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Trash Fish to Cash Fish
| Article
# : |
13708 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
8 / 1988 |
1,690 Words |
| Author
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Elyse Levine Elyse Levine is an instructor in the Nutrition Communications
Program at Boston University. Her articles on health and
nutrition appear regularly in Health Journal. |
Business is good for the seafood industry. Even the previously unpopular "trash fish" are gaining popularity due to the high prices of favorites like cod, flounder, haddock, and halibut.
The recent surge of popularity is largely due to the newly reported health benefits of eating fish. Since 1985, when widely published studies found less heart disease among fish-eating populations, health experts have advised consumers to eat more fish and shellfish. Americans have become enamored of blackened redfish, mesquite-grilled salmon, tuna steaks, and sushi.
In the United States, fish sales rose 20 percent over the past four years, and forecasts from the U.S. Department of Agriculture predict that consumption will double again by the year 2000. In the rest of the world, where seafood is eaten in much greater quantities than in the United States, consumption of seafood products is also rising steadily.
Rising demand, restricted supplies
In fact, business is so good that, for some species, supply cannot keep up with demand. The crimp on the supply side is a saga of politics, economics, and environmental issues.
In the 1960s and 70s, unregulated commercial fishing fleets caused near-depletion of haddock and other ground-feeding fish. Today none of these species are considered endangered, but regulation by the National Marine Fisheries Service continues to limit catches. In any case, experienced fishermen sometimes find that the fish are just not
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