Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil

Autores
Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous; Castello, Jorge Pablo; Prentice-Hernández, Carlos; Queiroz, Maria Isabel; Espírito Santo, Milton Luiz Pinho; Augusto-Ruiz, Walter; Abdallah, Patrízia Raggi; Hansen, J.; Bertolotti, María Isabel; Manca, E.; Yeannes, M. I.; Avdalov, Nelson; Fernández Amorín, S.
Año de publicación
2009
Idioma
inglés
Tipo de recurso
informe técnico
Estado
versión publicada
Descripción
A comparative assessment between the use of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) for reduction fisheries and human food and/or value-added products is the focus of this case study. General biological aspects, spatial and seasonal distribution and available biomass estimates of the target species are examined. Currently applied and promising potential methods of processing anchoita in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay are described and compared in terms of economic and nutritional impact. Engraulis anchoita is a small pelagic fish that occurs in the South West Atlantic Ocean (SWAO) with Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina sharing the so-called anchoita "Bonaerense" stock. Annual abundance estimates vary between 600 000 tonnes and 4.5 million tonnes, with significant regional and yearly variations in biomass estimates along the shelves of the three countries. Fishing takes place predominantly between July and November. Catches in 2006 were reported to be around 30 000 tonnes in Argentina and 17 000 tonnes in Uruguay. It is estimated that up to 135 000 tonnes of anchoita could be sustainably exploited along the southern Brazilian coast. However, despite its abundance, this species is not fished there. The three countries exhibit different approaches to the utilization of E. anchoita. Argentina is the pioneer in the exploitation and manufacture of anchoita and the main manufacturer of different kinds of products for human consumption directed to both the domestic and export markets. More than 80 percent of this production is salted fish and the remainder is prepared as value-added food. In 2005, Argentine exported anchoitabased products at a value of US$26 million. At present, Uruguay processes its anchoita catch exclusively as fishmeal for export, although the preparation of products for human consumption is planned for the near future. Due to its unexploited fishery resources as well as considerable demand, Brazil has great potential for manufacturing new products that could contribute to both the domestic and export markets. Trial products have been developed that could address food security and poverty alleviation in the region and elsewhere. Alternative potential uses for new products from anchoita were assessed on the basis of prototypes developed in Brazil. It is concluded that novel products such as dehydrated risotto, soup and sausage have considerable strategic marketing value. An assessment of the costs and benefits of the production of fishmeal and new products for human consumption in Brazil revealed that the transformation of anchoita for human consumption results in significantly higher direct positive impacts on poverty and food security. Governmental social programmes supporting school meals and hospital diets are a promising entry point for the introduction of novel products to nutritionally challenged parts of society. The search for common solutions for improved utilization of anchoita should evolve from a strong technical-scientific interaction and mutual collaboration among the governments of the three countries.
Fil: Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Oceanography; Brazil.
Fil: Castello, Jorge Pablo. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Oceanography; Brazil.
Fil: Prentice-Hernández, Carlos. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Queiroz, Maria Isabel. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Espírito Santo, Milton Luiz Pinho. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Augusto-Ruiz, Walter. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Abdallah, Patrízia Raggi. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Department of Economics; Brazil.
Fil: Hansen, J. Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero (INIDEP); Argentina.
Fil: Bertolotti, María Isabel. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales; Argentina.
Fil: Manca, E. Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero (INIDEP); Argentina.
Fil: Yeannes, M. I. CONICET; Argentina.
Fil: Avdalov, Nelson. INFOPESCA; Uruguay.
Fil: Fernández Amorín, S. Universidad de La República. Fisheries Research Institute of the Veterinary Faculty; Uruguay.
Materia
Anchoita
Procesamiento de Alimentos
Nivel de accesibilidad
acceso abierto
Condiciones de uso
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ar/
Repositorio
Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS)
Institución
Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales
OAI Identificador
oai:nulan.mdp.edu.ar:2261

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oai_identifier_str oai:nulan.mdp.edu.ar:2261
network_acronym_str NULAN
repository_id_str 1845
network_name_str Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS)
spelling Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and BrazilMadureira, Lauro Antonio Saint PastousCastello, Jorge PabloPrentice-Hernández, CarlosQueiroz, Maria IsabelEspírito Santo, Milton Luiz PinhoAugusto-Ruiz, WalterAbdallah, Patrízia RaggiHansen, J.Bertolotti, María IsabelManca, E.Yeannes, M. I.Avdalov, NelsonFernández Amorín, S.AnchoitaProcesamiento de AlimentosA comparative assessment between the use of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) for reduction fisheries and human food and/or value-added products is the focus of this case study. General biological aspects, spatial and seasonal distribution and available biomass estimates of the target species are examined. Currently applied and promising potential methods of processing anchoita in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay are described and compared in terms of economic and nutritional impact. Engraulis anchoita is a small pelagic fish that occurs in the South West Atlantic Ocean (SWAO) with Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina sharing the so-called anchoita "Bonaerense" stock. Annual abundance estimates vary between 600 000 tonnes and 4.5 million tonnes, with significant regional and yearly variations in biomass estimates along the shelves of the three countries. Fishing takes place predominantly between July and November. Catches in 2006 were reported to be around 30 000 tonnes in Argentina and 17 000 tonnes in Uruguay. It is estimated that up to 135 000 tonnes of anchoita could be sustainably exploited along the southern Brazilian coast. However, despite its abundance, this species is not fished there. The three countries exhibit different approaches to the utilization of E. anchoita. Argentina is the pioneer in the exploitation and manufacture of anchoita and the main manufacturer of different kinds of products for human consumption directed to both the domestic and export markets. More than 80 percent of this production is salted fish and the remainder is prepared as value-added food. In 2005, Argentine exported anchoitabased products at a value of US$26 million. At present, Uruguay processes its anchoita catch exclusively as fishmeal for export, although the preparation of products for human consumption is planned for the near future. Due to its unexploited fishery resources as well as considerable demand, Brazil has great potential for manufacturing new products that could contribute to both the domestic and export markets. Trial products have been developed that could address food security and poverty alleviation in the region and elsewhere. Alternative potential uses for new products from anchoita were assessed on the basis of prototypes developed in Brazil. It is concluded that novel products such as dehydrated risotto, soup and sausage have considerable strategic marketing value. An assessment of the costs and benefits of the production of fishmeal and new products for human consumption in Brazil revealed that the transformation of anchoita for human consumption results in significantly higher direct positive impacts on poverty and food security. Governmental social programmes supporting school meals and hospital diets are a promising entry point for the introduction of novel products to nutritionally challenged parts of society. The search for common solutions for improved utilization of anchoita should evolve from a strong technical-scientific interaction and mutual collaboration among the governments of the three countries.Fil: Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Oceanography; Brazil.Fil: Castello, Jorge Pablo. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Oceanography; Brazil.Fil: Prentice-Hernández, Carlos. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.Fil: Queiroz, Maria Isabel. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.Fil: Espírito Santo, Milton Luiz Pinho. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.Fil: Augusto-Ruiz, Walter. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.Fil: Abdallah, Patrízia Raggi. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Department of Economics; Brazil.Fil: Hansen, J. Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero (INIDEP); Argentina.Fil: Bertolotti, María Isabel. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales; Argentina.Fil: Manca, E. Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero (INIDEP); Argentina.Fil: Yeannes, M. I. CONICET; Argentina.Fil: Avdalov, Nelson. INFOPESCA; Uruguay.Fil: Fernández Amorín, S. Universidad de La República. Fisheries Research Institute of the Veterinary Faculty; Uruguay.FAO2009info:eu-repo/semantics/reportinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_18ghinfo:ar-repo/semantics/informeTecnicoapplication/pdfhttps://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/id/eprint/2261/https://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/id/eprint/2261/1/madureira.etal.2009.pdfenginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccesshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/ar/reponame:Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS)instname:Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales2025-09-04T09:44:19Zoai:nulan.mdp.edu.ar:2261instacron:UNMDP-FCEySInstitucionalhttp://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/Universidad públicaNo correspondehttp://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/cgi/oai2cendocu@mdp.edu.arArgentinaNo correspondeNo correspondeNo correspondeopendoar:18452025-09-04 09:44:20.73Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS) - Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Socialesfalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
title Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
spellingShingle Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous
Anchoita
Procesamiento de Alimentos
title_short Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
title_full Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
title_fullStr Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
title_full_unstemmed Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
title_sort Current and potential alternative food uses of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) in Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous
Castello, Jorge Pablo
Prentice-Hernández, Carlos
Queiroz, Maria Isabel
Espírito Santo, Milton Luiz Pinho
Augusto-Ruiz, Walter
Abdallah, Patrízia Raggi
Hansen, J.
Bertolotti, María Isabel
Manca, E.
Yeannes, M. I.
Avdalov, Nelson
Fernández Amorín, S.
author Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous
author_facet Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous
Castello, Jorge Pablo
Prentice-Hernández, Carlos
Queiroz, Maria Isabel
Espírito Santo, Milton Luiz Pinho
Augusto-Ruiz, Walter
Abdallah, Patrízia Raggi
Hansen, J.
Bertolotti, María Isabel
Manca, E.
Yeannes, M. I.
Avdalov, Nelson
Fernández Amorín, S.
author_role author
author2 Castello, Jorge Pablo
Prentice-Hernández, Carlos
Queiroz, Maria Isabel
Espírito Santo, Milton Luiz Pinho
Augusto-Ruiz, Walter
Abdallah, Patrízia Raggi
Hansen, J.
Bertolotti, María Isabel
Manca, E.
Yeannes, M. I.
Avdalov, Nelson
Fernández Amorín, S.
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv Anchoita
Procesamiento de Alimentos
topic Anchoita
Procesamiento de Alimentos
dc.description.none.fl_txt_mv A comparative assessment between the use of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) for reduction fisheries and human food and/or value-added products is the focus of this case study. General biological aspects, spatial and seasonal distribution and available biomass estimates of the target species are examined. Currently applied and promising potential methods of processing anchoita in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay are described and compared in terms of economic and nutritional impact. Engraulis anchoita is a small pelagic fish that occurs in the South West Atlantic Ocean (SWAO) with Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina sharing the so-called anchoita "Bonaerense" stock. Annual abundance estimates vary between 600 000 tonnes and 4.5 million tonnes, with significant regional and yearly variations in biomass estimates along the shelves of the three countries. Fishing takes place predominantly between July and November. Catches in 2006 were reported to be around 30 000 tonnes in Argentina and 17 000 tonnes in Uruguay. It is estimated that up to 135 000 tonnes of anchoita could be sustainably exploited along the southern Brazilian coast. However, despite its abundance, this species is not fished there. The three countries exhibit different approaches to the utilization of E. anchoita. Argentina is the pioneer in the exploitation and manufacture of anchoita and the main manufacturer of different kinds of products for human consumption directed to both the domestic and export markets. More than 80 percent of this production is salted fish and the remainder is prepared as value-added food. In 2005, Argentine exported anchoitabased products at a value of US$26 million. At present, Uruguay processes its anchoita catch exclusively as fishmeal for export, although the preparation of products for human consumption is planned for the near future. Due to its unexploited fishery resources as well as considerable demand, Brazil has great potential for manufacturing new products that could contribute to both the domestic and export markets. Trial products have been developed that could address food security and poverty alleviation in the region and elsewhere. Alternative potential uses for new products from anchoita were assessed on the basis of prototypes developed in Brazil. It is concluded that novel products such as dehydrated risotto, soup and sausage have considerable strategic marketing value. An assessment of the costs and benefits of the production of fishmeal and new products for human consumption in Brazil revealed that the transformation of anchoita for human consumption results in significantly higher direct positive impacts on poverty and food security. Governmental social programmes supporting school meals and hospital diets are a promising entry point for the introduction of novel products to nutritionally challenged parts of society. The search for common solutions for improved utilization of anchoita should evolve from a strong technical-scientific interaction and mutual collaboration among the governments of the three countries.
Fil: Madureira, Lauro Antonio Saint Pastous. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Oceanography; Brazil.
Fil: Castello, Jorge Pablo. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Oceanography; Brazil.
Fil: Prentice-Hernández, Carlos. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Queiroz, Maria Isabel. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Espírito Santo, Milton Luiz Pinho. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Augusto-Ruiz, Walter. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Institute of Chemistry; Brazil.
Fil: Abdallah, Patrízia Raggi. Universidade Federal do Rio Grande. Department of Economics; Brazil.
Fil: Hansen, J. Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero (INIDEP); Argentina.
Fil: Bertolotti, María Isabel. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales; Argentina.
Fil: Manca, E. Instituto Nacional de Investigación y Desarrollo Pesquero (INIDEP); Argentina.
Fil: Yeannes, M. I. CONICET; Argentina.
Fil: Avdalov, Nelson. INFOPESCA; Uruguay.
Fil: Fernández Amorín, S. Universidad de La República. Fisheries Research Institute of the Veterinary Faculty; Uruguay.
description A comparative assessment between the use of the Argentine anchoita (Engraulis anchoita) for reduction fisheries and human food and/or value-added products is the focus of this case study. General biological aspects, spatial and seasonal distribution and available biomass estimates of the target species are examined. Currently applied and promising potential methods of processing anchoita in Argentina, Brazil and Uruguay are described and compared in terms of economic and nutritional impact. Engraulis anchoita is a small pelagic fish that occurs in the South West Atlantic Ocean (SWAO) with Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina sharing the so-called anchoita "Bonaerense" stock. Annual abundance estimates vary between 600 000 tonnes and 4.5 million tonnes, with significant regional and yearly variations in biomass estimates along the shelves of the three countries. Fishing takes place predominantly between July and November. Catches in 2006 were reported to be around 30 000 tonnes in Argentina and 17 000 tonnes in Uruguay. It is estimated that up to 135 000 tonnes of anchoita could be sustainably exploited along the southern Brazilian coast. However, despite its abundance, this species is not fished there. The three countries exhibit different approaches to the utilization of E. anchoita. Argentina is the pioneer in the exploitation and manufacture of anchoita and the main manufacturer of different kinds of products for human consumption directed to both the domestic and export markets. More than 80 percent of this production is salted fish and the remainder is prepared as value-added food. In 2005, Argentine exported anchoitabased products at a value of US$26 million. At present, Uruguay processes its anchoita catch exclusively as fishmeal for export, although the preparation of products for human consumption is planned for the near future. Due to its unexploited fishery resources as well as considerable demand, Brazil has great potential for manufacturing new products that could contribute to both the domestic and export markets. Trial products have been developed that could address food security and poverty alleviation in the region and elsewhere. Alternative potential uses for new products from anchoita were assessed on the basis of prototypes developed in Brazil. It is concluded that novel products such as dehydrated risotto, soup and sausage have considerable strategic marketing value. An assessment of the costs and benefits of the production of fishmeal and new products for human consumption in Brazil revealed that the transformation of anchoita for human consumption results in significantly higher direct positive impacts on poverty and food security. Governmental social programmes supporting school meals and hospital diets are a promising entry point for the introduction of novel products to nutritionally challenged parts of society. The search for common solutions for improved utilization of anchoita should evolve from a strong technical-scientific interaction and mutual collaboration among the governments of the three countries.
publishDate 2009
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2009
dc.type.none.fl_str_mv info:eu-repo/semantics/report
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info:ar-repo/semantics/informeTecnico
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status_str publishedVersion
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url https://nulan.mdp.edu.ar/id/eprint/2261/
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repository.name.fl_str_mv Nülan (UNMDP-FCEyS) - Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Económicas y Sociales
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