Welcome   Sponsored By
Subscribe | Register | Advertise | Newsletter | About us | Contact us
   


Image: 123RF / FIS

ScienceDirect: 'Due to their feed, chicken and farmed salmon have remarkably similar environmental footprints'

Click on the flag for more information about United States UNITED STATES
Wednesday, February 15, 2023, 07:00 (GMT + 9)

The following article has been taken from Science News from the research organization of the University of California - Santa Barbara.

We love our chicken. We love our salmon. Thanks to how we farm these two popular proteins, their environmental footprints are surprisingly similar.

Photos: Salmon Arm Observer / Topline Foods / FIS

The key is in the feed, said UC Santa Barbara marine ecologist Ben Halpern, director of UCSB's National Center for Ecological Analysis & Synthesis, and an author of a paper that appears in the journal Current Biology. In an effort to tease out opportunities for reducing the substantial environmental pressures of global food production, he and an international team of colleagues took a deep look at how we raise these two highly popular animals for consumption, focusing in particular on dynamics between land and sea.

"Chicken are fed fish from the ocean, just as are salmon, and salmon are fed crop products like soy, just as are chicken," Halpern said, in comparing industrially farmed broiler chickens, and farmed salmonids (salmon, marine trout and char). In addition to land-based crops, chickens are fed fishmeal and fish oil; while salmon, which typically eat other fish, are farmed with land-based feed, such as oil crops, soybeans and wheat. "In a sense," he noted, "we really do have 'chicken of the sea.'"

The researchers found that 95% of the cumulative environmental footprint of these two items (greenhouse gas emissions, nutrient pollution, freshwater use and spatial disturbance) is concentrated on less than 5% of the planet, with 85.5% spatial overlap between the two products, due mostly to shared feed ingredients. According to the study, the total cumulative pressures from chicken production is highest in the United States, China and Brazil.

For fish, the highest cumulative pressures are found off the coasts of Chile, Mexico and China, with some pressure on land due to salmon aquaculture. Additionally, the researchers found that while chicken has nine times the environmental footprint of farmed salmon, it has 55 times more production than salmon, an efficiency due largely to the very fast reproductive cycle of chickens -- six to eight weeks to reach slaughter weight versus one to two years for salmon.

Overlay of the cumulative environmental footprint (cumulative pressure index [CPI]) of broiler chicken and farmed salmon production. The size of the circle in the legend indicates the number of overlapping cells in the CPI quantiles for farmed chicken and salmon. Source: University of California

Within that 5% of the planet that bears the environmental pressures of chicken and salmon production, there are variations in the farming methods' environmental efficiencies. In the case of chicken, for instance, the U.S. (the world's top producer of chicken) and Brazil (second largest) are more efficient than China (third largest). There are also variations between environmental pressures relative to the amount of salmon produced that differ by geography, indicating opportunities to improve efficiencies while minimizing environmental impacts.

Chicken and salmon are among the most popular sources of protein, and according to the researchers, are relatively environmentally efficient in comparison to other animal protein production such as beef and pork. However, the magnitude of their production, and their overlap in terms of environmental footprint raises interesting questions about the subtle connections between marine and land protein production, which, in turn, could provide opportunities for promoting sustainability. At the same time, the study underscores the importance of integrating food policies across realms and sectors to advance food system sustainability, according to the researchers.

Spatial efficiency of production. Source: University of California

"We got really interested in understanding how these two critically important and dominant foods affect our planet and how they compare," Halpern said. "I knew from past research I've been part of that what we feed animals is a key part of what determines their environmental footprint, but I really didn't expect chicken and farmed salmon to be so similar. The old adage that 'we are what we eat' applies to farm animals too!"

Source: University of California - Santa Barbara. Original written by Sonia Fernandez

[email protected]
www.seafood.media


 Print


Click to know how to advertise in FIS
MORE NEWS
Australia
Mar 25, 09:00 (GMT + 9):
Toxic Tide Devastates Kangaroo Island: Multi-Million Dollar Losses Force Major Aquaculture Shutdown
Peru
Mar 25, 06:30 (GMT + 9):
Peru earns global recognition: OECD hails its science-based fisheries model as world-class
Russian Federation
Mar 25, 06:00 (GMT + 9):
Far East Fisheries Surge: Herring Harvest Tops 150,000 Tons as 2026 Season Gains Momentum
Viet Nam
Mar 25, 04:00 (GMT + 9):
Vietnam accelerates smart fishing: digital technology transforms maritime control and combats illegality
United States
Mar 25, 04:00 (GMT + 9):
From Waste to Wealth: Lake Erie Marina Leads Groundbreaking Zero-Waste Fish Initiative
Worldwide
Mar 25, 00:10 (GMT + 9):
Global Squid Market Splits: Large Sizes Surge While Smaller Catch Loses Ground
China
Mar 25, 00:10 (GMT + 9):
China’s Feed Industry Rebounds in Early 2026 as Output Climbs Despite Shifting Demand
Spain
Mar 25, 00:00 (GMT + 9):
Other Media | iPac.acuicultura: The Spanish Aquaculture Business Association (APROMAR) Joins the Spanish Aquaculture Society (SEA)
European Union
Mar 25, 00:00 (GMT + 9):
Other Media | SeafoodSource: European border agency spots illegal fishing vessels in Mediterranean
Worldwide
Mar 25, 00:00 (GMT + 9):
Other Media | BBC: Decline in migratory fish populations prompts fight for protection
United Kingdom
Mar 25, 00:00 (GMT + 9):
Other Media | Fish Focus: The rise of low-impact scallops
Viet Nam
Mar 24, 18:00 (GMT + 9):
Vietnam Emerges as Global Scallop Powerhouse Amid Supply Chain Shake-Up
Iceland
Mar 24, 17:00 (GMT + 9):
Cod Prices Smash Records as U.S. Demand Sparks Haddock Comeback in Tight Global Market
Brazil
Mar 24, 11:00 (GMT + 9):
Brazil’s Tilapia: High-Tech Fish Farming Transforms São Paulo’s Interior
Worldwide
Mar 24, 07:00 (GMT + 9):
European demand rebound pushes Chinese pollock to $200–300/ton premiums over contract prices



Lenguaje
FEATURED EVENTS
  
TOP STORIES
Vietnam’s Tuna Exports Navigate Headwinds in 2026 with Strategic Market Shifts
Viet Nam Slowing momentum masks deeper transformation as exporters diversify markets and adapt to rising global pressures Vietnam’s tuna export sector is entering 2026 with resilience, even as mounting ...
The giant squid: hostage of the powers
Peru The recent meeting of the South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO) once again highlighted the weaknesses of international governance over one of the most important resources i...
From Deck to Data: How Fishing Fleets Could Revolutionize Real-Time Fish Tracking
Norway New research outlines a cloud-powered system that could transform fisheries management, boost efficiency, and deliver near real-time insights from vessels at sea A groundbreaking project led by the I...
Inside the Science of Squid: How Water-Retaining Agents Are Transforming Seafood Processing
China From traditional phosphates to cutting-edge alternatives, the industry evolves to meet safety, quality, and consumer demands The global seafood industry is undergoing a quiet but significant transfor...
 

Umios Corporation | Maruha Nichiro Corporation
Nichirei Corporation - Headquarters
Pesquera El Golfo S.A.
Ventisqueros - Productos del Mar Ventisqueros S.A
Wärtsilä Corporation - Wartsila Group Headquarters
ITOCHU Corporation - Headquarters
BAADER - Nordischer Maschinenbau Rud. Baader GmbH+Co.KG (Head Office)
Inmarsat plc - Global Headquarters
Marks & Spencer
Tesco PLC (Supermarket) - Headquarters
Sea Harvest Corporation (PTY) Ltd. - Group Headquarters
I&J - Irvin & Johnson Holding Company (Pty) Ltd.
AquaChile S.A. - Group Headquarters
Pesquera San Jose S.A.
Nutreco N.V. - Head Office
CNFC China National Fisheries Corporation - Group Headquarters
W. van der Zwan & Zn. B.V.
SMMI - Sunderland Marine Mutual Insurance Co., Ltd. - Headquarters
Icicle Seafoods, Inc
Starkist Seafood Co. - Headquearters
Trident Seafoods Corp.
American Seafoods Group LLC - Head Office
Marel - Group Headquarters
SalMar ASA - Group Headquarters
Sajo Industries Co., Ltd
Hansung Enterprise Co.,Ltd.
BIM - Irish Sea Fisheries Board (An Bord Iascaigh Mhara)
CEFAS - Centre for Environment, Fisheries & Aquaculture Science
COPEINCA ASA - Corporacion Pesquera Inca S.A.C.
Chun Cheng Fishery Enterprise Pte Ltd.
VASEP - Vietnam Association of Seafood Exporters & Producers
Gomes da Costa
Furuno Electric Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
NISSUI - Nippon Suisan Kaisha, Ltd. - Group Headquarters
FAO - Food and Agriculture Organization - Fisheries and Aquaculture Department (Headquarter)
Hagoromo Foods Co., Ltd.
Koden Electronics Co., Ltd. (Headquarters)
A.P. Møller - Maersk A/S - Headquarters
BVQI - Bureau Veritas Quality International (Head Office)
UPS - United Parcel Service, Inc. - Headquarters
Brim ehf (formerly HB Grandi Ltd) - Headquarters
Hamburg Süd Group - (Headquearters)
Armadora Pereira S.A. - Grupo Pereira Headquarters
Costa Meeresspezialitäten GmbH & Co. KG
NOAA - National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Headquarters)
Mowi ASA (formerly Marine Harvest ASA) - Headquarters
Marubeni Europe Plc -UK-
Findus Ltd
Icom Inc. (Headquarter)
WWF Centroamerica
Oceana Group Limited
The David and Lucile Packard Foundation
Ajinomoto Co., Inc. - Headquarters
Friosur S.A. - Headquarters
Cargill, Incorporated - Global Headquarters
Benihana Inc.
Leardini Pescados Ltda
CJ Corporation  - Group Headquarters
Greenpeace International - The Netherlands | Headquarters
David Suzuki Foundation
Fisheries and Oceans Canada -Communications Branch-
Mitsui & Co.,Ltd - Headquarters
NOREBO Group (former Ocean Trawlers Group)
Natori Co., Ltd.
Carrefour Supermarket - Headquarters
FedEx Corporation - Headquarters
Cooke Aquaculture Inc. - Group Headquarters
AKBM - Aker BioMarine ASA
Seafood Choices Alliance -Headquarter-
Austevoll Seafood ASA
Walmart | Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Supermarket) - Headquarters
New Japan Radio Co.Ltd (JRC) -Head Office-
Gulfstream JSC
Marine Stewardship Council - MSC Worldwide Headquarters
Royal Dutch Shell plc (Headquarter)
Genki Sushi Co.,Ltd
Iceland Pelagic ehf
AXA Assistance Argentina S.A.
Caterpillar Inc. - Headquarters
Tiger Brands Limited
SeaChoice
National Geographic Society
AmazonFresh, LLC - AmazonFresh

Copyright 1995 - 2026 Seafood Media Group Ltd.| All Rights Reserved.   DISCLAIMER