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Author Topic: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???  (Read 20701 times)

Dave

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #15 on: April 30, 2013, 07:49:07 PM »

Don't forget China, Russia, Japan and every other country that ranches salmon.  Oh yeah, add in every trout and salmon hatchery in North America, and, most likely, the world.
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Bassonator

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #16 on: April 30, 2013, 08:27:26 PM »

I love it...Anti's gettin it handed to them.
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dnibbles

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #17 on: April 30, 2013, 08:58:13 PM »

I like how you say that with a straight face......  If the industry was honest about it they would tell us how many pounds of "live fish" it takes to produce a pound of "live" atlantic. The ratio is probably closer to 10:1

Taking the weight of the fish oil and dried compressed fish meal it takes to put a pound of atlantic filet on a grocery shelf is not an honest comparison....

Here you go bankboy. Maybe you should be focusing on the shrimp aquaculture industry instead?

http://www.feedconferences.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderfiles/Obach.pdf

Don't believe them? Of course you don't, this is generally your cue to either deflect or to just irrationally claim that all the experts are lying. Maybe some first hand investigation would help?

I'm sure there's a salmon or trout hatchery somewhere near your RBC branch. Check out
http://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/sep-pmvs/hatcheries-ecloseries-eng.htm
 or http://www.gofishbc.com/about-us/what-we-do/fish-hatcheries.aspx .
 Find one nearby and head on down to educate yourself (you don't work on Mondays, right?). Talk to some of the people feeding fish on a daily basis, ask them about what it takes to grow a fish.
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absolon

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #18 on: May 02, 2013, 08:35:54 AM »


Um, the east coast cod debacle is probably why I live in BC now. IF it had been properly managed, I would probably still be in the east , doing what my family did since the 1700's when we first landed here. I notice nobody wants to address the fact about the amount of protein required to raise an Atlantic. Must all be politicians, ;)

As I remember, there were many voices pointing out the unsustainability of the cod harvest even if the politicians, particularly John Crosby, insisted that it could safely go ahead. All those fishermen and processors chose to continue harvesting in spite of those voices so it's a bit disingenuous to blame it all on the DFO now that the golden goose has been killed.

The amount of protein required to feed farm fish has been addressed many times both in terms of the quantity and the source. It's your choice to ignore it so again, it's a bit disingenuous to claim that no-one is addressing the issue.
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alwaysfishn

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #19 on: May 02, 2013, 09:21:57 AM »

As I remember, there were many voices pointing out the unsustainability of the cod harvest even if the politicians, particularly John Crosby, insisted that it could safely go ahead. All those fishermen and processors chose to continue harvesting in spite of those voices so it's a bit disingenuous to blame it all on the DFO now that the golden goose has been killed.


You'd think that we would have learned from that and applied that experience to the west coast feedlot business. In spite of the many voices pointing out that the feedlots are killing our wild salmon, industry and government insist that planting feedlots in wild salmon habitat can safely go ahead...

Go figure!  >:(
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absolon

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #20 on: May 03, 2013, 08:23:00 AM »

The obvious lesson would be that you can't continue the overharvest of wild fish by the sport, commercial and native sectors in the face of declining environmental conditions and expect the stocks to survive. The east coast experience is a clear and unambiguous demonstration of the consequences and it is truly unfortunate that so many choose to ignore it in favour of speculative associations with salmon farms.
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alwaysfishn

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #21 on: May 03, 2013, 10:31:51 AM »

My understanding is that our government works hard at managing the harvest of the wild stocks. Are you suggesting that the same good folks that are "supposedly" doing a great job of managing the feedlot industry are allowing overfishing, perhaps even managing the wild fisheries to extinction? Or is it just that your perspective is purely from the feedlot industries point of view?
 
I'm not sure if you have ever fished a day in your life.....  Most of us sports fishermen are not quite willing to pack away our fishing rods while allowing and then watching foreign companies kill off our wild salmon with their feedlots.
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Dave

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #22 on: May 03, 2013, 11:38:51 AM »

Most of us sports fishermen are not quite willing to pack away our fishing rods while allowing and then watching foreign companies kill off our wild salmon with their feedlots.
Name one stock of wild salmon being harmed by salmon farms.  You can't, you know it, but still you trot it out on a daily basis.
Early run Fraser chinook, on the other hand, are being fished to near extinction by FN as we speak.  Laying blame on whomever is at fault isn't helping these stocks as it's pretty much too late, much like the east coast cod debacle.
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absolon

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #23 on: May 04, 2013, 10:56:36 AM »


.....Most of us sports fishermen are not quite willing to pack away our fishing rods........

That would be the kernel of truth in the flowing river of manure.
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alwaysfishn

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #24 on: May 04, 2013, 12:02:08 PM »

Most of us sports fishermen are not quite willing to pack away our fishing rods while allowing and then watching foreign companies kill off our wild salmon with their feedlots.
That would be the kernel of truth in the flowing river of manure.

Isn't that what the feedlots are waiting for? They're thinking that they if they can eliminate a major competitor, they can also open up a whole new market for feedlot fish....

It would be interesting to hear how many sports fishermen would actually buy and eat that stuff....
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absolon

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #25 on: May 04, 2013, 12:05:12 PM »

Most of us sports fishermen are not quite willing to pack away our fishing rods
the kernel
Quote
while allowing and then watching foreign companies kill off our wild salmon with their feedlots.
the river
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Every Day

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #26 on: May 04, 2013, 03:38:34 PM »

It would be interesting to hear how many sports fishermen would actually buy and eat that stuff....

I've eaten it... it's not bad at all.
I wouldn't buy it, because it is expensive, and I have more than enough from catching fish, but I'd still eat it no problem.
The funniest thing is if I put steelhead and Atlantic on a plate side by side cooked you probably couldn't tell the difference.

Dave is right.

WE are destroying our wild stocks - not the farms. Just like WE destroyed the cod fishery and Atlantic fishery on the east coast by over-fishing them.

That is why we NEED salmon farms and sustainable aquaculture, because if we don't have it we will completely destroy our wild stocks of fish and fish them to extinction.

I like how you say that with a straight face......  If the industry was honest about it they would tell us how many pounds of "live fish" it takes to produce a pound of "live" atlantic. The ratio is probably closer to 10:1

I just needed to comment on this too...

First of all, there is a set number of "food fish" that can be harvested every year for fish meal. This number doesn't change unless population calls for it. Th funniest part about what you said is that if you own a pet you are contributing to the destruction of "live feed" more than fish farms do as only about 10% of fish harvested actually go to fish meal. The other 90% go to pet food, etc.

They use chicken bone, plant protein and other proteins to fill in for fish meal in most cases. There are endless possibilities and it doesn't always need to involve fish. As for the last thing you said.... it's just very ill advised, and you should probably learn a little bit about conversion ratio's before commenting. In many cases a manager will be fired if he is much over a 1:1 conversion ratio. Most of them, as dnibbles said, are actually getting better than a 1:1 ratio.
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alwaysfishn

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #27 on: May 04, 2013, 04:37:22 PM »

That is why we NEED salmon farms and sustainable aquaculture, because if we don't have it we will completely destroy our wild stocks of fish and fish them to extinction.

Are you suggesting DFO is not doing a good job at regulating catches of wild stock? Why would that be? Is it because they see wild fish as a problem that is costing the government and the feedlot industry market share?

I just needed to comment on this too...

First of all, there is a set number of "food fish" that can be harvested every year for fish meal. This number doesn't change unless population calls for it. Th funniest part about what you said is that if you own a pet you are contributing to the destruction of "live feed" more than fish farms do as only about 10% of fish harvested actually go to fish meal. The other 90% go to pet food, etc.

They use chicken bone, plant protein and other proteins to fill in for fish meal in most cases. There are endless possibilities and it doesn't always need to involve fish. As for the last thing you said.... it's just very ill advised, and you should probably learn a little bit about conversion ratio's before commenting. In many cases a manager will be fired if he is much over a 1:1 conversion ratio. Most of them, as dnibbles said, are actually getting better than a 1:1 ratio.

I appreciate that you like all pro feedlot posters would like to deflect the question of the unsustainability of growing feedlot fish when you need to catch wild fish to grow them. The post you were referencing was regarding feedlot salmon not pets. (but for your info I don't own any pets) Most people are aware that much of the fish meal comes from areas of the world where regulations are not enforced, so suggesting that only a set number of wild fish are caught for fish meal is just not true. Perhaps you would do better in "educating" us if you answered the question on conversion ratios rather than just repeating what previous feedlot proponents have said.

If the industry was honest about it they would tell us how many pounds of "live fish" it takes to produce a pound of "live" atlantic.
« Last Edit: May 04, 2013, 04:39:22 PM by alwaysfishn »
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Dave

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #28 on: May 04, 2013, 06:17:51 PM »

Go back a few posts af - food conversion issues have been addressed many times here and on other forums you and I and most others who care about aquaculture frequent, but as absolon and nibs said earlier, you simply refuse to listen, or perhaps comprehend.
C'mon, give us something new as debating you is becoming boring ;)

I'll let ED off the hook here and say yes, the senior managers of DFO based in Ottawa are doing a poor job of protecting wild salmon stocks but certainly not for your conspiracy theories; I say too many people, FN, sporties, and commercial fishers, are demanding their perceived right to kill salmon; as an example I'm asked almost daily if "we" are going to get a sockeye opening this summer, and just like they did for the east coast cod fishery, the people elected to manage this issue are listening to the people who put them in (and back in) office.  It's greed af, pure and simple; we know the problem and it's us.
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alwaysfishn

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Re: Another "environmentally friendly" salmon feedlot ???
« Reply #29 on: May 04, 2013, 06:24:24 PM »

Go back a few posts af - food conversion issues have been addressed many times here and on other forums you and I and most others who care about aquaculture frequent, but as absolon and nibs said earlier, you simply refuse to listen, or perhaps comprehend.


Lol.....  but you won't answer the question. That 1:1 conversion ratio is becoming stale, can't you guys freshen it up a little with some truth?
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