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Journal ArticleDOI

The relationships between stocking density and welfare in farmed rainbow trout

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TLDR
There is increasing public, governmental and commercial interest in the welfare of intensively farmed fish and stocking density has been highlighted as an area of particular concern, and there are contradictory recommendations in the literature for key water quality parameters to ensure adequate welfare status.
Abstract
There is increasing public, governmental and commercial interest in the welfare of intensively farmed fish and stocking density has been highlighted as an area of particular concern. Here we draw scientific attention and debate to this emerging research field by reviewing the evidence for effects of density on rainbow trout. Although no explicit reference to ‘welfare’ has been made, there are 43 studies which have examined the effects of density on production and physiological parameters of rainbow trout. Increasing stocking density does not appear to cause prolonged crowding stress in rainbow trout. However, commonly reported effects of increasing density are reductions in food conversion efficiency, nutritional condition and growth, and an increase in fin erosion. Such changes are indicative of a reduced welfare status—although the magnitude of the effects has tended to be dependent upon study-specific conditions. Systematic observations on large scale commercial farms are therefore required, rather than extrapolation of these mainly small-scale experimental findings. There is dispute as to the cause of the observed effects of increasing density, with water quality deterioration and/or an increase in aggressive behaviour being variously proposed. Both causes can theoretically generate the observed effects of increasing density, and the relative contribution of the two causes may depend upon the specific conditions. However, documentation of the relationship between density and the effects of aggressive behaviour at relevant commercial densities is lacking. Consequently only inferential evidence exists that aggressive behaviour generates the observed effects of increasing density, whereas there is direct experimental evidence that water quality degradation is responsible. Nevertheless, there are contradictory recommendations in the literature for key water quality parameters to ensure adequate welfare status. The potential for welfare to be detrimentally affected by non-aggressive behavioural interactions (abrasion, collision, obstruction) and low densities (due to excessive aggressive behaviour and a poor feeding response) have been largely overlooked. Legislation directly limiting stocking density is likely to be unworkable, and a more practical option might be to prescribe acceptable levels of water quality, health, nutritional condition and behavioural indicators.

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Book ChapterDOI

Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries

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Stress and the welfare of cultured fish

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References
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Book ChapterDOI

10 - Environmental Factors and Growth

J.R. Brett
- 01 Jan 1979 - 
TL;DR: The individual functions have been introduced in the chapter to provide some explanation of the response to environmental factors, without deviating from the major purpose of examining the recorded trends in the activity of growing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of chronic Cortisol administration and daily acute stress on growth, physiological conditions, and stress responses in juvenile rainbow trout

TL;DR: It is concluded that continuously elevated plasma cortisol from exogenous feedng had a profound long-term effect on juvenile rainbow trout, but that d d y stress-induced acute elevations of endogenous cortisol did not, except for a suppression of circulating lymphocytes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Neurobehavioral Nature of Fishes and the Question of Awareness and Pain

TL;DR: Although it is implausible that fishes can experience pain or emotions, they display robust, nonconscious, neuroendocrine, and physiological stress responses to noxious stimuli and avoidance of potentially injurious stress responses is an important issue in considerations about the welfare of fishes.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of feeding hierarchy on individual variability in daily feeding of rainbow trout, Oncorhynchus mykiss (Walbaum)

TL;DR: It is suggested that radiography can be used to assess social relationships within groups of Fish allowing the assessment of feeding hierarchies in larger groups of fish than would be possible by observational techniques.
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