CSIRO Introduces Pompano to Australian Aquaculture

The Pompano is suitable for Australian aquaculture. (Image credit: CSIRO)
A new white-flesh fish variety could be swimming onto Australian plates, adding more than $1 billion to the economy, following successful breeding trials by CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency, and promising initial market testing with chefs and consumers.

As consumer demand continues to grow for Australian-sourced white fish, there’s a huge opportunity to diversify aquaculture and cultivate species at scale efficiently and in a sustainable way.

The Pompano (Trachinotus anak) has been identified as the ideal white-flesh fish for developing in northern Australia’s tropical climate.

A new Pompano industry would help Australian aquaculture reduce its reliance on around 100,000 tonnes of white-flesh fish imports while helping to sustainably meet the growing demand for seafood.

Lead scientist Dr. Polly Hilder spoke at CSIRO’s AgCatalyst2024 event, highlighting the goal to produce a highly nutritious protein source while prioritizing sustainability and welfare.

“The Pompano is a robust, sociable fish endemic to northern Australia that grows really quickly and tastes great, making it an ideal candidate for adapting to our aquaculture environments,” Dr. Hilder said.

“We’re bringing a new species to Australian plates to give consumers more options while opening up new export opportunities to strengthen Australia’s white-flesh fish industry.

“We’re now working to scale production processes in commercial trials with industry.”

An initial market study conducted by Fishtales involving chefs found the Pompano is versatile, easy to prepare, and tastes great.

MasterChef Australia judge and co-owner and chef at Three Blue Ducks, Andy Allen, will highlight Pompano’s culinary qualities in a live cooking demonstration at AgCatalyst2024.

“I’ve had some time to work with this fish in my kitchen at home, and it tastes great as a mildly sweet, high-quality white meat that is firm but finely flaked,” Mr. Allen said.

“I’ve been able to use the whole fish in a variety of ways—from simply cooking the fillets in olive oil, salt, pepper, and lemon to getting a bit wilder by crisping up the wings and using the head in a couple of different ways too.

“It’s awesome to think we can breed this fish here in Australia sustainably and supply it to consumers in the future.”

By partnering with the industry to bring Pompano to the mainstream market, CSIRO aims to create a new, sustainable Australian white-flesh fish industry in the near future to diversify the market and reduce reliance on imports.

“We’re applying innovative circular economy approaches designed around welfare that make use of resources end-to-end – from capturing value from production processes, through to utilizing the whole fish at the consumer end,” Dr. Hilder said.

“For example, fish waste is high in phosphorous and nitrogen nutrients and can be turned into valuable byproducts such as fertilizer capsules.”

CSIRO’s National Protein Roadmap states that industry ambitions to produce 50,000 tonnes of white-flesh fish could create more than 1,000 jobs in Australia. It’s one of a suite of future protein solutions CSIRO is working on to meet growing global protein demand sustainably.

CSIRO’s aquaculture research and development spans breeding and genomics through to health, nutrition, and production processes.

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