Title: The Trout and Salmon and Sectors
1The Trout and Salmon and Sectors
- Phil Thomas, Chairman SSPO
2Authors Note
- David Bassett of the BTA became unavailable for
the Inverness meeting at short notice. Thus Phil
Thomas presented information on both the trout
and salmon sectors. - The presentation provided here has been
slightly modified from that given at the meeting
to include some additional information on the
trout sector which has been provided by David
Bassett.
3Organisers Suggested Coverage
- For the trout sector and the salmon sector
- Outline of aquaculture in Scotland covering
table production and restocking. - Economic scale, distribution and development
potential of aquaculture. - Aquaculture technologies and operations.
- Unique aspects that audience should know about
fish farming. - Why, where, what, how and whatever?
4Why Finfish Aquaculture?
- FAO says One-quarter of the world's fish stocks
are overexploited, depleted or recovering from
depletion. They have been under excess fishing
pressure which has reduced their capacity. There
is no possibility of increasing fishing activity,
and in some cases the stocks may decline further.
- About half of the stocks are fully exploited.
They are being fished at or close to their
maximum sustainable limit. There is no room for
further expansion of fishing activity. - Around one-quarter of fish stocks are
underexploited or partially exploited and could
perhaps produce more.
5Trends for Fish?
Trends in Global Fish
- Total global production/consumption is
increasing because of population increase and
increased consumption per head. - Sea-caught fish supplies are restricted because
of needs to conserve stocks. - Aquaculture provides an increasing proportion of
fish supply this will continue to increase. - Global aquaculture production is circa 67
million tonnes. Most is produced in China /Asia.
Main species there are low value carp, tilapia
and other fresh water fish. - EU production is relatively small but EU is the
largest global importer of fish and seafood
products and is only 40 self sufficient in
supply.
Country World Production ()
China 66.6
Asia - China 22.8
Europe 3.3
South America 2.7
North America 1.3
Africa 1.2
6tonnes
tonnes
7tonnes
tonnes
8Trout History
- Prior to the 20th century most trout eaten in
Europe were caught from the wild. The few trout
hatcheries that existed were used to re-stock
rivers for fishing. - In the early 1900's a Danish farmer developed a
farm design where fresh water flowed through each
fishpond radically improving fish yield and
reducing disease. This signified the start of the
commercial trout-for-table farming industry. - In 1945 the UK's trout industry consisted of less
than 20 re-stocking farms. The first table
trout farm was opened by a Dane in Lincolnshire
in 1950. - In the following years the industry has grown to
its current size of almost 360 trout farms
producing around 16,000 tonnes per annum.
9Trout Farming
10Trout Types
- Rainbow Trout (Onchorynchus mykiss)
- Although native to lakes and streams of
North-West America Rainbow Trout has been
introduced to regions throughout the world
including Australasia, South America and South
Africa. It is now the main breed of trout to be
farmed commercially. - Brown Trout (Salmo Trutta)
- Also known as the River or Lake Trout, the Brown
Trout is indigenous to many European countries
including Britain. - Golden Trout (Oncorhynchis Mykiss Aguabonita)
- Originating in the high altitudes of the northern
Rocky Mountains of the United States the Golden
Trout has been called the "fish from heaven" by
the Americans.
11Trout
- Scotland is the largest trout producer in UK.
- In 2009 production was 4,184t of small table
trout in and 2,628t of large trout. - Total farm gate value was 20.45m.
- This excludes trout for restocking .
- (Scottish stocked trout fisheries are estimated
to be valued at 35m/yr) - There are four main types of farms large trout
are produced in open sea lochs. - There is a trend towards diversification of
land-based sites with (partial) re-circulation
units in the design.
12Trout Farms
13Trout - Overview
- Production has been static for the past ten
years. - There is no real demand for new farms on land at
present planning has been under the Town and
Country Planning Act for a long time. - There is scope for increased production of large
trout at marine sites. Commercial factors will
determine whether this develops. - Permitted development rights at existing sites
would be important. - Fish health implications of multiple species
operations and mixed year classes would be
important in determining development.
14Salmon Farming
15Why farm the salmon?
16The History
- Practical trials in Norway in the 1960s found
caught salmon adapted readily to being grown-on
in net pens. - Salmon also had large sturdy eggs which made the
development of breeding technology feasible. - Salmon were a valuable fish with an established
market demand. - Salmon were collected from 41 Norwegian rivers
and a breeding work was started. - By the mid 1970s, salmon farm trials and breeding
programmes had become established and salmon
aquaculture was being developed in several
countries, including in Shetland and mainland
Scotland.
17Annual Scottish Farmed Salmon Production
Tonnes x 1000
The Crown Estate Islands Councils
Interim Arrangements
Town Country Planning Act
18 Where?
- 90 of UK finfish aquaculture is in Scotland.
- 454 registered finfish sites, 332 registered
shellfish sites (Scottish Government, 2008). - Freshwater sites widely distributed.
- Marine sites located west coast and islands.
19Marine Scotland Salmon Fisheries Regions
East North East Moray Firth North North West West
Coast Clyde Coast Solway Orkney Shetland Outer
Hebrides
20Distribution of Scottish Salmon Farms
West Salmon Farms East Salmon Farms
Shetland 107
Orkney 19
North West 42 North 2
West Coast 41 North East 0
Clyde Coast 15 Moray Firth 0
Outer Hebrides 45 East 0
Solway 0
Total sites
271 Total consented biomass 298, 113 tonnes
21Why are farms distributed like this?
- History, Policy, and Planning
- Salmon Catch Distribution
- Historically salmon farming started in west coast
and island areas because of the water quality
and suitability of sites. - Government Planning Policy in 1997 to locate
farms to the west coast and islands. - Scottish Government Locational Guidelines based
on predicted nutrient enhancement, benthic impact
and natural heritage sensitivities direct
location.
Total Catch East Coast West Coast
1970 409,032 85 15
1985 272,552 84 16
1990 169,009 81 19
1995 180,143 85 15
2000 101,498 85 15
2008 101,519 83 17
22Table Production of Salmon
- Table production of salmon is estimated as
135,000 t (whole fish equivalent) in 2009. - Scotland accounts for 97 of UK salmon
production. It is the 2nd largest salmon producer
in the World. - In the next 5 years production is anticipated
increase by a minimum of 30,000 t. - Present value is gt 400m at farm gate level
roughly the same value as the Scottish Fishing
industry. Salmon accounts for over 30 of
Scottish food exports. - The salmon industry is increasingly vertically
integrated, with added-value processing and
manufacturing in Scotland. - Expenditure in services and supplies and the
economic multiplier -effects increase economic
impact by some 2.5 times.
23Annual Scottish Farmed Salmon Production
Tonnes x 1000
Anticipated
The Crown Estate Islands Councils
Interim Arrangements
Town Country Planning Act
24Headline Numbers
- 500m into economy in 2008.
- 84m in capital projects over 2005-08.
- 304 m expenditure on supplies and services.
- 36m in local wages from salmon farms.
- Approximately 6,200 full and part time jobs in
farming and processing. - 70 of farm workers live within 10 miles of
salmon farm. - 88 of farm workers live within 20 miles of
salmon farm.
25Area Multiplier-Income of Farm Wages
26Salmon Restocking
- No published national statistics on restocking.
- Restocking is mainly takes owners of fishing
rights and/or DSFBs/fishing trusts. - Restocking only subject to regulation in 2008.
- Examples of very successful restocking.
- National scale and economic value of restocking
is unknown.
27Salmon Farming Follows the Natural Cycle
Broodstock female
Breeding male
Eggs
Fertilised Egg
Alevin
Fry
Smolt
Parr
Smolt
Salmon
Salmon
28Salmon Farming Follows the Natural Cycle
Broodstock female
Breeding male
Breeding Hatchery 2 months Smolting Egg to
Smolt (S0 or S½) at 10 mths Egg to Smolt (S1)
at 14 mths Egg to smolt (S2) at 24 plus
mths Ongrowing Smolts to sea - Sept-Nov (S0) or
March - May (S1) Growing phase 14-20
mths Growing/harvesting phase 8-10 mths
Fertilised Egg
Alevin
Fry
Parr
Smolt
Salmon
29Technology Development
- Different sets of technologies evolve together
but in a stepwise and not necessarily coordinated
way - Pen designs, netting, anchorage
- Feed systems barges and equipment
- Farm configurations and farm based technology
- Ancillary vessels, such as well boats and related
technology - Management and husbandry methodology, including
nutrition, fish health techniques, husbandry. - In practice, it is possible to see lots of mixed
technology operations.
30Historical Change
- Wooden framed cages (early years).
- Polyethylene cages (rings).
- Hinged steel cages in integrated farms
- Semi-exposed systems.
- Open-sea fish farms (submersible systems).
31Bracken, 2010
Bracken, 2010
Creran
Hjaltland, Shetland
32North Moine
33Overseas things may look different
Salmon Farm, Norway
Farming in China
34(No Transcript)
35Technology Development
After Hanlon
Plastic Pens
Closed containment systems Technically feasible
but unlikely to be a viable option.
(After, Chopin, 2010)
36(No Transcript)
37Sustainability of Finfish Farming
38Feed and Nutrition
- A conversion ratio of caught fish to farmed
salmon of 51 is often quoted. This figure is
incorrect and based on an incorrect set of
assumptions. - Modern salmon nutrition and aquaculture feed use
provides a conversion rate of 1.251. However,
about 25 of fish meal is derived from waste from
fish processing. - Inclusion rates of fish meal in salmon diets have
been reducing progressively as feed technology
develops. - The notion that salmon farming is not
sustainable because of its fish-feed needs is
incorrect.
39World Fish Meal Production and Use in Aquaculture
World Fish Meal Production
Aquaculture Feed
40IFFO Summary of Changing Use in Fishmeal Use
(After FIFO, 2009)
41Alternatives to Fish Meal
(After Skretting, 2010)
42Benefits of farmed fish
- Human health benefits show need for more fish
- Climate change benefits -small C footprint
Species GHG estimates (kg CO2 eq/kg) GHG estimates (kg CO2 eq/kg)
Smith et al (2008) Other sources (2009-10)
Lamb 17.4 -
Beef 13.0 14.0
Pork 6.3 4.4
Chicken 4.6 1.8
Salmon - 2.0
Trout 1.8-2.8
Mussels 0.5
Intake (g/h/d) UK Fish production equivalent (x 1000 t/yr)
Current UK average daily intake of oil-rich fish 63 194
FSA advice on daily intake of oil-rich fish 140 431
Increase in fish intake and fish production 77 237
43Seals and Finfish Farming
A very small proportion of seals attack finfish
farms but they can do substantial damage to
stocks. Attacks are not predictable.
44The End