BEIJING, March 18 (Xinhuanet) -- Overfished to the
brink of commercial collapse, scientists are coming to the rescue of the
Atlantic bluefin tuna by learning how to breed these huge fish in captivity,
which could reduce pressure on wild tuna.
Even so, demand for bluefin sushi is so intense that
others say the tuna will inevitably follow salmon, catfish and other
smaller fish into successful commercial aquaculture.
"I think that about 10 years from now, we'll get
bluefin tuna to breed via land-based hatcheries," said Yonathan Zohar, the
director of the University of Maryland Center of Marine Biotechnology. "It's
only a matter of time and resources."
The first problem to surmount is bluefin
behavior. Bluefin can take up to 12 years to reach sexual maturity,
compared to about three years for catfish, and getting them to breed outside
their natural habitat is difficult. Life in a floating sea cage or giant tank
apparently does not provide the right environmental cues to tell the fish to
turn on those sex hormones and produce another generation.
A European Union project recently made a start at
clearing these hurdles. Zohar collaborated on the paper, published in the July
2007 issue of Reviews in Fisheries Science, which used drug implants to get
bluefin to produce fertilized eggs in captivity. In the future, this technique
may help scientists overcome the practical and financial barriers to bluefin
farming by making the tuna breed at a younger age.
Zohar compares his research to a gynecology practice
for fish. The captive tuna's brains were not producing enough of the hormones
that normally tell the fish's bodies to breed, so Zohar developed a drug
treatment that mimics the hormone at the top of the chain of command:
gonadotropin-releasing hormone.
Some scientists are skeptical about the prospects of
breeding bluefin, and environmentalists say the breeding efforts are a costly
distraction. "That's a really expensive way of not solving a problem ¡ª which is
the overfishing of bluefin tuna," said Tom Grasso, the director of marine
conservation policy at WWF, a conservation organization that currently supports
a worldwide ban on all Atlantic bluefin fishing and encourages people to eat
other kinds of tuna instead.
The bluefin population of the western Atlantic has
plunged by more than 90 percent since the 1970s, according to the International
Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas. Last year, American fishermen
brought in less than 15 percent of their allowed catch.
(Agencies)