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Farm-bred octopus: A benefit to the species or an act of cruelty?
#1
Farm-bred octopus: A benefit to the species or an act of cruelty?

From the L.A. Times  12/20/2022
Climate & Environment
Farm-bred octopus: A benefit to the species or an act of cruelty? At the Kanaloa Octopus Farm, efforts are being made to breed octopus for human consumption. (Carolyn Cole / Los Angeles Times)



By Susanne Rust  Staff Writer 
Dec. 20, 2022 5 AM PTKAILUA-KONA, Hawaii  — 



Sandwiched here between the Pacific Ocean and Kona Airport — atop a dusty volcanic desert — dozens of 50-gallon water tanks gurgle and bubble away; each home to a solitary, wild-caught octopus and a couple of floating, plastic bath toys.

Situated on land owned and operated by the Natural Energy Laboratory of Hawaii Authority, the Kanaloa Octopus Farm bills itself as a research institute designed to help tease apart the secrets of the day octopus’ reproductive cycle. Doing so, farm owner Jacob Conroy and his staff say, could help protect the species from overfishing by providing humanity with a stable, captive-bred population of protein-packed cephalopods.

“Right now pretty much every octopus you have ever seen — whether it is the ones you see here today, in an aquarium or even on your dinner plate — have all been wild caught,” said Carmelle Joyner, a farm biologist and tour guide. “There is no method for raising octopus in captivity. This means that we are taking them all from our oceans and our reefs ... We are hopeful that if we can figure out how to raise them here, our research can be used to apply to other places to help out their natural population.”
But if the prospect of establishing a farmed and sustainable source of octopus — a delicacy of Japanese, Spanish, Portuguese and Mexican cuisines — inspires delight among some diners, Conroy’s farm has come under harsh criticism from those who say keeping octopuses in captivity is cruel.
The farm, which invites visitors to pet the invertebrates — and also features a gift shop stocked with octopus-inspired jewelry and Christmas ornaments — has become ground zero in a growing movement that is demanding humane treatment of these playful sea dwellers.


As scientific evidence of octopuses’ intelligence and self-awareness grows, advocates are calling the farm a singular horror show in which wild and curious day octopuses are captured and confined in sterile tanks, where they spend the rest of their short, year-long lives being poked, prodded and chased by the fingers and hands of gawking, occasionally shrieking, tourists.


“Octopuses are playful, resourceful and inquisitive. They have long-term memories, they use tools and they change the color of their skin for camouflage, but also for communication. They learn through observation. And most importantly they have the capacity to experience boredom,” said Debbie Metzler, director of Captive Animal Welfare at the PETA Foundation. “And yet the Kanaloa Octopus farm confines them to just this series of incredibly small, bleak tanks where they are just used for public interaction. This is exploitation. Not conservation.”

It’s a fight similar to those that have raged over the treatment of veal calves and force-fed geese for foie gras. Critics are asking whether Conroy’s startup and others should keep breeding and confining sentient creatures for a life with no agency, while providing little conservation value — the day octopus is neither endangered not threatened — and for a food that is marketed predominantly to wealthy people.

Conservationists worry too that widespread farming of octopuses would imperil other sea life, since octopuses require immense amounts of live, fresh caught crustaceans and fish while also producing large amounts of waste — which just gets dumped back into the ocean, harming nearby coral reefs and habitat.

“I think right now is the time to ask, why are we doing this?” said Jennifer Jacquet, professor of Environmental Studies at New York University. “Is it to feed hungry people? Is it because we absolutely have to?”

“We’re at a crossroads where we can ask ourselves, should we or should we not do this?” said Jacquet.Conroy did not respond to repeated requests for comment.


On a Thursday afternoon in October, a reporter and photographer for The Times visited the Kanaloa farm with about two dozen tourists from across the globe.
Most of the outdoor tanks were occupied by solitary day octopuses who’d been caught just off the coast in the days, weeks and months before. 


Some were burrowed into the small, plastic cave-like dwellings that sat at the bottom of their tanks — hiding from the hoots and hollers of excitable tourists. Others crawled around the inside walls of their sink, eyeballing their voyeurs and ignoring the two or three plastic bath toys that floated in lazy circles on the surface above them.

Slim Shady — a young male day octopus — reached up and touched the hand of a man who’d been gently splashing the surface, wriggling his fingers just beneath, hoping to make a connection with this alien life form.

“There you go,” said the man soothingly; his hand now wrapped in the embrace of at least two curious tentacles. “That’s a good boy.”

Despite attempts by entrepreneurs such as Conroy and companies such as Nueva Pescanova, in Spain, a successful commercially operating octopus farm does not yet exist. Nobody has yet figured out how to close the octopus life cycle in a commercially desirable species — that is, getting reproductive adults to mate, lay eggs, and have offspring that develop into reproductive adults.


The chance that Conroy’s facility or another will someday learn to breed octopuses in captivity, however, still worries animal welfare advocates and conservationists.

“This is a luxury product,” Jacquet said. “It is going to be grown to feed a satiated market that has excess money to buy luxury goods. To me, the octopus farm characterizes extreme excess with no ethical regard for a nonhuman life.”
   

In 2021, researchers at the Marine Biology Laboratory, in Woodshole, Mass., successfully closed the life cycle in the pygmy zebra octopus. 


Although that was a first, Robyn Crook, an octopus biologist at San Francisco State University, said the eggs and paralarvae of pygmy zebra octopuses are very different from the kinds commercial farms are hoping to capitalize on. 

“Octopuses have two slightly different universes of reproduction,” she said. 
Some, like the pygmy zebra octopus, produce a relatively small number of large eggs, “about the size of a pea,” she said.


Others, like the day octopus, or Octopus cyanea, and the common octopus, or Octopus vulgaris, produce hundreds of thousands of very small eggs.
They are desirable because of their high yield, Crook said. It’s just that nobody has figured out how to keep these small hatchlings alive for long.


Joyner, the Kanaloa Octopus Farm biologist, said the facility was trying to determine what the paralarvae hatchlings eat, calling it a “missing piece of the puzzle.” They have been able to keep the paralarvae alive for only 13 days post hatching. 
   

“When these guys hatch out they are about the size of a half a grain of rice. They are very, very small and they are very picky eaters, as well,” she said. “They really only like to eat live foods that are smaller than they are. And unfortunately, at this time, we haven’t figured out exactly what that is.”


But that’s not the only problem facing would-be octopus farmers.

Octopuses are antisocial and “aggressive, so you put two of those guys together in a tank and they’ll kill one another,” said Jacquet. “That would ruin the product.”

Also, octopuses require live food such as fish, crabs and clams to survive.

“Octopuses are very finicky,” said Peter Tse, a neurobiologist at Dartmouth University who studies octopus intelligence. “They really only want to eat living things that they have killed themselves.”


And finally, there’s the issue of pollution. Octopuses produce high levels of nitrogen and phosphorous as waste. That dirty water then gets pumped back into the ocean “and you know — in a sensitive place like Hawaii,” said Jacquet, that can really do some damage.

But most problematic, say the researchers, is the ethical question of whether keeping highly intelligent creatures in sterile tanks for their entire lives is acceptable.

Crook noted that in the United States there are no laws protecting octopuses and other cephalopods, such as squid and cuttlefish; they are not considered animals by the federal government.

Two years ago, a team of legal scholars sent a petition to the National Institutes of Health, urging classification of cephalopods as animals. And although Canada, the European Union, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand have laws protecting octopuses, they are still without protections in the United States.

“You need to have much more regulation on what people are doing with sentient creatures. Whether it’s for research. Whether it’s for food production. Or entertainment. There’s a much larger conversation we need to have,” said Kathy Hessler, director of the Animal Legal Education Initiative at George Washington University Law School.


The current lack of legal protections leaves octopuses, like the ones at Kanaloa, vulnerable to inhumane treatment and abuse, said both Hessler and Crook.

“There is very little known about veterinary treatment for octopuses,” said Crook. “Very little about pain relief and nothing at all about humane slaughter. All of these things where we’ve seen big advancements in aquaculture fin fish over the last 20 years, none of that is established for cephalopods.”

Octopuses “are behaviorally complex and they live in a very complex environment and so when we think about what is the right way to keep them in captivity, their environment should replicate that  complexity,” she said. 

From the photos she has seen of Kanaloa, she sees very little evidence these animals are being provided the stimulation and enrichment their intelligence requires. 

“Looks like straight-up tourist attraction, to me,” she said.
Assume the best and ask questions.

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#2
I guess I feel about it the same way I'd feel if we farmed dolphins for food.
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#3
Well said. About twenty years ago I went to a Korean restaurant. My friends ordered for us. At one point a waiter came out with a live octopus. He killed it and cooked it in front of us to show that it was fresh. I overcame my shock and tried it. Delicious. Not delicious enough to keep me from regretting it these many years later. Kanaloa Octopus Farm will hear from me.
Certainty will be the death of us.
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#4
https://www.yahoo.com/now/scientific-pap...00373.html

"New scientific paper claims octopuses are actually aliens from outer space"

Wait until the mothership returns and finds out what we have been doing to their children.
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#5
As a diver who has been lucky enough to interact with these amazing creatures, I am very much against 'farming' them. They are intelligent, curious, and playful. They recognize individual dive guides, and will come out to greet them as friends. Since I had a chance to interact with them, I've never been able to eat one again. Thanks Rob for bringing this to greater attention.

For a haunting read, the library has ' Remarkably bright creatures: a novel ' by Shelby van Pelt, which has a giant Pacific octopus that is being held in an aquarium as one of the main characters. It is an amazing feat of imagination, and has won several awards. It starts with " Day 1,299 of my captivity... ". The library has hardback, e-book, and audio-book copies available.
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#6
Gee, where to begin? I think the same argument could be made about almost every species on earth. What about lobsters and crabs that are boiled alive? Factory farming? Humans excel in our arrogance and ignorance of other species.

I've been to the octopus place and found the tour to be quite informative. The people there really care about the creatures. We didn't poke, prod or chase them. We were instructed to make a "cage" with the fingertips of both hands and gently lower it into the water. They would, on their own, come up and grab onto your fingers and interact with you.

It was a very nice and fascinating experience. I learned a lot about them. Oh, and BTW, one of the things I learned was that they acquired them by buying them from locals who caught them either to eat or use as bait.
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#7
I did email the octopus farm and received this response:

"I just wanted to let you know that we are in the process of talking to a lawyer to take legal action against the LA Times for the numerous lies in their article.
They never tried to talk to anyone who works here to get accurate information about what we do. Apparently the author came on our tour while out here on vacation and did not even try to interview anyone.
They lied about the size of our tanks, the smallest we have is 97 gallons not 50, and the largest are over 1000 gallons.
We absolutely do not dump any wastewater into the ocean ever.
We are not and have never planned to raise octopus for human consumption, we have always been very clear that we are attempting to raise them in captivity to supplement wild populations in areas that have been overfished or impacted by human actions.
We feed them locally farmed shrimp and abalone and sustainably fished crab, so there is very little impact on wild fisheries from our activities here, much less impact than you would see from a restaurant serving seafood.
I appreciate your caring about animal welfare, everyone here does too. The whole reason we are doing this is to hopefully prevent yet another species declining into threatened and endangered status due to human interactions with the animals and their environment.
I encourage you to take some time and learn more about what we are actually doing instead of believing lies that were written by someone associated with Peta who has an agenda against any captive animal studies. We are very open about what we do here, a quick email to ask some questions rather than accuse us of things we are not doing would go a long way in making informed decisions.

Dan Jackson
Manager
Kanaloa Octopus Farm"

Upon re-reading the article with these comments in mind, I noticed that none of the "experts" had actually been to the farm and I'm highly suspicious about anything PETA says. The author did not contact the operators of the farm, merely took a tour, and the implications that the octopi were being farmed for food were not stated as fact, just inferred. It will be interesting to see how this plays out, but it appears that, at best, the author did not do her homework.
Certainty will be the death of us.
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#8
benefit to the species or an act of cruelty?

Wait until the mothership returns 

The people there really care about the creatures. We didn't poke,


There's an episode of The Twilight Zone in which aliens land on Earth and share their knowledge and friendship with Earthlings.  They even generously offer to take a group of us to their planet to discover more about them.  The accomodations and food on board the saucer are fantastic.  All you can eat.  The hosts really live up to a book they've written, "How To Serve Man."  
But
It's a cookbook!

This facility in Kona sounds like it should be renamed "How to Serve Octopus."
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#9
(12-22-2022, 08:04 PM)kalianna Wrote: I did email the octopus farm and received this response:

"I just wanted to let you know that we are in the process of talking to a lawyer to take legal action against the LA Times for the numerous lies in their article.

You mean the mainstream media lies?
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#10
Yeah, I know. But I expected better things from an LA Times staff writer. And myself before I took the bait. There are two sides to every story. Well.... most stories.
Certainty will be the death of us.
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