How Sustainable is Antarctic Krill as a Raw Ingredient?

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RD.

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Hello; Did a quick read of the link. I have seen a film by Attleboro(sp) in which he talked about whales & krill. A fact is I have some krill packaged as fish food sitting on a shelf. Very possible some of the other commercial tropical fish foods have krill in them. The crux of the link is commercial "fishing" (harvesting) of krill at industrial levels.
The concern, at least in part, is species which feed on krill will not have enough to sustain populations at some desired level. To be sure a population level less than could exist without the human harvest. A thing I accepted long ago is life finds a way to utilize an available energy/food source. So, some organism will lose out in proportion to the amount of krill we harvest.

Before people came along, I figure the krill were taken by something and that predator -prey balances had established. I figure the krill evolved the species survival strategy of producing lots of offspring because such helped guarantee the potential for enough to survive predation and reproduce. The human industrial harvesting in effect being in competition for the available food source (krill) with the whales and many other such consumers. The simplest way to figure is the more people take = less for the whales. Not clear to me the situation is that simple but for now let me go with that.

I do not mind that there are whales. I do not want any whale population to fall to numbers below a level of sustainability. I do not know the details of how human krill harvest affects my life outside of fish food for my home tanks. I suspect the krill might be a food stock used to feed the farm raised catfish & salmon I cook for my dinner. Had some salmon last evening. Maybe in chicken feed??? If these suspicions are in fact correct, then I have a more direct involvement. I might have to reconsider how much I like whales.

Here is a thought. Pretty sure the krill will continue without the whales.

On a human species level much will depend on how important our krill harvest is to us in general. Would curtailing or reducing that harvest do real harm to some portion of the human population? I see an analogy to the dog & cat food thread i started a few days ago. Maybe an inverted analogy. One of the premises of that link is feeding dogs & cats meat is bad for the environment. Another is the meat fed to dogs & cats could go to starving people.

A side note- I noted a climate bit thrown in the link. I guess such is obligatory now days.
 
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Very possible some of the other commercial tropical fish foods have krill in them. The crux of the link is commercial "fishing" (harvesting) of krill at industrial levels.

The company in the link, and its sister company, are one of the largest producers for feed additives for aquaculture, and have been for many years. Many fish food manufacturers utilize their krill as a raw ingredient.
 
Tough to draw any conclusions regarding this issue, at least it is for me. Should I believe the companies with a financial stake in it, who claim to be doing the harvest in a safe and sustainable manner? Should I believe the dire warnings of the innumerable acronym-named councils and committees and coalitions and charities...at least some of which likely have a less-apparent financial stake in it? In today's world, the shrill wheel gets the donations.

I'm absolutely not an advocate of the "Drill, baby, drill!" philosophy but I also am a bit weary of being told that I commit a sin every time I draw a breath or eat a burger. Sadly, as I age, I have morphed from not knowing who to trust...all the way into not trusting anybody.

Even more sadly...that's just one step away from simply not giving a crap anymore. :(
 
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According to reports, worldwide whale populations have been on the rise since the commercial harvesting of whales was banned (cmon Japan, end the “research”…for recipes). Whales eat krill, megatons of the stuff. Hard to equate whale population growth with inadequate food sources, though krill is not their sole food source of course 🤔
 
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