Abstract

Too many salmon die during production at Norwegian fish farms. Earlier research shows that most farmed salmon die in operations partly related to protection of the wild salmon (from salmon lice), but it is not known how this relates to other conditions positive or negative for fish welfare. Fish farm personnel are experts on the organizational conditions during production. This is thus a study of what fish farm personnel consider contributing to fish welfare. Data are gathered through interviews, observation, and a small-scale survey. The results suggest that the personnel stand in a multiple protection dilemma, where fish welfare loses in a battle with objectives of profitable production, and protection of wild salmon. In this context of conditions emphasizing other objectives, the personnel act as a buffer for farmed fish welfare. In particular, the study indicates that fish health personnel perceive themselves and are perceived as advocates for fish welfare. This important role, and the multiple protection dilemma that comes from the conflict between product and environment, are not earlier described in organizational literature. Multiple protection dilemmas can be relevant for all production in open environment, so personnel and organizations should be structured to reduce and handle it.

Highlights

  • Good fish welfare is not sufficiently achieved in Norwegian salmon farming; 16% of the salmon set into sea cages are registered dead during the production process [9]

  • This study has shown that fish farm personnel experience that they contribute positively to fish welfare in a context where structural con­ ditions contribute negatively

  • Lice counting and delousing are executed because of a mix of regulations and managerial decisions, even when they are harmful for the farmed salmon

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Good fish welfare is not sufficiently achieved in Norwegian salmon farming; 16% of the salmon set into sea cages are registered dead during the production process [9]. Lice counting and delousing are harmful for the farmed salmon [36] Between these operations for the sake of production or to protect wild salmon, fish farm personnel are instructed to protect the farmed fish. It makes them central in balancing the objectives of the company and several regulations [25,29,52,58]. Personnel commonly experience a dilemma between protecting farmed fish and protecting wild fish

About fish farming
Company compliance with regulations
Theoretical basis of conditions for protection and production
Methods
Interviews
Survey
Methodological considerations and limitations
Technical considerations
Analysis
Empirical data
Structure
Materiality
Culture and competence
Interaction and work processes
Social relations
Summary of results
Conditions for fish welfare
Farmed versus wild salmon
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.