Guest guest Posted March 15, 2006 Report Share Posted March 15, 2006 > http://www.freecycle.org > > > www.foodnews.ca <http://www.foodnews.ca/> > > > *Editor's Note: Toronto Star readers respond to an > article from last > week on the safety of salmon consumption (link to > article below). These > readers critique the narrow view presented by the > article on the health > and safety of farmed salmon, arguing that it > neglects larger questions > of the environment and ecosystems. In particular, > fish lower on the food > chain can provide many of health benefits of salmon > while reducing our > own intake of chemicals that accumulate in animals > higher in the chain > while also increasing the energy efficiency of > inputs (all the fish > eaten by the salmon) versus energy yielded. * > > To discuss this or other foodnews posting, visit > www.foodnews.ca > > The original article can be viewed at: > http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_T\ ype1 & call_pageid=971358637177 & c=Article & cid=1136501415863 > > <http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_\ Type1 & call_pageid=971358637177 & c=Article & cid=1136501415863>). > > > > Environmentally bad > The Toronto Star > Tue 10 Jan 2006 > Page: A19 > Section: Letter > > By feeding farmed salmon wild-caught fish, we are > exacerbating our > impacts on marine ecosystems Spawning controversy > > Jan. 6. > > The debate surrounding the health risks and benefits > of salmon is > distressingly myopic, failing to address three key > issues. > > First, we are not chained to our food. While Health > Canada " experts " > offer sophomoric advice ( " the benefits of eating > oily fish like salmon > still outweigh any risks " ), where is the discussion > of the other oily > fish? Sardines, herrings, jack mackerel and other > small fish have the > same omega-3 fatty acids and offer many of the same > health benefits. > Because they are small and low in the food chain, > they have two major > advantages, overlooked in your article, which brings > us to the next point. > > Second, a discussion of food chains would give > context to discussion of > salmon and farming, for concerns of health and > environment. > > Salmon are carnivorous, high in the food chain. We > don't eat lions, for > good reason; it takes an awful lot of beef to make > lion meat. Similarly, > it takes a lot of sardines to make salmon. This fact > has two > implications - eating salmon (and tuna, swordfish, > shark, etc.) is > environmentally unfriendly and unhealthy. By feeding > farmed salmon > wild-caught fish, we are exacerbating our impacts on > marine ecosystems, > and concentrating ( " bio-accumulating " ) toxins that > accumulate in the > fats of all the small feeder fish. > > Third, issues of environmental toxicity must be > related to environmental > legislation and the choices we make as voters and > consumers. It is > downright frightening that eating apparently good > food can be so toxic, > due solely to environmental pollution. > > We are not powerless to change this. We can push for > stronger emission > controls from government, and we can follow > guidelines of groups like > the Environmental Working Group to purchase products > that are far less > polluting. > > Kai M. A. Chan, Assistant Professor, Institute for > Resources, > Environment and Sustainability, University of > British Columbia, > Vancouver, B.C. > > > Spawning controversy > Jan. 6. > > Since research indicates the high level of toxins in > the " chow " fed to > farmed salmon is potentially carcinogenic for human > consumption, then > why don't the leaders of our federal parties (who > coincidently are > fighting for our votes in the coming election) > pledge to do something > about it? > > It is inconceivable that this feeding procedure is > allowed to continue > while our political leaders ignore our health. Shame > on Health Canada, > the farmers who feed the " chow " to the salmon and to > our political > leaders. Perhaps one of these leaders can take time > out from photo ops > to consider this most unfortunate situation. > > Dr. Jeffrey Manly, Toronto > *********************************************************************** > Lynn Hunter, > Pacific Northwest Representative, > Pure Salmon Campaign, > NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL TRUST, > phone: 250-479-0937 > cell phone: 250-888-1700 > Email: hunterlynn > <hunterlynn > > Please visit our website: http://www.puresalmon.org > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > > -- > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > WHO WE ARE: This e-mail service shares information > to help more people > discuss crucial policy issues affecting global food > security. > The service is managed by Amber McNair of the > University of Toronto > in partnership with the Centre for Urban Health > Initiatives (CUHI) and > Wayne Roberts of the Toronto Food Policy Council, in > partnership with > the Community Food Security Coalition, World Hunger > Year, and > International Partners for Sustainable Agriculture. > > Please help by sending information or names and > e-mail addresses of > co-workers who'd like to receive this service, to > foodnews. To or , please > visit http://list.web.net/lists/listinfo/food-news. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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