The Best Aquaculture Practices (BAP) program, part of the The Global Aquaculture Alliance (GAA) has
expanded its coverage of shellfish with the completion of new standards
for mussel farms.
The new standards encompass all production systems
for mussels, including cultivation on the seabed or on poles, and
suspended cultures such as long-line culture and raft-and-rack culture.
They also cover various mussel species, including blue mussels,
Mediterranean mussels, Chilean mussels, New Zealand Greenshell mussels
and Asian green mussels.
The addition of BAP mussel farm standards represents
a key advancement for the BAP program, as the new standards will be
used as a template for broader mollusk farm standards that cover other
commercial species, including clams, oysters, scallops and abalone.
“GAA was delighted to collaborate with stakeholders
in the conservation, academic and mussel-farming communities to develop
these ground-breaking BAP standards that serve another key sector of the
aquaculture industry,” said George Chamberlain Global Aquaculture Alliance president . “Together with recently implemented multi-species
standards for fish and shellfish, GAA is advancing in its mission of
furthering responsible aquaculture to meet world food needs.”
As with all BAP standards, the mussel farm standards
address social and environmental responsibility, food safety, animal
welfare and traceability.
View the guidelines here.
The final mussel standards represent the outcome of
an exhaustive process that considered marketplace expectations and
existing BAP elements while recognizing that mussel production systems
differ significantly from the finfish and crustacean systems on which
other BAP standards are focused.
The technical content of the BAP mussel farm
standards was honed by a technical committee under the direction of Dr.
Andrea Alfaro of Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand. The
BAP Standards Oversight Committee - whose members represent a balance
of stakeholders from industry, NGOs and academia - recommended
refinements to the standards before approving them for release.
Suggestions received from farmers and farming
groups, non-governmental organisations and academics during the 60-day
public-comment period, which ended on June 8, were also integrated into
the final standards.
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