 
Aquaculture Pioneers
Two Cleveland physicians, Theodatus Garlick
and H. A. Ackley, performed the first successful artificial fertilization of
fish eggs in the United States in 1853. They later built the nation’s
first fish hatchery. Garlick published results of their experiments in
1857 in the "Ohio Farmer," spreading the knowledge for others to use. His
treatise on artificial fish propagation and pisciculture encouraged others
to begin artificially breeding fish. Aquaculture experts today sometimes
call Garlick the "Father of American Fish Culture." Garlick and Ackley
laid the foundation for the modern fish farming, or "aquaculture,"
industry. Aquaculture means raising aquatic animals or plants in a
controlled environment for all or part of their life cycle. Most
aquaculture is for commercial purposes, with the produce sold for use in
recreation, food, or other products. Aquaculture’s most popular fish
include channel catfish, striped bass, rainbow
trout, salmon, carp, and tilapia. Aquaculture also is a major source of
water chestnuts, algae, water hyacinths, seaweeds, water lilies, and other
wetland plants.
Thousands of fish farms are thriving
today as a result of their work, producing heart-healthy, high-protein
food for millions of people. Fish farms raise about half the oysters and
almost all the catfish, crawfish, and rainbow trout sold in the United
States. Worldwide, fish farming accounts for more than 70 million tons of
fish each year, and aquaculture is the great hope for supplying
hungry people with nutritious seafood, as natural catches from the oceans
decline. The
State of World
Fisheries and Aquaculture website offers more information.
Artificial fish breeding in fish
hatcheries also has become a key conservation tool. It allows restocking
of natural populations of game fish that are depleted because of pollution
and other problems. That helps sustain the sports fishing industry.
Fishing is the nation’s 5th most popular participation sport, ranking
ahead of biking, bowling, golf, in-line skating, jogging, tennis, and
skiing. Only walking, swimming, camping, and exercising with equipment are
more popular. Fishing enthusiasts spend more than $2 billion annually on
tackle and other gear, and pump billions into the tourist industries in
Ohio and other states.
Garlick and Ackley helped start all
that by showing for the first time that people could raise commercial
quantities of fish through artificial breeding. Fish farming certainly was
not new when the two doctors started their experiments. People in ancient
Rome and China, for instance, raised carp, oysters, and other fish in
artificial ponds. Ostia Antica, port for the ancient City of Rome, had
huge fish ponds to assure consumers the freshest possible seafood. Garlick
and Ackley, however, were among the first individuals in the United States
to rediscover and extend this knowledge. Previously, fish farmers caught
fish in the wild and transferred them to artificial ponds or other
enclosures. Fish spent only part of their life cycle under artificial
cultivation. Adult fish caught in the wild might be fattened or held for
brief periods. Small fish, or fingerlings, grew to maturity. Imagine how
expensive chicken or hamburgers would be if farmers had to start with wild
birds or cows.
Fish farming really began to make
sense from a monetary standpoint after these Ohio inventors realized that
fish could be raised in artificial environments throughout their entire life
cycle. They worked with brook trout Salvelinus fontinalis, which
"spawn," or reproduce, when the female sheds eggs into the water and the
male fertilizes them. Garlick and
Ackley removed eggs from a female trout and sperm, or "milt," from a male
and combined the two so fertilization could occur. The fertilized eggs
hatched into small trout, or "fry." They realized that the young fish
could be used to stock fish farms, and built the first fish hatchery on
Ackley's farm near Cleveland, which had 3 fish ponds.
The Science
Behind the Invention
Theodatus Garlick and H. A. Ackley
based their development of artificial breeding technology on the biology
of fish reproduction. Not all fish, however, would have cooperated like
the brook trout the Ohioans used in their experiments. Female trout lay
eggs in the water, where males fertilize them. Sharks, however, use
internal fertilization. Most sharks and a few other fish, including some
popular aquarium fish, even give birth to live young.
However, brook trout are the rule of
thumb in the fish world. Fertilization occurs after the female spawns, or
deposits eggs in the water. Marine, or salt-water, fish must lay millions
at one time, assuring that at least a few survive to adulthood. Their eggs
contain tiny droplets of buoyant oil that helps them float freely in the
water, offering a tasty snack to other fish. Predators also gobble up
many newly hatched fish.
Most freshwater fish lay fewer eggs
because they are better protected from predators. Their eggs have a
sticky outer coating that clings to stones and other objects in the water.
Many fish build "nests." They’re not elaborate like bird nests, but usually
just shallow holes at the bottom, serving to keep the eggs in one spot and protect
them. Some adult fish even guard the nests.

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