Posts Tagged ‘salmon’


Reducing Fishmeal in Aquaculture Feeds

Fishmeal (Source: www.nofima.no)

Fishmeal (Source: www.nofima.no)

According to the Nofima website, salmon can grow well on feeds utilising far less fishmeal than is currently standard.

Whilst fishmeal is a valuable source of protein, a combination of price, sustainability and flexibility factors are leading feed producers to source alternatives.  Plant proteins cannot completely replace marine ingredients without affecting the performance of the farmed fish.  Therefore, Nofima is investigating the issue from a different perspective – by increasing the nutritional value of the fishmeal, less product is required.  

Some of the substances that make raw marine ingredients valuable are separated with water in the production of fishmeal.  The water is referred to as ’stickwater’ and in order to exploit it, the stickwater is highly concentrated and returned to the fishmeal.   Examples of substances in the stickwater include: free amino acids, peptides, small proteins, minerals and soluble vitamins.  The production of low value fishmeal for non-aquaculture feed purposes does not include the transfer of the stickwater back to the fishmeal.  This creates a surplus of stickwater that Nofima believe can be utilised in fish feed for the aquaculture industry.

For further information, please click here.


World salmon aquaculture standards to be established

More than 80 of the world’s salmon aquaculture industry stakeholders – including producers, NGO representatives, retailers, government representatives and scientists – met in Edinburgh this week to move forward with developing global standards for salmon aquaculture

The aim of the standards is to  minimise or eliminate the salmon farming industry’s key impacts on the environment and society.

From the innovation perspecitve, this could spell openings for solutions that directly address priority areas identified at the ‘Salmon Aquaculture Dialogue’

More details are available on fishupdate.com


Warming threatens Australian fisheries

Changes in sea temperatures, currents, winds, rainfall, sea levels and extreme weather events threaten to adversely affect fish and shellfish numbers, said a report by the Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO). 
        
Australia’s A$220 million salmon industry off the southern island state of Tasmania could be the hardest hit as salmon are already cultivated close to their upper thermal limit. 
    
By 2030 sea surface temperatures in the South Tasman Sea are expected to rise by 0.6 to 0.9 degrees Celsius and along the northwest coast of Australia between 0.3 and 0.6 degrees Celsius, says Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology. 
     
“This report is yet another reminder that climate change imposes costs on this nation — costs not only in terms of our way of life, but in terms of the economic costs to our industries and to our communities,” said Climate Change Minister Penny Wong. 
    
Australia’s aquaculture industries would have to adapt to climate change through selective breeding and by regulating their marine environments, said the CSIRO report. 
    
“Australian fisheries and aquaculture management policies do not currently incorporate the effects of climate variability or climate change in setting harvest levels or developing future strategies,” said the report.

Click here to read the report


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