What ingredients are in Skretting feed?

Aquaculture feeds contain essential nutrients that should be delivered in the right quantities to keep fish and shrimp growing well and healthily. 

These nutrients come from a variety of different sources. In addition to fish meal and fish oil, they often contain other vegetable-based meals and oils, fish trimmings and processed by-products from land animals.  Skretting feeds can contain up to 50 ingredients to ensure a complete and balanced nutritional profile.

These could include:  

  • Agricultural crops such as wheat gluten, corn gluten, soybean meal, soy protein concentrate, rapeseed meal, sunflower meal, lupin and faba bean 
  • Wild-capture fish and crustaceans for ingredients such as fish meal, crustacean meal and fish oil 
  • By-products from farmed land animals such as poultry meal, feather meal, blood meal and poultry oil 
  • By-products from wild-capture fish and crustaceans such as fish meal, crustacean meal
  • By-products from farmed fish and crustaceans such as fish meal, crustacean meal, fish oil and salmon oil  Novel ingredients such as insect meal and algal oil 
  • Novel ingredients such as insect meal and algal oil
  • Micro-ingredients, including vitamin and mineral premix and pigment 

Much like humans, fish and shrimp have specific nutritional requirements, including protein, fat, carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals. The nutrients in our feeds come from a range of natural raw materials, depending on the species and the life stage they have reached. Aquaculture feeds, most commonly provided in the form of dried pellets, contain all of the essential nutrients needed to keep fish and shrimp healthy and growing, and support the needs over the different life stages. 

Fish meal and fish oil are two of the more commonly known marine ingredients sometimes used in aquaculture feeds. Fish meal is a powder obtained after cooking, pressing, drying and milling fresh raw fish, while fish oil is a liquid pressed from the cooked fish. Both are produced from harvesting short-lived, fast-growing stocks of small, bony and oily fish for which there is little or no demand for human consumption. Offcuts not suitable for human consumption, and resulting from seafood processing, are an increasingly large contributor to fish meal and fish oil production. Skretting has strict policies in place for sustainable sourcing of raw materials. 

Tree illlustration Tom Berry

MicroBalance

One of the most innovative developments from Skretting in recent years has been the development of fully flexible feeds, made possible through an innovative concept we call MicroBalance. Substituting ingredients is not as easy as you might expect – micronutrition must be fully understood an accounted for to ensure health and growth are not compromised. Many years of R&D at Skretting Aquaculture Research Centre (ARC) have ensured that we can now make feeds that are fully flexible when it comes to raw materials, and that they satisfy the needs of the fish and shrimp, without any negative effects on animal health and performance.

Skretting recognises that one of the most positive impacts it can have in the context of sustainability is to ensure that it manufactures its feeds from responsibly sourced raw materials. We therefore endeavour to improve the sustainability of our purchasing and feed formulas.  

About MicroBalance

FAQs

Why choose farmed over wild fish?
Are farmed fish and shrimp healthy to eat?
Do salmon and trout feeds contain colouring?
What ingredients are in Skretting feed?
Are the raw materials that Skretting uses in its feeds responsibly sourced?
Do feeds contain chemicals or preservatives dangerous to human health?
Are the animal by-products used in aquaculture feeds dangerous to human health?
Do feeds contain growth hormones or antibiotics?
What are fish meal and fish oil, and why are they used in aquaculture feeds?
Is low fish meal/fish oil content in feeds harmful to fish and shrimp?
Does Skretting use novel ingredients in its feeds?
What is ethoxyquin and is it safe?
Are circular economy principles applied to aquaculture feeds?
Is aquaculture sustainable?
Is aquaculture controlled?
Why is aquaculture important?
Why do aquaculture species grow quickly?
Are farms healthy environments for producing fish and shrimp?
How much wild fish is needed to feed farmed fish?
Are Skretting feeds sustainable?
Is it safe to eat farmed fish and shrimp?
How is Skretting contributing to feeding a growing global population?
Is one feed sufficient for all aquaculture species?
How much feed is needed to grow a farmed fish?
Can efficient feed management help improve the sustainability of aquaculture?