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The Rural Voice, 2002-08, Page 10COSH +WEHRMANN GRAIN & SEED ITD. (Canadian Oiganic Seed Alliance) offer organically grown seeds for your fall planting. Guaranteed purity and germination. Spelt seed Winter wheat Triticale Rye Peas & Oil radish Seed contracts and production contracts available for organic producers For more information call: 519-395-3126 R.R. #1 Ripley, ON NOG 2R0 Tel: (519) 395-3126 Fax: (519) 395-2935 ingasven @ hurontel. on. ca "Our experience assures lower cost water wells" 102 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Member of Canadian and Ontario Water Well Associations • Farm • Industrial • Suburban • Municipal Licensed by the Ministry of the Environment DAVIDSON WELL DRILLING LTD. WINGHAM Serving Ontario Since 1900 519-357-1960 WINGHAM 519-664-1424 WATERLOO 6 THE RURAL VOICE Robert Mercer Salmon, sewage and sink rates...quite a talk Robert Mercer was editor of the Broadwater Market Letter and commentator for 25 years. Fish farming is set to expand on the Canadian west coast and Dr. John Noakes, head of the Pacific region's Aquaculture Science Program of DFO in Nanaimo, gave a fact -filled, global and economic presentation to a meeting I attended at the end of June. He told the well -attended meeting that the world harvest of salt water fish had virtually been stable at 120 million metric tonnes for the last 15 years. The only growth in the fish harvest has been in aquaculture, which now accounts for 30 million metric tonnes compared to the worldwide wild catch of 90 million metric tonnes. Growth rate of the aquaculture industry worldwide has been at about 15 per cent per year with China now the largest contributor, much of its production based on marine plants rather than fish stocks. In terms of salmon production Norway leads the world with Chile second. Canada's total salmon production only represents two per cern of the world and is not an economic factor in woild pricing, according to Noakes. Canada's production of farmed - salmon started to exceed the wild salmon catch back in 1998, and according to Dr. Noakes is now nearly double the value of the wild catch. Farm salmon production is estimated at $550 million and wild salmon $259 million.. The major change in B.C. is that the five-year moratorium on expansion in the industry has been lifted by the new provincial government. In the highly competitive global market for fish products, Dr. Noakes said that at the retail level the competition for salmon is not from other fish products, but rather from chicken, another efficient converter of feed to flesh. Dr. Noakes explained in a lively discussion and answer session that the choice of growing Atlantic salmon on the B.C. coast over Pacific salmon, is based on the more efficient feed conversation ratio, as well as the general consumer preference and knowledge (especially in Europe) of the Atlantic over the Pacific species. Atlantic salmon converts feed at a rate of growth of one pound gained for every 1.1 pound of feed delivered to the fish cages. The Pacific salmon on the other hand, requires 1.5 pounds to produce the same weight gain. To another question Dr. Noakes said that the pigmental colouring of the salmon flesh can be altered by the fish farmer by changing certain levels of feed ingredients such as marine plant and algae materials. This is similar to the ability to change the colour of egg yolks in chicken layer operations. He noted that in different market areas consumers demand salmon of different colour intensities. Of interest also was the question about feed, and the ability of the manufacturers to incorporate into the fish food pellets a "binding" of the ingredients that lets the pellets move down through the water at different "sink rates". A question at the end of the evening posed a query about the difference in environmental harm from fish farming effluent and that of raw sewage released into the Strait of Georgia by the City of Victoria. Dr. Noakes noted that although both posed a possible problem from organic disposal, municipal treated or untreated raw sewage also posed a risk by pumping into the oceans unknown levels and varieties of minerals and industrial chemicals which were not treated or monitored at the municipal levei.0 Deadline for the September 2002 issue is August 21, 2002