
This information was provided by Giovanni's Fresh Fish Market in Morro Bay, California.
Ask your fish market the point of origin of your fish. Is it wild caught or farmed? Many times farmed fish is more inexpensive, but are fed antibiotics and in some cases dyes to color the flesh. Fresh fish should not smell strong. It should not look dry. If you are purchasing whole fish, the eyes should be clear and the scales in place.
By purchasing fish that is locally caught or comes from another region in the United States you are helping fishermen and their communities.
Simply put the definition is: "A rate of use, that does not exceed rates of re-generation." In short, the fish are reproducing faster than we are catching them. For more information, see the National Marine Fisheries Service.
It depends on who you ask. Special interest groups funded by several trusts spend about $30 million annually funding litigation, consumer boycotts, and lobbying to advance their view that most of the seafood consumed in the United States is not sustainable.
However, the National Fisheries Institute - a leading authority on world fish populations - says exactly the opposite. In fact, they say that almost all of the globally bought seafood for the U.S. market is already harvested at a rate that meets the world's present demand WITHOUT compromising the ability of the species to re-generate for future generations.
Some facts: