New Zealand King Salmon mortality rates an animal welfare disaster – SAFE

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New Zealand King Salmon has revealed a 42% mortality rate for salmon they farmed in warm water areas in their financial year ending 31 January 2022. For the salmon towed to cooler water the mortality rate was 37%.
SAFE Campaigns Manager Anna de Roo said it’s an animal welfare disaster.
“If this was happening to cows or pigs there would be investigations and prosecutions,” said de Roo.
“Salmon are just as deserving of protection under the Animal Welfare Act, however, currently they have no code of welfare. Mortality rates this high are completely unacceptable and it warrants a full animal welfare investigation.”
Salmon in the wild would normally be able to swim to cooler waters. Factory farms render them trapped in warmer waters. Overcrowding, an inability to escape danger, disease and heat stress kills hundreds of thousands of salmon every year.
Last summer New Zealand King Salmon made 160 trips to the Blenheim landfill to dump 1,269 tonnes of dead salmon. It currently has a resource consent application lodged to open more farms.
“Fishes feel pain and have the ability to experience positive and negative emotional states similar to other animals, but, it’s clear fishes are being ignored.”
“Salmon farming is factory farming, which is inherently cruel. Argentina banned fish farming last year and Aotearoa needs to look at banning it too.”
“As a starting point, farmed fishes need a code of welfare to begin addressing the terrible treatment of fishes in factory farms.”

2 COMMENTS

  1. While it is good to make people aware of this problem the easiest way to stop animal/fish exploitation would be for people to stop purchasing the end products. You only need to read the comments on this site when anyone questions current food choices to know that the desires of appetite are greater than any sense of giving other life forms a fair go.
    I have no objection to those who catch their own fish & give animals a decent quality of life before the inevitable but the various forms of factory farming disgust me.

  2. The mortality rates here are shocking. In these instances there ought to be legal action taken but the New Zealand government in representing the interests of the British Crown are burying their heads in the sand as it is convenient for them to do so and it would be highly inconvenient to prosecute.

    I agree with Anna de Roo wholeheartedly and wish her the best in her endeavors to mitigate the issue here. What people seem to be overlooking in this particular case, as Anna stated, is that fish deserve to have the same status as pigs and cows. Salmon are treated as simply recreational game in a lot of instances and that attitude needs to change.

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