Sunshine Coast sturgeon farm prepares to harvest caviar after 11 years of nurturing
By Randy Shore, Vancouver SunJanuary 13, 2011
Canada's only white sturgeon farm is on the verge of its first black caviar harvest after 11 long years of tender slimy care.
The Target Marine hatchery and land-based aquaculture operation near Sechelt has about 2,000 mature females nearing harvest age, according to general manager Justin Henry.
About 100 fish will be harvested for caviar this year and some of those eggs will be held back for fertilization to start the next generation of sturgeon.
"We had thought they would mature at eight years, because that's what we had seen in other countries, so it's been a long wait," said Henry. "No one had ever grown the Fraser River strain before."
Each of the female sturgeon nearing sexual maturity this spring can weigh 40 to 120 kilograms and yield four to 10 kilos of black caviar, worth up to $3,000 per kilo retail.
The fish are killed by percussive stunning and the roe harvested through an incision the length of the belly. Target started selling mature males for meat about four months ago and plans to sell the meat from harvested females, as well. The wholesale price of farmed sturgeon is more than $20 a kilo.
Henry has been contacted by firms as far away as China and Japan interested in purchasing the caviar when it is ready.
"We have already had interested buyers from the United States come and visit the hatchery," Henry said.
The 25-year-old hatchery had specialized in producing coho salmon smolts for the aquaculture industry. But the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early '90s led to massive overharvesting of sturgeon in the Caspian Sea and the collapse of the fishery that supplied much of the world's caviar.
Target was looking for opportunities to diversify and began to prepare its first generation of white sturgeon in 1999, the fish that are ready for harvest today.
"We had the technology here to rear these fish on land, with recirculation technology that allows us to control their environment," said Henry.
Target obtained sexually mature Fraser River white sturgeon from the Vancouver Island University aquaculture program and fertilized the eggs with the assistance of an aquaculture expert from University of California Davis.
Target's operation covers about two hectares (five acres) of a 24-hectare (60-acre) parcel of land on the Sunshine Coast. Water is drawn from a small creek and seven wells scattered throughout the parcel.
Target sold off eight open-pen fish-rearing operations and a processing plant in 2007 to concentrate on the sturgeon, though the hatchery continues to rear coho smolts.
Solid waste recovered from the sturgeon tanks goes to the Sechelt District compost, at least, what is left after the 20 hatchery staff take what they need for their vegetable gardens.
Large outdoor tanks covering the area of a football field are equipped with scrubbing towers and filters that remove ammonia, carbon dioxide and nitrogen from the water before sending it back for recirculation. Originally designed as a flow-through aquaculture system, many of the rearing tanks now recover 50 to 99 per cent of the water for recirculation. Target is in the process of converting two more tanks to the 99-percent standard with $100,000 in matching funds from the federal government.
The only remaining impediment to Target's plans to harvest caviar on its hatchery site is a rezoning application to the District of Sechelt. Although the district had already changed the zoning to allow processing on site, a group of local residents opposed to the change had the rezoning overturned by the court for a procedural error. A new application is in process.
"We can send the fish out and have the roe harvested, but we really need to be in control of the process to ensure the best quality product," said Henry.
Target is hosting an information meeting in support of the new application tonight at the Seaside Centre in Sechelt at 7 p.m.
rshore@vancouversun.com© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun