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Eater beware.
- Alaskan snow and king crab: These populations are recovering under Alaskan fishery management plans.
- U.S. brown, pink and white shrimp: They are taken with trawl nets with turtle excluder and bycatch reduction devices; however, 90 percent of shrimp sold in the United States is imported from countries in Latin America and Southeast Asia, where environmental regulations are lax or nonexistent.
- Blue crabs: Avoid buying fresh crabs in the winter, when dredges may have been used to harvest females that have burrowed before spawning.
- Swordfish: They are recovering in the Atlantic, but most swordfish are caught with longlines, which have a large bycatch of juvenile billfish, sea turtles, seabirds and sharks, and they may contain high amounts of methylmercury.
- Yellowfin, skipjack and albacore tuna: Plentiful, but these fish are often caught with longlines.
BAD
Eating fish from this group will add to the problems facing the world's fish stocks.
- Atlantic salmon: Farming causes water pollution by introducing excess feed, waste products, antibiotics and the farmed fish themselves into the surrounding environment; farmed fish may interbreed with wild salmon to the detriment of the wild stock.
- Atlantic flounder, plaice, halibut and sole: All Atlantic flatfish species have been overfished, and the bottom-trawl methods used to catch them result in high rates of bycatch.
- Caribbean-imported spiny lobster: Some areas have poorly managed fisheries, and this species is overfished.
- Monkfish, Pacific rockfish, tilefish and king mackerel: These species are all either overfished, caught in bottom trawls, contain high mercury levels or several of the above.
- Foreign-farmed shrimp and crawfish: Some operations use chloramphenicol, for which the U.S. Food and Drug Administration states there is no known safe level of human exposure.
- Imported swordfish: In the absence of international regulations for reducing bycatch by longliners, many foreign fisheries are catching and killing large amounts of endangered sea turtles and birds.
WORST
For now, anyone concerned with the sustainability of the ocean should avoid eating these fish.
- Sharks: Populations are overfished throughout the world.
- Red snapper: These fish continue to be overfished, and juveniles are sometimes caught and killed as bycatch in the shrimp-trawl industry.
- Imported caviar from wild sturgeon: Some populations, such as Caspian Sea sturgeon, are close to extinction.
- Orange roughy: This very slow-growing species has been so overfished that it will likely take decades to return to healthy levels.
- Bluefin tuna: These fish are extremely depleted due to aggressive, illegal overfishing.
- Chilean sea bass (other than from an MSC-certified fishery): Unregulated overfishing and rampant poaching threaten this species from the cold, deep waters near Antarctica. Endangered albatrosses and other seabirds are often drowned when accidentally snagged by the longlines usually used in these fisheries.


Comments
Thank you so much for your informative list. I will keep this in mind next time I am shopping for seafood. Just one request though, could you please also include the mercury levels thought to be contained in each particular type of seafood? For instance, though the Spanish Mackeral are listed under GOOD since they reproduce quickly, I've often read that they contain unsafe levels of mercury...
Posted by Una Chung-Iwasaka on January 5,2008 | 07:09PM
best of luck . save the world
Posted by arya on January 13,2008 | 06:25AM
Thanks for the downloadable pocket sized guide; I'm including one in each Christmas gift I give!
Posted by Jan Smith on December 10,2008 | 02:14PM
Thanks. I will share this with my fellow divers here in the Philippines. Would you happen to know if SE Asia and the Philippines have their own list also? If you do, kindly email link so I can spread the word. More power to you! Ordinary people like us are with you on this. Let us know how we can also help.
Posted by Gi on February 1,2009 | 09:59PM