TY - JOUR
T1 - Reasons to Be Skeptical about Sentience and Pain in Fishes and Aquatic Invertebrates
AU - Diggles, Benjamin K.
AU - Arlinghaus, Robert
AU - Browman, Howard I.
AU - Cooke, Steven J.
AU - Cooper, Robin L.
AU - Cowx, Ian G.
AU - Derby, Charles D.
AU - Derbyshire, Stuart W.
AU - Hart, Paul J.B.
AU - Jones, Brian
AU - Kasumyan, Alexander O.
AU - Key, Brian
AU - Pepperell, Julian G.
AU - Rogers, D. Christopher
AU - Rose, James D.
AU - Schwab, Alex
AU - Skiftesvik, Anne B.
AU - Stevens, Don
AU - Shields, Jeffrey D.
AU - Watson, Craig
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The welfare of fishes and aquatic invertebrates is important, and several jurisdictions have included these taxa under welfare regulation in recent years. Regulation of welfare requires use of scientifically validated welfare criteria. This is why applying Mertonian skepticism toward claims for sentience and pain in fishes and aquatic invertebrates is scientifically sound and prudent, particularly when those claims are used to justify legislation regulating the welfare of these taxa. Enacting welfare legislation for these taxa without strong scientific evidence is a societal and political choice that risks creating scientific and interpretational problems as well as major policy challenges, including the potential to generate significant unintended consequences. In contrast, a more rigorous science-based approach to the welfare of aquatic organisms that is based on verified, validated and measurable endpoints is more likely to result in “win-win” scenarios that minimize the risk of unintended negative impacts for all stakeholders, including fish and aquatic invertebrates. The authors identify as supporters of animal welfare, and emphasize that this issue is not about choosing between welfare and no welfare for fish and aquatic invertebrates, but rather to ensure that important decisions about their welfare are based on scientifically robust evidence. These ten reasons are delivered in the spirit of organized skepticism to orient legislators, decision makers and the scientific community, and alert them to the need to maintain a high scientific evidential bar for any operational welfare indicators used for aquatic animals, particularly those mandated by legislation. Moving forward, maintaining the highest scientific standards is vitally important, in order to protect not only aquatic animal welfare, but also global food security and the welfare of humans.
AB - The welfare of fishes and aquatic invertebrates is important, and several jurisdictions have included these taxa under welfare regulation in recent years. Regulation of welfare requires use of scientifically validated welfare criteria. This is why applying Mertonian skepticism toward claims for sentience and pain in fishes and aquatic invertebrates is scientifically sound and prudent, particularly when those claims are used to justify legislation regulating the welfare of these taxa. Enacting welfare legislation for these taxa without strong scientific evidence is a societal and political choice that risks creating scientific and interpretational problems as well as major policy challenges, including the potential to generate significant unintended consequences. In contrast, a more rigorous science-based approach to the welfare of aquatic organisms that is based on verified, validated and measurable endpoints is more likely to result in “win-win” scenarios that minimize the risk of unintended negative impacts for all stakeholders, including fish and aquatic invertebrates. The authors identify as supporters of animal welfare, and emphasize that this issue is not about choosing between welfare and no welfare for fish and aquatic invertebrates, but rather to ensure that important decisions about their welfare are based on scientifically robust evidence. These ten reasons are delivered in the spirit of organized skepticism to orient legislators, decision makers and the scientific community, and alert them to the need to maintain a high scientific evidential bar for any operational welfare indicators used for aquatic animals, particularly those mandated by legislation. Moving forward, maintaining the highest scientific standards is vitally important, in order to protect not only aquatic animal welfare, but also global food security and the welfare of humans.
KW - Animal ethics
KW - aquaculture
KW - fisheries
KW - policy
KW - sentience
KW - suffering
KW - verification
KW - welfare
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U2 - 10.1080/23308249.2023.2257802
DO - 10.1080/23308249.2023.2257802
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85173458070
SN - 2330-8249
VL - 32
SP - 127
EP - 150
JO - Reviews in Fisheries Science and Aquaculture
JF - Reviews in Fisheries Science and Aquaculture
IS - 1
ER -