Yes Kirk,

Mankind do make a mess and I think that you can find parallels in the 
animal farming with almost all that you describe below. Look at the modern 
chicken and pig farms. Where I have my summer house in Sweden, it has 
however been a quite noticeable return of wild Salmon. We also had very 
strict control so the farmed Salmon do not escape, the worry is that the 
farmed fish would mix with the wild and degenerate it. But the humans have 
to farm animals for survival. Fish farming is being more and more controlled.

Hakan


At 09:18 AM 12/28/2002 -0700, you wrote:


>  http://www.mercola.com/2002/dec/28/fish_farms.htm
>
>Fish Farms Become Feedlots of the Sea
>
>
>By Kenneth R. Weiss
>
>
>Like cattle pens, the salmon operations bring product to market cheaply. But
>harm to ocean life and possibly human health has experts worried.
>
>
>If you bought a salmon filet in the supermarket recently or ordered one in a
>restaurant, chances are it was born in a plastic tray here, or in a place
>just like it.
>
>
>Instead of streaking through the ocean or leaping up rocky streams, it spent
>three years like a marine couch potato, circling lazily in pens, fattening
>up on pellets of salmon chow.
>
>
>It was vaccinated as a small fry to survive the diseases that race through
>these oceanic feedlots, acres of net-covered pens tethered offshore. It was
>likely dosed with antibiotics to ward off infection or fed pesticides to
>shed a beard of bloodsucking sea lice.
>
>
>For that rich, pink hue, the fish was given a steady diet of synthetic
>pigment. Without it, the flesh of these caged salmon would be an
>unappetizing, pale gray.
>
>
>While many chefs and seafood lovers snub the feedlot variety as inferior to
>wild salmon, fish farming is booming. What was once a seasonal delicacy now
>is sometimes as cheap as chicken and available year-round. Now, the hidden
>costs of mass-producing these once wild fish are coming into focus.
>
>
>Begun in Norway in the late 1960s, salmon farming has spread rapidly to
>cold-water inlets around the globe. Ninety-one salmon farms now operate in
>British Columbian waters. The number is expected to reach 200 or more in the
>next decade.
>
>
>Industrial fish farming raises many of the same concerns about chemicals and
>pollutants that are associated with feedlot cattle and factory chicken
>farms. So far, however, government scientists worry less about the effects
>of antibiotics, pesticides and artificial dyes on human health than they do
>about damage to the marine environment.
>
>
>"They're like floating pig farms," said Daniel Pauly, professor of fisheries
>at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver. "They consume a
>tremendous amount of highly concentrated protein pellets and they make a
>terrific mess."
>
>
>Fish wastes and uneaten feed smother the sea floor beneath these farms,
>generating bacteria that consume oxygen vital to shellfish and other
>bottom-dwelling sea creatures.
>
>
>Disease and parasites, which would normally exist in relatively low levels
>in fish scattered around the oceans, can run rampant in densely packed fish
>farms.
>
>
>Pesticides fed to the fish and toxic copper sulfate used to keep nets free
>of algae are building up in sea-floor sediments. Antibiotics have created
>resistant strains of disease that infect both wild and domesticated fish.
>
>
>Clouds of sea lice, incubated by captive fish on farms, swarm wild salmon as
>they swim past on their migration to the ocean.
>
>
>Of all the concerns, the biggest turns out to be a problem fish farms were
>supposed to help alleviate: the depletion of marine life from over-fishing.
>
>
>These fish farms contribute to the problem because the captive salmon must
>be fed. Salmon are carnivores and, unlike vegetarian catfish that are fed
>grain on farms, they need to eat fish to bulk up fast and remain healthy.
>
>
>It takes about 2.4 pounds of wild fish to produce one pound of farmed
>salmon, according to Rosamond L. Naylor, an agricultural economist at
>Stanford's Center for Environmental Science and Policy.
>
>
>That means grinding up a lot of sardines, anchovies, mackerel, herring and
>other fish to produce the oil and meal compressed into pellets of salmon
>chow.
>
>
>"We are not taking strain off wild fisheries. We are adding to it," Naylor
>said. "This cannot be sustained forever."
>
>
>In British Columbia, the industry, under pressure from environmentalists,
>marine scientists and local newspapers, is taking steps to mitigate some of
>the ecological problems.
>
>
>"We have made some mistakes in the past and we acknowledge them," said Mary
>Ellen Walling, executive director of the British Columbia Salmon Farmers
>Assn. "We feel the industry is sustainable, if well-managed, and we have a
>code of practices that is followed by all of our member companies."
>
>
>Nearly 30 farms are preparing to move to less ecologically fragile areas,
>under orders from Canadian authorities.
>
>
>Some farms have installed underwater video cameras to detect when fish quit
>feeding, so workers can stop scattering food pellets. Many farms are
>switching to sturdier nets to stop fish from escaping and keep out marauding
>sea lions, which are shot if they penetrate the perimeter.
>
>
>The industry now recognizes that it will soon be pushing the limits of the
>ocean.
>
>
>"There will come a time when our industry will use more of the fish oil and
>fish meal than is available," said Odd Grydeland, an executive at Heritage
>Salmon in British Columbia. "Our biggest challenge is to find substitute
>grains for fish meal and fish oil."
>
>
>Farm-raised salmon now dominates West Coast markets, arriving daily from
>Canada and Chile. About 80 percent of the salmon grown in British Columbia
>goes to markets from Seattle to Los Angeles.
>
>
>The salmon industry took off so fast in British Columbia in the 1980s that
>the provincial government, worried about the environmental toll, imposed a
>ban in 1995 on any new farms.
>
>
>The industry responded by stuffing, on average, twice as many fish into each
>farm. Today, farms typically put 50,000 to 90,000 fish in a pen 100 feet by
>100 feet. A single farm can grow 400,000 fish. Others raise a million or
>more.
>
>
>The moratorium on new farms was lifted in September by the provincial
>government after voters elected a pro-business slate of lawmakers and
>administrators. As a result, 10 to 15 farms are expected to open each year
>over the next decade.
>
>
>Five international companies -- three of them based in Norway -- control
>most of the existing farms. Nearly all are situated around Vancouver Island,
>which begins outside Seattle's Puget Sound and extends up the coast for 300
>miles.
>
>
>It's a lightly populated place of stunning beauty. Cedar, hemlock and
>Douglas fir grow right down to the high-water mark.
>
>
>Massive tides flush rich blue-green waters through the archipelago of
>islands, straits, bays and inlets, nurturing five types of wild salmon.
>These, in turn, attract seals, sea lions, white-sided dolphins and the
>world's best-known pods of killer whales.
>
>
>Residents rely on boats and seaplanes to reach surrounding islands that host
>many of the farms. Each farm is a cluster of pens, often interconnected by
>metal walkways and tethered offshore by a lattice of steel cables, floats
>and weights.
>
>
>In the midst of this idyllic setting, signs of strain on the marine
>environment are bubbling to the surface much the way diseases and parasites,
>incubated in European salmon farms, fouled the fiords of Norway and the
>lochs of Scotland.
>
>
>In Norway, parasites have so devastated wild fish that the government
>poisoned all aquatic life in dozens of rivers and streams in an effort to
>re-boot the ecological system.
>
>
>"The Norwegian companies are transferring the same operations here that have
>been used in Europe," said Pauly, the fisheries professor. "So we can infer
>that every mistake that has been done in Norway and Scotland will be
>replicated here."
>
>
>Dale Blackburn, vice president of West Coast operations for Norwegian-based
>Stolt Sea Farm, said his staff works very closely with its counterparts in
>Norway. But, he said, "It's ridiculous to think we don't learn from our
>mistakes and transfer technology blindly."
>
>
>Still, more than a dozen farms in British Columbia have been stricken by
>infectious hematopoietic necrosis, a virus that attacks the kidneys and
>spleen of fish.
>
>
>Jeanine Siemens, manager of a Stolt farm, said, "It was really hard for me
>and the crew" to oversee the killing of 900,000 young salmon last August
>because of a viral outbreak.
>
>
>"We had a boat pumping dead fish every day," she said. "It took a couple of
>weeks. But it was the best decision. You are at risk of infecting other
>farms."
>
>
>Farms are typically required to bury the dead in landfills to protect wild
>marine life and the environment. But Grieg Seafood recently got an emergency
>permit from the Canadian government to dump in the Pacific 900 tons of
>salmon killed by a toxic algae bloom. The emergency? The weight of the dead
>fish threatened to sink the entire farm.
>
>
>About 1 million live Atlantic salmon -- favored by farmers because they grow
>fast and can be packed in tight quarters -- have escaped through holes in
>nets and storm-wrecked farms in the Pacific Northwest.
>
>
>Biologists fear these invaders will out-compete Pacific salmon and trout for
>food and territory, hastening the demise of the native fish. An Atlantic
>salmon takeover could knock nature's balance out of whack and turn a
>healthy, diverse marine habitat into one dominated by a single invasive
>species.
>
>
>Preserving diversity is essential, biologists say, because multiple species
>of salmon have a better chance of surviving than just one.
>
>
>John Volpe, a fisheries ecologist at the University of Alberta, has been
>swimming rivers with snorkel and mask to document the spread of Atlantic
>salmon and their offspring.
>
>
>"In the majority of rivers, I find Atlantic salmon," Volpe said. "We know
>they are out there; we just don't know how many, or what to do about them."
>
>
>His research focuses on how Atlantic salmon can colonize, if given a chance.
>It has terrified the U.S. neighbors to the north. Alaskan officials banned
>fish farms in 1990 to protect their wild fishery. So they don't take kindly
>to British Columbian farms creeping toward their southern border.
>
>
>Although native Pacific salmon are rare and endangered in the Lower 48,
>Alaska's salmon fisheries are so healthy they have earned the Marine
>Stewardship Council's eco-label as "sustainable." The council's labels are
>designed to guide consumers to species that are not being over-harvested.
>
>
>Recently, the prospect of genetically modified salmon that can grow six
>times faster than normal fish has heightened anxiety. Aqua Bounty Farms
>Inc., of Waltham, Mass., is seeking U.S. and Canadian approval to alter
>genes to produce a growth hormone that could shave a year off the usual 2.5
>to three years it takes to raise a market-size fish.
>
>
>Commercial fishermen and other critics fear that these "frankenfish" will
>escape and pose an even greater danger to native species than do the
>Atlantic salmon.
>
>
>"Nobody can predict just what that means for our wild salmon," Alaska Gov.
>Tony Knowles said. "We do see it as a threat."
>
>
>Canadian commercial fishermen, initially supportive of salmon farms, have
>grown increasingly hostile. They were stunned in August when their nets came
>up nearly empty during the first day of the wild pink salmon season in the
>Broughton Archipelago at the northeast end of Vancouver Island.
>
>
>"There should have been millions of pinks, but there were fewer than anyone
>can remember," said Calvin Siider, a salmon gill-netter. "We can't prove
>that sea lice caused it. But common sense tells you something, if they are
>covered by sea lice as babies, and they don't come back as adults."
>
>
>Alexandra Morton, an independent biologist and critic of salmon farms, began
>examining sea lice in 2001 when a fishermen brought her two baby pink salmon
>covered with them.
>
>
>Collecting more than 700 baby pink salmon around farms, she found that 78
>percent were covered with a fatal load of sea lice, which burrow into fish
>and feed on skin, mucous and blood. Juvenile salmon she netted farther from
>the farms were largely lice-free.
>
>
>Bud Graham, British Columbia's assistant deputy minister of agriculture,
>food and fisheries, called this a "unique phenomenon."
>
>
>"We have not seen that before. We really don't understand it," he said.
>"We've not had sea lice problems in our waters, compared to Scotland and
>Ireland."
>
>
>Salmon farmers point out that the sea louse exists in the wild. Their
>captive fish are unlikely hosts, the farmers say, because at the first sign
>of an outbreak, they add the pesticide emamectin benzoate to the feed.
>
>
>Under Canadian rules, farmers must halt the use of pesticides 25 days before
>harvest to make sure all residues are flushed from the fish. If that's done,
>officials said, pesticides should pose no danger to consumers.
>
>
>European health officials have debated whether there is any human health
>risk from synthetic pigment added to the feed to give farmed salmon their
>pink hue.
>
>
>In the wild, salmon absorb carotenoid from eating pink krill. On the farm,
>they get canthaxanthin manufactured by Hoffman-La Roche. The pharmaceutical
>company distributes its trademarked SalmoFan, similar to paint store
>swatches, so fish farmers can choose among various shades.
>
>
>Europeans are suspicious of canthaxanthin, which was linked to retinal
>damage in people when taken as a sunless tanning pill. The British banned
>its use as a tanning agent, but it's still available in the United States.
>
>
>As for its use in animal feed, the European Commission scientific committee
>on animal nutrition issued a warning about the pigment and urged the
>industry to find an alternative. But in response, the British Food Standards
>Agency took the position that normal consumption of salmon poses no health
>risk. No government has banned the pigment from animal feed.
>
>
>Scientists in the United States are far more concerned about a pair of
>preliminary studies -- one in British Columbia and one in Great Britain --
>that showed farmed salmon accumulate more cancer-causing PCBs and toxic
>dioxins than wild salmon.
>
>
>Scientists in the U.S. are trying to determine the extent of the
>contamination in salmon and what levels are safe for human consumption.
>
>
>The culprit appears to be the salmon feed, which contains higher
>concentrations of fish oil -- extracted from sardines, anchovies and other
>ground-up fish -- than wild salmon normally consume. Man-made contaminants,
>PCBs and dioxins make their way into the ocean and are absorbed by marine
>life.
>
>
>The pollutants accumulate in fat that is distilled into the concentrated
>fish oil, which, in turn, is a prime ingredient of the salmon feed.
>
>
>Farmed salmon are far fattier than their wild cousins, although they do not
>contain as much of the beneficial omega-3 fatty acids.
>
>
>The industry complains that environmental activists have misinterpreted the
>contaminant studies, needlessly frightening consumers.
>
>
>"The concern is that people will stop eating fish," said Walling, of the
>British Columbia Salmon Farmers Assn. "Salmon is a healthy food choice. Our
>Canadian government says this is a safe food."
>
>
>Environmentalists in British Columbia and Scotland recently launched
>campaigns urging consumers to boycott farmed salmon until the industry
>changes many of its practices.
>
>
>At the least, they want the farms to switch to solid-walled pens with catch
>basins to isolate farmed fish -- and their diseases, pests and waste -- from
>the environment. The ideal solution, they say, is to have the farmed stock
>raised in landlocked tanks.
>
>
>Protests notwithstanding, the industry is expected to get a lot bigger.
>Demand for seafood is rising and will double by 2040, according to the
>U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization. Nearly half the world's wild
>fisheries are exhausted from over-fishing, thus much of the supply will
>likely come from farmed seafood.
>
>
>"Aquaculture is here to stay," said Rebecca Goldburg, a biologist who
>co-authored a report on the industry for the Pew Oceans Commission. "The
>challenge is to ensure that this young industry grows in a sustainable
>manner and does not cause serious ecological damage."
>
>
>L.A. Times Dec. 9, 2002
>
>
>
>----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>----
>DR. MERCOLA'S COMMENT:
>  E-mail to a friend
>
>Many people will choose to eat fish at a restaurant because they believe it
>is one of the healthier choices on the menu, but the sad reality is that
>technology has transformed fish into an unhealthy choice. Traditionally
>caught fish are a problem due to the mercury and PCBs they receive from
>polluted waters. Farm-raised fish, which are raised in the same water, have
>the same issues with PCBs and mercury.
>
>
>However, nearly all fish sold in restaurants have the problems discussed in
>the story above. Not only will you not get many of the beneficial omega-3
>oils because of what the fish are fed, but the fish themselves are very
>unhealthy, much like factory-raised cattle.
>
>
>This story provides compelling reasons why you should seriously reconsider
>eating fish at nearly all restaurants.
>
>
>Although I don't advocate eating fish unless it has been tested and found to
>be free of mercury and other toxins, the best type of omega-3 fats are those
>found in fish. This type of omega-3 is high in two fatty acids crucial to
>human health, DHA and EPA, which are pivotal in preventing heart disease,
>cancer, and many other diseases.
>
>Routine consumption of fish oil, rich in EPA and DHA, is highly encouraged
>as it is in pure form and does not pose the mercury risk of fresh fish. It
>is important to obtain a high-quality oil to ensure that it is pure. I have
>tried various brands, but the one brand my patients and I have experienced
>outstanding success with, and that I can recommend highly, is Carlson's fish
>oil and cod liver oil, which is now available in my "Recommended Products"
>section. You may also be able to find it at your local health food store.
>Carlson's is regularly tested by an independent FDA registered laboratory
>and is of high potency and purity.
>
>Related Articles:
>
>Heart Disease Linked to Mercury-Contaminated Fish
>
>
>Why You Should Stop Eating Fish
>
>Mercury and Seafood Linked to Infertility
>
>FDA Negligent On Mercury in Fish
>
>
>Discover How Your Beef is Really Raised
>
>
>----------------------------------------------------------------------------



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