Fish as feed inputs for aquaculture: practices, sustainability and implications

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168 Fish as feed inputs for aquaculture – Practices, sustainability and implications



  • Round sardinella – total reported
    landings of 142 982 tonnes in 2004,
    to which the Bolivarian Republic of
    Venezuela contributed 99.2 percent
    (Figure 13);

  • Atlantic mackerel – total reported
    landings of 107 682 tonnes in 2004,
    to which the United States of
    America contributed 50 percent and
    Canada 50 percent (Figure 12);

  • Pacific anchoveta – total reported
    landings of 73 203 tonnes in 2004,
    to which Panama contributed
    64.2 percent and Colombia
    28.9 percent (Figure 14);

  • Pacific herring – total reported
    landings of 57 981 tonnes in 2004,
    to which United States of America
    contributed 58.9 percent and
    Canada 41.1 percent (Figure 15);

    • Pacific thread herring – total
      reported landings of 54 105
      tonnes in 2004, to which Panama
      contributed 84.1 percent and
      Ecuador 15.9 percent (Figure 15);

      • Brazilian sardinella – total
        reported landings of 53 421 tonnes
        in 2004, to which Brazil contributed
        100 percent (Figure 16);



    • Capelin – total reported landings
      of 52 351 tonnes in 2004, to which
      Canada contributed 69.1 percent
      and Greenland 30.9 percent
      (Figure 16);

      • Atka mackerel – total reported
        landings of 49 508 tonnes in 2004
        (58 733 tonnes in 2005; NMFS,
        2007), to which the United States
        of America contributed 100 percent
        (Figure 16);

        • Argentine anchovy – total
          reported landings of 39 367 tonnes
          in 2004, to which Argentina
          contributed 94.7 percent (Figure
          14).
          Other fish species destined for
          reduction (either from by-products
          or whole):







  • Alaska pollock – total reported landings 1 522 860 tonnes in 2004 (1 547 010
    tonnes in 2005; NMFS, 2007), to which the United States of America contributed
    99.8 percent (Figure 8);

  • Argentine hake – total reported landings 467 748 tonnes in 2004, to which
    Argentina contributed 89.1 percent, Uruguay 8.9 percent and the Falkland


FIGURE 10
Total capture fisheries landings of Gulf menhaden and Atlantic
menhaden within the Americas

Source: FAO (2006a), except 2005 data from NMFS (2007)

Source: FAO (2006a)

FIGURE 11
Total capture fisheries landings of Araucanian herring and
Argentine hake within the Americas

FIGURE 12
Total capture fisheries landings of Atlantic herring and Atlantic
mackerel within the Americas

Source: FAO (2006a)
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