From the highlands of Scotland to the Pacific waters of Chile, salmon faming is big business. In Chile alone, the export revenue generated from salmon farming now exceeds US$1 billion each year, a figure that is expected to double in the next few years. Supporters of industrial fish farming have long asserted that this so-called 'blue revolution' is both cheap and a sustainable alternative to the consumption of highly depleted wild-caught fish species
Salmon farming
However, the readily available, artificially red salmon flesh on sale
in the luxury shops across the western world doesn’t reveal the rampant
destruction that this industry causes in regions where the fish are
produced. Expanding at a rapid rate, fish farming now accounts for over
30 percent of all fish protein consumed annually in the world. But it
is single-handedly responsible for the destruction of countless
ecosystems and the fishing communities that rely upon them, in some of
the most vulnerable marine environments on the planet.
Salmon farming involves the raising and feeding of vast numbers of fish
in small contained net pens. A typical farm may contain up to a dozen
pens with anything from ten to 15000 fish in each pen.
Intensive feeding
The feeding requirement of carnivorous farmed fish species such as
salmon or tuna undermine the often-repeated myth that industrial fish
farming offers a solution to over-fishing. To grow a pound of salmon it
is necessary to catch up to five pounds of oily fish species, like
herring, sand-eel, sardine and mackerel, to process into fish feed.
These fish are literally vacuumed up out of the ocean, upsetting the
balance of marine ecosystems.
In British Columbia, Canada and Chile the killer whales, dolphins, seals and
sealions that once frequented their territorial estuaries, are now
shot, trapped, deprived of food or simply repelled with devices
invented by the salmon farmers to protect their stock.
Disease
As with all forms of intensive livestock rearing, the high
concentration of salmon in each net also encourages the spread of
disease. It is common to regularly dose farmed fish with antibiotics in
their food to protect against disease. Ultimately this leads to
the presence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria being found in the
sediments under the pens. These bacteria could pose a risk to human
consumers as well as to the wider ecosystem in which the nets are
placed. The nets are typically located in the fast-flowing waters of
estuary heads, so that the toxic faeces, uneaten food pellets,
parasitic lice, dead fish, escaped non-native fish as well as chemical
and antibiotic residues, are distributed over the whole estuarine
ecosystem.
A typical salmon farm of 200 000 fish produces roughly the same amount
of faecal matter as a town of 62 000 people. The release of this
noxious cocktail into the surrounding waters of salmon farms threatens
the very survival of smaller, native salmon species, the predators that
rely on them and the future of sustainable fishing practices and
communities that rely upon clean and healthy oceans.