Consuming small fish instead of farmed salmon could make seafood production more sustainable

Feeding small fish to people instead of to farmed salmon could make seafood production more sustainable
Panel (b) demonstrates how 2014 production used 33,000 t of fish oil, which required 227,500 t of trimmings and 460,000 t of wild-caught fish. Points and uncertainty bars reflect variation in the composition of trimmings and wild-caught fish in fishmeal and fish oil (FMFO), showing the Scottish salmon estimate (lower), global average (point), and EU average (upper). Salmon production used 55,000 t of the fishmeal produced leaving 99,688 t spare. Credit: Willer et al., 2022, PLOS Sustainability and Transformation, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

Farming Atlantic salmon requires a high volume of wild-caught fish as feed, but produces only a small percentage of the world's farmed fish supply. A study published March 1 in PLOS Sustainability and Transformation by David F. Willer at University of Cambridge, United Kingdom, and colleagues suggests redirecting wild-caught fish towards human consumption instead of salmon farming could relieve pressure on fish stocks while increasing seafood production.

Increased demand for seafood has driven an expansion in aquaculture. However, 90% of commercial fish feed is made from food-grade fish such as sardines and anchovies that are edible to humans. To analyze the efficiency of aquaculture in terms of net nutrient production, researchers first quantified the volume of micronutrients and retained by fish-fed farmed salmon using 2014 data on Scotland's farmed salmon production. They calculated the volume of micronutrients used as aquaculture inputs and compared it to salmon aquaculture nutrient outputs. Using these data, the researchers modeled several scenarios to assess potential sustainability benefits of alternative seafood systems.

The researchers found that in 2014, 460,000 metric tons of wild-caught fish were used to produce 179,000 metric tons of Scottish salmon. 76% of the wild-caught fish were edible for human consumption. The data also suggest that multiple alternative seafood production models would be more efficient in terms of net nutrient production, so could significantly reduce wild fish capture while increasing global seafood supply. However, these data were limited to only one year (2014). Future studies are needed to better understand how to operationalize a global shift away from farmed fish toward sustainable fisheries.

Feeding small fish to people instead of to farmed salmon could make seafood production more sustainable
Four production scenarios are presented in (a): I is farmed salmon fed on fishmeal and fish oil (FMFO) from wild-caught fish and trimmings (business-as-usual); II is salmon produced only from trimmings, with the spare edible wild-caught fish supplied directly to humans; III is trimmings-only salmon with equal portions of wild-caught fish and mussels; IV is trimmings-only salmon with equal portions of wild-caught fish and carp. In (b) the micronutrient concentration of Scenarios II—IV are shown relative to Scenario I (red dashed line). In (c) changes to seafood production required for each scenario are shown by the spare volume of wild-caught fish (relative to wild-caught fish in FMFO, Fig 1B of the manuscript), the fishmeal required for production, and the total volume of seafood produced corrected for edible portion sizes. Credit: Willer et al., 2022, PLOS Sustainability and Transformation, CC-BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)

According to the authors, "Feed production now accounts for 90% of the environmental footprint of salmonid production. Allowing salmonid production to expand further via its current approach will place exceptional stress on global fish stocks already at their limit. Our results suggest that limiting the volume of wild-caught fish used to produce farmed salmon feed may relieve pressure on wild fish stocks while increasing supply of nutritious wild fish for human consumption."

The authors add: "Nutritious are being squandered by salmon farming. Scientists reveal that eating the wild-caught fish destined for would allow nearly 4 million tons of to be left in the sea while providing an extra 6 million tons of seafood."

More information: Willer DF, Robinson JPW, Patterson GT, Luyckx K (2022) Maximising sustainable nutrient production from coupled fisheries-aquaculture systems. PLOS Sustain Transform 1(3): e0000005. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pstr.0000005

Citation: Consuming small fish instead of farmed salmon could make seafood production more sustainable (2022, March 1) retrieved 23 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2022-03-consuming-small-fish-farmed-salmon.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Farmed fish breeding with wild fish is changing the life cycle of wild fish

88 shares

Feedback to editors