Seafood

fisheries & fishing
Korea style raw fish.jpg
fish products
seafood
edible fish
fish roe
fish meal
emulsion
hydrolysate
fish oil
fish sauce
shrimp paste
seafood list
crustaceans
molluscs

fish processing
marketing
fishing industry

I N D E X

Seafood is any sea animal or seaweed that is served as food, or is suitable for eating by humans, such as fish and shellfish (including mollusks and crustaceans).

Edible seaweeds are also seafood, and are widely eaten around the world. See the category of sea vegetables.

The harvesting of seafood is known as fishing and the cultivation of seafood is known as aquaculture, mariculture, or in the case of fish, fish farming.

Seafood is an important source of protein in many diets around the world, especially in coastal areas.

Contents

Overfishing

Main article: Overfishing
Fried Fish and Chips from the fishette on Harbor drive in San Diego.
Galician Mariscada

Research into population trends of various species of seafood is pointing to a global collapse of seafood species by 2048. Such a collapse would occur due to pollution and overfishing, threatening oceanic ecosystems, according to some researchers.[1]

A major international scientific study released in November 2006 in the journal Science found that about one-third of all fishing stocks worldwide have collapsed (with a collapse being defined as a decline to less than 10% of their maximum observed abundance), and that if current trends continue all fish stocks worldwide will collapse within fifty years.[2]

The FAO State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture 2004 report estimates that in 2003, of the main fish stocks or groups of resources for which assessment information is available, "approximately one-quarter were overexploited, depleted or recovering from depletion (16%, 7% and 1% respectively) and needed rebuilding."[3]

Advocacy organizations such as the National Fisheries Institute, however, disagree with such findings and assert that currently observed declines in fish population are due to natural fluctuations and that enhanced technologies will eventually alleviate whatever impact humanity is having on oceanic life.[4]

Dishes

See also

References

  1. World Seafood Supply Could Run Out by 2048 Researchers Warn boston.com. Retrieved 6 February, 2007
  2. "'Only 50 years left' for sea fish", BBC News. 2 November 2006.
  3. "The Status of the Fishing Fleet," The State of World Fisheries and Aquaculture: 2004.
  4. Seafood Could Collapse by 2050, Experts Warn, msnbc.com. Retrieved 22 July 2007.

External links