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Tuesday 4th November 2008 |
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Welcome to this week's newsletter
We have 4 new features this week:

Growing Demand for Seafood Traceability
While the meat industry has had quality assurance and traceability systems for some time - most dating back to the outbreak of BSE in the UK in the mid '90s - the fish and shellfish industries have shown a tendency to lag behind, writes Chris Harris, Senior Editor for TheFishSite.
One that Got Away: The Issue of Farmed Salmon Escapes
There is a terrible paradox at work within the salmon farming industry. On the one hand, it is widely acknowledged that salmon aquaculture could be the saviour of depleting wild stocks, but on the other, the consequential effects of these farms are actually bringing them closer to extinction, writes Adam Anson, reporting for TheFishSite.
Marine Finfish : The Use of Poultry By-product Meals in Pelleted Feed for Humpback Grouper
Grouper farming, especially in Southeast Asia, is still heavily dependent on feeding with trash fish, say Rossita Shapawi, Saleem Mustafa and Wing-Keong Ng of the Network of Aquaculture Centres in Asia-Pacific.
Reproductive Physiology of Fish: a 30 Year Overview
Research into the physiology of fish has had many beneficial implications for the aquaculture industry, explains Bernard Jalabert, Fish Reproduction Group. This feature was published by Cybium, Société Française d’Ichtyologie.
» The Loch Ness - Farmed Salmon - Monster
» The Hidden Costs of Salmon
» Sea Trout Returns to the Shetlands
» How to Calculate the Carbon Footprint of Your Product
» Irish West Coast Losing Fish Farmers
» Seafish: Advice on UK Legislation
» New Land-based Lobster Farming Project in Swansea
» Seafish in £2 Million Court Battle
» Norway Chases Reckless Mackerel Quota for 2009
» SFF: West Coast Prospects Look Bleak
» Record Sales and Visitors at Sea Food Expo 2008
» Focus on Recirculating Aquaculture Systems
» Looking to the Future with Indoor Fish Farms
» Fisheries Council Discuss Emerging Trends
» BC Urged to Contain Fish Farm Threat
» Record US Fish Sales to Canada
» Problems Spill: Fish Over Farmed in Broughton
» Coral Success Leads to Commercial Venture
» Oysters and Council Finally Reach Agreement
» Investment to Transform Australian Aquaculture
» Feds Delay New Great Lake Rules
» A List of Sustainable Seafood in Chesapeake Bay.
» Aquaculture Development in Coastal Bays
» Shellfish Farm Faces $1.3 Million Fine
» Aquaculture Sales Up 19 Per Cent in Hawaii
» New Study to Highlight Waste of Seafood
» FAO Report on Capture-based Aquaculture
» Uniting in the Name of Lake Victoria
» Letter to the UN: Protest Over Salmon Farms
» Sustainable Aquaculture: A Plus for Gambia?
» Council Delays Gulf Aquaculture
» The Nigerian Aquaculture Plan Gets Going
» VIV China 2008: A Bright Future
» US$ 20 million for Mauritian Eel Project
» Vietnamese Fish Meet US Farm Bill Barrier
» Biofuel from Seaweed for Korea and Indonesia
» Northland: Money to Predict Shellfish Harvest
That's all for this week!
Ed.
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