Chinese Scientists Achieve Breakthrough in Artificial Eel Breeding After Six-Year Research
Team cultivates 3,000 breeding parents and 3 million fry using satellite tracking and environmental simulation
Quick Look
- Chinese scientists have achieved a breakthrough in artificial eel breeding, cultivating over 3,000 high-quality breeding parents and more than 3 million fry through refined nutritional enhancement and environmental simulation.
- The national research program, launched in December 2024, passed preliminary acceptance in March at testing bases in Hainan and Fujian.
- China accounts for 75 per cent of the world's farmed eels and exported more than 65,000 tonnes in 2025.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Eels undergo six stages of physical transformation over at least five years, traveling 6,000km from ocean depths to freshwater rivers and lakes. China currently stocks eel farms with fry sourced from net fishing, as artificial insemination has not been commercially viable.
From hatching to maturity and spawning, eels undergo six stages of physical transformation over at least five years as they travel 6,000km (3,700 miles) from the ocean depths to freshwater rivers and lakes. Zhao Feng and his team from the Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences used satellite-tracking technology to analyse environmental factors and feeding patterns of adult eels in their natural habitat before achieving artificial breeding in the rearing workshop. "Through three to four months of refined nutritional enhancement and environmental simulation, we successfully cultivated over 3,000 high-quality eel breeding parents and over 3 million fry," Zhao told China Science Daily in an interview published on April 14. The project, to develop high quality breeding and artificial reproduction technology for eels, is a national key research and development programme launched in December 2024, and passing preliminary acceptance in March at two eel testing bases, in Hainan and Fujian. China accounts for 75 per cent of the world's farmed eels and exported more than 65,000 tonnes of the fish and associated products in 2025, according to customs data. However, without artificial insemination, the farms are stocked with fry sourced from net fishing.
Open Questions
- What is the survival rate of the cultivated fry?
- How does the cost compare to wild-caught fry?
- When will commercial-scale production begin?





