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Farmed Fish

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Farmed seafoods have been reported to be more and less healthy than wild caught ... And today's supplies of farmed fish are now lower in PCB's than most wild fish. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Farmed Fish


1
Farmed Fish Getting the Facts Straight
  • Kevin Fitzsimmons, Ph.D.Professor of
    Environmental Science
  • University of Arizona, Department of Soil,
    Water, and Environmental Science
  • Tucson, Az
  • Feb. 19, 2007

2
Overview
  • Fish and other seafood are universally touted as
    highly nutritious and a key part of healthy
    eating
  • Some seafoods have been identified as
    contaminated or variable in nutritional values
  • Farmed seafoods have been reported to be more and
    less healthy than wild caught
  • Review of the science and consideration of
    benefits and risks

3
Introduction
  • Seafoods, and fish specifically, are high in
    protein, minerals and vitamins
  • The fats that are present, tend to be
    polyunsaturated fatty acids
  • The omega 3 fatty acids are especially important

4
Remember organic chem?
  • Found in many marine algae, canola, walnuts,
    soybean, and flaxseeds
  • Essential part of the nutritional requirement of
    almost all organisms
  • Important in neural and cardiovascular functions

5
Facts about fatty acids in salmon
  • Most farmed salmon have slightly lower PUFAs
    than wild salmon
  • However, the farmed product is still the next
    highest source of PUFAs available
  • Moreover, farmers are rapidly adjusting feeds to
    increase omega 3s

6
Facts about fatty acids in other farmed fish
  • Fatty acids can also be elevated in non-salmonid
    fish depending on feed ingredients
  • Higher omega-3s are expensive and will likely
    require higher price
  • Tilapia - Moderate in PUFAs 0.387 g/100g raw
  • 0.600 g/100g cooked
  • Tilapia - Moderate omega 3 FAs 0.141 g/100g raw
  • 0.220 g/100g cooked
  • Source USDA- ARS Lab

7
PCBs in Salmon and other fish
  • One study found higher PCBs (which may be a
    carcinogen) in Scottish farmed salmon compared to
    wild fish
  • Several subsequent studies found PCBs in wild
    and farmed fish, but level was dependent on PCBs
    in source water, wild prey fish or in fish feed
  • Level of PCBs in all cases were minute and well
    inside safe levels and comparable to many other
    common foods

8
PCB risk vs. cardiovascular risk
  • Risk and Benefits
  • Levels in salmon vary from 0 to 30 ppb
  • FDA level of concern is 2000 ppb (2ppm)
  • EPA suggests that fish with 24 ppb or greater
    should not be consumed more than once per month
  • Above 24 ppb increased potential for cancer may
    be 1 in 100,000
  • Comparison Increased potential for
    cardio-vascular problems with high LDLs is 1 in
    2

9
PCB risk vs. cardiovascular risk
  • Every technical report of PCBs in salmon has
    pointed out that heart benefits of salmon greatly
    outweigh cancer risks.
  • Fish feed companies now screen feed ingredients
    for PCBs. And todays supplies of farmed fish
    are now lower in PCBs than most wild fish.
  • In Western US, most farmed salmon comes from
    southern Chile, which has little industry, very
    clean water and undetectable levels of PCBs in
    salmon

10
Mercury in fish
  • Methylmercury is a by product of coal burning.
  • It bio-accumulates in top predator fish in
    freshwater and marine systems.
  • In freshwater Pike, muskies are problems
  • In marine waters sharks, swordfish and tilefish
    are of concern for pregnant and nursing women and
    babies
  • Sources EPA and FDA
  • http//www.cfsan.fda.gov/frf/sea-mehg.html

11
Mercury in fish
  • EPA frequently publishes advisories to limit
    consumption of wild freshwater fish
  • Current advisories for several lakes in Arizona,
    probably due to natural background levels in
    lakes
  • EPA advises to eat up to 2 meals of low mercury
    fish per week.
  • Farmed fishes have non-detectable levels,
    because they are grown in clean water and do not
    bio-accumulate from eating wild fish

12
The actual EPA Advisory Brochure
Examples Shark (wild) 0.99 ppm Tilapia
(farmed) N.D. to 0.01 ppm
13
Artificial color added
  • Salmon and trout feeds sometimes include
    ingredients that impart reddish or pink color to
    the flesh.
  • Astanxanthin, canthaxanthin and beta-carotene are
    commonly used.
  • These may be plant or algae extracts, or
    chemically derived.
  • May also use whole algae as ingredient (Spirulina
    or Dunaliella)
  • Yes, the same extracts and algae sold in health
    food stores, (which was not included in the scare
    stories)

14
Environmental concerns - Salmon
  • Some cage farms have contributed to benthic
    pollution in the past.
  • This is especially bad for the fish, so farmers
    rapidly moved cages to locations with more
    current and water flow.
  • Most new cages are in deep water.

15
New Cage Designs
16
Cages for warm water marine fishes
17
Environmental concerns with conventional shrimp
culture
  • Loss of mangroves and other coastal vegetation.

18
Integrated shrimp farming
19
Shrimp and Seaweeds
  • Gracilaria and shrimp production in Hawaii

20
Shrimp and halophytes
21
Bivalve rearing environmentally benign
22
Concerns with eating bivalves
  • Bioaccumulate toxins from algae bloomsNeurotoxic
    Shellfish PoisoningDiuretic Shellfish
    PoisoningVibrio cholera
  • Do not eat wild bivalves in months without rs
  • Farm raised bivalves are monitored and much safer

23
Aquaculture and fish farming
  • Aquaculture is making huge advances in production
  • Dozens of species of plants and animals are grown
    profitably
  • Aquaculture products continue to provide more
    seafood
  • Almost all aquaculture is more sustainable than
    commercial fishing

24
Aquaculture and commercial fishing
  • 2005 UN-FAO reported 50 of all fish consumed
    globally were farmed
  • Most species are newly domesticated
  • No by-catch or ship pollution
  • Much safer for workers, fishing is USs most
    dangerous occupation
  • Fishing is last major hunting and gathering
    lifestyle

25
Improved processing of farmed products
26
Competition with wild seafood
  • US fishing industry complains about farm raised
    imports
  • Current tariffs on Norwegian salmon, Chinese
    crayfish, Vietnamese catfish, and shrimp from
    Brazil, China, Vietnam, Thailand and India
  • Wild fish have difficulty competing on price,
    quality and consistency

27
Future of farmed seafoods
  • Commercial fisheries will phase out in favor of
    sport fishing
  • Farmed products will account for vast majority of
    seafood.
  • Environmental sustainability is increasing
    rapidly and will be achieved well before land
    farming.
  • Price and quality will continue to improve rapidly
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