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Scientists say fish feel pain. It could lead to major changes in the fishing industry.

May 24, 2018 โ€” The idea that fish suffer runs counter to almost everything Americans have been taught about creatures of the sea. That their brains are not complex enough to experience pain. That their behaviors when stressed โ€” such as wriggling violently on a hook โ€” are just unconscious reactions, disconnected from the suffering of sentient beings. That theyโ€™re, more or less, unfeeling little meat sticks that donโ€™t deserve animal welfare protections.

The accumulated research on fish pain has recently hit the public with the impact of a blunt object. In January, Hakai magazine published a comprehensive feature under the headline, โ€œFish Feel Pain. Now What?,โ€ which Smithsonian magazine republished under the more provocative title, โ€œItโ€™s Official: Fish Feel Pain.โ€ This month, the storytelling studio Topic ran a deeply reported story โ€œHow to Kill Fish,โ€ in which author Cat Ferguson argues that the Japanese technique called ike jime is not only more humane than other forms of slaughter but also produces superior-tasting fish.

So why is the public only now interested in a subject that researchers have been covering for two decades? Is it another manifestation of a food culture that demands only the finest ingredients?  Or maybe Americans โ€” or some at least โ€” are now ready to face the consequences of a world that acknowledges fish pain? What would it mean for the commercial fishing industry? For regulators? For recreational anglers?

For starters, the U.S. government might have to amend the Animal Welfare Act and the Humane Methods of Slaughter Act, both of which exclude fish. Weekend anglers might have to kill their fish first before throwing them in a cooler. Fish farms might have to adopt new methods of slaughter. Commercial trawlers, the boats that roam the worldโ€™s oceans, might have to upgrade their equipment to kill fish humanely.

In other words, there would be a lot of resistance to changing the way fish is caught, transported and killed. It might be possible for fish farms and weekend anglers to change their ways, says David Krebs, founder of Ariel Seafoods in Destin, Fla., but it would be impossible for commercial boats, which can net a million or more fish at one time.

โ€œYou have a [catch] come on board with two million creatures, and youโ€™re going to take each one of them and say, โ€˜Letโ€™s change how youโ€™re dying.โ€™ Itโ€™s impossible,โ€ Krebs says. โ€œYouโ€™re not changing the way that the Russians are trawling or the way that the Japanese are trawling.โ€

Read the full story at the Washington Post

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