Fish Focus

NEW USE FOR LUMPFISH

New use for lumpfish. It has long proved difficult to find other uses for lumpfish (lumpsucker) once it has finished its mission as a lice eater in fish farms. Now it turns out that the small cleaner fish might be well suited as feed for small king crabs.

“The idea behind the research project ‘Kongemat’ (‘Food fit for kings’) was to find a sustainable way to utilise lumpfish”, says Nofima scientist and project manager Birthe Vang.

Cleaner fish in fish farms stop eating salmon lice when they reach sexual maturity. It is therefore important to find alternative uses for this valuable resource so that it can be utilised in a sustainable manner. Currently, the aquaculture industry often has to pay to get rid of excess cleaner fish – not an ideal situation from both an economic and animal welfare perspective.

“So far, millions of cleaner fish have been used in fish farms to deal with salmon lice.  Now it looks like lumpfish are about to be phased out as cleaner fish. Wild lumpfish are still being fished, however, where mainly the roe from female fish is utilised, so there is still a lot of lumpfish available for alternative uses”, says Birthe Vang.

Suitable as bait in crab fishing

Several attempts have been made to find new, effective ways to utilise lumpfish after they have stopped eating lice, or the roe has been collected, but none of them have been successful.

A project led by Nofima looked into the potential use of lumpfish for human consumption in South Korea.

“The results from the market test in South Korea show that it can be challenging to sell whole cleaner fish for human consumption”, says researcher Gøril Voldnes.

“They did not like the appearance of the fish at all. They thought it was rather scary looking and very unappetising. In addition, the respondents said that the fish didn’t have much taste, the texture was too soft, there was very little meat, and their lice-eating history was simply unpleasant”, says Birthe Vang.

Nofima scientists then attempted to test whether lumpfish could be a suitable raw material for extracting the popular and important protein collagen.

“But no, it turns out it does not actually contain a lot of collagen”, Vang states.

However, lumpfish have proved suitable as bait in crab fishing, so the researchers asked themselves: Can it be used for feeding small king crabs until they reach commercial size?

Nofima already has an ongoing project titled “Helt konge” (“Crab is King”) which focuses on precisely how to rear small crabs from 250 grams up to a marketable size of around 1.3 kilos and up. Nofima’s feed experts have already developed a suitable feed.

Using that as a basis, Birthe Vang and her colleagues in the departments of marine biotechnology, seafood industry and production biology at Nofima got to work.

“We wanted to test whether whole or processed lumpfish that have been used as cleaner fish can boost the appetite and feed intake in small king crabs, and thereby boost the meat content and value of adult king crabs”, says Birthe Vang.

Developing a taste for feed coated with lumpfish concentrate

24 king crabs at the Aquaculture Research Station in Kårvika outside Tromsø were included in the 12-week trial:

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