Re: Help with a project: Farm raised seafood vs wild caught - your thoughts.
It may not happen in our lifetime but I wont be suprised if most wild fisheries are shut down due to low numbers or completely dissapear. And those that aren't will probably be VERY expensive luxury items. At that point it will be mostly farm raised seafood but that too will be very expensive. The omega-3 fatty acids we get from fish come from 2 places. Fish and algae. DHA, EPA and ARA (which is an omega-6 actually) are 3 important fatty acids for survival (DHA and EPA are considered more beneficial but ARA as a pro-infammatory can be important too). We have some ability to synthesize those in our own body but its minimal at best and is an energy consuming process. Algal DHA is a product that is becoming available and we are doing some research with it in the aquaculture field (to reduce our use of fish oil further) and Im sure we may see it more in food items as well but it is still in its infancy and very costly. Algal farms that can cheaply grow algae and process it into a food source (DHA oil for capsules or for use in foods) and potentially a fuel source (algal biofuels) at the same time would probably be very successful.
If you are interested in wild fisheries and aquaculture you can follow this link to see the Food and Agriculture Oraganization of the United Nations SOFIA report (SOFIA = State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture). Its downloadable as a pdf (its big). The 2010 report is the most recent but its data is from 2008. The 2012 report should come out this year which will have data from 2010. It takes a while to compile everything and put it all together.
Edit to add about prices: The human population is growing. And it happens to be growing most in places that have always consumed a lot of seafood (southeast Asia). Southeast Asia accounts for ~90% of all food fish aquacutlture and a very large portion of wild caught fish as well (or at least the fishing vessels originate from there and the product goes there). A lot of US fish are going there too (wild and farmed). Its kind of interesting actually that we ship so much there but also import much of the same stuff right back. We have wild and farmed raised salmon in the US but a lot of what you see comes from China (wild/frozen) or Norway (farmed) especially if you live in the middle US or in smaller towns (I do see more US fish at the larger seafood markets in big cities). Swai from vietnam is everywhere. Its freaking catfish. We grow quite a bit of catfish right here in the US. I had to laugh when I was at the store the other day and looked at some scallops from a company called "American Pride." I flipped the package over and saw "Product of Peru" on the back.
Originally posted by Carter
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If you are interested in wild fisheries and aquaculture you can follow this link to see the Food and Agriculture Oraganization of the United Nations SOFIA report (SOFIA = State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture). Its downloadable as a pdf (its big). The 2010 report is the most recent but its data is from 2008. The 2012 report should come out this year which will have data from 2010. It takes a while to compile everything and put it all together.
Edit to add about prices: The human population is growing. And it happens to be growing most in places that have always consumed a lot of seafood (southeast Asia). Southeast Asia accounts for ~90% of all food fish aquacutlture and a very large portion of wild caught fish as well (or at least the fishing vessels originate from there and the product goes there). A lot of US fish are going there too (wild and farmed). Its kind of interesting actually that we ship so much there but also import much of the same stuff right back. We have wild and farmed raised salmon in the US but a lot of what you see comes from China (wild/frozen) or Norway (farmed) especially if you live in the middle US or in smaller towns (I do see more US fish at the larger seafood markets in big cities). Swai from vietnam is everywhere. Its freaking catfish. We grow quite a bit of catfish right here in the US. I had to laugh when I was at the store the other day and looked at some scallops from a company called "American Pride." I flipped the package over and saw "Product of Peru" on the back.
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