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Thursday, December 18, 2008 - 3:00 AM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire. When the North Atlantic’s stocks of cod, tuna, halibut, and other big ocean predators threatened to collapse in the 1990s
after decades of overfishing, consumers and conservationists alike
turned their hopes to farming: raising pellet-fattened fish in net pens
in bays and channels. But a sweeping analysis published last February shows that farming has only made matters worse for wild salmon.
Salmon farms were already known to weaken wild populations by
exposing them to lice infestations, interbreeding with escaped farmed
fish, and contaminants such as antibiotics, pesticides, and
disinfectants. http://www.soulcast.com/Louis3J3SheehanTo look at farming’s impact on overall survival rates,
marine biologists Jennifer Ford and the late Ransom Myers of Dalhousie
University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, examined three decades’ worth of
data from Ireland, Scotland, and Canada. The studies measured fish
abundance and survival with rod catches, helicopter flyovers, and
trapping by fences and fish wheels. http://www.soulcast.com/Louis3J3Sheehan
Even under ordinary circumstances, salmon have it rough. Born in
rivers, they must head out to sea to mature, and 90 percent die before
returning to their native waters to spawn.
Ford and Myers found that proximity to fish farms reduced both the
overall abundance and the survival of wild juveniles by more than 50
percent in just one generation. “People expected a decrease of 10,
maybe 20 percent at most,” Ford says. “We were quite surprised.” http://www.soulcast.com/Louis3J3Sheehan
Salmon farming has also been criticized for reducing wild
populations of anchovies and sardines, which are used to make fish-meal
pellets. http://www.soulcast.com/Louis3J3Sheehan
At present more than half of all store-bought salmon comes from
farms, and other species, including cod and halibut, are being
considered for cultivation. “We need to look at what happened with
salmon farming as we develop technologies for all these other fish,”
Ford says. “As it stands, aquaculture is worse on salmon stocks than
the fisheries were.” Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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