麻豆传媒

 

麻豆传媒 researchers help N.S. company launch eel aquaculture business

- August 2, 2017

NovaEel Inc. CEO Paul Smith examines female eels being raised at 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Aquatron through an NSERC-funded industry-academic partnership. (Provided photos)
NovaEel Inc. CEO Paul Smith examines female eels being raised at 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Aquatron through an NSERC-funded industry-academic partnership. (Provided photos)

Thanks to researchers at 麻豆传媒, a Nova Scotia company is poised to launch an eel-farming industry with potential to generate $250 million in annual sales for the regional economy.

NovaEel Inc. is targeting the insatiable Japanese market for eel, or unagi, which has relied heavily on China and Europe since overfishing its own stocks of immature eels (鈥済lass eels鈥) some 50 years ago. Those producers, too, have since overfished their wild baby eels. This makes an opening for Nova Scotia, where the glass eel fishery is sustainable and well-regulated. With the rapid growth in Japanese cuisine and sushi worldwide, there is large demand for eels.

鈥淭o produce eels for market, it鈥檚 necessary to harvest baby eels in the wild and grow them up in tanks, because no one has ever succeeded in breeding eels in captivity,鈥 explains Paul Smith, CEO of NovaEel, a collective of licensed eel fishers and companies from Nova Scotia and Maine.

鈥淭he challenge is, eels are ambisex. This means they develop into male or female, depending on population density and food supply. But males only grow to about 150 grams, while females can reach several kilograms. Most eels in captivity will be male, which does not yield enough product to be worthwhile. We needed a way to ensure our glass eels would become female, so they would reach a marketable size, while remaining safe for human consumption.鈥

A safe feminization process for glass eels


Working together, NovaEel and scientists at 麻豆传媒 Medical School have perfected a method of turning glass eels into females, and have them stay female in crowded conditions, without risk to human health.

鈥淲e鈥檝e validated a method of feminizing the eels using a form of estrogen known as estradiol, and can confirm this feminization even before the eels develop any visible sexual characteristics,鈥 says Dr. James Fawcett, a professor in the departments of Pharmacology and Surgery. 鈥淢ost importantly for human health, we鈥檝e found that the eels鈥 estradiol levels return to normal in a matter of days, leaving no residue behind in the tissue.鈥


Eel-farming collaborators: Dr. Yu Ri Park, postdoc in the Centre for Water Resources Studies, Faculty of Engineering; Dr. Neil Ross, research director for NovaEel; Dr. James Fawcett, professor in Pharmacology and Surgery; Dr. Alejandro Cohen, scientific director, Proteomics & Mass Spectrometry Core Facility, 麻豆传媒 Medical School.

The researchers developed new sample preparation procedures and analytical methods specifically for this project. By combining three different techniques鈥攃hromatography, ion mobility and mass spectrometry鈥攖hey were able to establish precise and sensitive measurements of female hormones in the eel tissues. Their methods and results were published in the peer-reviewed journal, , and .

鈥淭he specificity and sensitivity of our methods allows us to monitor hormone levels at a wide range of concentrations, including the trace amounts found in male specimens,鈥 notes Dr. Alejandro Cohen, who played a lead role in developing and conducting the studies as scientific director of the at 麻豆传媒 Medical School. 鈥淣ow that we have these tests, we can make them available to other industries as well.鈥

Dr. Fawcett obtained a $25,000 Engage Grant from NSERC and $5,000 from the National Research Council鈥檚 Industrial Research Assistance Program, which allowed the 麻豆传媒 researchers to work with NovaEel to develop the methods for safely and reliably feminizing its glass eel supply. 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Industry Liaison & Innovation office played a key role in facilitating this funding and continues to be involved in various aspects of the project.

鈥淲e鈥檇 be nowhere on this project without 麻豆传媒,鈥 says Dr. Neil Ross, NovaEel鈥檚 research director, adding that staff members at the university鈥檚 Aquatron are also key players in the company鈥檚 research and development efforts. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way we could purchase the sophisticated facilities or develop and conduct that kind of testing on our own鈥攚e need our academic partners.鈥

Safeguarding the environment


Now that the feminization process is established and proven safe, the next step for NovaEel is to seek FDA and Health Canada approval for the process and the medication, and then move on to practical matters of raising the female eels. Part of this involves ensuring the environmentally responsible disposal of wastewater at its aquaculture facilities. This is where members of 麻豆传媒鈥檚 engineering faculty come in.

鈥淲e鈥檙e collaborating with聽Dr. Adam Donaldson and Dr. Graham Gagnon in the Faculty of Engineering to refine our aquaculture processes,鈥 Paul Smith explains. 鈥淲e鈥檙e planning low-impact, land-based production facilities 鈥 not sea pens 鈥 but there are a lot of details to work out to ensure our operations are as clean, efficient and sustainable as possible.鈥

Assuming all goes well with the regulatory approvals, NovaEels could be set to begin raising eels in tanks on Maritime soil as soon as 2020.

鈥淲hy continue to literally ship our industry鈥檚 growth potential to China?鈥 asks Smith, explaining that the eel fishers who formed the company have all been selling glass eels to China for years. 鈥淏ut why sell for $1 this year what we could sell for $10 next year? We want to capture the potential value of this industry for the Maritime economy by raising the eels for market here. Thanks to our partners at 麻豆传媒, we expect to be able to do that.鈥

A training ground for scientists and engineers


The NovaEel partnership with academia has so far involved more than 20 trainees. These include undergraduate students, graduate students, postdocs and recent grads in science and engineering programs at 麻豆传媒, as well as a student from the University of New Brunswick.


麻豆传媒 Masters of Engineering student Jessica Bennett is working on a N.S. Department of Fisheries & Aquaculture-funded study for NovaEel; she first began working with the company as a technician following her BSc.

鈥淎 number of students have conducted research projects on scientific and technical issues, such as eel genomics, eel nutrition, the eel gut microbiome, and removal of medications from the water supply in recirculating aquaculture systems,鈥 notes Smith, who holds a Master of Science in biology himself. 鈥淥thers have worked with us as technicians, co-op students and volunteers. They bring so much energy and insight, it鈥檚 tremendous to have them involved.鈥

As Jim Fawcett notes, the trainees are gaining important new skills and learning how research can be applied to solve practical problems.

鈥淧artnerships like the one with NovaEel open doors to new sources of funding that provide both research and job opportunities for students,鈥 Dr. Fawcett says. 鈥淚t also increases our region鈥檚 pool of people with specialized skills, such as the ability to use the sophisticated instruments in the Proteomics Core Facility. This, and the recent addition of new equipment, increases this facility鈥檚 capacity to provide analytical services to other researchers and to industry as well.鈥


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