Flavor and health benefits lure people to seafood. Consumer demand, however, can lead
to a depletion of the ocean's resources. While markets today offer a variety of
sustainable fish choices, they can be expensive. It's simple economics: High demand plus
low supply yield higher prices. Buying sustainable seafood increases the odds that your
favorite fish will be available and affordable in the future.
What does "sustainable" mean? Monterey Bay Aquarium spokesman Ken Peterson explains, "Sustainable seafood comes from sources, whether fished or farmed, that can exist into the
long term without jeopardizing the health of the fish population or the integrity of the
surrounding ecosystem." Key factors that determine sustainability are population,
percentage of by-catch, and impact on the environment.
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Who's Helping |
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 Here's how you can help protect our ocean creatures from being overfished. |
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Harvesting quantities of fish that leave too few to reproduce renders populations
unsustainable. Examples of fishery collapse include Atlantic cod and wild Atlantic salmon.
The latter is considered commercially extinctonly farmed Atlantic salmon appears in
markets. Overfishing proves especially troublesome for slow-growing fish, such as Pacific
rockfish and Patagonian toothfish (Chilean sea bass), both of which reach spawning age at
about 10 years. Some species of orange roughy need 20 years to mature. If overfished,
stocks can take decades to recover.
By-catch occurs when such nontargeted ocean-dwellers as sea turtles, albatrosses, and
dolphins are caught with the harvest. Trawling for wild (not farmed) shrimp brings up an
inherently high degree of by-catch (up to 10 pounds per pound of shrimp). Turtle-
release nets and fish-excluder devices used by U.S. trawlers and the availability of
trap-caught shrimp help keep this number from escalating even higher. Farmed seafood such
as catfish, striped bass, and shellfish has little by-catch due to aquaculture methods.
Habitat destruction happens when manufacturing waste pollutes streams, rivers, and
oceans. Dams are especially problematic for spawning fish that attempt to return to their
natal waters. Harmful harvesting methods have the potential to sweep vast sections of
ocean floor barren of life, wreaking environmental devastation.
The bottom line is that consumers make a difference. If shoppers are selective about
fish, reduced demand for jeopardized species will force fishers to turn to more abundant
seafood. And the old adage "there's always more fish in the sea" would once again ring
true.
Downloadable seafood cards listing safe seafood choices.
Seafood Watch cards from the Monterey Bay Aquarium.
Seafood cards from Audubon.