Fish Farming (Edexcel IGCSE Biology (Modular))

Revision Note

Lára Marie McIvor

Last updated

Fish Farming

Benefits of fish farming

  • Most fish are still caught in the wild (i.e. in the open ocean or in freshwater rivers and lakes)

  • However, overfishing has lead to dramatic declines in many fish populations

  • Fish farms are ways of raising large numbers of fish in a small space to provide food (protein) for humans

  • This has several advantages over wild-caught fish, including:

    • The ability to selectively breed fish to ensure high quality, fast-growing fish

    • The ability to protect against predators

    • The ability to control water quality (many wild-caught fish have significant levels of pollutants such as mercury in their flesh)

    • The ability to control feeding to ensure rapid growth

Methods used in fish farms to ensure high yields

  • Within fish farms, large numbers of fish are kept in freshwater or seawater enclosures and are carefully monitored and controlled in many different ways

  • This helps to ensure high yields (fast growth of healthy fish)

  • The methods used include:

    • The control (and maintenance) of water quality

    • The control of intraspecific predation

    • The control of interspecific predation

    • The control of disease

    • The control (and removal) of waste products

    • The control of the quality and frequency of feeding

    • The use of selective breeding

Fish farming methods table

Method

Explanation

Maintenance of water quality

Water is filtered to remove waste and harmful bacteria to prevent diseases. Water is also cleaned to maintain high levels of oxygen for aerobic respiration

Control of intraspecific predation

Intraspecific predation: predation within the same species
Fishes are separated by size and age so they don't eat each other or fight

Control of interspecific predation

Interspecific predation: predation between different species
Different species of fishes are separated by fences, nets and tanks to prevent fighting

Control of disease

Antibiotics are given to fish to prevent disease which might otherwise spread quickly due to their close confinement, increasing the chances of survival. They are also kept in small numbers to minimise the spread of diseases

Removal of waste products

Water can be filtered to remove waste products such as faeces and sewage. Fences, nets and tanks are cleaned or location of fish can be changed to ensure clean water

Quality and frequency of feeding

Fish are fed food that is high in nutrients to ensure fast growth. They are fed frequently but in small amounts so they do not overeat or start eating each other

Use of selective breeding

Fish are separated by gender so that selective breeding can be used by farmers to only allow fish with desired characteristics to reproduce. This ensures that the stock of fish is fast growing as these genes get passed on much more frequently

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Lára Marie McIvor

Author: Lára Marie McIvor

Expertise: Biology Lead

Lára graduated from Oxford University in Biological Sciences and has now been a science tutor working in the UK for several years. Lára has a particular interest in the area of infectious disease and epidemiology, and enjoys creating original educational materials that develop confidence and facilitate learning.