Fish meal
Fish
used
Fishmeal
can be made from almost any type of seafood, but is generally manufactured from
wild-caught, small marine fish that contain a high percentage of bones and oil,
and are usually deemed not suitable for direct human consumption. The fish
caught for fishmeal purposes solely are termed "industrial". Other
sources of fishmeal are from bycatch and byproducts of trimmings made during
processing (fish waste or offal) of various seafood products destined for
direct human consumption.
The main fish sources by country are:
Chile: anchovies, horse mackerel
China: various species
Denmark: pout, sandeel, sprat
European Union: pout, capelin, sand eel, and
mackerel
Iceland and Norway: capelin, herring, blue whiting
Japan: sardine, pilchard, sauries, mackerels
Peru: anchovies
South Africa: pilchard
Thailand: various species
United States: menhaden, pollock
It
takes 4 to 5 tons of fish to produce one ton of fish meal; about 6 million tons
of fish are harvested each year solely to make fish meal.
Nhận xét
Đăng nhận xét