Researchers seek better ways to farm sablefish – The Seattle Times

NOAA is studying ways to make it easier to commercially harvest the sablefish, prized for its flavor and as a possible solution to a worldwide demand for seafood

PORT ORCHARD The dark-gray fish prized for its buttery flavor live deep in the ocean, so researchers keep their lab cold and dark to simulate ideal conditions for sablefish larvae.

A biologist shines his dim red headlamp and uses an ultrasound to scan the belly of an anesthetized sablefish about the length of his forearm to tell if its female and has eggs to collect. He gently squeezes out hundreds of tiny, translucent eggs into a glass beaker.

Once the eggs are fertilized externally, theyll grow in large indoor tanks and some in floating net pens in Puget Sound to be used for research.

At this federal marine research station near Seattle, scientists are studying sablefish genetics and investigating ways to make it easier and more efficient to commercially grow the fish.

It is part of a larger effort by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to support marine aquaculture as a solution to feed a growing demand worldwide for seafood.

People are consuming more fish than in previous decades, with average worldwide per capita consumption hitting 43 pounds a year, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Fish consumption is expected to grow more in coming years.

NOAA says aquaculture can relieve pressure on fishing populations and promote economic growth.

Fishermen along the West Coast, mostly in Alaska, catch millions of pounds of wild sablefish each year, but no commercial sablefish net-pen farming exists in the U.S.

Sablefish, also known as black cod or butterfish, are a long-lived species native to the northeast Pacific Ocean and highly valued in Asia for its beneficial nutrients and delicate flavor. The fish is grilled, smoked, poached, roasted or served as sushi.

Michael Rubino, who directs the NOAA aquaculture program, noted that practices for farming fish in the United States meet very strict environmental regulations.

But some critics worry large-scale farms could harm wild fish stocks and ocean health, and some commercial fishermen worry about potential competition.

This would be a big threat for us, said Robert Alverson, executive director of the Fishing Vessel Owners Association, a Seattle-based group that represents about 95 commercial fishermen in Alaska, Oregon, Washington and California.

In 2015, fisherman harvested about 35 million pounds of sablefish worth $113 million in the United States, all along the West Coast.

Nearly half of the sablefish caught in the United States is exported, with a majority going to Japan.

Alaska prohibits finfish farming.

Rubino and others say wild harvests and aquaculture can complement each other, particularly during months when there are lower catch limits for wild sablefish.

In recent years, NOAA scientists have worked to reduce potential barriers to sablefish aquaculture. They have developed techniques to produce all-female stocks of sablefish that grow faster and much bigger than males in about 24 months. Ideal market size is roughly 5 pounds.

Theyve also studied different ways to reduce the costs of feeding juvenile fish, increase larvae survival rates and decrease deformities.

One research project is replacing more expensive algae with clay that is used to help sablefish larvae better find their prey. Another looked at finding the optimal temperature to increase larval growth.

Wild fish are caught off the Washington coast and used to develop captive brood stocks, or mature fish that are used for breeding.

At the facility, the fertilized eggs grow in silos in dark, cold rooms before being moved to other indoor tanks where theyre fed a steady diet of brined shrimp and other food. Large circular tanks hold fish in different growth stages.

The facility produces about 10,000 all-female fingerlings, or juveniles about an inch long, each year.

Kurt Grinnell, aquaculture manager for the Jamestown SKallam Tribe, said the tribe is very interested in sablefish aquaculture for many reasons.

Its a native fish to our area. Its a very robust fish. Its very sought-after. Its got great market value, he said. Over time, our country and other countries will have to get their protein source somewhere, and we believe this is one way to meet that demand.

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Researchers seek better ways to farm sablefish - The Seattle Times

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