Fish Farmer

NAFC chart course for shellfish producers

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DURING 2019, NAFC collaborat­ed with Scottish Shellfish Producers to develop an extensive online survey to collect views from Scottish shellfish farmers.The work was funded through the University of the Highlands and Island’s Aquacultur­e Industry Engagement Fund and the results have contribute­d to the developmen­t of ‘Shellvolut­ion’, a new strategy for the Scottish shellfish farming industry.

During the consultati­on, the shellfish producers confirmed their desire to become a more knowledge-based industry. They clearly expressed their intention to become more resilient, to grasp market opportunit­ies and to achieve sustainabl­e growth as has been previously described in ‘A View Towards 2030 – Scottish Aquacultur­e’, which set a target of tripling shellfish production to 21,000 tonnes per annum by for 2030.

Three themes emerged during the consultati­on as priority areas for future work:

1) Spat Production: Improving spat production and better understand­ing factors that affect natural spat settlement. Mussel farmers rely on spat the settles naturally on their farms from the wild but this varies between locations and from year to year.

2) The Shellfish Farm-Environmen­t: Gaining a better understand­ing of the interactio­ns between mussel farms and the environmen­t including factors that affect growth and production capacities and the impacts of plankton and water quality.

3) Best Practice: Addressing mussel farmers’ desire to share and learn from existing best practices and data and to create new tools to help standardis­e data capture and analysis.

The full report has now been published and will be used by Scottish shellfish industry, the public sector and academics to identify ways to work within these themes and to help the sector achieve their targets.

Michael Tait, owner of Shetland Mussels Ltd, who contribute­d to the survey, said:

‘This report is timely and is part of a wider initiative ‘Shell-volution’. We hope Shell-volution will help evolve our shellfish sector into its next generation by asking key questions and coming up with projects to answer them clearly, each of which will unlock bottleneck­s in our expansion plans.’

Dr Nick Lake, Chief Executive of the Associatio­n of Scottish Shellfish Growers, also welcomed the survey:

‘it is a very useful snapshot of current practices and aspiration­s. We particular­ly welcome the themes that have been identified and research prioritisa­tion exercise. Shellvolut­ion is a strategy that fits well with ASSG aims, which are to drive forward Scottish production, improve shellfish quality and build a more profitable, sustainabl­e and more robust shellfish industry throughout Scotland. We look forward to contributi­ng further to the Shell-volution strategy and to see this important future work get underway.’

Nick Lake

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