight months of the year and high quality "frozen at sea" (FAS)
line-caught fish are available during the interim.
This Newsletter may be excerpted, reproduced or circulated without limitation.
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