China China produces the most caviar of any single country. The largest caviar company in the world is the Chinese brand
Kaluga Queen, which cultivates sturgeon at
Qiandao Lake in
Zhejiang.
Russia In the wake of over-fishing, the harvest and sale of black caviar were banned in Russia in 2007. The ban on sturgeon fishing in the
Caspian Sea has led to the development of
aquaculture as an economically viable means of commercial caviar production. Russian caviar exports were also banned from 2002 to 2011.
Italy Cristoforo da Messisbugo in his book ''Libro novo nel qual si insegna a far d'ogni sorte di vivanda'', Venice, 1564, at page 110, gave the first recorded recipe in Italy about extraction of the eggs from the roe and caviar preparation "to be consumed fresh or to preserve". The writer and voyager
Jérôme Lalande in his book "
Voyage en Italie", Paris, 1771, vol. 8, page 269, noted that many sturgeon were caught in the
Po delta area in the territory of
Ferrara. In 1753 a diplomatic war broke out between the
Papal States, governing the Ferrara territory, and the
Venetian Republic about sturgeon fishing rights in the Po River, the border between the two states. From about 1920 and until 1942, there was a shop in Ferrara, named "Nuta" from the nickname of the owner Benvenuta Ascoli, that processed all the sturgeons caught in the Po River for caviar extraction, using an elaboration of the original Messisbugo recipe, and shipped it to Italy and Europe. A new owner sporadically continued production until 1972, when the sturgeon stopped swimming up the Po River. Since 2015, some sturgeon have reappeared in the Po. Currently, Italian caviar is obtained almost entirely from bred sturgeons. The caviar production is concentrated predominantly in
Brescia, which is considered the capital of Italian caviar: in this area, in
Calvisano, is located the world's largest sturgeon farm, which produces 25 tonnes of caviar each year.
North America In the early 20th century,
Canada and the
United States were the major caviar suppliers to
Europe; they harvested roe from the
lake sturgeon in the
North American Midwest, and from the
shortnose sturgeon and the
Atlantic sturgeon spawning in the rivers of the
East Coast of the United States. The American caviar industry started when Henry Schacht, a German immigrant, opened a business catching sturgeon on the Delaware River. He treated his caviar with German salt and exported a great deal of it to Europe. Around the same time, sturgeon was fished from the Columbia River on the
West Coast of the United States, also supplying caviar. American caviar was so plentiful at the time that it was given away at bars to induce or prolong patrons' thirst. Today, the shortnose sturgeon is rated
Vulnerable in the
IUCN Red List of
endangered species and rated
Endangered per the
Endangered Species Act. With the depletion of Caspian and Black Sea caviar, production of farmed or "sustainable" caviar has greatly increased. In particular, northern California is reported to account for 70% to 80% of U.S. production. In 2021, a significant illegal sturgeon egg harvesting and selling ring run in part by the former top sturgeon biologist for the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) was discovered and broken up by investigators. In coastal
British Columbia,
Fraser River white sturgeon are sustainably
farmed to produce caviar.
Spain The 17th-century book
Don Quixote mentions "cavial" in a banquet of German pilgrims. Until 1992, sturgeons and caviar were collected at the lower parts of rivers
Guadalquivir,
Ebro,
Duero and
Tajo. From 1932 to 1970, the
Ybarra family had a factory in
Coria del Río.
Overfishing, pollution and the
Alcalá del Río dam eliminated the wild population of
Acipenser naccarii. In Spain, a fish farm called Caviar de Riofrío produces
organic caviar at
Loja, Granada, Andalusia.
Armenia Despite being landlocked, Armenia has developed a caviar industry based on farmed
sturgeon, primarily in aquaculture facilities in the
Ararat Valley. Estimates indicate approximately 10–20 tonnes of caviar production annually. Their most famous brand of caviar,
Petrossian, was founded in 1920 by two Armenian brothers, with headquarters in
Paris, France.
Uruguay As well with Canada and the United States, Uruguay has become a major producer and exporter.
Israel Kibbutz Dan in
Israel produces four tons of caviar a year. The farm is fed by the
Dan River, a tributary of the
Jordan River.
Madagascar Madagascar is the first African country that produces and exports caviar since 2018.
Malaysia In Malaysia, caviar production is relatively new and smaller in scale. Caviar is harvested from farmed sturgeon fish in
Tanjung Malim,
Perak. The caviar produced here is marketed as "tropical caviar". The first Malaysian brand of tropical caviar was launched in March 2019.
France In France, caviar is produced on a small scale in the
Gironde estuary of
Nouvelle-Aquitaine. ==Ecology==