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Is your seafood โ€˜catfishingโ€™ you? Study shows 1 in 5 fish mislabeled, fraudulent

November 26, 2026 โ€” Craving fish? Your seafood may be โ€œcatfishingโ€ you.

Studies show diners may be getting a completely different, usually cheaper fish than the one they ordered.

Itโ€™s called seafood fraud, and itโ€™s happening in quite a few Chicago restaurants, studies show.

NBC 5 Responds visited Hooked on Fish market in Edgewater to find out more about seafood fraud. Owner Karen Wollins explained that some consumers fall victim because it can be difficult to tell one fish from another just by looking at them.

โ€œA lot of people donโ€™t really know,โ€ said Wollins, who has operated Hooked on Fish for the past decade. The market specializes in selling responsibly sourced, sustainable fish.

So we asked Kathy, a Hooked on Fish customer and diehard seafood fan, to try to identify a few fish species based on their fillets in a display window.

Read the full article at NBC Chicago

CALโ€™s Dean Pinkert calls on US shrimp buyers to investigate their Indian supply chains

April 4, 2024 โ€” Dean Pinkert joined the Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.-based Corporate Accountability Lab, a non-governmental organization dedicated to advancing global human rights and environmental sustainability, as a special advisor in November 2021. He was one of the authors of โ€œHidden Harvest: Human Rights and Environmental Abuses in Indiaโ€™s Shrimp Industry,โ€ a report released 20 March that presented evidence of labor issues at Indian shrimp hatcheries, farms, peeling sheds, and processing plants, as well as mangrove destruction and water contamination from shrimp farm effluent.

SeafoodSource:  Why did CAL decide to do such an in-depth investigation of Indiaโ€™s shrimp industry?

Pinkert: Forced labor is very close to the heart of CALโ€™s mission. We style ourselves as a human rights organization and also an organization that is interested in fostering a sustainable environment. So, when we became aware of the possibility that there were forced labor issues in Indiaโ€™s shrimp industry, we started to look very seriously into that.

I think that you also have to at least understand one piece of context, which is that the shrimp industries in other countries, [including] Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Thailand, and Vietnam, have previously faced a lot of criticism from human rights groups and investigative activities focused on labor abuses, including forced labor, but India had not. When thereโ€™s forced labor or environmental abuses in an industry and it looks like CAL can add value because those issues havenโ€™t been fully investigated by human rights groups in the past, CAL is going to jump in and do it.

Read the full article at SeafoodSource

This coronavirus mutation has taken over the world. Scientists are trying to understand why.

June 29, 2020 โ€” When the first coronavirus cases in Chicago appeared in January, they bore the same genetic signatures as a germ that emerged in China weeks before.

But as Egon Ozer, an infectious-disease specialist at the Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, examined the genetic structure of virus samples from local patients, he noticed something different.

A change in the virus was appearing again and again. This mutation, associated with outbreaks in Europe and New York, eventually took over the city. By May, it was found in 95 percent of all the genomes Ozer sequenced.

At a glance, the mutation seemed trivial. About 1,300 amino acids serve as building blocks for a protein on the surface of the virus. In the mutant virus, the genetic instructions for just one of those amino acids โ€” number 614 โ€” switched in the new variant from a โ€œDโ€ (shorthand for aspartic acid) to a โ€œGโ€ (short for glycine).

Read the full story at The Washington Post

Bumble Bee CEO Tharp sees bright retail future for tuna, but in pouches not cans

January 22, 2019 โ€” Jan Tharp, the interim president and CEO of Bumble Bee Foods, sees tuna fish retail sales growing at a strong rate again but taking a different shape in the not-so-distant future, she told a packed room at the National Fisheries Instituteโ€™s Global Seafood Marketing Conference, in San Diego, California.

She was looking at charts of data from Information Resources Inc. (IRI), a Chicago, Illinois-based company that monitors retail sales trends. They showed total sales for seafood up 18%, from $9.8 billion in 2011 to $11.6bn in 2018, and the sale of tuna pouches up 12.3% in the past year.

The sale of seafood shelf-stable seafood was up only 2.9% in 2018, however. And household purchases of canned light tuna have dropped from 48.1% of tuna segment sales in 2014 to 39.3% in 2018, according to IRI.

Read the full story at Undercurrent News

Diners Still Have a Crustacean Crush as Lobster Prices Jump

December 21st,2016  โ€” Compared with most lunch sandwiches, the lobster rolls Alex Robinson sells from the side of his blue Happy Lobster Truck in downtown Chicago were already pricey. So, he was worried customers would go elsewhere after he started charging $17 instead of $15 to cover higher costs.

Turns out, Americans still have a crush on the crustaceans, and many are more than willing to pay up. Even after the price increase this year, Robinson says he hasnโ€™t lost any business. The 4 ounces (113.4 grams) of wild-caught Maine lobster that he drizzles with butter and a touch of mayonnaise on a bread roll remain his best-selling item.

โ€œWe havenโ€™t had anyone who said it wasnโ€™t worth it,โ€ said Robinson, who owns the truck. โ€œPrices are going up, and itโ€™s still staying popular.โ€

Four years after a glut led to the cheapest lobsters since the 1980s, prices on average are up 37 percent this year and the highest on record going back decades. While U.S. and Canadian fisherman have caught more than ever in recent years, output hasnโ€™t kept pace with demand. Exports to China surged, and American restaurants that got used to low-cost seafood have added lobster to spice up everything from soups and salads to macaroni and cheese.

โ€œThe market now is outstripping the supply,โ€ said Bernie Berry, president of the Yarmouth, Nova Scotia-based Cold Water Lobster Association, which represents fisherman in Canada. โ€œI donโ€™t think we can catch enough lobsters.โ€

Canadian claw and knuckle meat โ€” a common variety used in lobster rolls โ€“averaged $28.31 per pound (454-gram) this month, up 7 percent from a year earlier and well above the 10-year December average of $17.85, according to Urner Barry, a Toms River, New Jersey-based researcher that has been tracking food prices since 1858. In July, the average reached $29.44, the most ever.

Read the full story at Bloomberg News 

The unusual, mysterious American eel

August 1, 2016 โ€” I recently watched a man fishing in the Arkansas River at Little Rock who caught an American eel. When he set the hook, the angler was pleased with the reaction. The fish surged away, stripping line against the drag. The man grunted and cranked, smiling all the while.

When the 2 1/2-foot fish was finally beached, the manโ€™s demeanor abruptly changed. I doubt he could have been more horror-stricken had he landed a 20-foot anaconda. He dropped his rod, ran to his pickup, extracted a .357 revolver and proceeded to plug the โ€œbeast.โ€

When the gun was empty, he smiled again, turned to me and said matter of factly, โ€œI hate @#$+&eels.โ€

I decided not to share my penchant for a delicately herbed anguille au verte.

The eelโ€™s long, snakelike body gives folks reason for pause. Beady eyes punctuate a small pointed cranium. The eelโ€™s underlip protrudes in a perpetual pout, and the slug-colored hide is ensconced with thick, snotty mucous. Hold a bass in one hand and an eel in the other, and itโ€™s hard to believe theyโ€™re both fish.

Despite their repugnant appearance, however, eels are delectable and worthy opponents on rod and reel. Catch-and-release (or catch-and-run-away) may have been invented by anglers who caught eels by mistake, but among families of Old World origin, no Christmas is complete without eels for the table. This winter specialty keeps thousands of commercial fishermen at work netting tons of live eels to sell in Boston, Chicago and New York.

Eels can be caught in Arkansas waters, too, but they are sporadic in occurrence and not commercially important. The species is most common in larger rivers like the Arkansas, Mississippi, White, Ouachita and Red.

For 23 centuries, man speculated on the origin of the eel. Aristotle was convinced that eels rose spontaneously from mud. Roman scholar Pliny the Elder believed young eels came from bits of skin adults rubbed off on rocks. Scandinavians postulated that another fish, the Aalmutter, was the โ€œeel mother,โ€ while Italian fishermen espoused the idea that eels copulated with water snakes. In early America, it was generally assumed that eels arose spontaneously from horse hairs that fell in the water. These whimsical notions had support until 1924, when scientists discovered facts as astounding as the age-old beliefs were fantastic.

Read the full story at Arkansas Online

Report: Diners shell out more when menu says the lobsterโ€™s from Maine

May 4, 2016 โ€” Serving up Maine lobster is paying off big for restaurants that tout the stateโ€™s iconic offering on their menus.

Restaurants selling lobster are charging $6.22 more, on average, when it comes from Maine and its provenance is identified by name on the menu, according to a new report issued Tuesday by the Maine Lobster Marketing Collaborative. The Portland-based nonprofit, which was founded in 2013 and is funded by industry license surcharges, based its finding on a 2015 menu survey of about 7,000 American restaurants conducted by Technomic Inc., a food consulting and research firm based in Chicago, said Executive Director Matt Jacobson.

โ€œThereโ€™s lobster, and then thereโ€™s Maine lobster,โ€ Jacobson said. โ€œPeople are willing to pay for that difference. Not just pennies more, but $6 more a plate, plus. Chefs are drawn to the taste, the story and sustainability of Maine lobster. When chefs like to cook it, customers are willing to pay for it. Thatโ€™s good for everybody, including the lobstermen.โ€

The Technomic data contained in the collaborativeโ€™s first quarterly report proves what many in the industry have long suspected, but couldnโ€™t prove because of a lack of consumer research, especially in the domestic market, Jacobson said. It will serve as another tool in the collaborativeโ€™s arsenal when it begins its summer-long campaign to convince chefs to add Maine lobster to their menus. Only a quarter of all restaurants identify the origin of their lobster dishes, he said, but most of those who do are selling Maine lobster.

Last summer, when the cooperative began its Maine lobster education campaign, the organization arranged a series of โ€œcollisionsโ€ between what Jacobson calls rock-star chefs, who tend to set the culinary tone in local foodie markets, and Maine lobstermen. Sometimes the collaborative brought chefs out on a Maine lobster boat, but usually, the collaborative brought one of Maineโ€™s lobster harvesters into the kitchens of some of the best restaurants in the country for cooking demonstrations, recipe sharing and story telling.

Read the full story at the Portland Press Herald

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