logo
Find us on
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Skip Navigation Links
logo 9/24/2024 3:17:48 PM     
Mass fish escape raises concerns over fish farming 
By Tim Jeanes AU Source: abc 5/19/2005

MARK COLVIN: Australia's latest mass escape of farmed fish has raised new questions about the environmental dangers of aquaculture industries.

Up to 25,000 salmon and trout recently escaped from a fish farm at Tasmania's Macquarie Harbour.

Locals have described the aftermath as looking like an abattoir after fishermen went on a catching drive and left blood and fish guts strewn around the area.

But conservationists, and traditional fishermen, say the incident points to a far more dangerous side to putting feedlots in our oceans.
 

TIM JEANES: Tasmanian West Coast Mayor, Darryl Gerrity, says the scene was one of carnage, after recreational fishermen moved in for the kill.

DARRYL GERRITY: It was awash with salmon that had been filleted, and it was quite disgusting and a was substantial mess. There's not very little tidal movement in that particular area, and they're now starting to rot and smell, and is not good for the tourism image, and the green and clean image that we want to project on the West Coast of Tasmania.

TIM JEANES: Mayor Gerrity says the danger extends beyond the immediate threat to public health.

DARRYL GERRITY: There's not a lot of work been done on it, but when you've got 15,000 salmon, afford at 10 kilo each, in Macquarie Harbour that has some pollution and has got a limited food chain for the native fish, there are grave concerns.

TIM JEANES: Not so according to the industry.

Pheroze Jungalwalla is the Executive Officer of the local Growers Association. He says research into escapee Atlantic salmon has found they don't generally attack other species.

PHEROZE JUNGALWALLA: About three per cent had fish remains, and one per cent had invertebrates in their gut. The rest of the gut content was made up of either pellets or things like leaves, twigs, stones, even cigarette butts and earplugs, really indicating that these fish are very well accustomed to eating pellets, that's what they're accustomed to, and they really aren't very successful at foraging in the wild.

TIM JEANES: In South Australia, there's a similar conflict of opinion over a different species, yellowtail kingfish.

 
Salmon, Atlantic Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1101Nepal’s water hyacinth helps exotic fish invade, harming native speciesmongabay2023-11-07NP
1102Federal Fisheries Department doing a poor job of monitoring fishing industryCBC News2023-11-07CA
1103A story about counting steelhead is an immersive journey to the river.montereycountyweekly2023-11-11US
1104Fishermen threaten to stop fishing, take legal action over massive block of offshore wind farmsportugalresident2023-11-12PT
1105Fishermen Catch Huge Blue Marlin Weighing Over 1,000lbs in Gulf of Mexiconewsweek2023-11-06US
1106Elephantnose Fish ‘Sees’ by Doing an Electric Boogiescientificamerican2023-11-06DE
1107Aucklanders ignore safety warnings to fish in polluted harbourrnz2023-11-09NZ
1108Хороший клев лобастой кефали в Сочиohotniki2023-11-16RU
1109US Commercial fishing groups sue tire manufacturers over fish-killing chemicalreuters2023-11-08US
1110Salmon are vanishing from the Yukon River — and so is a way of lifegrist2023-11-09CA
1111Sixth grader hooks mammoth koi fish from a Houston-area pondchron2023-11-09US
1112Key Indonesian fish populations depleted & new assessments neededmongabay2023-10-31ID
1113Why don’t fish have tonsils? They have a good alternative, study suggestsscience2023-11-01US
1114Why volunteers rescue 1,000s of stranded fish every fall from this irrigation canalcalgaryjournal2023-11-01CA
1115Japanese consumers are eating more local fish in spite of Chinas ban due to Fukushima wastewaterabcnews2023-11-02JP
1116Fish travel in style on train as man keeps tanks air filter goingFox News2023-11-03US
1117Abundance of Fraser River pink salmon run exceeds forecastCTV News2023-08-23CA
1118Newfoundland fishermen get 'best news' on northern cod stocks in a generationCTV News2023-11-03CA
1119Fishing Equipment Market to Reach $23 Billion, Globally, by 2032 at 4.8% CAGRwfmz2023-11-16US
1120N.W.T. fishing camp creating community for active and veteran military membersCBC News2023-11-17CA
1121Frisch: Season Highlightsechopress2023-11-17US
1122Generation of B.C. salmon wiped out by central coast landslidethestar2020-12-15CA
1123Massive landslide on B.C. coast imperils dwindling salmon stocksCBC News2020-12-15CA
1124Study of 17,000 years of fish fossils reveals rapid evolutionscience2023-10-04US
1125America’s eel RAS superstarthefishsite2023-11-15US

214 215 216 44 of [217 - pages.]