Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative

Trout being tossed from a hand-held net into an aquaculture pond.
Trout being tossed into an aquaculture pond. Image credit: ©Damian Horațiu Sultănoiu. stock.adobe.com

Project website

The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) is a federally funded project that seeks to create a regionwide group to foster relevant, science based initiatives that support aquaculture industries in the Great Lakes region that are environmentally responsible, competitive, and sustainable.

GLAC Quick-Facts Rack Card

  • GLAC 1.0 began September 1, 2019, and ends August 31, 2023.
  • GLAC 2.0 began September 1, 2022, and ends August 31, 2024.
  • GLAC 3.0 begins September 1, 2024, and ends August 31, 2027.

GLAC 2.0 funding is being used to help strengthen the aquaculture community in the Great Lakes region, provide decision-makers in all eight Great Lakes states with science-based aquaculture information and help clarify how aquaculture regulations are implemented.

GLAC 3.0 funding will be used to address aquaculture communication and literacy needs that have been identified as important issues by the GLAC state advisory groups and the aquaculture industry in the Great Lakes region.

Target audiences for this project include aquaculture producers, consumers, and fish/seafood marketers in the Great Lakes states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Illinois-Indiana, Pennsylvania, and New York. 

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What is aquaculture?

Aquaculture is the farming of aquatic organisms in both coastal and inland areas involving interventions in the rearing process to enhance production.

Sustainable aquaculture is the ability to raise and harvest food-fish without degrading or depleting the environment, in a manner that is economically competitive, and in a manner that can be sustained indefinitely.  

Responsibly managed aquaculture can provide growers with a livelihood and produce a nutrient-rich protein source that can help feed the world while not negatively affecting the environment. 

Four people standing a lab with a biofilter and aquaculture tank.
Minnesota Sea Grant (MNSG) Aquaculture Extension Associate Kieran Smith giving a tour of the Minnesota Aquatic Invasive Species Research lab where the MNSG Egg-to-Market Yellow Perch project is taking place. This tour was given during the Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative event Great Lakes Aquaculture Days 2022 Fish Health Workshop. Image credit Amy Schrank/MNSG.

Project description

The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) seeks to help Great Lakes region fish farmers develop businesses that meet the following criteria:

  • Economic sustainability means that a fish business is economically viable indefinitely or for a prolonged period of time.
  • Environmental sustainability means that a fish business actively protects the environment. This includes an operation that does not release pollutants, does not deplete or destroy natural resources, and does not (un)intentionally introduce fish or pathogens or other species into public and other waters.
  • Social sustainability means that fish businesses are good neighbors and actively contribute to the health and well-being of their communities. This includes fair wages, safe working conditions, and workforce diversity.

Why aquaculture? Aquaculture is one of the fastest-growing food sectors worldwide. Although people have cultivated aquatic species for thousands of years it was not until relatively recently that farm-raised products accounted for more than 50% of seafood consumed by people. When the volume of wild-caught fish began to level off in the late 1980s, aquaculture was seen as a means of fulfilling a need for protein. The aquaculture industry continues to grow as the need for protein increases and as people seek safe, local, and sustainable food systems to provide food for a global population that is estimated to reach nine billion people by 2050.

Why Minnesota Sea Grant?

The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative supports Sea Grant's mission to enhance the practical use and conservation of coastal, marine and Great Lakes resources in order to create a sustainable economy and environment. The project’s primary goal is to provide relevant, science-based initiatives that support an environmentally responsible, competitive, and sustainable aquaculture industry in the Great Lakes region.

What have we done lately?

  • Fall 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is working to develop a new website that will continue to provide information for potential aquaculture producers and will also aim to engage consumers, educators and the public to share information about aquaculture in the Great Lakes region.
  • Fall 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is working on developing educational materials about aquaculture aimed at state agencies, policy makers and legislators. The goal is to inform these groups about the potential for successful aquaculture and aquaponics businesses in both rural and urban underserved areas, and information about how these groups can engage with and support the aquaculture industry in their state.
  • Fall 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is offering travel funding for students, current and potential aquaculture producers, and aquaculture speakers. Recipients of this award must identify as part of an underrepresented group including, but not limited to, age, race, ethnicity, income, location, or beginning aquaculture farmer.
  • September 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative held an in-person meeting and networking session at the Great Lakes Sea Grant Network Meeting in Evanston, Illinois.

Participants & audience

The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) serves aquaculture businesses and fish farmers throughout the Great Lakes through mass media, targeted communications, email lists, and state advisory groups.

Target audiences for this project include aquaculture producers, consumers, and fish/seafood marketers in the Great Lakes states of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, Illinois-Indiana, Pennsylvania, and New York. Details are on the GLAC website

Funding

The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is funded by a three-year grant from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and National Sea Grant Office.

  • GLAC 1.0 began September 1, 2019, and ends August 31, 2023.
  • GLAC 2.0 began September 1, 2022, and ends August 31, 2024.

Project history

2023

  • Fall 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is working to develop a new website that will continue to provide information for potential aquaculture producers and will also aim to engage consumers, educators and the public to share information about aquaculture in the Great Lakes region.
  • Fall 2023. The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is working on developing educational materials about aquaculture aimed at state agencies, policy makers and legislators. The goal is to inform these groups about the potential for successful aquaculture and aquaponics businesses in both rural and urban underserved areas, and information about how these groups can engage with and support the aquaculture industry in their state.
  • Fall 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is offering travel funding for students, current and potential aquaculture producers, and aquaculture speakers. Recipients of this award must identify as part of an underrepresented group including, but not limited to, age, race, ethnicity, income, location, or beginning aquaculture farmer.
  • September 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative held an in-person meeting and networking session at the Great Lakes Sea Grant Network Meeting in Evanston, Illinois.
  • August 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative hosted a symposium entitled “Fish Farming in the Great Lakes Region: Hatcheries, Private Farms, and Partnerships” at the 153rd Annual Meeting of the American Fisheries Society in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
  • June 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative showcased seafood from the Great Lakes region by organizing a booth to serve local seafood at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) Sustainable Seafood Celebration event in Washington, D.C., on June 7, 2023. NOAA hosted more than 700 people at this event to showcase seafood from around the United States.
  • Spring 2023: All of the Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) state Sea Grant programs convened their state advisory groups. 
  • May 2023: The Minnesota Sea Grant Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative project team convened their regional advisory group.
  • The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative continues to meet monthly.
  • The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative has a dedicated website with current events, advisory group members, research summaries, presentation recordings, and more.
  • All Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) Sea Grant programs are working to convene their state advisory groups during spring 2023 to receive feedback about GLAC activities and gather input as we advance GLAC over the next two years.
  • The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) is working to develop a new GLAC website.
  • February 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) presented results from and plans for the next two years of the GLAC project at the 2023 Aquaculture America Conference in New Orleans, Louisiana, and the 2023 North Central Aquaculture Conference in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.
  • February 2023: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative sponsored and helped organize the 2023 North Central Aquaculture Conference jointly hosted by the Minnesota and Wisconsin aquaculture associations in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.
  • The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) has developed a plan for the next iteration of GLAC to continue providing support of sustainable aquaculture in the Great Lakes region.
Marc Tye looking into a microscope.
Marc Tye, owner of Tye Fish Solutions and project collaborator on Minnesota Sea Grant's project Increasing Golden Shiner Bait Production in Minnesota is looking into a microscope at the Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative event Great Lakes Aquaculture Days 2022, where attendees participated in hands-on fish dissections. Image credit: Amy Schrank/Minnesota Sea Grant.

2022

2021

  • August 31-September 2, 2021: The Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative (GLAC) hosted Great Lakes Aquaculture Days 2021. This event provided virtual tours of six different aquaculture production facilities in the Great Lakes region. Each tour was followed by a Q&A session with the farm owner. The videos of the six tours are available on the GLAC website.

Program Staff

Amy Schrank headshot
Extension Program Leader (2023); Fisheries and Aquaculture Extension Educator
Don Schreiner headshot
Fisheries Specialist
Minnesota Sea Grant Aquaculture Extension Associate Kieran Smith
Aquaculture Extension Associate
Marie Thoms headshot
Communications Director

Program News

The Wisconsin Aquaculture Association and the Minnesota Aquaculture Association will host the

Staff from Minnesota Sea Grant Fisheries and Aquaculture Program will be presenting recent and ongoing projects that addres

The Minnesota Sea Grant-led Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative is offering reimbursement to attend and/or present at state or regional aquaculture meetings in the Great Lakes states. 

Featured Stories

Interest in aquaculture continues to grow in the Great Lakes region as witnessed by a sellout crowd for the 2024 Wisconsin-Minnesota Aquaculture Association meeting held in Red Cliff, Wisconsin, March 22-23.

The Sea Grant Great Lakes Aquaculture Collaborative, led by Minnesota Sea Grant, hosted a Great Lakes aquaculture seafood booth at the annual NOAA Sustainable Seafood Celebration in Washington D.C. in June 2023.

Partners

  • Illinois-Indiana Sea Grant, Sea Grant Programs
  • Michigan Sea Grant, Sea Grant Programs
  • Michigan State University, Academic Institution (College and University)
  • Loyola University, Academic Institution (College and University)
  • New York Sea Grant, Sea Grant Programs
  • Ohio Sea Grant, Sea Grant Programs
  • Pennsylvania Sea Grant, Sea Grant Programs
  • Wisconsin Sea Grant, Sea Grant Programs

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