Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Fish farms turn murky waters clear

- — LI LEI AND WU YONG

The once murky waters found in lakes and reservoirs across Northeast China’s Liaoning province are being made clear again thanks to the help of a partner found in Mother Nature — fish.

The Liaoning Water Resource Management Group in 2016 began implementi­ng a plan to establish fish farms in algae-plagued water bodies to improve water quality and provide a secondary source of revenue.

Algal blooms emerge as nitrogen and phosphorus build up in lakes, reservoirs and other slow-moving waters due to agricultur­al runoff and contaminat­ion from untreated urban sewage.

The blooms endanger the ecosystem of freshwater lakes and can cause taste and odor problems in waters used for drinking.

The water management group, which operates 16 reservoirs across Liaoning and supplies nearly 70% of the province’s water, has long wrestled with algae.

By introducin­g fish into water bodies, the water resource group is able to control algal blooms, clean up the water and then re-catch the fish to sell on the market once they’ve reached maturity.

In recent years, provinces such as Yunnan, Anhui and Shandong, where freshwater lakes are abundant, have also rolled out similar programs.

However, these programs’ custodians have warned the process is not as simple as it seems.

“Not all fish can thrive in reservoirs,” said Guan Wankai, who oversees the group’s operations at Guanyinge Reservoir in Benxi, southeast Liaoning.

Guan said to make the program work, the group has looked to filter-feeding fish including carp and types of catfish, that guzzle particles suspended in the water.

He said the fish in Guanyinge Reservoir are mostly silver and bighead carp.

Citing research data, the official said harvesting 2.2lb of carp is equivalent to removing about 0.04lb of nitrogen, 0.003lb of phosphorus and 0.26lb of carbon from the water. When calculated by the biomass of algae, 88lb are eliminated from the water with 2.2lb of fish caught.

The group said it had released 8,758 short tons of carp and other species across Liaoning by last year, and the harvest amounted to 30,975 short tons.

In 2023, 5,070 short tons of fish were caught, with the group raking in an additional 71 million yuan ($9.86 million), it said.

Official figures show that 52% of the country’s freshwater aquacultur­e areas are lakes and reservoirs, which produce about one-fifth of China’s freshwater catch.

These fish, especially those from reservoirs, are commonly referred to as “ecological fish” due to their health benefits.

China is the world’s fourth largest organic food producer by growing area, and sales of such food reached 87.7 billion yuan in 2022, according to a report by the State Administra­tion of Market Regulation.

The group said many of its fish products had been certified organic.

“With living standards increasing, consumers now prefer organic fish raised in open waters,” the group said.

“Our fish business has a bright future ahead.”

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Farmed fish are netted from the Guanyinge Reservoir in Benxi, Liaoning province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Farmed fish are netted from the Guanyinge Reservoir in Benxi, Liaoning province.

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