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#1
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Here is a scary sort of article about farmed salmon. Something to worry
about with them, I suppose. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/08/salmon_040108 Tim Lysyk |
#2
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![]() "Tim Lysyk" wrote in message news:gooLb.48651$Dm.43107@edtnps89... Here is a scary sort of article about farmed salmon. Something to worry about with them, I suppose. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/08/salmon_040108 Try http://flyforums.proboards20.com/ind...m=1073593 555 TL MC |
#3
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They probably feed the salmon ground up cow parts, brains and all.
"Tim Lysyk" wrote in message news:gooLb.48651$Dm.43107@edtnps89... Here is a scary sort of article about farmed salmon. Something to worry about with them, I suppose. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/08/salmon_040108 Tim Lysyk |
#4
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I think in about 50 years people will be born with "full body cancer".
-- Bill Kiene Kiene's Fly Shop Sacramento, CA, USA www.kiene.com "Tim Lysyk" wrote in message news:gooLb.48651$Dm.43107@edtnps89... Here is a scary sort of article about farmed salmon. Something to worry about with them, I suppose. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/08/salmon_040108 Tim Lysyk |
#5
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Tim Lysyk wrote:
Here is a scary sort of article about farmed salmon. Something to worry about with them, I suppose. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/08/salmon_040108 Tim Lysyk What they were concerned about is a chemical called dioxin. However the latest I heard on the news last night was that the measured amounts were so small that it made any kinds of statictics too inaccurate to be something to be really concerned about. (I think the latter statement came from the FDA). Sounds more like a ploy to keep people from buying Scandinavian farm grown salmon and instead by wild fish caught here. |
#6
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Svend Tang-Petersen wrote:
What they were concerned about is a chemical called dioxin. However the latest I heard on the news last night was that the measured amounts were so small that it made any kinds of statictics too inaccurate to be something to be really concerned about. (I think the latter statement came from the FDA). Sounds more like a ploy to keep people from buying Scandinavian farm grown salmon and instead by wild fish caught here. I don't know, the link that Mike Connor posted suggested the problem is quite real, and severe. I don;t think it is a ploy at all. Tim Lysyk |
#7
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I try to buy only wild salmon so this doens't bother me. what does though
is whether the raising of large numbers will effect our fisheries. The west coast of Ireland used to be a good a good Altantic salmon fishery. Now there are are few fish caught on this coast. the story is that there is too much crap and too many disease associated with the massive fish pens stationed in the estuaries. the wild salmon apparently cannot survive in this situation. there are apparently large Atlantic salmon pens in British Columbia, and some have escaped. I have seen a report of one caught in the wild. "Tim Lysyk" wrote in message news:gooLb.48651$Dm.43107@edtnps89... Here is a scary sort of article about farmed salmon. Something to worry about with them, I suppose. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/08/salmon_040108 Tim Lysyk --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.559 / Virus Database: 351 - Release Date: 1/7/2004 |
#8
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![]() "Sierra fisher" schrieb im Newsbeitrag ... I try to buy only wild salmon so this doens't bother me. what does though is whether the raising of large numbers will effect our fisheries. SNIP Salmon farming is causing massive damage to the environment and ecology wherever it is being done. Not only at the farms themselves. Massive amounts of irreplaceable "wild" protein is being converted into fish meal and similar. ( at a massive loss ratio!), to feed the unfortunate creatures. The cumulative and total damage this engenders is beyond estimate, and in many cases, already beyond repair. This is just another way of raping nature in order to make money, but one of the most dangerous to date. When the seas die, then mankind will die as well. Who knows? It may be a good thing. TL MC |
#9
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Svend Tang-Petersen wrote:
What they were concerned about is a chemical called dioxin. However the latest I heard on the news last night was that the measured amounts were so small that it made any kinds of statictics too inaccurate to be something to be really concerned about. (I think the latter statement came from the FDA). I found the following article after I replied to your post. It appears there is some concern over the validity of the study. I may have to break down and actually read it. http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2004/01/09/salmon040109 Tim Lysyk |
#10
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![]() I don't know, the link that Mike Connor posted suggested the problem is quite real, and severe. I don;t think it is a ploy at all. Tim Lysyk The 'ploy' thing taken aside I still see a few diverging opinions. E.g. the FDA says the levels are "not dangerous" and "the figures may be misleading" where as the group doing the investigation claims "unlimited consumption is unwise" and "thresholds set too low". The latter must be a misquote for this to make sense at all, i.e. it should have been "too high". And what does "unlimited consumption" mean ? In gradschool we once did a calculation to see how much coffe you had to drink to die from instant coffein poisoning. I think it came down to about 20L (or ~6G) in 20min. "unlimited consumption" of almost anything we eat is bad for you. Naturally the levels should be reduced if at all possible, and Im assuming that the farmers will do what they can at least to avoid the bad publicity. But Im not convinced that the levels are so high that you should panic. I tried to find the article to look at the numbers, but need to sign up for the Science mag online. All I could find were two bad charts doing an overlaid comparision of PCB and Dioxin content and the quality was such that I find it inconclusive. And I have to admit that I was always a bit sceptical of research published in certain mags. Some of them, like Nature, seem to check the validity of research better than others before it gets published. Another possible source for the contaminents could be in the packaging since most of it seems to be concentrated in the skin of the fish. E.g. its well know that you should not pack/store food items in garbage bags since they give off similar chemicals. So do the northern european fish show higher level because they have been wrapped in plastics longer ? (Were they shipped to the lab from overseas ?). If they only compared locally caught wild salmon to the farmed onces then the wild salmon might not even have been wrapped in plastic and thus have lower levels for that particular reason. There's a lot of variables in an investigation like this, and unless they have taken steps to eliminate other sources and done a controlled experiment the results could in worst case be worthless and the conclusions misleading. The only way to make sure you can 'blame the fish' is to do the measurements locally on fresh fish as they are taken from the water. Then compare local fresh farmed vs local wild fish to determine wether or not the farmed fish have significantly elevated levels of pollutants. If so then you have a 'case', if not the problem lies elsewhere i.e. the handling. And naturally you will have regional variations as well. Without reading the published article we dont know how they did the investigation, and it may not even be mentioned. And was the quality of the investigation chekked/verified by other independent researchers before the results were announced ? |
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