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Here is a quick synopsis on Sustainable Seafood extracted from the Summer

2007 (London, Ont. Canada) Slow Food newsletter. While on this theme it provides

me with an opportunity to reminder you to see Sharkwater, aside from the

breathtaking beauty of this film it is essential viewing for anyone who cares

about

the state of the environment and the future of the world as a whole. This

film really shows why not to depend on the masses and especially the governments

- it is a clear demonstration of Margaret Mead's statement " Never doubt that a

small group of thoughtful committed citizens can change the world. Indeed it

is the only thing that ever has. " We can be those citizens! For a success

story* see end of this article.

 

Please note that in the sustainable alternative listed below, I do not , in

the main, consider, farmed fish as a viable alternative! While this does have

the potential to be such, however, their can be use of fish feed (such as

shrimp, crabs, shell fish etc.) from poorer countries, thus depriving the locals

of

much needed sustenance.

 

The alternative is GM foods coming fast and furious and other contaminates...

 

 

" Here are just a few: Aluminum tolerance in papaya, tobacco, rice, and corn

(so they can grow the plants in soil contaminated with aluminum).

Growth-enhanced farm-raised salmon. Monosexed fish. Altering carnivorous fish to

starch-based digestion. Antifreeze gene in warm-water fish to raise them in cold

climates. "

 

Extracted from: Why Genetically Modifying (GM) Food Products Are A No No

 

http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/2006/12/10/_why_genetically_modifying_gm_f\

ood_products_are_a_no_no.htm

 

Chris Gupta

http://tinyurl.com/2nhqsa

 

----------------------------

 

Sustainable Seafood - Are You Ocean Wise?

http://www.vanaqua.org/conservation/oceanwise/sustainable-seafood.html

 

The Vancouver Aquarium’s Ocean Wise program works with local restaurants to

help them identify sustainable seafood options for their menus. At

participating restaurants, consumers can choose seafood menu items which have

the Ocean

Wise logo beside them.

 

The Vancouver Aquarium works to ensure that ocean resources are harvested and

consumed in a sustainable manner. One of those resources is the fresh, high

quality seafood that is available in BC.

 

The world's marine life is quickly being depleted. An estimated 90% of all

large, predatory fish are already gone from the world's oceans. The only

solution is to turn back from the brink, and to begin consuming seafood in a

sustainable manner.

 

Sustainable seafood can be defined as:

 

1) A species that is abundant and resilient to fishing pressures;

 

2) A species that is well managed with a comprehensive management plan based

on current research;

 

3) A species that is harvested in a method that ensures limited by-catch on

non-target and endangered species;

 

4) A species whose method of catch ensures there is limited habitat loss

associated with the harvesting method.

 

Endangered Fish Alliance

 

Closer to home, many local chefs are also members of The Endangered Fish

Alliance http://www.endangeredfishalliance.org/ . The Endangered Fish Alliance

was

started in Toronto in December of 2002 by a group of concerned chefs,

restaurateurs, caring food professionals, conservationists, and was coordinated

by

staff members of the Toronto enviroguide

http://www.marketsinitiative.orgto-enviroguide-press-release.pdf/view

..

 

The Endangered Fish Alliance encourages members in Canada to make

environmentally-wise choices by not serving four endangered fish:

 

 

· swordfish,

 

· Chilean sea bass,

 

· orange roughy, and

 

· certain types of caviar.

 

 

Currently at 161 pioneer members, more restaurants continue to join this

alliance.

 

Membership in this not-for- profit organization is free. They ask only that

members do not serve the four endangered fish and encourage them to use the

website to learn about the state of the world's fisheries before choosing

seafood

for their menus or inventory.

 

Find out more at:

www.endangeredfishalliance.org

 

Shopping Guide:

Sustainable Alternatives

 

 

Chilean Sea Bass

 

Pirate fishing fleets that disregard fishing limits are illegally catching

this fish from Antarctica. Unless people stop eating Chilean sea bass, it may be

commercially extinct within five years.

 

Alternatives include:

 

Alaskan Halibut

Atlantic Herring

Atlantic Striper

Cat Fish

Mahi Mahi

Pacific Halibut

Sable Fish

Shad

Striped Bass

White Sea Bass

 

Swordfish

 

Swordfish are usually caught on longlines, which kill both the adults and the

young -- also, many tuna, sharks and sea turtles. Swordfish may not be a

healthy choice. It has a high level of cancer-causing methylmercury, also known

as

a reproductive toxin.

 

Alternatives include:

 

Hawaii Swordfish

Salmon

Tuna (long line

caught Albacore,

Bigeeye, Yellowfin,

canned light, white

and Albacore)

 

Caviar

 

These caviar-egg producing sturgeons from Russia, Iran and Turkey are at risk

of extinction because of over fishing and water pollution. Sturgeon doesn't

produce eggs until the age of 20, so heavy fishing doesn't allow time for the

young to grow up and reproduce.

 

Alternatives include:

 

Farmed White

Sturgeon Caviar

Farmed Paddlefish Roe

Farmed Rainbow Trout Roe

Whitefish Roe

Wild Pacific Salmon Roe

 

Orange Roughy

 

This fish can live to be over 100 years old. Each July, when they are over

20, they come together in easy-to-net spawning schools. Once 30,000 tons of

orange roughy could be taken quickly from one place.

 

Alternatives include:

 

Pacific Halibut

Tilapia

Pacific Sole

Summer Flounder

--------------------------

 

*Success! in Saving the Red Snapper

 

Fin-tastic news! Thanks to the efforts of over 15,000 Care2 members that

signed the Ocean Conservancy's " Act Now to Save the Red Snapper " petition, the

Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council has adopted a plan to set a

science-based catch limit for red snapper.

 

For over two decades Gulf fishery managers, whose responsibility it is to

protect and sustain our fish populations, ignored science and repeatedly set

catch levels too high. As a result, the spawning population of Gulf Red Snapper

is

down to 3% of its historic abundance.

 

This change in fishery management reverses twenty years of bad practices and

management failures. Now, the Red Snapper will be able to rebound.

 

 

 

 

To / :  chrisgupta

List information is at: http://tinyurl.com/2xohw

ARCHIVES: http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/archives.htm

Share The Wealth: http://www.newmediaexplorer.org/chris/

Communication Agents: http://www.communicationagents.com/

Council Member: Friends of Freedom - http://www.friendsoffreedom.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

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