Study Highlights Lack of Protections for Farmed Fish
A recent study published in Cambridge University’s Animal Welfarejournal (Mood et al., 2023) estimates the number of farmed fishes slaughtered for food in global aquaculture from 1990 to 2019. The study authors first noted that, unlike other forms of animal agriculture, aquaculture production is typically reported as “biomass” rather than number of individual animals. The authors sought to highlight the individual toll, given the welfare issues associated with aquaculture and the growing body of evidence that fish are sentient beings capable of feeling pain—not merely brainless, undifferentiated biomass.
The study estimated that 124 billion farmed fish were slaughtered for food in 2019, a nine-fold increase since 1990. Despite the fact that the World Organisation for Animal Health first established welfare codes for farmed fish in 1995, the authors found that at least 70 percent of farmed fish have no protection under countries’ animal welfare laws, and less than 1 percent have fish-specific legal protection at slaughter.
Program Terms: Farmed Animals, Marine Wildlife
Related News
Titus Reintroduces Humane Transport of Farmed Animals Act as New AWI Report Reveals Feeble Enforcement of Welfare Violations
In Program: Farmed AnimalsToday, US Rep. Dina Titus (D-NV) reintroduced the Humane Transport of Farmed Animals Act to improve conditions for livestock transported across the United States. The bill would...
North American Environmental Commission Confirms Mexico’s Role in Imperiling Vaquita
In Program: Marine WildlifeA commission under the United States-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA) released a report yesterday confirming that Mexico’s unwillingness to enforce its own wildlife protection, trade, and fisheries laws...
Captive dolphins face uncertain futures. They deserve better
In Program: Marine WildlifeIn this op-ed for the Tampa Bay Times, Dr. Naomi Rose, AWI’s senior scientist in marine mammal biology, discusses the challenges in caring for orcas...
Yahoo! Japan Sells Polluted Whale and Dolphin Meat Products to Unsuspecting Consumers
In Program: Marine WildlifeThe Animal Welfare Institute (AWI) and an international coalition of animal protection and environmental groups are calling on Yahoo! Japan and its parent company, the...