Marine Farming
Marine Farming
Marine Farming
INTRODUCTION
1
2 Issues and Prospects
History
Aquaculture has been practiced by humankind since time began. Five thousand
years ago, Chinese villagers trapped carp in artificial lakes that formed when
flooded rivers receded. Ancient carp culture practices in China were described
in the 5th century BC, while Egyptians might have cultivated fish one thousand
years earlier. Also, ancient Romans grew oysters and, most probably, fish 2,000
years ago. Around 600 A.D., the Menehune of Hawaii built a huge fish pond on
Kauai, as legend goes, by erecting overnight a 900-foot-long lava rock wall.3
Most ancient fish farming was based on the capture of young stages and
then transferring them to ponds and sea enclosures to grow. This could be done,
for example, by fencing off tidal areas toward ebb tide, which arrested fish move-
ment seaward and facilitated their collection during the outgoing flow. Another
method, practiced till the present in some places, is to let fish enter open enclo-
sures during seasonal floods to feed and grow, and fencing them off before the
water recedes. Fish are kept in enclosures to grow, or collected and moved
elsewhere. Such types of culture can be seen even today, for example, in Italy’s
“vallicultura” and in Southeast Asia. All these and other early variants of fish
farming are considered extensive type. Extensive fish farming implies that fish
are not crowded beyond their population density in nature and are rarely artifi-
cially fed. Thus, extensive fish farming hardly affects natural habitats, while
environmental problems have only appeared through the intensification of
production.
While ancient fish farming was based on eggs, larvae, and juveniles col-
lected from nature, in a true full-circle aquaculture system they should be pro-
duced on the farm premises. First to close the growth circle was an 18th century
German farmer, who fertilized trout eggs with their sperm and hatched them in
tanks and ponds.
During most of the 20th century, marine fisheries and fish farming were
developing in parallel as separate industries with little market interaction. By
and large, each produced different species and had respective traditional con-
sumers, but during recent decades fish market changes have occurred. Many
consumers now buy fresh or smoked salmon, sea bream, oysters, or frozen
shrimp, often without knowing or caring whether they were caught in the open
ocean or grown in ponds, on mollusk farms, or in floating cages. Presently, the
farming of about 15 species of marine finfish is either in early phase or expand-
ing, each according to progress made by researchers and fish farmers. Nonetheless,
capture fisheries and fish farming are inter-related and to a great extent overlap
in their ecology, economics and social impacts. Both interact in several manners
and often co-exist in common ecosystems. This article discusses issues of marine
farming development, recognizing the fact that our civilization has been based
on human-modified ecosystems, both on land and in the water, and that further
modifications are required because of the poorly handled needs of the expand-
ing human population and the sustained destitution of many people. This chap-
ter concludes by providing recommendations and principles for the future
sustainability of marine farming.
Statistics
In 2007, total world fisheries yield was over 140 million mt, of which 90 million
mt was produced by capture fisheries and over 50 million mt from aquaculture.
Most of the aquaculture occurs in developing countries, with China leading at
approximately 31 million mt.4 In 2006, the world consumed 110.4 million mt of
fish, with 51.7 million mt originating from aquaculture production. The global
population is forecast to reach 8.32 billion in 2030. If capture fisheries produc-
tion (92 million mt in 2006) and the non-food uses of fish (33.3 million mt in
2006) remain constant, aquaculture needs to produce 80.5 million mt by 2030 in
order to maintain the current annual per capita consumption of 16.7 kg. That
is, 25 years from now, aquaculture will need to produce 28.8 million mt more per
year than its current annual production.5
During the last four decades, fish farming has expanded to meet the soaring
global demand for seafood. On land and in the sea, it has undergone tremen-
dous quantitative development, and soon will overtake capture fisheries in the
global supply of food fish.6 Consumption of wild and farm-raised fish has dou-
bled since 1973, mostly in developing countries. As the demand for fish rises,
populations of marine and freshwater species are unable to significantly increase
yields because of stagnant or declining catches. The total marine fisheries yield
has reached 90 million mt/year, a yield that after a period of rapid growth and
despite increasing demand has remained mostly level for the past decade.
4. Food and Agriculture Organization, “FAO fisheries global statistics: capture and
aquaculture,” available online: <http://www.fao.org/fishery/statistics/en>.
5. Food and Agriculture Organization, “Opportunities for addressing the chal-
lenges in meeting the rising global demand for food fish from aquaculture,” Committee
on Fisheries, Sub-committee on Aquaculture, 4th Session (Puerto Varas, Chile, 6–10
October 2008).
6. A.G.J. Tacon and M. Halwart, “Cage Aquaculture: A global review,” in Cage
Aquaculture: Regional Views and Global Review eds., M. Halwart, D. Soto and J.R. Arthur,
FAO Fish. Tech. Pap. No. 498 (2007): pp. 1–16.
4 Issues and Prospects
Since the late 20th century, salmon has become the main finfish farmed in
colder waters, while milkfish, shrimp, sea bream, sea bass and yellowtail are the
mainstays in South Asia’s and the Far East’s ponds, cages and lagoons. Atlantic
salmon, an exotic fish in Chile and on the Pacific coast of North America has
been farmed there since the mid-1990s. Relatively a late comer to the salmon
industry, Chile has produced more than 100,000 mt/year and earned over
US$2.2 billion in 2006. This followed a 15-year development phase during
which production expanded by an incredible 2,200 percent. Between 2003 and
2006, Chile’s export earnings grew by an average 22 percent per year, challeng-
ing Norway as the world’s top salmon producer. Unfortunately, Chile’s salmon
industry suffered during the last couple of years from massive outbreaks of
salmon disease that caused considerable decline in production and earnings.
Cod farming, already beyond the research and development stage, has become
a reality mainly in Norway, the UK, and Denmark. Also, the farming of halibut
and turbot is becoming commercial.
The tuna grow-out industry, pioneered in Australia towards the end of the
20th century, has also expanded in the Mediterranean and the central Atlantic
Ocean’s coastal waters. The practice of tuna on-grow (fattening) in cages, how-
ever, cannot be considered real farming. In fact, it consists of creaming off young
fish from the stock years before they have any chance of spawning, and fatten-
ing them for half a year before harvesting. This procedure must negatively
affect wild stocks of the most sought-after tuna species. In Japan, it is the fry that
are caught to be fattened at a fish farm, a procedure that should not affect wild
tuna stocks.
Recently, however, successes were reported on closing the whole lifecycle of
tunas, i.e., holding breeding stock, making them spawn and fertilize the eggs,
and on-growing the larvae into fingerlings, etc.7 If fully implemented this could
substantially increase production and relieve pressure on wild populations. The
snag is that tuna are grown on other forage fishes. If pellets are used, they con-
tain a high share of fishmeal produced from industrial or small pelagic fishes.
Several kilograms are needed to produce one kilogram of tuna.
7. Anonymous, “Grow your own bluefin,” Fish News International 47, no. 12 (Dec
2008): 16–17; E. Fiske, “ALLOTUNA duplicates bluefin breeding success,” (2008),
available online: <http://www.fis.com>.
Marine Farming 5
aquaculture would not be able to match the increasing food needs of the expand-
ing human population.
The FAO defines sustainable development as “development that meets the
needs of the present without compromising the needs of future generations …
to be achieved through … a balance between environmental integrity, social
development and economic development.”8 According to the FAO, sustainabil-
ity entails the notion of progressive development, which has no negative effect
on the environment and on the future of the resource concerned.9
Sustainable development suffers from different, often incompatible inter-
pretations by economists, sociologists, environmentalists, and various stakehold-
ers.10 This argument ranges from the extreme “nature-first” conservation
approach to a “development and business first” approach. The former is about
maintaining or returning marine ecosystems as close as possible to their “virgin”
or pre-industrial state.11 The latter is about extraction of fishery resources in the
most profitable way.12
Constraints
It is important to bear in mind the various constraints that may impede further
development of marine farming. Although growing sea fish in floating cages
may be, under some conditions, less costly than on land, the marine fish farming
industry has been focusing on raising species, which when supplied from capture
fisheries fetch relatively high prices. While it may indeed serve as a mass protein
provider, its product is intended only for those who can afford the price; hence,
the repeating cases of salmon market gluts. They are good and popular fish, but
8. S.M. Garcia, “The FAO definition of sustainable development and the Code
of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries: An analysis of the related principles, criteria and
indicators,” Marine and Freshwater Research 51, no. 5 (2000): 535–541.
9. J.F. Caddy and R.C. Griffiths, “Living marine resources and their sustainable
development – Some environmental and institutional perspectives,” FAO Fishing Technology
Paper T353 (1995).
10. M. Ben-Yami, “The meaning of sustainability,” Part 1, World Fish 5 (2006): 6;
Part 2, World Fish 6 (2006): 6; G.D. Sharp and C.A.S. Hall, “Neoclassical Economics and
Fisheries,” in Making World Development Work: Scientific Alternatives to Neoclassical Economic
Theory, eds. G. Leclerc and C.A.S. Hall (Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press,
2007), pp. 423–441.
11. M. Ben-Yami, “Ecological and socioeconomic aspects of the expansion of Nile
Perch in Lake Victoria,” in Fisheries Resource Utilization and Policy. Proc. World Fisheries
Congress, eds. R.M. Meyer, et al. (Oxford & IBH Publ. Co., New Delhi, 1996),
pp. 95–110.
12. R. Goodland and H. Daly. “Environmental sustainability: universal and non-
negotiable,” Ecology Applications 6, no. 4 (1996): 1002–1017.
6 Issues and Prospects
many potential consumers cannot afford the prices that the salmon producing-
processing-marketing system needs to charge to remain solvent.13
According to the FAO, aquaculture would keep growing so that the 2010
world’s total fish production may reach some 140 million mt. While the supple-
ment must come from farming, some 30 million mt of marine fish landings
would go for fishmeal needed to feed, apart from poultry and cattle husbandry
and inland aquaculture, all the predatory fishes that are grown in marine cages.
This is a nagging problem because feed alone may account for some 60 percent
of total production costs.14 Processing and marketing technologies are advanc-
ing, and no doubt, some of today’s “industrial” fish will be made fit for human
consumption and fetch prices that would make their reduction to fishmeal une-
conomic. Availability of fishmeal, therefore, may become a constraint; hence,
quite appropriately, vegetable surrogate feeds are investigated.
Species that feed at lower levels of the food pyramid like carp, milkfish,
tilapia, grey mullets and, according to information from Israel, gilthead sea
bream, can be grown on reduced fishmeal or vegetable diets.15 Nonetheless, fish
farmers still prefer to use feeds that incorporate some fishmeal due to a lack of
financial motivation and inertia.16 Tilapias are basically freshwater vegetarian
fishes, widely cultured throughout the world, with some species showing euryha-
line behaviour. Recently, the University of Malta reported on trials aimed at
growing tilapia both in sea cages and in seawater tanks.
Other problems confronting the marine farming industry are environmen-
tal concerns, public resistance to genetic engineering, bioaccumulation of vari-
ous chemical substances by fish grown in polluted waters, frequent outbreaks of
stock-devastating diseases, and the proliferation of parasites.
Outlook
While markets and consumers get the fish they need, fishing industry strategists
and fishermen look with wary eyes on the ongoing expansion of the marine fish
farming industry. Although farmed sea fish cannot be sold cheaply, their regular
supply prevents wild-fish prices from going up, including off-season to compen-
sate a fishery for poor landings. Together with reduced quotas and subsidies,
and several impoverished stocks, this may lead to significantly unfavorable con-
sequences, and even the downsizing of affected capture fisheries. On the other
hand, an increase in landings of wild fish of species that are also farmed, as well
as landings of species that are market-wise equivalent to the farmed ones, may
negatively affect prices of the farmed fish.
There is good news. Firstly, marine aquaculture may represent a way out for
investment capital from the capture industry and a second line of defense to
displaced fishermen by providing employment. Secondly, fish farmed at sea
might resist unfavorable environmental changes in water better than wild fish. If
organisms that form the natural food base of wild fish are seriously affected by
such changes, the food base of the wild fish stock would be reduced. Their dis-
placement or disappearance may cause wild population’s migration or starva-
tion, or both. Farmed fish are supplied their food in the temperature and salinity
of the surrounding water and would suffer only at the extremes of their physi-
ological survival range. All this may make fishing capital redundant. Low-income
families may consider investment and employment in the marine farming
industry, particularly in offshore cage farms, where seamanship, sea legs, boat-
operation, net-making and net-mending skills represent important advantages.
According to the FAO, the maximum wild-capture fisheries potential from
the world’s oceans has been reached, thus almost any further growth in the
world’s fish supply will come from fish farming.17 Rising demand and technologi-
cal developments have fueled the explosive growth of fish farming and stimu-
lated what is considered to be the most hopeful trend in the world’s troubled
food system,18 while targeting the affluent consumer.19 In any case, humankind is
consuming more and more seafood, not so much owing to increased consump-
tion per capita, but rather due to continuing growth of the world’s population.
In this context, in terms of demand and supply, the share of Asian aquaculture
is overwhelming.
The commonly proposed solution to the problem of satisfying demand for
fishery products is to improve the management of exploited fish stocks and the
development of commercial fish farming, a process that is ongoing at an accel-
erating pace. There is a continuum between open-access fishing and intensive
aquaculture in which fishing rights and property rights are developed from vague
17. Food and Agriculture Organization, The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture
(Rome: FAO, 2006).
18. B. Halweil, “Fish Farming for the Future: Will Farmed Fish Feed the World?”
Worldwatch Report, (Worldwatch Institute, Sept. 2008), available online: <http://www
.worldwatch.org/node/5881#toc>; M. Halwart, D. Soto and J.R. Arthur, eds. “Cage
Aquaculture: Regional Views and Global Review,” FAO Fishing Technology Papers 498
(Rome: FAO, 2007); J.H. Ryther and J.E. Bardach, The Status and Potential of Aquaculture,
American Institute of Biological Sciences, Washington, D.C. (Clearinghouse for Scien-
tific and Technical Information, Springfield, Virginia, 1968), vol. I, pp. 177–767.
19. M. Ben-Yami, “Aquaculture: The importance of knowing its limitations,” Ceres
19, no. 4 (1986): 15–19.
8 Issues and Prospects
Presently, small forage fish account for 37 percent of the world’s sea fish yield,
and 25–30 million mt of them are reduced into fishmeal and fish oil. Half of the
oil is used for poultry and cattle fodder. In 2006, aquaculture consumed approxi-
mately 3.06 million mt or 56 percent of world fishmeal production, and 0.78
million mt or 87 percent of total fish oil production, with over 50 percent of fish
oil going to salmon farming. Between 1992 and 2006, the content of fishmeal
and fish oil used in fish feeds tripled at the expense of the poultry sector, which
gradually reduced its reliance on fishmeal. Besides fishmeal or fishmeal-based
diets, 5 to 6 million mt of low-value, trash fish are used as direct feed in aquac-
ulture, and notably in tuna cage culture.
The FAO does not expect any significant increase in fishmeal production
and predicts that fishmeal usage in the animal production sector, particularly
poultry, will continue to decrease in the future.22 Furthermore, it is expected
that a proportion of fishmeal and fish oil used in fish feed will be replaced by
vegetable-based protein and oil, and that feed management efficiency will
improve. Additionally, price level is bound to affect aquaculture production,
especially when the demand for aquaculture products is outstripping the supply
and fish prices soar so that even inefficient farms make money.23
The expansion of salmon culture in three continents, Europe and North
and South America, has resulted in increased demands for feed fishes. Recently,
20. J.L. Anderson, “Aquaculture and the future: Why fisheries economists should
care,” Marine Resources Economics 17 (2002): 133–151.
21. T. Asgard, E. Austreng, I. Holmefjord and M. Hillestad, “Resource efficiency
in the production of various species,” in Sustainable Aquaculture: Food for the Future?,
eds. N. Svennevig, H. Reinertsen and M. New (Rotterdam, Netherlands: A.A. Balkema,
1999), pp. 171–183.
22. FAO, “Opportunities for addressing the challenges in meeting the rising global
demand for food fish from aquaculture,” see n. 5 above.
23. Id.; A. Jackson, “Fish in fish out rations explained,” Aquaculture Europe 34, no. 3
(2009): 5–10.
Marine Farming 9
the farming of cod, another piscivore, has become the focus of massive develop-
ment efforts. The magnitude of farming piscivorous species competes with the
previously predominant culture of tilapia, carp and catfish that utilize mainly
vegetable or algae-based feeds.24
Apart from the tuna fattened mainly on small pelagics, predatory fish grown
in ponds and cages are usually fed with mixed feeds of varying proportions of
animal protein. Fishmeal is very concentrated (60 percent protein), and nor-
mally about 4.5 kilograms of raw fish are needed to produce 1 kilogram of
fishmeal.25
Piscivorous fishes such as salmon and trout must be fed with animal protein;
hence, the fish farming industry has become a major fishmeal consumer. How-
ever, the world’s resources of fish that can be economically utilized for reduction
are finite and as mentioned above, with the right market conditions and appro-
priate technology, some of them could be used for human consumption and
might increasingly go towards canning, and to sushi-type, fresh-fish markets.
Thus, the presently spiraling growth of aquaculture must face fishmeal supply
constraints.
Altogether, the use of forage fish for feed has become a worrying situation.
The existing management efforts focus on groundfish and large pelagics, rather
than on forage fish. Little is known about their role in the marine ecosystem both
as grazers and forage species for seabirds and marine mammals, as well as the
relationship between their natural and fishing mortality. If and when the demand
for forage fish by human food markets increases, some of the fishmeal industry,
and consequently, the fish farming industry may find themselves facing feed
prices that may preclude feasible operation. According to Halweil,26 although
raising seafood like oysters, clams, catfish, and tilapia is many times more effi-
cient than cattle breeding, a growing scarcity of fish feed may jeopardize future
expansion of farming piscivore fish, like salmon and cod. If such a shift occurs,
one would expect increasing reduction of the fishmeal contents in the various
feeds and pellets, improving feed-production and feeding-in-cage technology.
Today, at a conservative feeding coefficient of 4:1, with feed containing 25 per-
cent fishmeal, 5 kilograms of raw fish produce 1 kilogram of farmed fish weight.27
Only with a much higher and hardly practiced fishmeal content of 50 percent,
10 kilograms of raw fish for 1 kilogram of farmed fish weight would be
needed.
Reduction of fishmeal content in the feed of other fishes grown in cages
that are feeding in the wild on invertebrate fauna, like sea bream, is also indi-
cated in view of the satisfactory performance of vegetable proteins.28 Although
24. FAO, “Opportunities for addressing the challenges in meeting the rising global
demand for food fish from aquaculture,” see n. 5 above.
25. Jackson, see n. 23 above.
26. Halweil, see n. 18 above.
27. Jackson, see n. 23 above.
28. Kissil and Lupatsch, see n. 15 above.
10 Issues and Prospects
29. D.L.Alverson, M.H. Freeborg, S.A. Murawski and J.A. Pope, “A global assess-
ment of fisheries by-catch and discards,” FAO Fishing Technology Paper 339 (Rome: FAO,
1994).
30. J. Forster, “Broader issues in the fish farming debate,” pp. 245–259, Chpt. 3,
and “Emerging Technologies in Marine Aquaculture,” pp. 51–72, Chpt. 12. in
Offshore Aquaculture in the United States: Economic Considerations, Implications and Opportunities,
ed. M. Rubino (Silver Spring, MD: U.S. Dept. of Commerce, NOAA, 2008).
31. R. Shapawi, W.-K. Ng and S. Mustafa, “Replacement of fish meal with poul-
try by-product meal in diets formulated for the humpback grouper,” Aquaculture 273, no.
1 (2007): 118–126.
32. C. Folke, N. Kautsky and M. Troell, “The costs of eutrophication from salmon
farming: Implications for policy,” Journal of Environmental Management 40, no. 73 (1994):
182.
33. Asgard et al., see n. 21 above.
Marine Farming 11
Problems
34. M. Ben-Yami, “ICZM and the role of scientists,” in Mediterranean Coastal Margins
of Israel, Collection of Lecture Abstracts, eds. B. Gallil and Y. Mart (I.O.L.R. – National
Institute of Oceanography, 1998), pp. 33–36; M. Ben-Yami, “Managing the conflict
alone,” World Fish 1 (2005): 6.
35. J. Volpe, “Farming is a net-loss proposition – ecologically, socially and eco-
nomically,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer (January 25, 2004), available online: <http://seattlepi
.nwsource.com/opinion/157539_focus25.html>.
36. L.N. Frazer, “Sea-cage aquaculture, sea lice, and declines of wild fish,”
(Conservation Biology 2008), available online: <http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/
journal/120122721/issue>.
12 Issues and Prospects
farmed fish escape each year in the Atlantic Ocean. Of fish farmed, unlike the
quantitatively less important wild sea bass and sea bream, cod and to some
degree salmon exist in large wild stocks of major commercial importance. Hence,
the capture fishery is looking with a wary eye at the impact of infected runaway
fish on their wild brethren, and on the possibility of interbreeding of farmed
varieties with wild stocks. Also, sea-lice spreading from cages to wild fish may
increase their lice burdens and cause wild fish to decline.37
While fish infected in the cages have a better chance to survive due to veteri-
narian care and various treatments, wild populations are more vulnerable.
Massive infections of wild fish can be avoided only by ensuring that they do not
share water with farmed fish, either by locating sea cages far from wild fish
migration routes and feeding/spawning grounds or through the use of closed-
containment systems.38
Fish farms with tons of feed released into the cages create algae-promoting
conditions similar to pollution from cities and terrestrial farms. The situation is
reversed with oyster farms because oysters are filter feeders. Oyster farms pro-
vide water-cleaning benefits and support coastal economies. They also make
better oysters; a farmed oyster is plumper, sweeter and prettier than its wild
cousin; hence, farming planktivorous, herbivorous and omnivorous freshwater
fish like grey mullet, tilapia, carp and catfish, and mollusks like oysters and mus-
sels are environmentally sounder. But the money is in the piscivores, like tuna,
salmon and cod. The need to feed them with small whole fish or fishmeal
is putting pressure on populations of wild forage fishes, which makes the fish-
farming industry compete with wild carnivores over their limited resources.
With time, more problems materialized that, while not markedly slowing
development produced negative effects. For example, the denuding of mangrove
areas by expanding shrimp farming in Latin America and South and Southwest
Asia, which has allegedly affected catches in adjacent artisanal fisheries and their
communities, and more recently, was blamed for at least part of the damage
caused all over the Indian Ocean by the 2004 tsunami.
Poorly run, land-based fish farms, floating fish cages and feeding pens
release unutilized protein, nutrients and fecal matter creating wasteful and
often noxious pollution in the environment. According to some estimates,
a fish farm with 200,000 salmon releases nutrients and fecal matter roughly
equivalent to the raw sewage generated by 20,000 to 60,000 people. Scotland’s
salmon aquaculture industry produces the same amount of nitrogen waste
as the untreated sewage of 3.2 million people, which is just over half the coun-
try’s population.39 Residual feed and bio-products pollute protected waters caus-
ing increased turbidity and desertification over shallow bottoms. Complaints
on the part of bathers and the tourism industry have forced some cage farms
37. Id.
38. Id.
39. Halweil, see n. 18 above.
Marine Farming 13
in the Mediterranean and the Red Sea to transfer their operations to land-
based facilities.40
40. M. Ben-Yami, “Sea cage fish farming decline,” World Fish 10 (2002): 10.
41. A. Diamant, A. Colorni and M. Ucko, 2007 “Parasite and disease transfer
between cultured and wild coastal marine fish,” in CIESM 2007, Impact of Mariculture on
Coastal Ecosystems ed. F. Briand, (Lisboa, Portugal: CIESM Workshop Monographs 32:
49–53).
42. M.K. Saiki, M.R. Jennings and R.H. Wiedmeyer, “Toxicity of agricultural
subsurface drainwater from the San Joaquin Valley, California, to juvenile Chinook
14 Issues and Prospects
Anthropogenic pollution and effluents affect both wild and cultured species
onshore and in coastal waters. Serratia marcescens, a bacterium commonly found
in the guts of people and animals is killing off corals and can also kill fish.43
Unpredictable and uncharacterized impacts of climate, weather, and tec-
tonic events present unquantifiable threats. The first decade of this century has
seen unprecedented impacts on aquaculture in Aceh (Indonesia), Bangladesh,
China and Myanmar, which have all suffered from severe natural disasters.44 On
the other hand, fish farmed in the sea might resist environmental changes in
water, such as temperature variations, better than wild fish, which depend upon
their natural forage organisms. Forage species, however, may be more sensitive
to such changes than the fish themselves. Their scarcity or disappearance may
cause their predators’ migration, starvation, or both. Farmed fish are supplied
with food regardless of the temperature and salinity of the surrounding water
and would suffer only at the extremes of their physiological survival range.
Allocation of marine areas for use as fish and shellfish farming became a prob-
lem when farms were established within traditional fishing grounds. While fish
cages should not and do not need to be placed over prime or traditional fishing
grounds, regulations are inconsistent in preventing ill-conceived offshore aquac-
ulture projects and in providing for their removal. The accelerated development
of aquaculture is calling for specific regulation and for allocation of marine
areas where fish farms can be established, which can affect traditional and com-
mercial fisheries. Notwithstanding, some of the claims regarding displacement
of fishing grounds by aquaculture seem exaggerated, at least when it comes to
open ocean. The area occupied by fish farms overlying exploitable fishing
grounds is only significant in a few cases.
Many commercial fishermen oppose fish farming in floating cages because
of the associated influx of nutrients into the environment and the biological effects
salmon and striped bass,” Transactions of American Fisheries Society 121 (1992): 78–93;
available online: <http://dx.doi.org/10.1577/1548–8659(1992)121<0078:TOASDF>
2.3.CO;2>; D. Palawski, J.B. Hunn and F.J. Dwyer, “Sensitivity of young striped bass to
organic and inorganic contaminants in fresh and saline waters,” Transactions of the
American Fisheries Society 114 (1985): 748–753; Available online: <http://dx.doi
.org/10.1577/1548–8659(1985)114<748:SOYSBT>2.0.CO;2>.
43. K.L. Patterson, J.W. Porter, K.B. Ritchie, S.W. Polson, E. Mueller, E.C. Peters,
D.L. Santavy and G.W. Smith, “The etiology of white pox, a lethal disease of the
Caribbean elkhorn coral, Acropora palmata,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
99(13), (2002): 8725–8730.
44. FAO, “Opportunities for addressing the challenges in meeting the rising global
demand for food fish from aquaculture,” see n. 5 above.
Marine Farming 15
of densely populated fish farms on habitat and wild stocks through broadcasting
parasites, viral diseases over wild fish populations and possible genetic effects of
massive escapes of farmed fish into the open ocean. The possible effects of fish
escapes from cages in areas where massive marine farming is practiced, as in the
North Atlantic, on both sides of the Pacific, in Chile and in the Mediterranean,
have been widely studied and discussed.45
Growth in fish supply from marine and on-land farming is a must as long as
humankind keeps its excessive proliferation and demand is growing. Properly
managed fish farming can help not only feed an expanding global population,
but also relieve fishing pressure on wild fish populations.46
PROSPECTIVE DEVELOPMENTS
Regulation
45. Ben-Yami, “ICZM and the role of scientists,” see n. 34 above; T. Dempster,
H. Moe, A. Fredheim and P. Sanchez-Jerez, 2007, “Escapes of marine fish from sea-cage
aquaculture in the Mediterranean Sea: Status and Prevention,” in Impact of Mariculture on
Coastal Ecosystems, F. Briand ed. (Lisboa, Portugal: CIESM Workshop Monographs, 32:
55–60); Halweil, see n. 18 above; D. Standal and I. Bouwer Utne, “Can cod farming
affect cod fishing? A system evaluation of sustainability,” Marine Policy 31, no. 4 (2007):
527–534.
46. Halweil, see n. 18 above.
47. A.S. Issar, “Progressive development in arid environments: Adapting the con-
cept of sustainable development to a changing world,” Hydrogeology Journal 16, no. 6
(2008), pp. 1431–2174; A.S. Issar, “Progressive development to sustain food supply in the
arid and semi-arid regions,” Journal of Arid Environments 73, no. 3 (2009): 396–397.
16 Issues and Prospects
businesses are looking for the most profitable rather than for the most environ-
mentally and economically feasible techniques. The same goes with respect to
the contaminants contained in farmed fish flesh, which points to a greater role
for aquaculture certification and standards and to labeling, similar to those in
organic and the local foods sector.48 Progressive regulation should force marine
farmers to design and apply methods that maintain economic feasibility and are
environmentally friendly.
Unfortunately, legal mechanisms available to regulate ocean fish farms
in national and international waters are few and far between. One problem
is that different national agencies have jurisdiction over different aspects of
activities in seas and oceans, such as commercial shipping lines, fisheries, naval
restrictions, coast guard and safety issues, pollution control, sand and minerals
dredging, oil and gas exploration, offshore wind energy farms, and oil and
gas extraction facilities like rigs and pipelines, etc. Many countries have not yet
decided on specific standards for the establishment and management of off-
shore fish farms, and/or on which agency or agencies should govern fish farms.
All this can make regulation, including site allocation and licensing, as well
as enforcement, a highly controversial political issue.49 There are conflicting
stakeholders’ interests, especially with regards to small private and community-
operated enterprises versus corporate interests, and fish farming versus commer-
cial and recreational fishing interests. Moreover, there are powerful environmental
lobbies that, rightly or wrongly, resist mariculture. Therefore, the very existence
and character of state policies or their absence, as well as the level at which they
are implemented is critical to the development of marine farming.50 Many of
the conflicts could be avoided if mariculture developers followed procedures
such as those in the Guide for the Sustainable Development of Mediterranean
Aquaculture.51 Notwithstanding, marine aquaculture will keep developing with
or without an effective legal framework. The extent and character of this devel-
opment would be in accordance with the extent and character
of market demand, while adjusting to its changing preferences such as grow-
ing demand for organic products and attention to environmentally friendly
production procedures.
TECHNOLOGY
Storm-Proof Cages
Containment
Closed-containment technology can prevent fish and water from escaping into
the ocean to prevent the spreading of parasites and diseases. Closed contain-
ment farming requires floating tanks that must combine ship-type strength and
seaworthiness with maximum mechanization and automation of servicing by
remote control. They may be anchored or secured to piles or free-floating in
oceanic currents (see Ocean Drifters below). Fish in containment tanks would
not be able to escape and would grow without risk of attacks by marine mam-
mals, which is common in regular net cages, while filtration or other pollution
preventing systems would minimize environmental effects.
One idea is to develop a finfish aquaculture industry using open net pens or
submersible cages in association with derelict oil rigs. As with any offshore natu-
ral (e.g., reef or seamount) or man-made structure, a multi-species biotope
around such rigs would develop micro-fauna and other planktonic organisms
that could serve as extra food for caged fish. Artificial islands and their immedi-
ate surroundings could serve as bases and sites for marine fish farms.54 Seeding
bio-filtering organisms to create their colonies/reefs in the vicinity of cage farms
can reduce the deterioration of water quality due to waste and residual food
from the cages.55
Dried sea cucumber fetches extremely high prices on the growing affluent
Chinese market as a delicacy and an aphrodisiac. So far, all the supply of sea
cucumbers comes from the wild in inshore and shallow coastal areas, which
brought about substantial resource declines. Efforts towards stocking and even
farming sea cucumbers have been ongoing for years.56 Recently, in the Philippines
sea cucumber was cultured for the first time in fishponds in polyculture with
shrimp, following a successful experimental breeding that produced juveniles for
stocking, in fish farms and in the wild.57 In the future, more and more commer-
cially valuable finfish and invertebrates will be cultured following ongoing
research and experimentation.
Polyculture
Fish in cages utilize the energy of only part of their feed. The remainder and the
waste are flushed out of the cages. Hence, the idea is to cultivate species that live
at different stages of the food chain on the same or neighboring site. For example,
54. M. Ben-Yami and Y. Nir, “Ecological aspects of artificial islands – the Israeli
context,” in Studies of Mediterranean Coastal Margins of Israel, eds. B. Gallil and Y. Mart.
(Inst. Nat. Conserv., Tel Aviv Univ., 1990).
55. M. Ben-Yami, “Will science help cage farmers clean up their act?” World Fish 1
(2004): 18.
56. S. Ito and H. Kitamura, “Technical development in seed production of the
Japanese sea-cucumber, Stichopus japonicus,” Beche-de-mer Info. Bull. 10 (1998): 24–28;
ICLARM “Producing larval sea cucumbers in New Caledonia,” (The World Fish Center,
2002), available online: <http://www.cgiar.htm>, <http://www.cgiar.org/iclarm/>.
57. H.D. Tacio, “There’s big demand for sea cucumbers,” Agriculture Business Week,
Sept. 2010.
Marine Farming 19
keeping salmon, mussels and kelp in the same system may enable the feed to be
fully utilized because the mussels and kelp can absorb it in various ways and
grow on the feed not consumed by the fish and their waste.58 Another solution
could be keeping non-fed omnivorous fish in lower levels of double-bottom
cages, where they feed on organic material sinking through the net floor of the
upper level where carnivorous fish are intensively fed.59
Genetic Engineering
Offshore Aquaculture
There are many reasons why the marine farming sector is aiming for the open
ocean, in spite of some claims that open net cages flush pollution, disease and
parasites into the ocean, adversely impacting wild fish supply and the health and
sustainability of the oceanic habitat. However, the water quality in the open
ocean is better and flow rates are higher than within narrow or partly enclosed
inshore areas, and the temperature is more stable. These factors improve growth
conditions and fish quality. Open water systems farther offshore should be less of
a concern because the waste dilution process is more efficient, so that cages sited
over deep ocean water, especially where oceanic currents prevail, may have little
impact on the surrounding water quality or the ecosystem. Also, the available
evidence suggests that in open-ocean aquaculture there is no measurable nutri-
ent loading in the effluent. However, offshore aquaculture creates specific com-
plications, such as problems with rough weather conditions, allocation and
enforcing farm siting rights and servicing cages far offshore.
The pros and cons debate is ongoing. In view of the evident necessity for
further expansion of marine farming, people are expecting national and inter-
national regulation and are looking at technology. Unsurprisingly, some rather
futuristic ideas have popped up.
A new pilot project run by the Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL) in Woods
Hole, Mass., and coordinated by Scott Lindell, launched four experimental mus-
sel farms to test blue mussel farming offshore Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
It uses technology developed at the University of New Hampshire, consisting of
anchored longlines suspended 10 meters below the ocean surface, holding bio-
degradable “socks” filled with mussel seed, and relies upon the oceanic currents
for the supply of food to the growing mussels. This development may lead to the
creation of a multi-million dollar sustainable industry involving local fishermen,
existing shore-side infrastructure and an underutilized natural resource.
Ocean Drifters
for itself.” Such fish farms will be able to float to more optimal locations when
required and submerge when exposed to rough weather. Even though this vision
is unlikely to be a reality for at least 10 or 15 years, most of the technology for
fish farms drifting in the open sea is already available.63
Sea Ranching
The term sea or ocean ranching is used here to describe the attempts at increas-
ing the output of natural and fishery ecosystems through the stocking of juve-
niles into vast open areas, but mostly in inshore and coastal waters.64 Such
stocking with fingerlings or juveniles of edible invertebrates and finfish is limited
to species that are either strictly local or seasonally returning to the locality, and
depends on aquaculture technology that controls spawning and/or egg and lar-
val development until the animal grows to a stockable size. Culture and stocking
of juvenile lobsters and sea cucumbers in the coastal waters of Galapagos was
proposed as a way to conserve the islands’ ecosystem, in view of heavy extrac-
tion of these species by local fishermen.65
A group of Israeli fish farmers and scientists put forth an idea of fish ranch-
ing, which they call “virtual cage technology for farming of fish.” They propose
to train juvenile fish in hatcheries to associate acoustic and visual signals with
food. Trained fish are released to the sea to grow in nature; however, to perpetu-
ate their response to the signals they are fed periodically from floating plat-
forms. At harvest time the acquired response would attract the fish to collection
sites to be trapped and harvested selectively using a computerized vision sys-
tem. This technology offers an alternative to cage farms and is almost neutral
environmentally. It should be beneficial to fishermen and consumers, and may
complement coastal cage culture and in some places replace it. It would save
investment in expensive offshore cage farms and in floating growth-and-service
installations and feeding technology, and save on running expenses for servic-
ing labour.66 This rather futuristic development requires working only with fish
that tend to stay in one locality, grow fast enough in nature, and have good
market value.
63. D. Robson, MIT’s Self-Propelling Fish Farm Prototype (text and video), avail-
able online: <http://www.NewScientist.com>.
64. A. Isaksson, “Ocean ranching: Its role and contribution to Pacific and
Atlantic salmon fisheries,” in The State of the World’s Fisheries Resources, ed. C.V. Voitglander
(Oxford & IBH Publishing Co. Pvt. Ltd., New Delhi, India, 1996), pp. 133–149.
65. M. Ben-Yami, Managing artisanal fisheries of Galapagos: A Consultancy
Report (Charles Darwin Research Station; Ecuador Fisheries Department, 2001).
66. B. Zion et al., “Technologies for fish growers,” Fisheries and Fishbreeding in Israel
1 (2007): 1058–1063. (In Hebrew with English abstract).
22 Issues and Prospects
Relocating sea fish farming ashore opens several interesting options. One is to
regard fish as one component of an integrated system in which other organisms
are also grown. Such aquaculture could be based on algae or other plants and
designed to develop in a way that could exert less pressure on the environment
and even enhance it.67 In addition, the option to grow sea fishes in land-based
installations or in ponds represents a solution for situations where sea-borne
farming in cages is excluded for environmental reasons or due to successful pres-
sure of other stakeholders.68
67. Forster, “Broader issues in the fish farming debate,” see n. 30 above.
68. Ben-Yami, “A collision course with aquaculture,” see n. 13 above; Ben-Yami,
“Sea cage fish farming decline,” see n. 40 above.
69. S. Moss, “An integrated approach to sustainable shrimp aquaculture in the
U.S.,” Clean, Green, Sustainable Recirculating Aquaculture Summit. (Washington D.C.:
Food and Water Watch, January 2009).
70. Y. Zohar, Y. Tal, H.G. Schreiber, C.R. Steven, J. Stubblefield and A.R. Place,
“Commercially feasible urban re-circulating aquaculture addressing the marine sector,”
in Urban Aquaculture, eds. B. Costa-Pierce, A. Desbonnet, P. Edwards, and D. Baker
(Wallingford, OX: CABI Publishing, 2008), pp. 159–172; Y. Zohar, “Environmentally
compatible, recirculated marine aquaculture: addressing the critical issues,” Clean,
Green, Sustainable, Recirculating Aquaculture Summit, (Washington D.C.: Food and
Water Watch, January 2009).
Marine Farming 23
may well find applications also in marine fish farms where closed containment
fish tanks are employed at sea. Most recently, a self-contained, super-intensive
shrimp culture system was developed at Texas A&M University by Dr. Tzachi
Samocha.71
In some arid and semi-arid areas, for example, in South Asia,72 the Middle East
and in the Israeli Negev, saline, often warm groundwater is available.73 While
such water may be too salty to support agriculture, it may be suitable for aquac-
ulture, starting with algae of species valuable for diverse end uses, including
medicinal ones, and ending with marine and euryhaline invertebrates and fin-
fish.74 Development of such aquaculture may become an effective alternative
livelihood for people living in arid areas. Undoubtedly, any such development
would require substantial investments in research and infrastructure, choice of
or devising methodology and, because of the need for strong technical support,
an area-wide extension service. Studies and experimental culture projects have
yielded a range of marine and freshwater finfish species that can be successfully
grown in the desert, including tilapia, barramundi, sea bass, striped bass and
red-drum.
In recent years this option has been attracting the attention of international
organizations, and rightly so, in view of the fact that semi-arid and arid areas
constitute more than 40 percent of the global land area. Such areas are home to
nearly one-third of the global population, the bulk of which live in developing
countries and represent some of the poorest people in the world. ‘Arid aquacul-
ture’ in dry lands would present a supplement or a substitute to traditional crop
farming and livestock rearing, might mitigate the consequences of desertifica-
tion, and improve nutrition through diet diversification.
CONCLUSIONS
Because capture fisheries and marine farming in some areas are on a collision
course and in others in a shaky, often volatile co-existence, the future development
1) It is imperative that, for the sake of sensible, rational and efficient manage-
ment, both marine aquaculture and capture fishery industries fall in their
shared countries under the same legal and enforcement authorities. This will
enable rational allocation of farming sites and fishing grounds, abatement of
conflicts, and maintaining an equitable modus vivendi.
2) It is important to recognize that there are no one-size-fits-all solutions, and
there is no panacea for every problem encountered by fish farmers, fisher-
men, and authorities in charge of fisheries (capture and aquaculture) man-
agement throughout the world. Every environment, every fishery, every fish
species, and every site has its specific conditions and requirements.
• farm sites should be selected and allocated so that they do not take up
traditional fishing grounds, especially those of small-scale and subsistence
fishermen;
• farm sites should be selected and allocated so that they are not in the way
of massive, seasonal or annual, migrations of wild fish populations;
• marine fish farms should be operated according to clear and strictly
enforced rules aimed at minimizing their effect on the neighboring habi-
tat;
• marine fish cages should be designed to prevent escapement of fish and,
especially in shallow waters, to contain or re-cycle residual feed;
• the application of drugs and chemical substances, such as pesticides, hor-
mones and antibiotics, should be regulated, monitored and the ensuing
rules strictly enforced;
• coastal aquaculture farms should not be established in environmentally
sensitive areas, in particular mangrove-covered areas;
• marine farms should not import and breed exotic species, except if estab-
lished by specific research that their eventual escape into the wild would
not be detrimental to local biota and the ecosystem;
• fish farmers should, as far as feasible, minimize the use of small forage
fishes and fishmeal made of them;
• in fishery management, the “precautionary principle” should not be
blindly applied with “fish first,” whenever the managers find themselves in
doubt as to what to do. It should be borne in mind that the resource is
managed for the sake of people, and that the “doubt” in the expression
“when in doubt” may still carry a tendency to lean either in favor of the
resource or of the humans, and that the “taking no risk whatsoever” strat-
egy may be detrimental to human societies; and
• ecosystem management must pay appropriate attention to the reduction
and elimination of all sorts of pollution and its sources, to the prevention
of inshore habitat destruction and to the recovery of essential habitats for
fish reproduction and nurseries, such as mangrove forests, wetlands, and
reefs, etc. On the other hand, it must take into account changes and fluc-
tuations in marine climate, its physical and chemical phenomena, and the
various biological factors that affect recruitment and natural mortality in
wild fish, and to a lesser extent in farmed fish.