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When the oceans are plundered
The nineties may well be remembered as the decade that
the crisis in world fishing first hit. For the 200 million people, mainly
from developing countries, who depend on diverse thriving aquatic ecosystems
for their livelihoods, the consequences have been most severe. Since the
fifties the world's fishing fleet has been growing, reaching a peak between
1970 and 1989 when fleets grew at twice the rate of fish landings. Corporate-ridden
and stimulated by international development agencies and banks, the industrialisation
of fisheries and the race for the last fish, have led to global problems
of over-capacity and over-investment. Each year, the governments of the
world subsidise the global fleet by US$54 billion to obtain catches to
the value of US$79 billion. Ever more sophisticated technology is carried
by larger vessels and bigger fleets producing more waste. The United Nations
Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), has calculated that close to
one fifth of the world's marine fish catches are discarded back into the
sea.
As fish become scarcer, prices increase and the international
fish market expands to new grounds. Fish production in the Southern countries
has skyrocketed with foreign exchange earnings from their fish increasing
from US$9 billion in 1983 to US$17 billion in 1993. While both States
and small-scale fishermen in the South may temporally benefit from higher
prices, the poor and the not-so poor consumers in the South gradually
lose their access to a traditionally cheap protein, as fish literally
travels North, either by boat or plane. Exports increase more than production
and internal fish consumption decreases. In the period 1978-1988, African
per capita supply decreased by 2.9% and in South America by 7.9%, while
fish has become expensive even for middle classes in India. The average
fish consumption in the North is triple that of the South, even though
fish constitutes a more important part of the diet in many areas in the
South, particularly Asia. For example, in Bangladesh, where fish accounts
for more than 50% of the animal protein intake, the average annual per
capita intake is 7.2 kilograms. In contrast to the United Kingdom and
United States, where fish accounts respectively for some 10% and 6% of
the animal protein intake, annual per capita consumption is close to 20
kilograms. In the long term, both North and South, the intensification
of fishing activities results in small-scale, inshore fishermen being
pushed aside.
Although global fish catches have steadily increased
since the fifties, up to the 116 million tons produced in 1996, there
are numerous signs that this trend is unsustainable. According to the
FAO, in 1994 35% of fishing grounds were over-exploited or depleted, while
25% were fully exploited and only 40% allowed for an increase in captures
under current exploitation patterns. As the FAO itself puts it, "the
ever-growing total tonnage of world fishery production gives a misleading
vision of the state of world fishery resources and a false sense of security".
There is no shortage of indications that something fishy
is indeed happening to our oceans. Just a couple of examples may help
to give an idea of the depth of the problem. World-wide, only the Western
Pacific still keeps healthy tuna resources, while Greenpeace reports that,
"Scientists estimate that overfishing has reduced Southern bluefin
to only 2-5% of its original population levels". Almost all groundfish
stocks seem to be heavily fished or overfished in just ten years,
the world catch of groundfish species has been halved. It had traditionally
been considered that the likelihood of fishing any species to extinction
was remote. Nevertheless, in 1996 the IUCN included about a hundred species
of marine fish in their Red List of endangered species. Besides several
species of tuna, it includes sharks and more than 30 species of seahorse.
The evidence is so large, and the implications so deep
(not only for the world's peoples, but also for the fish processing industry)
that the problem has now been widely acknowledged. However, more than
stressing the need to change fishing strategy, those who created the problem
in the first place, such as the World Bank, UN FAO and the agri-food industry,
are keen to promote aquaculture as a new industrial sector. In the words
of Ismael Serageldin, Chair of the Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research (CGIAR): "On the land we have learned to
produce food by cultivation. But in the sea we still act as hunters and
gatherers". To raise the sense of urgency, we are again reminded
about the need to feed a growing world population. The FAO projects that
by 2010 there will be a shortfall of 16 million tons in the supply of
fish and fishery products to meet demand. As the North Atlantic Salmon
Conservation Organisation (NASCO) says, "By the year 2025 the
demand will have increased from 100 to 165 million tons". The
crisis is also recognised by industry as mentioned by Aquaculture Production
Technology, a specialised Israeli company, "The only way to bridge
the gap between reduced capture fisheries output and increased world
demand is through Aquaculture". A closer look at the proposed
solution of aquaculture raises doubts as to its long term viability. It
is noticeable that to convince society of the importance of learning to
cultivate fish, the promoters of aquaculture have their best arguments
in the experience of farming communities world-wide who have been doing
it for millennia.
Traditional, extensive aquaculture
The harvest of wild fish and other aquatic produce such
as crabs and frogs, collected from rice paddies after the first heavy
rains, continues to be key for food security and animal protein intake
to many farming communities in lowland areas of Asia. Aquaculture, however,
starts when human action controls or enhances the rearing in water of
fish, crustaceans or molluscs. The rise of carp within complex agricultural
rice systems in China is perhaps as old as rice culture itself. Rice farmers
in Kerala, India, have for centuries managed a polyculture system based
on rotational cultivation of rice and shrimp, their Chenmmeenkettu.
Equally, 300 years ago the Japanese learnt to favour the growing of seaweed
for their diet.
These low-external input aquacultural systems, which
are often referred to as "extensive aquaculture" by the
formal sector, do not compete with other uses of the aquatic environment,
but rather complement them by helping to close nutrient cycles. For example,
in many countries, particularly in Asia, farmers have developed systems
in which wastes - poultry, animal and plant wastes - are thrown into fishponds
to encourage the growth of organisms which fish feed upon. Wastes are
then returned to the field as fertiliser. The main fish species in these
systems are carp and, more recently, tilapia. These systems still thrive
today through local initiative and NGO rural development programmes. Rice
farmers are continuously adapting fish to their needs such as pest and
weed control.
Farmers innovation has helped enhance nutrition
and increased their income. In Indonesia, fish can help raise incomes
from paddies because fish income does not have to be shared with the landlord.
The results of the introduction of fish in complex agricultural systems
may be spectacular even from a purely economic point of view. Malawian
farmers have been able to totally transform their farm management through
fish aquaculture in the marginal wet lands, associated with vegetable
cropping. After seven years these farmers came to earn more from the gardens
and ponds than from their croplands and homestead, and it has been calculated
that for every dollar invested in the wetlands seven were generated. The
importance of such aquaculture for food security is reflected in the fact
that 85% of aquacultural production in the South is consumed locally.
The Blue Revolutionaries
The new prophets of aquaculture intend to reproduce the
Green Revolution production model in aquatics. Industry, multilateral
development banks and UN agencies proclaim it as the Blue Revolution.
Although occasionally referring to the benefits of traditional aquacultural
practices, what they propose is entirely different: the monocropping of
high-value species to supply international markets. Will a model based
on the green revolution, that failed to meet the needs of the resource
poor and increased genetic erosion in agriculture, do any better underwater?
Half of marine aquacultural production
is actually made up of marine algae and seaweed, mainly kelp, this article
focuses exclusively on the fish sector. In the last ten years aquacultural
production has more than doubled, to one fifth of total world fish production
(figure 1). Given that one third of all fish catches
are turned into fishoil and fishmeal, aquaculture provides a quarter of
the fish used for direct human consumption. Impressive as this
growth may look, it reflects mostly the activity of a single country,
China (see box & figure 2).
Asian developing countries provide the centre of production
and in 1995, China alone accounted for 63% of total world aquaculture.
The other main producers are: India, the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand,
Bangladesh and Taiwan. Within developed countries, Japan and the US are
the main producers, followed by France, Italy and Norway.
The species produced vary according to the kind of water
and to the regions (table 1). World-wide,
the bulk of the production is still from low-value freshwater species
that are raised in integrated agricultural systems: carp and, to a lesser
extend, tilapia. The farming of this latter species has recently expanded
very quickly in Asia and Africa. In 1992 world-wide production of tilapia
reached 473,000 tonnes, mainly from China, Indonesia, the Philippines
and Egypt. The production of various carp species is higher still. In
1995 world-wide production of the silver, grass and common carp was 6.7
million tons. Although carp are also important in some European countries,
particularly Hungary, developed countries tend to cultivate more added-value
fish in their freshwaters. In the US, the main species is catfish, while
trout are appreciated in the US, Europe and Japan.
Brackish waters, a mixture of sweet and marine water
with intermediate salinity, are found in such places as mangroves, estuaries,
lagoons and swamps. They account for 7.1% of fish aquacultural output,
centred on high-value species. In developing countries, there has been
a wide expansion of export-oriented shrimp aquaculture, while in European
Mediterranean countries these areas hold the production of oyster and
high-valued carnivorous marine finfish species such as stripped seabream
and seabass. If traditional integrated aquaculture activities in Asia
are left aside, in the North and South aquaculture is focused on high
value species (molluscs, crustaceans, marine fish and salmon) that together
account for 31.5% of world production equal to 61% of the total market
value. It is these areas where the promoters of the Blue Revolution have
invested their resources.
| Financing the Blue Revolution
The growth of intensive aquaculture in developing
countries, including shrimp aquaculture, has been stimulated
by an intensification of loans from multilateral aid agencies.
From 1988 to 1993, a third of the money committed to fisheries
consisted of aid to aquaculture. The Ecologist reports
that in 1991, World Bank (WB) loans for aquaculture included
US$420 million to India, US$385 million to China, and US$267
million to Argentina. Though the negative effects of intensive
aquaculture have become increasingly evident, there has been
little change in World Bank policy. In May 1997, the WB approved
a US$40 Million loan to the Government of Mexico to help finance
an Aquaculture Development project, to intensively grow shrimp,
tilapia, scallop and abalone. The objective is to increase Mexicos
15% aquaculture contribution to total fisheries production.
The Bank has drawn criticism for only consulting local peoples,
after the plans were already drawn up, when little could be
changed.
In 1997 the Bank also approved a US$120 million
loan for livestock and aquaculture development in the Heilongjiang
Province of China. The aim being to expand fish production by
constructing 584 hectares of new ponds, rehabilitating 237 hectares
of existing ponds and restocking a 12,000 hectare natural lake.
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Towards aquatic monocultures
The most serious impact of the blue revolution aquaculture
is that, rather than increasing global catches, it may very well lead
to lower total productivity of our seas. Most intensive aquacultural operations
take place in shallow waters which compete with other possible uses. Plentiful
sunlight and nutrients in these zones, contribute to the position of shallows
as the world's most diverse and productive types of marine ecosystems,
including seagrasses in temperate zones and mangroves and coral reefs
in tropical areas. Such systems harbour the juvenile stages of most fish
species, including the oceanic fish which sustain both traditional and
industrialised fishing activities.
The intensive, high-density cultivation of fish and shellfish
has environmental effects similar to those of intensive livestock or poultry.
First and most evident is the accumulation of organic matter, both in
the form of unconsumed feed and faeces. When aquacultural activities are
conducted directly in the marine or brackish environment, this accumulation
may well lead to a process of eutrophication, with associated depletion
of oxygen near the sea-bottom or throughout the water column and a proliferation
of unicellular algae, some of which may be toxic. Compounding these problems
is the pollution by pesticides and antibiotics, used intensively when
animals are raised in such high densities. The result is a serious loss
of local biodiversity. This has particularly occurred in sheltered waters,
such as with salmon in Norwegian and Chilean fjords, with the raising
of oysters and mussels in lagoons and estuaries, and with the raising
of shrimp in ponds.
When aquaculture employs the construction of special
installations, such as ponds, the impacts are even more pervasive. The
most extended example of intensive aquaculture, and that which has been
promoted most aggressively by international development banks and institutions,
provides a good example, shrimp aquaculture. Farming shrimp and prawn,
or "pink gold", for the lucrative markets in the North,
is the most prominent example of the social and environmental consequences
of intensive aquaculture practised on a big scale. It has grown quickly
in South-east Asia, Ecuador and Central America. In 1990 Asia alone accounted
for 80% of the world total, covering 820,000 hectares which produced 556,000
tonnes. Principle markets remain Japan, the United States and Europe with
a total market value of nearly US$7 billion.
Shrimp culture is one of the main causes of the destruction
of mangroves. In Thailand 40% have been destroyed and the clearing for
pond construction is only one part of the story. Although there are hatcheries
for shrimp larvae, when this supply is not sufficient, larvae are fished
from wild mangrove systems using very fine-mesh nets that also sieve out
big quantities of other marine organisms.
Shrimp aquaculture is not only conducted in mangroves,
but also on agricultural lands close to water bodies. Besides the displacement
of farmers and rice culture, the high needs of fresh and salt water lead
to a drying of underground waters sources, with a subsequent penetration
of saline water. Such deterioration means that the average life of aquaculture
farms is only 3-5 years before being abandoned, leaving behind salted,
polluted land of no further agricultural use.
Behind these environmental costs, there is the social
price that local communities pay by losing access to both aquatic and
mangrove resources. In Bangladesh, for example, shrimp farmers have priority
in leasing land, which has deprived local people of their rights for common
land and public water bodies. Government regulations to encourage export
often worsen the problem. In the Philippines, fishing unions have protested
that bays where they fish have been obstructed by fish pens. Despite this
it is still local fishers who provide most of the fish that is locally
consumed.
The instability inherent to such intensive farming systems
results in local communities being unable to participate. In the words
of Roger S.V. Pullin, the Director of the Inland Aquatic Resource Systems
Program of ICLARM: "For stand-alone fish farms, a farmer might
expect a total loss or at least serious loss of profits at least once
in 10 years and perhaps, on average, twice in 10 years. This would mean
bankruptcy for some commercial operators, and life-threatening situations
for some resource-poor farmers in developing regions". Later,
the inevitable environmental degradation resulting from intensive aquaculture
forces operators to change their locations. Both factors have made the
sector the domain of capital-intensive operators who do not need to bear
the costs of environmental degradation, that is investors who are able
to put their returns into other sectors or companies able to find new
sites for their operations.
Dazzling export figures hide enormous costs for the countries
that export shrimp. The annual profits from these operations in the State
of Andhra Pradesh, India, are estimated at 15,000 million rupees. However
the Third World Network estimates the negative impacts on local communities
and the environment at 63,000 million rupees, far outweighing any production
gains when viewed in the wider perspective. Indeed a coalition of Indian
NGOs has won a legal challenge on the right of the shrimp industry to
destroy the rights to livelihood of millions of coastal people. Their
actions led the Supreme Court of India to dismantle existing installations
and to ban new operations.
Impact on biodiversity
Aquaculture has relied on fish stocks from a narrow centre
of origin with subsequent inbreeding causing impaired genetic performance.
A classic example is that of the cultivation of tilapia in South East
Asia. As Pullin explains, "Some fish were collected from open
waters in Egypt in 1962 and shipped to Japan. Some of their descendants
were shipped to Thailand in 1965 and they produced a strain that has been
widely farmed since then. A few fish of this strain were shipped to the
Philippines in 1972 and their descendants have since been farmed there".
In spite of the selection efforts by Filipino farmers,
in 1989 their tilapia turned out to be less efficient than new founder
stocks collected from the wild in Egypt. As a solution to this problem,
the ICLARM launched a programme in the middle eighties to develop genetic
resources for tilapia, that has lead to the creation of the "super-tilapia",
using Egypt's wild populations.
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Source: K.Rane, FAO Fisheries Dept.
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To understand the impact of such escapes and releases
it is necessary to take into account that, particularly in freshwater
hydrological systems, populations have adapted to their environment through
particular genetic combinations. If large enough numbers of introduced
fish interbreed with wild populations of the same or related species,
these particular combinations of environmental adaptation are lost. Small
wild populations are particularly susceptible to this kind of genetic
contamination.
A good illustration of the scale of escape in aquacultural
systems is salmon. Adult salmon are raised in giant cages floating in
the sea, close to the coast. In 1995 the number of salmon known to have
escaped from Norwegian salmon farms increased to almost 650.000 from 570.000
in 1994, and the same year the proportion of fish of farmed origin in
samples from the coastal fisheries was 42%. In the Magagudavic River,
Canada, 1995 estimates were as high as 90% of salmon caught being of farmed
origin.
Even if there is no interbreeding or released fish are
sterile, there are other potential effects on wild populations which are
often impossible to predict. It is well known that many native populations
of Atlantic salmon in Norway are threatened with extinction, from a parasite
introduced through genetically resistant salmon populations from the Baltic
Sea. The most severe case of extinction caused by an introduced species
may be the case of the Nile perch, which lead to the loss of nearly 200
unique species of cichilds in Lake Victoria.
Wasted protein
Perhaps the most pervasive effect of the Blue Revolution
is that the rise in production of carnivorous fish (accounting for all
the luxury fish raised) and shrimp has translated into a larger demand
for fishmeal, which has to be obtained from wild fisheries. World-wide,
a third of fish catches are devoted to fishmeal. The rise of particularly
shrimp production, has introduced new fisheries to tropical countries
where they were virtually unknown previously. In Thailand, this has already
been translated into "biomass fishing", whereas before
the sea bottom was trawled for shrimp, with the rest of the species discarded
or sold in local markets, now it is done to extract anything that can
be turned into fishmeal. However many of these species have been part
of the traditional food of coastal communities. As a result of these destructive
practices, people are deprived of cheap protein. In Indonesia, demand
for prawn feed is making unaffordable previously inexpensive and locally
available products such as sardines. In Malaysia, the same phenomenon
has resulted in a shortage of fish for the salted fish industry.
With local communities marginalised, unable to participate
in the system, and bearing the environmental consequences, intensive aquaculture
is of no benefit. There is little evidence either, to suggest trickle
down benefits from export earnings. From the national perspective, the
blue revolution results in a transfer of cheap protein form the South
into less abundant expensive protein to be exported to the North. The
economic and monetary crisis in South-East Asia shows that relying on
currency and external markets, rather than ensuring internal production
for food security, may be a dangerous gamble.
Enter Genetic Engineering
In January 1996, for the first time in history, genetically
engineered salmon was grown in a commercial hatchery in Loach Fyne, Scotland.
The AquAvantage Bred Salmon were genetically engineered for accelerated
growth rate with a technology developed by a research team from Memorial
University, New Foundland, Canada. The technology transfer was mediated
by the Boston based A/F Protein.
| China embraces the Blue Revolution
In 1996, China's total volume of aquatic products reached
28 million tons, a quarter of the world's total output of which
half came from aquaculture. This enormous volume has been possible
through a combination of political will, natural resources,
scientific and technological development and financial investment.
All in order to feed a huge population.
After a severe fisheries crisis, the State
Council in 1985, took the decision to develop China's aquaculture
as a means to protect the marine resources and "make
China's fisheries industry get rid of the limitation of fishing
from natural resources". Backed with World Bank loans,
China started to develop its coastal line and inland water bodies.
For instance, in the Liaoning Province, some 98,000 hectares
of beaches have been set aside for this purpose, accounting
for 60% of the provincial total.
China has undertaken a technology-based approach
to the development of their aquaculture. They have started breeding
marine fish the whole year round with the aid of propagating
technology.
In order to develop aquaculture, the Chinese
Government liberalised the market relying on external financial
aid, particularly from the World Bank. In 1987, a US$7.3 million
loan enabled an increase of output of cultivated prawns, eels
and laver. In 1985, the International Finance Corporation (IFC),
signed its first investment agreement in China's agribusiness
sector to provide approximately US$19 million in financing to
the Nantong Wangfu company, to implement an eel farming and
processing project in Nantong, in the Jiangsu province of China.
Nearly all the processed products are earmarked to be exported
to Japan.
At first glance, the Blue Revolution in China
appears to be a success story, with a large presence of diverse
fish in the cities and countryside. Fish is now relatively cheap
and Chinese per capita consumption has topped the world's average.
However, in 1994 Leith Duncan, a fisheries
consultant who travelled to China, reported that in Zhejiang
Province, 97% of the prawns produced were dying from diseases
resulting from water pollution. It is also known that overfishing
remains a problem. Long-term production patterns will show whether
increased productivity has been implemented in a sustainable
way and what its impacts have been. In the meanwhile, China
is leading the field in the Blue Revolution.
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The application of genetic engineering to fish started
in 1982 with the familiar moral justification of the need to feed a future
world population, as NASCO puts it, "The predicted demand for
aquatic organisms from a rapidly increasing world population will require
increasing use of biotechnology in aquaculture". Developing countries
are encouraged to get on the wheel as soon as possible, "The ability
to produce transgenic fish and shellfish in culture, which grow faster
and to a larger size with more efficient utilisation of nutrients, is
of particular value to developing countries, not only as a source of food,
but also as export products", states a World Bank Discussion
Paper on Marine Biotechnology and Developing countries. It comes down
to a question of faith in technology, but before engaging in it, countries
should ask themselves whether genetic engineering in aquaculture provides
a solution to the real problems. Failure to address key questions such
as the environmental stress on marine ecosystems with their resulting
impoverishment, and the progressive marginalisation of coastal communities
from economic and nutritional livelihood, may result in gene technology
compounding the existing crisis.
Trial and error
Behind the promises of the technology, fish genetic engineering
is so far very inefficient and random. The most frequently used methodology
consists of inoculating the desired genes egg by egg, or embryo by embryo.
The idea is that the gene will be incorporated into the egg's genome and
then expressed in the transgenic adult. Injecting fish eggs one by one
is tedious and requires skilled operators. The efficiency is low with
the average number of transgenic fish obtained from inoculated eggs usually
ranging between zero and 13 % of those that survive.
The largest part of current research efforts is devoted
to developing techniques that allow large-scale transfer of genes into
fish. Teams around the world are busy trying to develop more efficient
"mass transformation" methods such as electroporation, particle
bombardment, the use of liposomes and sperm cell vectors, so far with
little success. The reality of fish genetic engineering today is more
a question of luck and tricks than a comprehensive understanding of the
processes involved. Added to this, even the NASCO acknowledges that many
genetically modified fish are highly inbred.
Although there is much basic research to be resolved,
scientific teams have embraced applied research, and have not disregarded
patents in the process. Increasing the economic appeal of aquaculture
has provided the motivation to focus on three lines of research into faster-growing,
freeze-resistant and disease-resistant fish.
Enhanced growth
Feed accounts for roughly half the operating costs in
fish farming. Growth rate and food conversion efficiency of cultured fish
species is of utmost interest to aquaculturists. The first fast-growing
transgenic fish, a common carp incorporating a mouse promoter gene linked
to a human growth hormone gene, was developed in China in 1986. Scientific
teams from the US have since genetically engineered carp and catfish,
while British and Cuban groups have centred their efforts on tilapia and
Canadian scientists have focused on salmon and trout. Over time, and in
order to avoid the sensitivities of consumers, scientist have increasingly
used gene constructs containing only fish genes.
It is Canadian scientists who have achieved the most
dramatic results with transgenic salmon growing up to 10 times faster
than control groups. This was done by adding the growth hormone gene of
a chinook salmon, controlled by an ocean flounder antifreeze gene promoter.
It is these fish that have been exported to Scotland. A further gene construct
based on the Pacific sockeye salmon created transgenic salmon that were
on average more than 11 times heavier than non-transgenic controls, with
one individual an extraordinary 37 times larger. However, such top growers
paid their price by showing cranial deformities and opercular overgrowth.
At one year old, the deformities became more severe and were followed
by death.
The Canadian research team is also researching the production
of freeze-tolerant fish. The cultivation of salmon, for example, is limited
to certain latitudes because if water drops below zero degrees celsius
the salmon's cells freeze and the animals die. However, some demersal
fish species thrive in waters under ice, such as the ocean pout, thanks
to a protein that prevents their blood freezing. Canadian scientists had
the idea to isolate the anti-freeze protein gene from a winter flounder
and insert it into the salmon's genome. Results proved disappointing with
the salmon producing only one percent of the protein level naturally found
in the flounder. It was while doing this experimentation that by chance
scientists discovered that the anti-freeze protein gene promoter, activated
growth hormone expression.
With fish under high density cultivation being particularly
prone to sickness, the interest in disease resistance is understandable.
For viral infections, there have been several approaches to disease resistance.
One of them has been the use of antisense technology which a Japanese
team has used to genetically engineer trout resistance to the necrosis
blood virus. Several approaches have also been undertaken to fight other
infections. Canadian teams working on salmon are targeting a trout gene
as a bacterial inhibitor. Another approach, undertaken by a team working
in New Zealand, is to insert the genes encoding for biologically active
peptides from frog skin.
Although these represent the main areas of research,
other points have caught the scientist's attention. A Japanese team is
attempting to develop a gene to make freshwater fish tolerant to salt
and vice versa. Another line of research relates to genes involved with
skin pigmentation, with the economic motivation to tailor fish colour
to culinary and ornamental tastes.
Compared with plants, transgenic fish research is still
in its infancy and to a large extent carried out by public research centres
or institutes, which have established large teams which cross national
borders and have established close working relationships with their counterparts.
It is yet to be seen whether these relations will survive in if technologies
are introduced on a commercial scale.
Risks from transgenic fish?
Our knowledge of the marine ecosystems remains superficial
and ignorance of both short and long term effects of transgenic fish is
necessarily poor and schematic. One certainty we have is that transgenic
fish will escape into the rivers and oceans in the same way that their
non-transgenic relatives do.
In the case of fast-growing fish, their effects on wild
populations and ecosystems would depend on weather these fish grow faster
because they eat more or because they are more efficient. In the first
case, they would present more competition to wild stock. The increased
size at a given stage in its life history could result in transgenic fish
competing with other species of the ecosystem or in its predators not
being able to feed from it.
The case of the freeze-resistant salmon would allow this
species to colonise entirely new ecosystems where they could compete with
the existing carnivorous species. Such a scenario leaves open the possibility
that it could thrive and invade large areas. A situation that would be
compounded if the genetic character was transmitted to wild salmon populations.
A similar story of species advantage disrupting the natural balance would
also be the danger with disease resistance.
Although in the long term the aquaculture industry would
be affected by such interactions, the fishing sector would be the first
one to note the impact of the release of transgenic fish into the environment.
As an answer to prevent these problems, scientists argue that it is possible
to design transgenic fish which are unable to reproduce, a claim that
is far from proven. Even if such modifications were achieved they could
alter the behaviour of the transgenic fish with a resulting impact on
wild populations or ecosystems. The point is not whether such risks are
acceptable, but if they are needed at all. Proponents of the Blue Revolution
technology, who continuously remind us of the need to feed the world,
will affirm that we need to bear the risk, but where is all this leading
to?
Designer fish
If the trends of over-fishing, intensive aquaculture
and genetic engineering are taken to their extreme, the image that comes
to mind is that of impoverished marine ecosystems producing large amounts
of "designer" fish, under the control of corporations
able to invest in and maintain such systems. In this brave new world,
cultivating the aquatic environment would be a task of industry and the
role of the people would be reduced to indispensable workers and quiet
consumers of more or less sophisticated fish protein. This industrialisation
of the aquatic environment is in fact, the very core of the Blue Revolution.
Fisheries review
It is certainly true that the world will have to feed
a growing population, but it is even more urgent that it starts feeding
its current population and does it in a way that does not pre-empt capacity
to continue in future. Instead of trying to resolve existing problems
by developing new answers that will invariably lead to more problems,
a better solution would be to solve existing problems and look into the
available alternatives that can nurture the base of life: diversity.
The initial step towards this objective is to review
fisheries management. After taking into account both the degree of exploitation
of our seas and oceans and its direct and indirect impacts, it seems clear
that, under current fisheries practices, the present total catch is unsustainable.
Two questions then come to mind. Would it be possible to maintain current
harvest levels in a sustainable way? Also, would it be possible then to
even increase it?
The answer to these questions depends on who you ask.
The FAO maintains that marine captures may be sustainably increased to
20 million tonnes if a number of conditions are met. Namely that degraded
resources are rehabilitated, under-developed resources are exploited avoiding
over-fishing, and discards are reduced. Other voices propose a radical
change in the very heart of fisheries management, including its underlying
assumptions. According to this approach, the main objective of fisheries
management should be the protection of marine resources against the causes
that lead to their over-exploitation. In the long term, such a change
would not necessarily mean a decrease of the harvest. In the waters of
the European Union, it would be possible to obtain a level of catches
similar or even larger than the ever-dwindling amounts that the EU member
states over-fish year after year, if proposed management practices were
adopted. An approach that is concerned with maintenance over merely conservation
could be defined as a harnessing approach, such as has been the root of
the way many coastal communities have managed their fishing grounds for
millennia.
Having been plundered for all they are worth, the world's
oceans have become impoverished, drained of the rich biodiversity that
once fed so many. For an industry desperately seeking to secure supply
for continuing demand, the short term fix of the Blue Revolution is an
attractive one, if not the only solution to industry's own survival. Supplying
prawns to restaurant tables in Rome, Washington or Tokyo may bring in
ready cash, but it is devastating for aquatic ecosystems and the millions
of people who depend on them for their livelihood. Both intensive aquaculture
and genetically engineered fish are the last-gasp efforts of a dying industry
trying to sustain itself and should be clearly seen as short-sighted in
approach. The sorriest players in all this are the international banks
and institutions, who instead of supporting the sustainable fishing practices
of the South, are instead lending millions to industry to keep the North
in luxury fish. Existing integrated aquacultural systems provide a prosperous
alternative to the Blue Revolution which could be successfully enhanced
in the future.
This article is part of ongoing work by Anna-Rosa
Martinez. A fully sourced version is available from her at GRAIN.
| Sprouting up: Mycogen scores plant vaccine monopoly
Mycogen Corp. has won exclusive commercial rights to produce
and deliver genetically engineered (GE) plants that contain edible
vaccines for human and animal diseases. Though the technology of
growing vaccines in plants is still at the development stage, Mycogen
has seized upon what it sees as the huge global market potential
by pursuing its licensing rights internationally. Mycogen President
Carl Eibl clarified the company's position saying, "Human
and animal vaccines are a multi-billion dollar industry".
By developing common food plants which contain virus and bacteria
antigens, Mycogen claims that costs and logistical problems involved
with administering existing vaccinations will be reduced.
Shocked by implications of the vaccine plants,
geneticist Dr Ricarda Steinbecker forecasts a whole host of problems
that the technology could bring, "Some people can't take
conventional vaccines their system can't cope with them and
they overreact". To her the prospect of widespread cultivation
in developing countries of the altered food crops, particularly
those eaten raw by children, is of deep concern.
Industry has consistently resisted the segregation
of GE from regular crops claiming it is logistically impossible.
Furthermore, in November last year several tons of GE sugar beet
from a Monsanto field test site in Holland found their way into
the processing plant causing the Dutch authorities to impound 10,000
tons. Such examples contribute to evidence that industry does not
have a grip on its GE seed. If such situations can happen in one
of the most regulated countries in the world, the chances of similar
scenarios happening in developing countries are high.
Visually identical to conventional plants, the
GE vaccine plants will be indistinguishable from common edible varieties.
Steinbecker warns further that, "Genetic alteration causes
stress in a plant which could be expressed in a number of ways,
the antigen itself could be altered or its presence could cause
the production of dangerous toxins".
Dr Charles Arntzen, President of the Boyce Thompson
Institute, Cornell University, US, leading oral vaccine research
explained plant selection criteria, "First we have identified
plant species...available in a large number of developing countries.
Second we have identified fruit that is fed directly to infants
and small children. Third we have focused on a fruit that is uncooked.".
Arntzen came up with the banana as the preferred vehicle for edible
vaccines, currently involving production of E-coli bacteria. Ironically
Arntzen's team will now need licensing approval from Mycogen before
harvesting any fruits of the research currently taking place in
Maryland US and Mexico.
Two broad patents originally awarded to researchers
Roy Curtiss and Guy Cardineau were assigned by them to Washington
University, with whom Mycogen has entered the licensing agreement
for an undisclosed figure. According to a Mycogen spokesman, the
University will also receive a percentage of royalties from any
future sales.
Mycogen, one of the largest US seed producers is
owned by corporate giant Dow Chemicals. Dow recently offered a multi-million
dollar compensation settlement to five thousand banana workers in
Costa Rica who had been poisoned by its agrochemicals. Mycogen is
likely to strike a hard bargain in current negotiations to sub-license
the technology on human vaccines. It intends to charge an initial
licence fee and a percentage of sales for use of the lucrative patents.
The company, a major stakeholder in agricultural products, intends
to concentrate on marketing animal vaccines, particularly in the
developed world, but also in Argentina and Brazil where it has vested
interests in the poultry industry.
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