Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada

In the autumn of 2001, a survey was conducted to examine basic farm production and human resource characteristics of recirculation facilities in the United States and Canada currently growing finfish. An 86% response rate was achieved. The survey data indicate that this sector of aquaculture is quit...

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Published in:International Journal of Recirculating Aquaculture
Main Authors: Delabbio, Juliette L., Murphy, Brian R., Johnson, G. R., Hallerman, Eric M.
Other Authors: Smith, Stephen Allen, Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Commercial Fish and Shellfish Technologies Program, Virginia Tech 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90590
https://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378
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author Delabbio, Juliette L.
Murphy, Brian R.
Johnson, G. R.
Hallerman, Eric M.
author2 Smith, Stephen Allen
Fish and Wildlife Conservation
author_facet Delabbio, Juliette L.
Murphy, Brian R.
Johnson, G. R.
Hallerman, Eric M.
author_sort Delabbio, Juliette L.
collection VTechWorks (VirginiaTech)
container_issue 0
container_title International Journal of Recirculating Aquaculture
container_volume 4
description In the autumn of 2001, a survey was conducted to examine basic farm production and human resource characteristics of recirculation facilities in the United States and Canada currently growing finfish. An 86% response rate was achieved. The survey data indicate that this sector of aquaculture is quite heterogeneous. The number and pounds of fish produced is quite variable, with presence of small-, medium- and large sized farms in this sector. Recirculation technologies are employed to culture a wide variety of both warmwater and coldwater fishes in both saltwater and freshwater situations. The four fishes most commonly grown in recirculation units in the United States and Canada are Atlantic salmon smolts, tilapia, hybrid striped bass and ornamental fishes. A high proportion of facilities using recirculation technologies use pumped groundwater as a primary water source. Over 40% of facilities represented in the survey rely on a single water source to sustain their operation and have no secondary water source as backup. Management personnel of recirculation facilities are highly educated; more than 74% of respondents reported holding at least an undergraduate degree. The majority of personnel managing recirculation facilities are middle-aged individuals who have over 10 years of related work experience. The findings of this study represent the first empirical description of the recirculation sector of finfish aquaculture in the United States and Canada.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Atlantic salmon
genre_facet Atlantic salmon
geographic Canada
geographic_facet Canada
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378
op_relation Delabbio, J., Murphy, B.R., Johnson, G.R. and Hallerman, E., 2003. Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada. International Journal of Recirculating Aquaculture, 4. DOI: http://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378
1547-917X
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90590
https://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378
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Commercial Fish and Shellfish Technologies Program, Virginia Tech
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publisher Commercial Fish and Shellfish Technologies Program, Virginia Tech
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spelling ftvirginiatec:oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/90590 2025-01-16T21:04:28+00:00 Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada International Journal of Recirculating Aquaculture Delabbio, Juliette L. Murphy, Brian R. Johnson, G. R. Hallerman, Eric M. Smith, Stephen Allen Fish and Wildlife Conservation 2003-06-01 19 pages 1.44 MB application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90590 https://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378 en eng Commercial Fish and Shellfish Technologies Program, Virginia Tech Delabbio, J., Murphy, B.R., Johnson, G.R. and Hallerman, E., 2003. Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada. International Journal of Recirculating Aquaculture, 4. DOI: http://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378 1547-917X http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90590 https://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378 4 1 2572-9160 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Commercial Fish and Shellfish Technologies Program, Virginia Tech Finfish Aquaculture Recirculating Aquaculture Article - Refereed Text 2003 ftvirginiatec https://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378 2023-11-30T19:07:45Z In the autumn of 2001, a survey was conducted to examine basic farm production and human resource characteristics of recirculation facilities in the United States and Canada currently growing finfish. An 86% response rate was achieved. The survey data indicate that this sector of aquaculture is quite heterogeneous. The number and pounds of fish produced is quite variable, with presence of small-, medium- and large sized farms in this sector. Recirculation technologies are employed to culture a wide variety of both warmwater and coldwater fishes in both saltwater and freshwater situations. The four fishes most commonly grown in recirculation units in the United States and Canada are Atlantic salmon smolts, tilapia, hybrid striped bass and ornamental fishes. A high proportion of facilities using recirculation technologies use pumped groundwater as a primary water source. Over 40% of facilities represented in the survey rely on a single water source to sustain their operation and have no secondary water source as backup. Management personnel of recirculation facilities are highly educated; more than 74% of respondents reported holding at least an undergraduate degree. The majority of personnel managing recirculation facilities are middle-aged individuals who have over 10 years of related work experience. The findings of this study represent the first empirical description of the recirculation sector of finfish aquaculture in the United States and Canada. Article in Journal/Newspaper Atlantic salmon VTechWorks (VirginiaTech) Canada International Journal of Recirculating Aquaculture 4 0
spellingShingle Finfish Aquaculture
Recirculating Aquaculture
Delabbio, Juliette L.
Murphy, Brian R.
Johnson, G. R.
Hallerman, Eric M.
Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada
title Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada
title_full Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada
title_fullStr Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada
title_short Characteristics of the Recirculation Sector of Finfish Aquaculture in the United States and Canada
title_sort characteristics of the recirculation sector of finfish aquaculture in the united states and canada
topic Finfish Aquaculture
Recirculating Aquaculture
topic_facet Finfish Aquaculture
Recirculating Aquaculture
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/90590
https://doi.org/10.21061/ijra.v4i1.1378