October 6th, 2016 โ Happy National Seafood Month!
But do you know whatโs in your sushi or that basket of fish and chips? A recent report indicates you might not.
According to research compiled by ocean conservation group Oceana from 200 studies, 20 percent of seafood sold worldwide is mislabeled.
So that tuna youโre enjoying might actually be whale meat, and the โwild-caught salmonโ commanding the high ticket price on the menu may actually be cheaper farmed salmon. In other egregious cases, fish containing high levels of mercury are being sold as safer alternatives, and some โcaviarโ contains no animal DNA whatsoever.
How can this happen? โSeafood fraud is one of those issues that isnโt always under one [government] agency,โ Beth Lowell, senior campaign director at Oceana, explained to NBC. โThereโs this patchwork of fish management laws, wildlife trafficking laws, food and drug laws.โ
Oceana defines mislabeling as โspecies substitution where one fish was sold as another.โ And, according to their research, itโs rampant.
Fishy methodology?
But not everyone agrees that the problem is as widespread as this report indicates. The National Fisheries Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to education about seafood safety, sustainability, and nutrition โ and which promotes dietary guidelines recommending Americans include fish and shellfish in their diets twice per week โ responded to the Oceana report criticizing their methods.
The NFI cited FDA research that shows the percentage of mislabeled (primarily domestic) seafood is 15 percent, focusing on the varieties at highest risk for mislabeling and/or substitution, including cod, snapper, and grouper.
Others in the industry think all of these numbers are overstated. โMy belief is that itโs very, very small,โ Wayne Samiere, a marine biologist and owner of Honolulu Fish Company, told NBC. โIn seafood, reputation is everything. Who would risk their reputation?โ
โYou can always go to a restaurant and find something, always dig up some kind of thing going on, but is it going on on a large scale?โ he said. โThereโs simply no way. A high-end chef in a large restaurant group, these are the guys that will be the most afraid, they have the most to lose. The benefit is very small.โ