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HARBOR BRANCH - OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE
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SALTWATER FISH FARMERS ENCOURAGED BY GOVERNMENT REGULATORY PROGRESS,
MEETING TO IDENTIFY MOST PROMISING TECHNOLOGIES AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR FLORIDA AND BEYOND
FORT PIERCE -- Estimates suggest that by 2020, population growth and other factors will
lead to an increased seafood demand of up to 30 million tons. With current wild catches
leveling or declining, the bulk of this demand will clearly have to be met by aquaculture,
and some of the greatest potential for aquaculture expansion is in raising marine fish for
food. On Oct. 20 and 21, industry, research, and government experts in this field from
around the country and overseas will converge at Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institution
for the 2nd International Sustainable Marine Fish Culture Conference
(www.sustainableaquaculture.org) to
discuss new advances in both offshore and onshore
aquaculture of saltwater fish. They will also work to identify the most promising current
commercial opportunities, including the potential for use of large cages to raise fish off
Florida's coasts. As one of the first marine fish aquaculture gatherings since a recent
historic and unprecedented endorsement of aquaculture by the Bush administration, the
conference will have far reaching implications locally and nationally.
"Major strides have now been made in overcoming technological and regulatory hurdles to
advancing marine fish aquaculture since our last conference in 2003," says Ken Riley,
Harbor Branch aquaculture education director and conference organizer, "This year, we're
excited about bringing everyone together again to specifically identify the most promising
opportunities for commercialization."
At a press conference on Friday, Oct. 21 at 12:30 p.m., speakers will explain the latest
technological and political developments, and the most critical issues for those working
to expand marine fish farming at commercial scales.
Following the press conference, samples will be available of hybrid striped bass raised in
freshwater then transferred to saltwater prior to harvest to enhance flavor. The fish were
used as part of a successful Harbor Branch-USDA study examining if poultry by products can
be used to replace fishmeal--a limited resource--in standard feeds. Samples of Cobia raised
in offshore cages in Puerto Rico will also be available. Reporters will also be able to tour
the Harbor Branch-USDA collaboration's extensive new research facility at the Harbor Branch
Aquaculture Park. These new facilities were built to increase research capabilities, and
incorporate lessons learned from greenhouses destroyed during the hurricanes. They are
already stocked with thousands of pompano, striped bass, flounder, black sea bass, and
other species under investigation for their potential commercial viability. Projects
underway include development of methods to raise saltwater fish in near freshwater to
decrease operational costs and allow more use of inland agricultural areas, research on
alternatives to fish meal in feeds, and engineering studies aimed at developing cost-effective
and energy-conservative systems for growing fish onshore.
Press Conference Speakers:
Ken Riley, Harbor Branch director of aquaculture education, will give a brief overview
of marine fish farming--including issues concerning aquaculture expansion on the Treasure Coast
and around the state--and outline the role that this year's conference, and its predecessor held
in 2003, have played and are playing in advancing the field. He will also describe Harbor
Branch-USDA collaborative projects underway. These include work to raise Florida pompano,
a prized and highly valuable species, in captivity. He will describe research using light
and temperature manipulation, among other techniques, to trigger spawning and the successful
production in tanks of millions of fertilized eggs and thousands of healthy young fish on
their way to market weight. This project involves acclimating pompano, a saltwater species,
to thrive in freshwater, which is easier and cheaper to maintain at an industrial scale.
Michael Rubino is the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Aquaculture
Program manager and has been a leader in the push to increase aquaculture's economic viability.
This led last year to unprecedented and specific direction by President Bush in his
administration's U.S. Ocean Action Plan (December 2004) calling for a new regulatory structure
for aquaculture. Dr. Rubino will discuss the resulting legislation, the National Offshore
Aquaculture Act now pending in Congress, and how it will promote offshore fish farming
and enable U.S. fish farmers to compete with foreign competitors to reduce our country's
$8 billion seafood trade deficit.
Daniel Benetti is Chairman of Marine Affairs and Policies, and Director of Aquaculture
at the University of Miami's Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science. He will
discuss research on raising species such as cobia in massive offshore cages in the Bahamas,
Puerto Rico and elsewhere. He and his colleagues have documented astonishing growth rates for
cobia at these facilities even with low consumption of fishmeal relative to the amount of
fish the cobia would consume in the wild, a critical factor in determining environmental
feasibility. Benetti will also discuss innovative methods for overcoming shark predation
at aquaculture cages, one of the most significant challenges that farmers have thus far faced.
Sherman Wilhelm, director of the Division of Aquaculture at the Florida Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services, will discuss Florida's newly proposed regulations for
offshore fish farming, including best management practices, aimed at ensuring economic
viability for a developing industry while also achieving state environmental conservation
goals. An afternoon session focused on offshore sea cages will follow the press conference
and will include a discussion by conference attendees of the proposed Florida framework,
which is essential to allowing commercial offshore ventures in Florida to move forward.
Additional experts will be on hand at the conference to answer questions as needed.
Journalist Notes:
Please contact Mark Schrope at 772-216-0390 or
schrope@hboi.edu if you plan to attend the press
conference to arrange for security gate clearance.
High-resolution photos and video are available.
Michael Rubino will only be available during the press conference, but interviews with other
experts can be arranged at other times.
Reporters are welcome to attend any portion of the conference, and conference abstracts are
available on request.
The research conference will be held in the Johnson Education Center on the Harbor Branch
campus at 5600 US 1 North, Ft. Pierce, FL. The press conference will be held at the building
just to its left, called DTA. Signs will point the way from the Ed Center entrance.
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HARBOR BRANCH Oceanographic Institution was founded in Ft. Pierce, Fla., in 1971 to support the exploration and conservation
of the world's oceans. The institution has held to this mission and grown into one of the world's leading oceanographic
institutions with a 500-acre campus, over 200 personnel, and a fleet of sophisticated research ships and submersibles.
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