(Foto: New Zealand King Salmon)
13
March, 2015
NZ
King Salmon chief executive Grant Rosewarne said warm sea
temperatures at the company's Waihinau Bay farm, in Pelorus Sound,
had contributed to the deaths. Rosewarne would not say for commercial
reasons how many salmon had died, or how many fish were at the farm,
but said the mortality rate was a "multimillion-dollar problem
to solve".
Water
temperatures at the Waihinau Bay farm had stayed above 18 degrees
Celsius for three months, Rosewarne said.
"I
don't think we've ever had it quite as bad as this year."
King
salmon cannot regulate their body temperature. They function best
when water temperatures are between 12C and 17C.
The
increased salmon death rate in the Pelorus Sounds started in
mid-February, Rosewarne said.
The
water temperature dropped about half a degree last weekend after
rain, but was still above 18C.
"We
won't really see an improved situation until the temperature starts
to drop," Rosewarne said.
"We're
completely at the whim of the weather."
The
Waihinau Bay farm is the only NZ King Salmon farm affected by higher
than normal mortality rates.
No
"primary pathogen" was pinpointed during investigations
into what was causing the fish deaths, and there was no risk to human
health, Rosewarne said.
Staff
were "extremely disappointed" about the deaths and had done
the best they could for their stock, he said.
"Within
the constraints we've got, we have done everything possible to keep
the stress low and give these fish the best chance possible of
getting through the summer."
Losing
fish in what was already a tight market had disappointing
consequences for company growth, Rosewarne said.
"The
losses at Waihinau Bay will impact our production in the short-term,
however we have enough time to put a plan in place to avoid
significant effect.
"Our
longer-term production is not affected, although we will have to
re-assess our site utilisation."
Lower
flow water sites, such as the Waihinau Bay farm, were particularly at
risk of sustained periods of high water temperatures.
Rosewarne
said staff were unable to move the fish to another site because it
would put further stress on them, and there were no suitable
alternative sites for the fish.
The
two-year-old salmon at the Waihinau Bay farm had been at sea for
about nine months.
The
temperature was not the only factor contributing to the large number
of salmon deaths, Rosewarne said.
"It's
never the sole reason. It's one of the more extreme things that can
stress the fish out but there's other things that can affect it as
well."
Giving
the fish a nutritious and easily digestible diet helped ease the
stress on them, Rosewarne said.
The
company had changed to a more expensive feed at its Waihinau Bay farm
after a high mortality rate last year, but the feed had not been as
successful as hoped.
There
would be another review of feed after the high number of salmon
deaths this summer, Rosewarne said.
Other
strategies to limit the effect of high water temperatures included
selecting and breeding fish that had survived high temperatures in
the past, and reducing stress on fish by keeping seals at bay with a
large gap between the fish pen nets and the outer predator nets.
The
dead fish are barged out from the farm and transported to North
Island company Kakariki Proteins.
Staff
at Kakariki Proteins sterilise and dry out the fish, extracting the
oils and protein, before turning the salmon into dried pet and animal
food.
Kakariki
Proteins does not make products for human consumption.
-
The Marlborough Express
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