Aquaculture's Troubled Harvest
Fish Farms Threaten Health
of Consumers and Aquatic Habitats
by Bruce Barcott
Mother Jones magazine, December
2001 / Project Censored 2003
Farmed fish provide one-third of the seafood
consumed by people worldwide. In the U.S., aquaculture supplies
almost all of the catfish and trout as well as half of the shrimp
and salmon. In the early 1990s, the fledgling aquaculture industry
was hailed as a remedy to the problem of marine overfishing and
the subsequent decline in jobs for fishermen. unfortunately, aquaculture's
harm to people and surrounding environments may be greater than
its highly anticipated benefits.
A recent Canadian study found that a single
serving of farmed salmon contains three to six times the World
Health Organization's recommended daily intake limit for dioxins
and PCBs. A salmon farm of 200,000 fish releases an amount of
nitrogen, phosphorus, and fecal matter roughly equivalent to the
nutrient waste in untreated sewage from 20,000 to 25,000 people.
Farmed salmon (usually called Atlantic or cultured Atlantic salmon)
are genetically modified to be larger and have a 50 to 70 percent
higher metabolic rate. When these super-fish get into the wild
they compete unfairly for food resources, causing an increased
rate of starvation among wild fish.
There is also a wide range of chemicals
used in aquaculture, including antibiotics, parasiticides, pesticides,
hormones, anesthetics, minerals, and vitamins. The use of these
antibiotics is a health risk for fish as well as people, since
it promotes the spread of antibiotic-resistance in both human
and fish pathogens.
Canada is a major target for salmon farming.
At first, salmon farms were welcomed for the jobs they would bring.
Within a few years, however, large foreign corporations bought
out many of the smaller operators. As the new operators took control,
farms expanded and anchored their net pens in places where wild
salmon smolts rested and fed on their way out to sea. Shrimp fishermen
began pulling up traps full of back muck-a gooey mixture of feces,
excess antibiotic-laden fish feed, and decayed salmon carcasses
that had drifted out of the pens.
Other problems persist. Piercing acoustic
sirens have been installed over salmon pens to keep seals and
sea lions away, and the noise has caused killer whales to flee
the Canadian archipelago. To rid their fish of sea lice, farmers
dose them with ivermectin, a potent anti-parasitic known to kill
some species of shrimp. Farmed fish contracted antibiotic-resistant
stains of furunculous, a fatal disease that produces ugly skin
ulcers; wild salmon that migrated past their pens also contracted
the disease. Said one Canadian fishing guide, "I've been
catching salmon up here all my life. I'd never seen a fish with
a lesion until the farms came in."
Glen Neidrauer, a game warden who patrols
the archipelago for Canada's Department of Fisheries and Oceans,
said," I can appreciate the values of the jobs, but why would
you jeopardize a place so pristine? We're not just talking fish.
All the birds, bears, and sea mammals depend on the wild salmon.
I wonder how long you can mess with that until they finally don't
return."
***
Human numbers continue to grow exponentially and feeding ourselves
is an ever-expanding venture. The oceans today are experiencing
impacts never before seen. Evidence of overfishing's impacts continues
to mount. Aquaculture has been the industrialized technology employed
to grow and harvest numerous aquatic resources.
For the past 40 years, beginning in Norway,
salmon have been farmed in ocean pens. Environmental regulations
in Norway have driven many to the Western Hemisphere. Today the
inlets of British Columbia are caged off for the farming of salmon-Atlantic
salmon to be accurate. Despite promises to contain the fish, an
estimated 40,000 to 1 million have escaped and are spawning in
streams native salmon use. Other impacts that have been documented
show "dead zones" immediately adjacent to the salmon
pens. A pen of 200,000 fish produces as much fecal waste as a
city of more than 25,000 people.
We have seen this problem before with
land grown livestock. Swine farms are notorious for their environmental
impacts. Now we are seeing these impacts from aquaculture in the
U.S. and Canada.
***
This is merely one answer to the question
that will dominate both environmental and consumer reporting in
the next decade: What's in our food?
In the case of farmed salmon, the answer
is too many antibiotics and a legacy of polluted marine waters.
I came away from the story fairly hopeful, because this is an
issue where individual consumers, not bought-off politicians,
hold the power. The equation is simple, if strangely counterintuitive:
Eat wild salmon to save wild salmon. Because the farmed stuff
is junk, through and through.
In early 2002, the Canadian government
lifted its seven-year moratorium on expanding British Columbia
salmon farms. Multinational corporations could add 10 to 15 new
B.C. farm sites every year, effectively doubling the industry's
footprint over the next decade. Chile continues to dump below-market-price
farmed salmon into the U.S., driving down worldwide prices and
making it nearly impossible for Alaskan wild salmon fishermen,
who operate sustainable, well-managed fisheries, to make a living.
Meanwhile, Canadian researcher Michael Easton published a study
in May 2002 that found elevated levels of PCBs in British Columbia
farmed salmon. "Depending on whether you are a child or not,"
said Easton, "you would be advised not to eat farmed salmon
more than once a week."
Before you get active on this issue, the
best thing you can do is eat the stuff. Try a farmed salmon side
by side with the real wild thing. You will become well informed
with every forkful. The best information, pro and con, starts
at Canada's David Suzuki Foundation <www.davidsuzuki.org>
and the B.C. Salmon Farmers Association Web sites <www.salmonfarmers.org>.
Sources: MOTHER JONES, November/December
2001 Title: "Aquaculture's Troubled Harvest" Author:
Bruce Barcott
PEW OCEANS COMMISSION REPORT on Marine
Aquaculture, 2001, <www.pewoceans.org> Title: "Marine
Aquaculture in the United States: Environmental Impacts and Policy
Options" Authors: Rebecca J. Goldburg, Matthew S. Elliott
& Rosamond L. Naylor
Project Censored 2003
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