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

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


(Huntington et al., 2004; Worm et
al., 2006; Skewgar et al., 2007).

5.2 Trash fish and baitfish
Direct environmental impacts
include:


  • increased environmental
    pollution resulting from the
    use of highly perishable and
    water-polluting trash fish-based
    feed items (Tacon et al., 1991;
    Ottolenghi et al., 2004);

  • increased biosecurity and disease risks of feeding unpasteurized trash-fish
    products back to cultured fish and/or wild fish through bait use (Gill, 2000;
    SCAHAW, 2003; Hardy, 2004; anon., 2005);

  • increased fishing pressure on wild juvenile target species for fattening and on
    pelagics for feeding/bait use (Dalton, 2004; Ida, 2006); and

  • increased use of trash fish may also include the captured juveniles of higher-value
    commercial food-fish species and consequent risk of overfishing on available fish
    stocks (FAO, 2004).


Indirect social impacts include:


  • increasing trash fish prices due to high demand for trash fish for use as aquaculture
    feed, which may place these fish out of the economic reach of the poor and needy
    for direct human consumption as an affordable food source (Edwards, Tuan and
    Allan, 2004).


5.3 Krill
Despite the fact that there are over 85 known species of krill (Nicol and Endo, 1997)
and that total reported krill landings reached over 1 118 165 tonnes in 2004, only one
krill species is currently reported, viz. Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) (FAO,
2006a). In view of the important ecological role played by krill in marine food webs, it
is imperative that all krill species be reported and quantified by fishers for transparency,
traceability and the long-term sustainability of the krill fisheries sector (Nicol, 2006;
Murphy et al., 2007). Removal of large quantities of krill from the marine ecosystem
may have adverse long-term ecosystem impacts on dependent species, and in particular
for many protected marine mammals and birds (Reid and Croxall, 2001; Hill et al.,
2006).

marine ecosystem and potential
ecosystem and biodiversity impacts
upon other dependent piscivorous
animal species, including other
fish species, birds and mammals


  1. POTENTIAL ALTERNATIVE USES OF FEED-FISH SPECIES
    6.1 Increased use of traditional feed-fish species for direct human
    consumption
    6.1.1 Frozen and preserved products
    As mentioned previously, an increasing portion of the catch of Chilean jack mackerel
    and other pelagics (e.g. Patagonian grenadier and chub mackerel) is being processed
    for direct human consumption (Figure 48). Despite the fact that the average price for
    frozen jack mackerel and fishmeal is very similar (Figure 49), the reported fishmeal and
    fish oil yield from jack mackerel is about 23 and 5–7 percent, respectively, in contrast


FIGURE 49
Chilean prices for major product lines

Source: SUBPESCA (2005)
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