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Maximising sustainable nutrient production from coupled fisheries-aquaculture systems

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Change log

Authors

Robinson, James 
Patterson, Grace 
Luyckx, Karen 

Abstract

Aquaculture expansion is expected to meet growing demand for sustainable animal-source foods. Yet marine-fed species already require millions of tonnes of wild-caught fish for feed, over 90% of which are nutritious food-grade species. Allocating feed fish for human consumption could reduce pressure on marine resources while increasing seafood production. We examine micronutrient flows (the transfer of micronutrients from feed to fish) in Scotland's farmed salmon industry, which is particularly reliant on marine feeds, to show that 1-49% of essential dietary minerals and fatty acids available in wild fish are retained in farmed salmon. Using three alternative production scenarios we show that reducing marine feeds in salmon production and allocating wild-caught feed fish for human consumption could produce more nutritious seafood and leave 66-82% of feed fish in the sea. Using global data on marine-fed aquaculture production, we show that removing wild-caught fish from salmonid production could leave 3.7 Mt fish in the sea while increasing global seafood production by 6.1 Mt.

Description

Funder: Waterloo Foundation; funder-id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100012107


Funder: Leverhulme Trust; funder-id: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100000275


Funder: Henslow Fellowship

Keywords

30 Agricultural, Veterinary and Food Sciences, 4104 Environmental Management, 4803 International and Comparative Law, 41 Environmental Sciences, 48 Law and Legal Studies, 3005 Fisheries Sciences, 14 Life Below Water, 2 Zero Hunger

Journal Title

PLOS Sustainability and Transformation

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2767-3197
2767-3197

Volume Title

1

Publisher

PLOS
Sponsorship
D.F.W. was funded by the Department of Zoology and a Henslow Fellowship at Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge. J.P.W. R. was funded by a Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship. K.L. was funded by the Waterloo Foundation.