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Farmed vs. wild salmon -- which is better?

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Dr. Rhonda Low on farmed vs. wild salmon
CTV News Extended: Lori Petryk on defensive eating
CTV News Extended: More salmon results

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By: ctvbc.ca

Date: Thursday Mar. 4, 2010 10:29 PM PT

Compared to farmed salmon, wild salmon is more nutritious and carries fewer toxins that can accumulate in humans, a CTV News investigation has found.

Samples of wild Pacific salmon tested on behalf of CTV News at laboratories in B.C. had eight times more Vitamin D and three times more Vitamin A than farmed Atlantic salmon. The samples of wild salmon were also leaner.

But that doesn't mean you should avoid farmed salmon, dietitians say. The benefits of this nutrient-rich food are so great that it should be a staple in all diets, regardless of the source, they say.

"If you can still afford the gold standard of wild salmon, that's the best. If not, then farmed salmon is still really good for you," said Lori Petryk, a Vancouver-based dietician.

CTV does the testing

All servings of salmon are a good source of Omega-3 fatty acids and vitamins A and D, however wild salmon packs more nutritional benefit per ounce.

Lab tests showed that samples of wild Pacific salmon had more than 500 International Units of Vitamin D, while farmed salmon had far less – just 60 I.U. For children and adults under the age of 50, Health Canada recommends 200 I.U. of Vitamin D each day.

The tested samples of wild salmon also had 154 I.U. of Vitamin A compared to 40 I.U. found in the samples of farmed salmon. Likewise, the fat content of wild salmon was 2.5 per cent while farmed salmon had three times the fat, an overall 13 per cent fat content.

Because of the higher fat content, farmed salmon can store more Omega 3 fatty acids than wild salmon. But this also means farmed salmon can accumulate higher levels of toxins such as PCBs, a banned toxin found in materials like asbestos.

Today, much of the salmon sold in grocery stores is farmed Atlantic salmon produced in B.C. and, according to the provincial government, is responsible for as many as 3,500 direct and indirect jobs.

The aquaculture industry in B.C. is monitored by the province, and 91 farms on the mainland and Vancouver Island were inspected in 2008. That same year, a joint report from the Ministry of Agriculture and Lands and the Ministry of the Environment said the success of the industry "depends on farms being environmentally sustainable and socially acceptable."

Like apples and oranges

Unlike wild salmon whose lifecycles take them from Interior streams to unknown depths of the Pacific Ocean, farmed fish are raised in floating net pens and eat a diet of fish oils, plant-based proteins and pellets of concentrated nutrients.

Mary Ellen Walling of the BC Salmon Farmers Association said the diet given to farmed salmon is designed to resemble that of wild Pacific salmon. And she points out that wild and farmed salmon are actually different species.

"It would be like taking a glass of Chardonnay and comparing it to a Riesling," said Walling, who says she prefers to eat fresh salmon -- whether farmed or wild.

"Pink salmon and sockeye salmon and chum salmon all have a little bit of a different flavour. We grow mostly Atlantic salmon here in British Columbia that has a milder texture, milder flavour and a bit of a bigger flake."

Farmed salmon are also given a carotenoid – a pigment found in plants like carrots -- that tints the flesh of farmed fish to resemble the rich reds and pinks that occur naturally in Pacific species like Coho and sockeye salmon.

To treat for sea lice, early in their lifecycle, farmed salmon are given a chemical therapeutant that Walling said is used very judiciously and results in "very little residue left in the marine environment."

Toxic soup

Jay Ritchlin, the director of marine and freshwater conservation at the David Suzuki Foundation, believes humans can safely eat limited amounts of farmed salmon but says food with any PCBs and other contaminants should be avoided when possible.

Ritchlin says he is more concerned about the environmental burden of international fish farming and advocates for more sustainable practices.

"The waste from the salmon farms, disease and parasites from the salmon farms, escaped farmed salmon all get out in the environment and have a harmful effect on the ecosystem and the wild salmon."

Ritchlin points to trace amounts of PCBs found in farmed salmon as evidence the aquaculture industry needs to make changes.

"About a third or more of the wild fish caught in the world are destined to be ground up and turned into feed for other animals, and particularly aquaculture is one of the things that uses that fish meal and that fish oil," he said.

Wild fish build toxins in their bodies like many plants and animals and those chemicals are further concentrated when fish are turned into food for farmed salmon – and that concentration carries through to the fish sold in stores, he says.

Murray Isman, the Dean of the Faculty of Land and Food Systems at UBC, says levels of PCB contaminants are higher in farmed salmon but they aren't concentrated enough to pose a significant health risk even over time.

"They are probably higher than in wild fish, but I think the important point [is] that they are 50 to 70 times lower than the acceptable level as determined by Health Canada," he said.

Like the banned pesticide DDT, PCBs behave similarly in the environment and very small amounts can be detected in humans, said Isman.

"But the question is, again, is there a health impact from that? Even though these things are in our bodies and we do accumulate them in our diet, really they're far, far below the levels that would have any impacts on our health," he told CTV News.

For more on CTV's investigative series Food for Thought, click here.

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Migzy
said
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Testing the wild vs farmed salmon for nutrition content is all well and good, but what about testing what else is in the fish in regards to toxicity. Getting Omega-3 fatty acids is good but not if we are exposing ourselves to other chemicals and/or potential disease vectors. They are feeding the farmed salmon, fish meal as well as soy/etc, that can't be healthy for the fish so by extension is us eating that fish unhealthy for us? Take for example the feeding of cow parts, in addition to other stuff, to cows or other animals has been related to BSE or Mad Cow Disease. I'm not saying the wild salmon aren't exposed to other chemicals in the sea, such as from all the garbage/plastic floating in the ocean or mercury, etc, it would be good to report on these things as well.


Lifeforce
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Great story. Human health risks are more reasons to stop farming salmon in water pens. Farmed salmon also threaten the survival of wild salmon that are desperately needed for endangered species such as orcas.


Darren
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As with all studies, a bit more ino would be good. Where were the samples selected from? Are all farmed similar, likewise were the wild samples seleceted from certain sources (all rivers are not the same) that may have made them seem more or less favourable.I personally only eat farmed. I love all fish, but it seems to me eating wild goes against preserving it. I think some context is relation to other foods would be nice, how do they compare to milk, chicken, pork, beef etc. Sure we are comparing salmon (albeit different species), but are they healthier or unhealthy compared to other staples of our diet. Maybe they are so much better, it is not what salmon we eat, but that we should eat more of either over beef, pork etc?


sds
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Salmon farms are harmful to the wild population! The salmon in the farms are covered in sea lice which drop off and then attack the smolts of the wild salmon entering the ocean from the rivers. Those little smolts can't handle the many lice and die before they ever arrive at their ocean destination. The salmon farming industry is responsible for much of the decline in fish stocks in recent years (along with foreign over fishing outside of our waters) I live in Northwest BC and have seen even our sport fishery cancelled, let alone the commercial fishery. Do Not Support Fish Farms!!! They are killing our Salmon!


marcus
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It looks like they were comparing sockeye with farmed Atlantic salmon. Maybe comparing farmed chinook with wild chinook would be a better comparison. Maybe they did... but using the term "wild pacific salmon" is a bit of a misnomer as it can mean one of 5 different species, all of which having different nutritional values from each other.


Don
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For me farmed vs wild comes down to which one tastes better. There is no comparison. Farm fish lack flavour and the texture is different and often mushy. I have eaten wild Atlantic salmon and they make the farmed ones look (and taste) like the crap they are. Thankfully I live in an area with an abundance of wild fish and have no problem getting a stock for my family to eat. If we would just care for our spawning rivers and streams properly, we could close all the fish farms and hire those 3500 people to work on trollers and in process plants. But that's the right thing to do, so that also means it will never happen.


Cyril
said
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The Norwegians think that we're crazy for allowing fish farms on our Coast. Let's bring back the bumper sticker- 'Friends Don't Serve Friends Farmed Salmon'. And at the same time, let's all resolve to eat more pinks and chums - thereby increasing the value of these species so they are not thrown back into the ocean (dead) for lack of market. Catches of salmonids have increased to the north and south of B.C. Hate to admit it, but when it comes to protecting their fisheries the Americans are much smarter than British Columbians.


David - WI
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What a ridiculous article... comparing the nutritional and fat contents of two different kinds of fish; and pretending the differences are due to how they are raised? Absurd!"Pacific salmon are in the genus Oncorhynchus, which contains numerous individual species including Chinook, Coho, and Steelhead. Unlike Atlantic salmon, Pacific salmon only spawn once before they die.""Atlantic salmon, on the other hand, are in the genus Salmo, typified by the species Salmo salar."


Cake
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Dear "sds";You need to get a map as well as a quick class on salmon biology. If you live in the Northwestern part of BC and have seen declining fish stocks, then don't try blaming fish farms. No fish farms up there (unless you include Alaska salmon ranches?) and the little fishies don't swim south to feed, they swim north. If your sport fishery is cancelled, then perhaps that's a hint - stop killing the wild salmon and bonking them on the head. Biology class = $265Map = $3.50Thinking before posting a comment...priceless.


Michael Pomponio
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Good to see that the end result is that salmon - farmed or wild - is healthy for you and good to eat. But I fear that CTV may not be entirely transparent in this sampling procedure. To only name "Pacific salmon" as your source is dubious, as there are 5 different species of salmon that could be tested. All 5 species have different results.For example, Pink salmon have low levels of pcb, but also low levels of healthy Omega 3s.But, sockeye salmon is the opposite as it will have relatively high levels of pcb, but also high levels of Omega 3s. If you test different species for different tests, you need only show the best results from each. If that's the case, this study was purposefully biased. CTV - what is the truth?But, even if it is a biased study, the end result is that wild or farmed salmon is very healthy for you, and when compared to other meats we may eat, it's a no brainer.Michael Pomponio


D. R.
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Fish farming is factory farming....disgusting.