February 16 – 19, 2026 | Las Vegas, Nevada
California Aquaculture Association Session
February 18, 2026, 8:30a – 5:30p PST
Room: Champagne 1
What opportunities exist in California, and what challenges lie ahead?
This session aims to explore these questions and more, offering insight into topics such as the history of aquaculture in California, the current business and regulatory landscape for aquaculture and commercial seafood, the sector’s role in addressing climate change, advances in feed and sustainability, and new opportunities for industry growth and expansion across the state.
Morning Session 1
| 8:30a – 9:00a | California Aquaculture Flyover Tony Vaught – Professional Aquaculture Services |
| 9:00a – 9:30a | Opportunities and Challenges in Restorative Aquaculture on the West Coast, A Look at Purple Sea Urchin Ranching Peter Struffeneger – Pacific Plaza Imports / Plaza Aquafarms |
| 9:30a – 9:45a | California Tribal Aquaculture: A Path of Resilience and Recovery Daniel Swezey – Kashia Band of Pomo Indians |
| 9:45a – 10:00a | Working with Industry: The Value of Getting Research Out of the Lab and Into the Field Jesse Trushenski – Riverence |
Morning Session 2
| 11:00a – 11:15a | The Role of Aquatic Health in California Aquaculture Development Bill Keleher – Kennebec River Biosciences |
| 11:15a – 11:30a | The Why and How of State/Industry-led Disease Freedom Claims Lori Gustafson – USDA APHIS |
| 11:30a – 11:45a | Applying AI Vision in Hatcheries to Improve Cohort Quality and Farm Outcomes Paul Grech – OctaPulse |
| 11:45a – 12:00p | Public Awareness and Attitudes Toward Aquaculture in California: Insights from a 2025 Multimodal Survey Devin Fitzgerald – California Sea Grant |
| 12:00p – 12:15p | Aquaculture Cooperative Extension in California – Current and Future Activities Jackson Gross – UC Davis |
| 12:15p – 12:30p | How We Grow Fish – and Trust: A Regenerative Aquaculture Story Megan Sorby – Pine Island Redfish |
Afternoon Session
| 1:30p – 5:00p | Afternoon Roundtable and Networking Session: From Research to Reality – Unlocking U.S. Aquaculture Growth
Moderators: Kathleen Hartman and Megan Sorby Despite decades of public investment, groundbreaking research, and well-intentioned policy, U.S. aquaculture production has remained largely flat. The question is no longer what do we know?—it’s why isn’t it scaling? This roundtable brings commercial producers, feed and equipment manufacturers, seafood processors, distributors, lenders, and buyers to the center of the conversation to define what the private sector actually needs to grow production. The first half of the session will focus on identifying critical gaps in research, infrastructure, and commercialization support—directly informing academic research priorities, NGO initiatives, and future grant and funding programs.The second half will tackle the harder question: how do we convert decades of public investment into measurable increases in seafood production? Led by private-sector voices, this discussion will examine historical U.S. agricultural programs that successfully catalyzed commercial growth, alongside international aquaculture models where government policy and financing have accelerated industry scale. We will explore which tools—financing mechanisms, risk-sharing programs, procurement strategies, permitting reform, and infrastructure investment—could realistically work in the U.S. context.This session is designed for industry leaders who build, finance, grow, process, and sell seafood—and for the policymakers, researchers, and funders who want their work to translate into real production, real jobs, and real seafood on the plate. |



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