Environmental issues in Chilean salmon farming: a review

The growth of Chilean salmon production has not been free of important sanitary and environmental shortcomings. To ensure sustainability, it is necessary to understand the environmental impacts of salmon production on the Patagonian ecosystems. Currently, there is limited regulation or monitoring of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Reviews in aquaculture 2019-05, Vol.11 (2), p.375-402
Hauptverfasser: Quiñones, Renato A., Fuentes, Marcelo, Montes, Rodrigo M., Soto, Doris, León‐Muñoz, Jorge
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container_issue 2
container_start_page 375
container_title Reviews in aquaculture
container_volume 11
creator Quiñones, Renato A.
Fuentes, Marcelo
Montes, Rodrigo M.
Soto, Doris
León‐Muñoz, Jorge
description The growth of Chilean salmon production has not been free of important sanitary and environmental shortcomings. To ensure sustainability, it is necessary to understand the environmental impacts of salmon production on the Patagonian ecosystems. Currently, there is limited regulation or monitoring of impacts in the freshwater phase compared to the marine fattening stage, and there is some evidence of local eutrophication impact and diversity changes downstream the farms. Eutrophication of Patagonian channels and fjords from marine farms has been recognized as crucial environmental risk, although most scientific evidence comes from local effects below and around farms. So far, there are no regulations based on carrying capacity estimates to limit maximum fish biomass per area or water body. There is controversy regarding the potential role of nutrients derived from farming in triggering harmful algal blooms, yet current environmental monitoring and available information does not allow establishing or rejecting a cause–effect relationship. Pesticides used to control sea lice infestation have been shown to be deleterious to some non‐target species. There is evidence that the use of high quantities of antibiotics has allowed the development of antibiotic‐resistant bacteria in sediments and there is concern that salmon aquaculture has the potential to increase the proportion of antimicrobial‐resistant bacteria to antibiotics that are used in human medicine. There is an urgent need for more comprehensive ecosystem (beyond farm) studies on the impacts of antibiotics. Escapes of salmon (exotic species) from farms are a relevant environmental risk, although the most farmed species, Salmo salar, has shown little success in establishing wild populations. The review identifies critical knowledge gaps whose fulfilment is essential to advance towards an ecosystem approach to aquaculture and to protect Patagonian ecosystems.
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Pesticides used to control sea lice infestation have been shown to be deleterious to some non‐target species. There is evidence that the use of high quantities of antibiotics has allowed the development of antibiotic‐resistant bacteria in sediments and there is concern that salmon aquaculture has the potential to increase the proportion of antimicrobial‐resistant bacteria to antibiotics that are used in human medicine. There is an urgent need for more comprehensive ecosystem (beyond farm) studies on the impacts of antibiotics. Escapes of salmon (exotic species) from farms are a relevant environmental risk, although the most farmed species, Salmo salar, has shown little success in establishing wild populations. 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Pesticides used to control sea lice infestation have been shown to be deleterious to some non‐target species. There is evidence that the use of high quantities of antibiotics has allowed the development of antibiotic‐resistant bacteria in sediments and there is concern that salmon aquaculture has the potential to increase the proportion of antimicrobial‐resistant bacteria to antibiotics that are used in human medicine. There is an urgent need for more comprehensive ecosystem (beyond farm) studies on the impacts of antibiotics. Escapes of salmon (exotic species) from farms are a relevant environmental risk, although the most farmed species, Salmo salar, has shown little success in establishing wild populations. 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subjects Algal blooms
Antibiotics
Aquaculture
aquaculture pollution
Bacteria
Carrying capacity
Ecological monitoring
Ecosystem approach to fisheries
Ecosystems
Environmental changes
Environmental impact
Environmental monitoring
Environmental risk
environmental sustainability
Eutrophication
Farming
Farms
Fish
Fjords
Freshwater
Freshwater fishes
Infestation
Inland water environment
Introduced species
Lice
Medicine
Nutrients
Patagonian marine ecosystems
Pesticides
Salmo salar
Salmon
salmon farming
Sediments
Sustainability
Toxicity tests
Water bodies
Water quality
title Environmental issues in Chilean salmon farming: a review
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