Guest guest Posted March 22, 2004 Report Share Posted March 22, 2004 here's a good article on fish to eat and avoid. there's lots of other information on internet too if you search on fish and mercury. http://news.uns.purdue.edu/UNS/html4ever/030206.Santerre.angling.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2004 Report Share Posted March 22, 2004 Hi Robin I see someone posted a link for you to look at... but I can give a short list of good/bad fish as far as mercury content. Avoid the large, predator fish. They live long and have time to store more toxins in their body. Tuna, swordfish, shark and tilefish are offenders. Tuna can be eaten occasionally, though (3 oz/week per child). I cannot remember which tuna is the least contaminated (yellow fin, white, etc). Golden and white snapper are not good either. The better seafood to eat are shrimp, tilapia (mild white fish... worth checking out for your daughter) and WILD Pacific salmon. The gov't recommends 12 ounces of fish per week for an adult from the lesser contaminated fish. HOWEVER, they also add that if you consume at least 2 ounces of cooked fish from a restaurant you should NOT eat fish anymore that week (you never know about the fish you eat in restaurants, I guess!). I would actually eat less than 12 ounces per week (gov't standards are usually too cautious for me). Pacific salmon is what I eat the most of here in WA. The Omega 3s are so beneficial. I have started primarily using supplements in the past 2 years after reading about methylmercury. I also eat shellfish (scallops, mainly). I don't know about fresh water fish. I do know that PCBs were high in Lake Michigan fish for a long time. I wonder if they still recommend not to eat those fish? Anybody know? I've read that 1/2 the amount of mercury eaten in fish will be excreted from our bodies in one month. I guess that is based on a normally functioning body. If you eat a lot of fish over a span of a few weeks, then take a few weeks off. I don't think the US has seen mercury poisoning from fish eating. I've written too much. Pam --- In , " Robin " <slill@n...> wrote: > Hello Everyone, > I was wondering if anyone could tell me what would be the > best fish to feed my family. I particuarly don't like seafood > except for shrimp but with all this talk of EFA's and how good for > you it is, I feel I should be putting it into my family's diet. I > do not know ANYTHING about fish and their levels of murcury so I > wouldn't know where to begin. Also, which fish out there is the > LEAST fishy tasting? If anyone could give me some info on this or > if you are big fish eaters in your family I would LOVE to get some > recipes and experiment. > With much appreciation, Robin Mommy to Cameron 3.4 apraxic and Cara > 19 months. (still CAN'T get the oil down her so maybe she'll eat > some fish!!!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 22, 2004 Report Share Posted March 22, 2004 regarding fresh water fish question... I believe farm raised cat fish is recommended. Regarding best kinds of tuna... light tuna in can and the tuna found in foil packages are recommended. This information was on CNN this week. I think the foil somehow reacts with the mercury to decrease it (or something like that). as mentioned, the smaller salt water fishes and crustaceans are better as they are on the bottom of the chain. Shrimp, crab, lobster, etc can be eaten in abundance, however, i don't know about their omegas and other nutrient content. becky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 I'd be curious about the fresh water fish. That would be what is most abundant in the middle of the country: bass, trout, catfish. I know growing up we ate a lot of bass because my dad and brothers were fishermen. I just wonder about that. --- In , " Robin " <slill@n...> wrote: > Hello Everyone, > I was wondering if anyone could tell me what would be the > best fish to feed my family. I particuarly don't like seafood > except for shrimp but with all this talk of EFA's and how good for > you it is, I feel I should be putting it into my family's diet. I > do not know ANYTHING about fish and their levels of murcury so I > wouldn't know where to begin. Also, which fish out there is the > LEAST fishy tasting? If anyone could give me some info on this or > if you are big fish eaters in your family I would LOVE to get some > recipes and experiment. > With much appreciation, Robin Mommy to Cameron 3.4 apraxic and Cara > 19 months. (still CAN'T get the oil down her so maybe she'll eat > some fish!!!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2004 Report Share Posted March 23, 2004 > Hello Everyone, > I was wondering if anyone could tell me what would be the > best fish to feed my family. I particuarly don't like seafood > except for shrimp but with all this talk of EFA's and how good for > you it is, I feel I should be putting it into my family's diet. I > do not know ANYTHING about fish and their levels of murcury so I > wouldn't know where to begin. Albacore tuna draws a warning Saturday, March 20, 2004 By LINDY WASHBURN STAFF WRITER Go ahead and eat that tuna sandwich, the government told most Americans on Friday. But if you're a young child or a pregnant or nursing woman - don't eat too many. The latest advice on fish consumption for pregnant or nursing women and young children recommends eating only one meal a week of white, or albacore, tuna because the mercury it contains may damage the developing nervous system of the fetus or child. The advisory was issued by the federal Food and Drug Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency. Men, teenagers, and women who have no intention of becoming pregnant are on their own. The agencies made no recommendations for them.The guidelines for young children and women who are pregnant, nursing, or considering having a baby are: Do not eat shark, swordfish, king mackerel, or tilefish. Eat up to two meals a week (12 ounces in all) of a variety of fish and shellfish that are low in mercury. Those include shrimp, canned light tuna, salmon, pollock, and catfish. Follow state advisories on locally caught fish. If there are no advisories, limit fish consumption that week to just 6 ounces of the locally caught fish. For young children, follow these same recommendations, but serve smaller portions. On the Web The federal government's fish advisory can be found at www.cfsan.fda.gov New Jersey advisories for fish caught in local waters may be found at www.nj.gov/dep/dsr/njmainfish.htm Two environmental groups critical of government fish advisories have created their own recommendations for seafood consumption. The Environmental Working Group has a " tuna calculator " at its site, www.ewg.org. The Environmental Defense Fund has a " seafood selector, " based on human health and ecological considerations, at its site, www.environmentaldefense.org. By following the guidelines, " women and young children will receive the health benefits of eating fish and shellfish and can feel confident they have reduced their exposure to the harmful effects of mercury, " said Lester Crawford, FDA deputy commissioner. Goldburg, a senior scientist and biologist with the Environmental Defense Fund, criticized the advisory's examples of fish low in mercury. Those very fish may be high in other contaminants, she said. Farm-raised salmon, for example, can contain dangerous levels of PCBs. " Telling people they can eat two meals a week of farm-raised salmon will be giving them high doses of PCBs,'' Goldburg said.Crawford. however, said, " Americans can and should feel comfortable consuming fish as an important part of the food supply.'' The advisory emphasized the benefits of eating fish: They are rich in protein, low in saturated fat, and full of heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids. Each year, 630,000 babies are born who have been exposed to potentially toxic levels of mercury in the womb, the EPA says. Mercury interferes with the development of the brain and nervous system. It can lower intelligence and slow a child's ability to walk, talk, remember, and draw. Adults can recover from the effects of overexposure, but children suffer permanent harm. Lillo, a third-generation fishmonger and owner of 's Seafood Market in Glen Rock, said his customers ask a lot of questions about the fish they buy - about its fat content, its " alleged'' mercury content, and other things. He finds much of the government advice confusing. " If you listen to all of this, you won't eat anything,'' he said. " They never spell out exactly how much of what you should eat.'' Lillo buys his fish each morning at the Fulton Fish Market in New York. " The Number One thing with seafood is freshness, " he said. His fish sales have increased over the years " because fish is good for you,'' Lillo said. Fish become contaminated primarily because of mercury pollution from coal-fired power plants. The pollution settles in water, and is transformed by bacteria in the sediments into methylmercury, which is easily absorbed in animal tissue, and builds up the higher it goes in the food chain. Albacore tuna have higher levels of mercury because they are older than the young tuna harvested for " canned light'' tuna, and thus have eaten more fish and accumulated more mercury in their tissues. Tuna steak is also high in mercury, the advisory says. When fish is high in mercury, no preparation or cooking can reduce the toxin, said Dr. Acheson, an FDA medical officer. Fish sticks and fast-food fish are usually made from fish that is low in mercury, the advisory said. Others species could have been listed as low in mercury - such as tilapia and flounder, said Dr. Gochfeld, a mercury expert at the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute in Piscataway and head of the state's mercury task force. He would have changed the " Do not eat'' category to " Do not eat more than once a month,'' and added yellow-fin tuna steak to that category. The National Consumers League praised what it called the FDA's " balanced " approach. With obesity rising in the United States, people should not be afraid to eat fish, the organization said. The advisory comes as the federal government is considering a proposal to limit mercury pollution. The proposal has been attacked by New Jersey officials, environmentalists, and children's health advocates for doing too little too slowly to control pollution. The need to warn consumers about eating fish because of pollution, while doing too little to control the pollution, troubles Goldburg, of the Environmental Defense Fund. The Environmental Working Group, another advocacy group, has filed a legal challenge to the FDA's guidelines. The group believes if women followed the advice given Friday, the number of newborns exposed to mercury would rise. The organization called it a " giveaway'' to the seafood and coal industries, at the cost of children's health. The head of the EPA's office on water defended the agency. " We all recognize that mercury is prevalent throughout the environment,'' Grumbles said. " It is a toxin that needs to be controlled. I don't think there is a mixed message here.'' Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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