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Fish
Farming - a brief history
British
Trout Farming
Prior
to the 20th century most trout eaten in Europe were caught direct
from the wild and the few large-scale trout hatcheries that existed
were used to re-stock rivers for fishing. Until the end of the
Second World War the UK's trout industry consisted of less than
20 such re-stocking farms.
In
the early 1900's a Danish trout farmer developed a pioneering
farm design where fresh water flowed through each fishpond radically
improving fish yield and reducing disease. This breakthrough signified
the beginning of the commercial trout-for-table farming industry.
A
Danish entrepreneur opened the first "table trout" farm in Lincolnshire
in 1950 and in the following 50 years the industry has grown to
its current size of almost 360 trout farms producing around 16,000
tonnes per annum*.

While Brown Trout (Salmo trutta) is indigenous to the UK, and
were the first fish farmed, the majority of today's farmers produce
Rainbow Trout (Oncorhyncus mykiss) which were introduced from
North America. Rainbow Trout are more tolerant of warm water than
the Brown variety, grow faster and are often slightly larger in
size.
Ancient
Fish Farming
The
artificial propagation of fish was established by the ancient
Chinese who collected fish eggs by placing mats in streams or
ponds and allowing the fish to spawn on them. The mats with the
fertilised eggs were then removed and sold for use in ponds and
flooded rice fields.
The wealthy Roman General Lucullus practised another form of fish
culture in the first century BC. He dug canals from his fishponds
to the sea into which freshwater streams were led. When spawning,
sea-fish that need to breed in freshwater passed through the canals
into his ponds and stocked them with their young. Floodgates prevented
their return to the sea.
In
the 14th century, a French monk, Dom Pinchon, discovered
the art of artificially fertilising trout eggs and then hatching
them by burying them in the sand in wooden boxes.
* Source: The Produce Studies Group, March 1999
British
Trout Association, The Rural Centre, West Mains, Ingliston EH28 8NZ
Tel:
0131 472 4080 Fax: 0131 472 4083 E-mail:
mail@britishtrout.co.uk
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