Wild Versus Farmed Salmon, The Pros And Cons
Main Category: Nutrition / DietArticle Date: 26 Dec 2005 - 1:00 PST
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On the one hand, farmed salmon has more heart-healthy omega-3 fatty acids than wild salmon. On the other hand, it also tends to have much higher levels of chemical contaminants that are known to cause cancer, memory impairment and neurobehavioral changes in children. What's a consumer to do?
In general, a new study shows that the net benefits of eating wild Pacific salmon outweigh those of eating farmed Atlantic salmon, when the risks of chemical contaminants are considered, although there are important regional differences.
Those are the conclusions of Barbara Knuth, Cornell professor of natural resources who specializes in risk management associated with chemical contaminants in fish, and Steven Schwager, Cornell associate professor of biological statistics and computational biology and an expert in sampling design and statistical analysis of comparative data. The two have co-authored a benefit-risk analysis of eating farmed versus wild salmon in the Journal of Nutrition (November, Vol. 135).
"None of us [study authors] argues that the benefits of salmon are not real. But the dirty little secret is that there are risks," said Schwager, noting that even taking into account the risks, the benefits of salmon may be particularly worthwhile for some groups.
"For a middle-aged guy who has had a coronary and doesn't want to have another one, the risks from pollutants are minor ones, and the omega-3 benefits him in a way that far outstrips the relatively minor risks of the pollutants," he said. "But for people who are young -- and they're at risk of lifetime accumulation of pollutants that are carcinogenic -- or pregnant women -- with the risks of birth defects and IQ diminution and other kinds of damage to the fetus -- those risks are great enough that they outweigh the benefits."
Knuth added: "Because we found regional differences in contaminants in farmed salmon, with Chilean salmon showing the lowest levels and European (particularly Scottish) farmed salmon showing the highest levels, careful consumers with a history of heart disease could choose farmed salmon from Chile for their high omega-3 content and relatively lower level of contaminants." She noted that farmed salmon from North America would be a better second choice than European farmed salmon.
The researchers' benefit-risk analysis showed that consumers should not eat farmed fish from Scotland, Norway and eastern Canada more than three times a year; farmed fish from Maine, western Canada and Washington state no more than three to six times a year; and farmed fish from Chile no more than about six times a year. Wild chum salmon can be consumed safely as often as once a week, pink salmon, Sockeye and Coho about twice a month and Chinook just under once a month.
In a study published last spring (Environmental Health Perspectives, May 2005), the research team reported that the levels of chlorinated pesticides, dioxins, PCBs and other contaminants are up to 10 times greater in farm-raised salmon than in wild Pacific salmon, and that salmon farmed in Europe are more contaminated than salmon from South and North American farms.
The team also published a study this fall (Environmental Science and Technology, Vol. 39:8622) that found that farmed salmon, on average, contain roughly two to three times more beneficial fatty acids than wild salmon, presumably because of the differences in the diet on which the fish are raised.
"Our results also support the need for policy and regulatory efforts to limit pollution of our waters and clean up pollution that has occurred, and thus ultimately reduce the risk side of this equation by reducing the potential for human exposure to these contaminants," said Knuth, adding that the country of origin of fish sold should be clearly labeled so consumers can make informed decisions.
Other co-authors of the risk-benefit study include lead author Jeffrey Foran, University of Illinois-Chicago; David Carpenter, University at Albany; David Good, Indiana University; and Coreen Hamilton, AXYS Analytical Services Ltd., British Columbia, Canada. The study was funded by the Environmental Division of the Pew Charitable Trusts.
Joseph Schwartz
bjs54@cornell.edu
Cornell University News Service
http://www.news.cornell.edu
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December 20, Russians ban all fresh Norwegian fish
posted by Dr. Claudette Bethune on 26 Dec 2005 at 1:17 pmCadmium contamination in fish feed, now in farmed salmon exported to Russia
Cadmium contamination in Norwegian fish feeds was known by Norwegian food safety advisors early this year, and these fish are now likely the farmed salmon imported to Russia that were recently found contaminated by Russian veterinarians.
In an April 18, 2005 report to the Norwegian Food Safety Authority by the Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety: cadmium in complete feeding stuffs was recently found at 11-17 mg/kg. The committee recommended nothing needed to be done, based on a single study performed by the committee authors that did not examine the elimination of cadmium in fillet. In an April 28 report, The Norwegian Veterinary Institute identified zinc sulphate in a Chinese pre-mix as the source of the contamination.
On December 20, Russian food safety officers announced they will ban all fresh Norwegian fish imports from Jan. 1 2006 because its vets say they have found dangerously high levels of lead and cadmium in the fish and Norway's monitoring system is not adequate.
The same Norwegian scientific committee collected 20 more salmon the first week of December to test cadmium and lead. With no regard to the elimination rate of cadmium in fillet (half-life determined to be about 25-30 days in salmon) the 'new' samples did not show any contamination. It is not clear when the import of contaminated fish that Russian scientists tested compares to that surveillanced by Norway. Out of the small fraction of farmed fish that Norway tests with surveillance, 570,000 metric tons were produced in Norway last year. The institute primarily responsible for seafood surveillance in Norway (NIFES) tested <60 farmed salmon in 2005. The leaders of NIFES (Norwegian Institute of Nutrition and Seafood Research) are also the leaders of the Norwegian Scientific Committee for Food Safety, and therefore are 'in habil' to both surveillance and advise the public on food safety.
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