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"As fish go, tilapia's lifestyle leaves much to be desired.
They're a "garbage fish" in every sense of the word. They can survive in hopelessly polluted environments, they can be bred and raised in garbage cans and, when necessary, can subsist on a diet of other animals' excrement.
It makes Tilapia so easily farmed that Americans eat close to 500 million pounds of it a year, according to the Department of Agriculture, or more than four times the amount of Tilapia they ate a decade ago.
It also makes it bland and not particularly healthy for you. When its diet consists of manure, however, it's basically like feeding them salmonella and E.coli.
Michael Doyle, director of the Center for Food Safety at the University of Georgia, notes that the large amount of antibiotics that are given to the fish to ward off infections from the manure -- which is used as a cheap alternative to fish feed -- makes the strains of salmonella and E.coli those fish catch extremely hard to eliminate.
"While there are some really good aquaculture ponds in Asia, in many of these ponds -- or really in most of these ponds -- it's typical to use untreated chicken manure as the primary nutrition," he told MSN News. "In some places, like Thailand for example, they will just put the chickens over the pond and they just poop right in the pond."
That's creating antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria, but it's also creating problems for U.S. eaters who get 82% of their Tilapia from China."
.....
" According to Bloomberg, 27% of seafood consumed in in the United States comes from China, and yet the FDA only inspects 2.7% of the fish that gets imported. Of the fish inspected, the FDA has reportedly rejected 820 Chinese seafood shipments since 2007, including 187 that contained tilapia.
Yet Tilapia is so cheap and plentiful that it's popularity is still growing among American consumers despite its negligible health benefits. With that in mind, the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Seafood Watch program suggests buyers consider the source of their Tilapia before making a purchase. While Tilapia raised in the U.S., Canada and Ecuador all pass muster, those from China and Taiwan are iffy alternates. "
"As fish go, tilapia's lifestyle leaves much to be desired.
They're a "garbage fish" in every sense of the word. They can survive in hopelessly polluted environments, they can be bred and raised in garbage cans and, when necessary, can subsist on a diet of other animals' excrement.
It makes Tilapia so easily farmed that Americans eat close to 500 million pounds of it a year, according to the Department of Agriculture, or more than four times the amount of Tilapia they ate a decade ago.
It also makes it bland and not particularly healthy for you. When its diet consists of manure, however, it's basically like feeding them salmonella and E.coli.
Michael Doyle, director of the Center for Food Safety at the University of Georgia, notes that the large amount of antibiotics that are given to the fish to ward off infections from the manure -- which is used as a cheap alternative to fish feed -- makes the strains of salmonella and E.coli those fish catch extremely hard to eliminate.
"While there are some really good aquaculture ponds in Asia, in many of these ponds -- or really in most of these ponds -- it's typical to use untreated chicken manure as the primary nutrition," he told MSN News. "In some places, like Thailand for example, they will just put the chickens over the pond and they just poop right in the pond."
That's creating antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria, but it's also creating problems for U.S. eaters who get 82% of their Tilapia from China."
.....
" According to Bloomberg, 27% of seafood consumed in in the United States comes from China, and yet the FDA only inspects 2.7% of the fish that gets imported. Of the fish inspected, the FDA has reportedly rejected 820 Chinese seafood shipments since 2007, including 187 that contained tilapia.
Yet Tilapia is so cheap and plentiful that it's popularity is still growing among American consumers despite its negligible health benefits. With that in mind, the Monterey Bay Aquarium's Seafood Watch program suggests buyers consider the source of their Tilapia before making a purchase. While Tilapia raised in the U.S., Canada and Ecuador all pass muster, those from China and Taiwan are iffy alternates. "