I have just come across this press release on research by UC
Santa Barbara's National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis tackles the murky distinction between what consumers traditionally think of as 'wild' or 'farmed' fish and proposes new labeling guidelines.
Press release:
Most people think of seafood as either wild or farmed, but in fact both
categories may apply to the fish you pick up from your grocery store. In
recent years, for example, as much as 40 percent of the Alaskan salmon
catch originated in fish hatcheries, although it may be labeled "all
wild, never farmed."
English: The logo of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, white and red (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
An article produced by a working group of UC
Santa Barbara's National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
(NCEAS) recommends that when a combination of seafood production
techniques are used, this be acknowledged in the marketplace. The group
calls on national and international organizations and governmental
agencies to use the term "hybrid," when applicable. The article is in
press with Marine Policy, and is currently available online.
"Farming
fish and shellfish is generally a different way to produce seafood than
fishing," said Dane Klinger, first author and a Ph.D. student at
Stanford University. "While fisheries traditionally interact with their
target population only at the time of capture, aquaculture, in its
‘purest' state, controls the entire lifecycle of the organism, from egg
to harvest. However, many common types of seafood are produced using
techniques from both fisheries and aquaculture."
Mary Turnipseed,
second author and a former postdoctoral fellow at NCEAS, commented:
"Seafood production is a critical part of global food security, but the
way we study and talk about it often obscures how to achieve the thing
we care the most about: increasing the supply of sustainably produced
seafood to feed a rapidly growing human population. We need to start
collecting more accurate data on how seafood is really produced in
today's world, and a first step will be through replacing the old
farmed-fished dichotomy with a farmed-fished-hybrid classification
scheme."
The article reveals how the strictly traditional
categories of seafood production –– fisheries and aquaculture –– are
insufficient to account for the growth potential and environmental
impacts of the seafood sector. The authors examine several popular
seafood products that are harvested using a combination of techniques
generally ascribed to either fisheries or aquaculture.
The authors
reviewed several cases of fisheries that are augmented by aquaculture.
In addition to the example of hatcheries stocking Pacific salmon in
Alaskan fisheries, hatcheries also stock scallops in New Zealand waters,
and eastern oysters in the Chesapeake Bay, according to the authors.
And American lobsters are fed by bait placed in traps until they reach
legal catch size. In fact, the amount of bait provided to lobsters in
one season is often greater than the volume of lobster catch in the same
season, by a factor of two.
In aquaculture, the lines are often
blurred –– fishing may be involved in production. For example, Bluefin
tuna farms obtain their stock by fishing. These farms also fish for
feed, and use 10 to 20 kilograms of fish for every kilogram of tuna they
produce.
The primary source of information about the world's
fisheries and aquaculture enterprises is the United Nation's Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO). However, the authors explain that the
reporting of data from many developing and developed countries to the
FAO is incomplete. They note that for the 52 percent of countries that
do submit adequate data, "adding a hybrid production category would help
elucidate their national understanding of domestic seafood production,
as well as enhance global understanding of an important food sector."
The
authors conclude by stating the urgency of adding the hybrid category:
"Without these data, transformations in the market for a critical food
and livelihood source for billions of people could occur, with global
analysts and policymakers being the last to know."
The team
responsible for the article, the NCEAS Working Group on Envisioning a
Sustainable Global Seafood Market and Restored Marine Ecosystems,
includes ecologists, economists, policy analysts, members of the seafood
industry, and marine conservation organizations.
In addition to
Klinger and Turnipseed, the authors are Benjamin S. Halpern, NCEAS;
Kimberly A. Selkoe, NCEAS and the Hawaii Institute of Marine Biology;
James L Anderson, University of Rhode Island; Frank Asche, the
University of Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway; Larry Crowder, the Center
for Ocean Solutions, Monterey, Calif.; Atle G. Guttormsen, Norwegian
University of Life Sciences, Aas, Norway; Mary I. O'Connor, University
of British Columbia; Raphael Sagarin, University of Arizona; Geoff
Shester, Oceana, Monterey, Calif.; Martin D. Smith, Duke University; and
Peter Tyedmers, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
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