Frankenfish Poised to Climb From Shelf to Sea

Food And Water Watch

Just sixty GE salmon into a wild population of 60,000 would lead to the extinction of the wild population.

A coalition of 31 consumer, animal welfare and environmental groups, along with commercial and recreational fisheries associations and food retailers submitted a joint statement criticizing an announcement this week by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) that it will potentially approve the long-shelved AquAdvantage transgenic salmon as the first genetically engineered (GE) animal intended for human consumption.

The engineered Atlantic salmon being considered was developed by AquaBounty Technologies, which artificially combined growth hormone genes from an unrelated Pacific salmon, (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) with DNA from the anti-freeze genes of an eelpout (Zoarces americanus). This modification causes production of growth-hormone year-round, creating a fish the company claims grows at twice the normal rate. This could allow factory fish farms to crowd fish into pens and still get high production rates.

Each year millions of farmed salmon escape from open-water net pens, outcompeting wild populations for resources and straining ecosystems. If the FDA opens this door, GE fish will likely be among the millions of salmon that currently escape from open ocean pens every year. This could be the last blow to wild salmon stocks and in turn the thousands of men and women who depend on fishing for their livelihoods. “Approving genetically engineered salmon is a sharp contradiction to the agreements the United States has signed at NASCO, where transgenic salmonids are considered a serious threat to wild salmon” said Boyce Thorne Miller, Science and Policy Coordinator for the Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance and accredited observer at the North Atlantic Salmon Conservation Organization.

Escaped GE salmon can pose an additional threat – genetic pollution resulting from what scientists call the “Trojan gene” effect.” Research published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences notes that a release of just sixty GE salmon into a wild population of 60,000 would lead to the extinction of the wild population in less than 40 generations.

Anticipating the stark danger to our fisheries and ocean environments – and trying to circumvent analyses of those dangers – AquaBounty has claimed that they will only raise their fish in land-based facilities. However most salmon farmers in the real world ply their trade in low-lying coastal areas and competing corporations will no doubt race to produce GE fish in crowded open ocean facilities already in use for fish production. Backsliding on its original claims, reports have circulated that AquaBounty may only suggest producers raise GE fish in “inland waters” – presenting novel threats to our nation’s lakes, rivers, and estuaries – many of which are already under attack by invasive fish species like the Asian carp and Northern snakehead.

“FDA’s decision to go ahead with this approval process is misguided and dangerous, and is made worse by its complete lack of data to review” said Andrew Kimbrell, Executive Director for the Center for Food Safety. “FDA has been sitting on this application for 10 years and yet it has chosen not to disclose any data about its decision until just a few days before the public meeting.”

“The approval of these transgenic fish will only exacerbate the problems facing our wild fisheries.” - Jonathan Rosenfield, PhD, a Conservation Biologist and President of the SalmonAID

CONTENTS

Quotas, Consolidation Pounds N.E. Fleet

Last Cannery May Be First Lobster Processor

Adventure, Living Up To Its Name

Editorial

The Commons

The Enforcers are Enforced

Fishermen’s Letter to President, Full Page in Newspaper

Fishermen Fishing

Racing Notes 2010

Things Are Happening at S.W. Boatworks in Lamoine

Frankenfish Poised to Climb From Shelf to Sea

Simultaneously Closed and Certified: Feds End Dogfish Landings

U.S. Atlantic Spiny Dogfish Fishery Seeks MSC Sustainability Certification

The End of the Bottom Line Project: Final Roundline Exchange for All Fishermen

46th Annual Lobster Festival at Winter Harbor

Moorings Serve Double-duty as Habitat

Common Ground Country Fair Marks 34th Year

Energy Tide 2

Letters to the Editor

Back Then

The Clamdigger (Part 2)

The Wrinkle

September Meeetings

Maine Fishermen’s Forum Scholarship Fundraiser

September Events

Working Waterways and Waterfronts National Symposium on Water

Capt. Mark East’s Advice Column