Farms: Fish farms in Alaska
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Alaska has farmed salmon for over 30 years now. Why does the Marine Stewardship Council and the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Seafood Watch not tell you this? Fish farming fishing farms fish farms salmon farming salmon farms culture hatchery hatcheries Alaska wild salmon farmers
Comments
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"The answer is; this year about 1.5 billion Alaska salmon will escape into the ocean and could potentially spread disease." Source?
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Random youtuber attempting to expose some conspiracy, hmm I dunno.. Oh, whats that?? Cool music?!!?!! So it must be true!!!
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@patemccormick07 We can read through the U.S. propaganda scheme.
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@missjlkrauss What do you feed your hatchery fish Miss? Are they not held in net pens for up to 12 months? Did you not feed you salmon with tainted wheat in your feed pellets a couple of years ago, and did not recall the feed, letting your tainted salmon go out in the wild? It looks like Alaska can do what ever they want. Screw the rest of us.
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Kudos to all of the posts by Alaskrab. The rest of you are ignorant with missinformation and don't know what you're talking about. Do your research. Alaskan salmon hatcheries are nothing like salmon farms.
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scmarly I have one question for you. Q: When was the last time an Alaska Hatchery Salmon escaped it's pen and threatened to spread infection among the Native Pacific Salmon Species? gotbait
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Your Salmon are hand picked for spawning, smolts are raised in plastic trays, fed pellets, put in net pens, spilled into the open ocean, become feed competitors to natural wild, and a large % of your ranched feed sealions that are overwelming the wild. Did I mention your fry are fed pellets? Truck loads head north every day.
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perfect video but ı want learn this music name.? Can you give me or say? Thank you...
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these people also have been paid to say this from the Moore Foundation. Save the wild eat them all.
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The Alaskan seafood industry reportedly dumps 1.5 million metric tonnes of untreated fish waste into the ocean every year. In contrast, fish waste from processing farmed salmon is used to make fish-based fertilizer.
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The David Suzuki Foundation participated in the "Go Wild" campaign based in Minneapolis, Minn. The stated purpose of the campaign was "to break the farmed fish habit" so that wild fish will be more widely distributed.
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the Moore Foundation had changed the stated titles and purposes of at least four grants, including the one to SeaWeb. The title of a $453,000 grant to the Coastal Alliance for Aquaculture Reform was changed from "Farmed and Dangerous Markets Campaign" to "Aquaculture Education Campaign."
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The Moore Foundation is the major source of funding for sea lice research by environmental organizations in British Columbia. SeaWeb publicized sea lice research by the David Suzuki Foundation during the time that SeaWeb was funded to "shift consumer and retailer demand away from farmed salmon." Alexandra Morton and John Volpe are profiled at SeaWeb as photographers.
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This isn't any news. We'd known this for 30 years.