The global number of fish confined in farms is estimated to range from 60 to 130 billion individuals at any point in time — roughly the same number of members of our species who have ever been born on planet Earth (since around 200,000 B.C.E). The increasing global appetite for fish and the sharp decline in wild fish populations each year will keep forcing farmed fish numbers up: global production of fish has quadrupled over the past 50 years, with no clear signs of growth stagnation yet.
Farmed fish are typically smaller than terrestrial farm animals, and grow at a much slower rate. Accordingly, the time they spend in captivity to produce the same amount of meat, calories or protein is substantially longer. Likewise, the number of farmed fish used to produce a given amount of meat is also larger given their smaller body sizes, higher pre-slaughter mortality rates, and use of other fish species as feed (in carnivorous species). Slaughter is typically conducted without stunning, death is slow and even high-standard farming conditions typically fall very short of enabling the expression of the behavioral repertoire of most species.
This makes fish farming a vastly underrecognized source of suffering among farmed vertebrates. In this preliminary assessment, we explore the possible scope of harm imposed on 25 of the top farmed fish species, and the extent to which some fish species may experience substantially different welfare than others. For each species we estimate the time in captivity and number of individuals typically killed to produce 1 Kg of boneless fish meat. Estimates are based on brief reviews of typical mortality figures during the fingerling and grow-out stages, life spans in captivity, weight at slaughter and weight conversion factors. We also explore the association of these parameters with (1) scores representing the potential for good welfare under high-standard farming conditions, as developed by the FishEthoGroup (Fair-Fish International) and (2) each species’ dietary habits (predominantly carnivorous or herbivorous).
This preliminary analysis is not based on the Cumulative Pain metric, through which the time in physical and psychological pain (i.e. negative affective states) emerging from every welfare challenge (e.g., diseases, injuries, behavioral deprivations, threats, fear) is quantified and justified. Instead, it is simply aimed at providing an initial and rough approximation of possible differences in the loss of welfare embedded in the production of the top farmed fish species, hence of which fish groups should be prioritized for further investigation.
Mortality Findings
Observed differences between predominantly Carnivorous and Herbivorous species