Aquaculture for all

South Korea Successfully Farms Salmon

Salmonids Technology & equipment Education & academia +2 more

SOUTH KOREA - The Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries has reported that, for the first time, South Korea has successfully farmed 500 tons of salmon.

Lucy Towers thumbnail

The fish was farmed at a Goseong County (Gangwon Province) fish farm, KoreaBizWire reports.

Salmon have an anadromous lifecycle, as they are born in rivers or streams, mature in the ocean, and return to their birthplace for spawning. Hence, salmon aquaculture requires two separate – freshwater and ocean water – breeding environments.

Furthermore, because salmon fail to survive in water temperatures exceeding 20 degrees celsius, their farming had been considered impossible in Korean seas, which can heat up to over 29 degrees during summertime.

To overcome the setbacks, Donghae STF, a fisheries company, hatched salmon eggs imported from Canada in 2014, and raised them for 10 months at its aquafarm located in inland waters.

After growing to 200 – 400 grams in size, the fish were moved to a sea farm in March 2015.

In order to maintain the surrounding water temperature at 15 – 18 degrees Celsius, the salmon were raised in a submersible fish cage that can be placed in waters up to 25 meters deep.

It took 20 months to raise 200-gram salmon to 5-kilogram mature fish, which are similar to their imported counterparts.

The successful mass breeding of the fish is also significant in that the global salmon market is rapidly growing, while there are limitations in catching wild salmon. The global salmon output was 4.24 million tons in 2013.

“We’ll continue to discover optimal regions for salmon aquaculture in the East Sea, so we can substitute a portion of imported salmon with domestic ones,” said a ministry official.

“We’ll also be promoting private investment in salmon aquaculture, to help it establish itself as a prosperous industry of the future.”

Create an account now to keep reading

It'll only take a second and we'll take you right back to what you were reading. The best part? It's free.

Already have an account? Sign in here