MEPS

Marine Ecology Progress Series

MEPS is a leading hybrid research journal on all aspects of marine, coastal and estuarine ecology. Priority is given to outstanding research that advances our ecological understanding.

Online: ISSN 1616-1599

Print: ISSN 0171-8630

DOI: https://doi.org/10.3354/meps

Impact Factor2.1 (JCR 2025 release)

Article Acceptance Rate52.2% (2024)

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Volume contents
Mar Ecol Prog Ser 385:1-14 (2009)

Coastal salmon farms attract large and persistent aggregations of wild fish: an ecosystem effect

ABSTRACT: Coastal aquaculture is a globally expanding enterprise. Currently, 1200 salmon farms operate in coastal Norway, yet their capacity to aggregate and subsequently modify wild fish distributions is poorly known. Aggregations of wild fish at 9 farms and 9 control locations were counted on 3 separate days in June to August 2007. On each sampling occasion, 6 counts were made at 5 distinct depth-strata at each farm and control location. Wild fish were 1 to 3 orders of magnitude more abundant at farms than at control sites, depending on the location. Gadoid fish (Pollachius virens, Gadus morhua and Melanogrammus aeglefinus) dominated farm-associated assemblages and were present across a wide range of sizes, from juveniles to large adults. Estimated total farm-aggregated wild fish biomass averaged 10.2 metric tonnes (t) per farm across the 9 farms (range: 600 kg to 41.6 t). Applied across the geographical range of Norway’s 1200 salmon farms, our estimates indicate that salmon farms attract and aggregate over 12000 t of wild fish into a total of just 750 ha of coastal waters on any given day in summer. Possible consequences of these persistent, substantial aggregations of wild fishes at farms include a heightened potential for the transfer of pathogens from salmon farms to wild fish and among adjacent salmon farms, and altered availability of wild fish to fisheries. Restrictions on fishing in the immediate surrounds of salmon farms may avoid farms acting as ecological traps, particularly for species with depressed populations such as G. morhua, which are highly attracted to farms.

KEYWORDS

Wild fish such as saithe Pollachius virens aggregate in large numbers beside Norwegian salmon farms Photo: Per Eide

Fish farming is an expanding enterprise worldwide with farms now common artificial structures in many coastal environments. Using an underwater video technique, Dempster and colleagues estimated wild fish aggregations at 9 salmon farms spread throughout coastal Norway (59°N to 70°N) and compared these to natural control locations. Wild fish were heavily aggregated at farms, with an average of over 10 t of fish, predominantly saithe Pollachius virens and Atlantic cod Gadus morhua, per farm. Their estimates imply that Norway’s 1200 salmon farms aggregate over 12000 t of wild fish on any day in summer, which represents an ecosystem scale redistribution of wild fish in coastal waters. Wild fish aggregations at fish farms are important in the context of disease transfer to and from farms and the vulnerability of wild fish to capture.

T. Dempster (Co-author)

  • SINTEF Fisheries and Aquaculture, 7465 Trondheim, Norway
  • Department of Zoology, University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia

I. Uglem (Co-author)

  • Norwegian Institute for Nature Research, 7485 Trondheim, Norway

P. Sanchez-Jerez (Co-author)

  • Department of Marine Sciences and Applied Biology, University of Alicante, PO Box 99, 03080 Alicante, Spain

D. Fernandez-Jover (Co-author)

  • Department of Marine Sciences and Applied Biology, University of Alicante, PO Box 99, 03080 Alicante, Spain

J. Bayle-Sempere (Co-author)

  • Department of Marine Sciences and Applied Biology, University of Alicante, PO Box 99, 03080 Alicante, Spain

R. Nilsen (Co-author)

  • NOFIMA, 9192 Tromsø, Norway

P. A. Bjørn (Co-author)

  • NOFIMA, 9192 Tromsø, Norway