Where am I? > Home > News > Environment

Alternative animal feed part of global fisheries crisis fix: UBC study

Science Centric | 18 November 2009 11:40 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Leave a comment Decrease text size Increase text size
DON'T MISS —
Wildfires in Southern California captured by satellite
Wildfires in Southern California captured by satellite — [1 Sep 2009] — Wildfires throughout Southern California has been captured by the backward (northward)-viewing camera of the Multi-angle...
Water scarcity started 15 years ago
Water scarcity started 15 years ago — [26 Aug 2009] — New analysis shows that the water scarcity being experienced in southeast Australia started up to 15 years ago. While the...
Solar cycle linked to global climate
Solar cycle linked to global climate — [16 Jul 2009] — Establishing a key link between the solar cycle and global climate, new research led by the National Centre for Atmospheric...
New form of El Nino could mean more hurricanes make landfall
New form of El Nino could mean more hurricanes make landfall — [2 Jul 2009] — El Nino years typically result in fewer hurricanes forming in the Atlantic Ocean. But a new study, published in the 3 July...
More Environment...

Finding alternative feed sources for chickens, pigs and other farm animals will significantly reduce pressure on the world's dwindling fisheries while contributing positively to climate change, according to University of British Columbia researchers.

'Thirty million tons - or 36 per cent - of the world's total fisheries catch each year is currently ground up into fishmeal and oil to feed farmed fish, chickens and pigs,' says UBC fisheries researcher Daniel Pauly, co-author of the Oryx: The International Journal of Conservation article, published online this week.

'Meanwhile, 25 per cent of infants in Peru - which produces half of the world's fishmeal using anchovies - are malnourished,' says Pauly.

In the Oryx article, nine of the world's leading fisheries and conservation researchers - including four from UBC - reviewed the effectiveness of past conservation campaigns and propose new strategies to effect swifter and larger-scale changes.

'Globally, pigs and chickens alone consume six times the amount of seafood as US consumers and twice that of Japan,' says lead author Jennifer Jacquet, a post-doctoral fellow at UBC's Fisheries Centre. 'Ultimately these farm animals have a greater impact on our seafood supplies than the most successful seafood certification program.'

'We should work to eliminate the use of tasty fish for livestock production. It's a waste,' says Pauly. 'Plus, it is not what pigs or chickens naturally eat. When is the last time you saw a chicken fishing?'

Many sustainable seafood campaigns focus on consumers but ignore large-scale market impacts - such as farming demand for fishmeal - and have failed to reach their goals, say the study's authors, which include Enric Sala of the National Geographic Society and Rashid Sumaila and Tony Pitcher of UBC.

After pioneering and distributing more than one million seafood wallet cards - pocket-sized guides that advise consumers of ocean-friendly seafood, the Monterey Bay Aquarium conducted a study that revealed no overall change in the market and that fishing pressures had not decreased for targeted species, the study points out.

'Sustainable seafood certification programs such as wallet cards have raised consumer awareness but are far less effective than targeting mega supermarket chains such as Walmart, Whole Foods and Loblaw through a combination of positive and negative publicity campaigns,' says Jacquet, adding that more than 60 per cent of seafood in Canada and half the seafood in the U.S. is sold through supermarkets.

The authors also suggest establishing international standards for labelling sustainable seafood, eliminating harmful fisheries subsidies and leveraging momentum for fisheries conservation through existing global concerns for climate change.

'Global fisheries consume 13 billion gallons of fuel each year just to catch and land fish,' says Jacquet. 'That's more gas than 22 million cars would use. Energy use would be much higher if we include the fuel used to ship fish further for processing and to market. No discussion of the overall impact of fisheries would be complete without clarifying its contribution to greenhouse gas emissions and climate change.'

'Overall, we'd like to encourage people to engage more as citizens - as they have with the global climate change movement - and less as mere consumers,' said Pauly. 'Big problems like overfishing require efforts to be directed at big change.'

Source: University of British Columbia

The Dolomites in Italy have been inscribed on the World Heritage List due to their outstanding natural beauty and the geological significance of their limestone formations, (c) IUCN - Martin PriceWadden Sea, Dolomites inscribed on the World Heritage List

— 27 June 2009

Two new natural wonders - the Wadden Sea, on the coast of Germany and the Netherlands, and the Dolomites Mountains in Italy have been inscribed on the World Heritage List, following... — full story

Consulting a weather forecast can help avoid the surprise of a rain storm, (c) UCAR300 billion weather forecasts used by Americans annually

— 24 June 2009

Close to 9 out of 10 adult Americans obtain weather forecasts regularly, and they do so more than three times each day on average, a new nationwide survey by scientists at the National... — full story

View from a specially outfitted C-130 aircraft operated by the National Centre for Atmospheric Research in the skies over Wyoming. Scripps-led researchers made the first direct detections of airborne bacteria in clouds aboard the aircraft, and reported the results in the 17 May online edition of the journal Nature, (c) Andrew J. Heymsfield, NCARFirst direct observations of biological particles in high-altitude ice clouds

— 17 May 2009

A team of UC San Diego-led atmospheric chemistry researchers moved closer to what is considered the 'holy grail' of climate change science when it made the first-ever direct detection... — full story

Lava erupts onto the seafloor at NW Rota-1, creating a cloudy, extremely acidic plume, (c) WHOIMarine scientists return from expedition to erupting undersea volcano

— 5 May 2009

Scientists who have just returned from an expedition to an erupting undersea volcano near the Island of Guam report that the volcano appears to be continuously active, has grown considerably... — full story


Popular tags in Environment: climate · ecosystems · nitrogen · pollution