Florida scientists develop way to detect
mislabeled fish
Send a link to a friend
[February 07, 2015]
By Zachary Fagenson
MIAMI (Reuters) - A pair of Florida
scientists have developed a device they say can genetically verify
whether imported fish destined for dining tables are grouper or less
expensive, potentially harmful Asian catfish often passed off for the
popular firm-fleshed fillets.
|
By early summer, Tampa-based PureMolecular LLC hopes to begin
selling the fist-sized machines for about $2,000 apiece, said John
Paul, the company’s chief executive and a marine science professor
at the University of South Florida.
Retailers trying to profit from mislabeling cheaper seafood as more
expensive varieties have come under increasing fire from consumer
and environmental activists and from seafood vendors who find it
harder to charge the full price for properly labeled fish.
One group estimates that up to a third of the fish consumed in the
United States could be mislabeled.
At the moment only the genetic marker that matches up with grouper
DNA is available, though more species could follow after the
so-called QuadPyre’s release.
Paul said the technology produces results within 45 minutes.
Scientists are relying more on genetic data to identify and classify
fish, said Jerald S. Ault, a marine biology professor at the
University of Miami’s Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric
Science.
“Genetically, only .02 percent of imported fish is analyzed,” Paul
said.
Currently, U.S. Food and Drug Administration tests can take up to a
week to produce results, he added.
The ocean conservation group Oceana published a study in 2013 that
said 33 percent of the seafood tested in 21 U.S. metropolitan areas
was mislabeled.
“Forty-four percent of all the grocery stores, restaurants and sushi
venues visited sold mislabeled seafood,” Oceana’s report said.
[to top of second column] |
Earlier this year Louisiana Senator David Vitter introduced a new
food safety bill aimed at tightening imports of foreign seafood by
increasing inspections and limiting the number of ports through
which it can pass.
The bill also increases penalties on importers that knowingly
mislabel seafood, and seeks to ban offending countries or companies
from exporting to the United States.
Ultimately it’s the diners and restaurants that are the most
effected, Paul said.
“One restaurant owner told me he has a nice $19 grouper entrée, but
he can’t compete with someone ... who’s selling a $5 grouper
sandwich that’s not grouper,” he said.
(Editing by David Adams and David Gregorio)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|