Mislabelling and high mercury content hampers the efforts of market-based seafood initiatives in Peru

Peru is experiencing a “gastronomic boom” that is increasing the demand for seafood. We investigated two implicit assumptions of two popular sustainable seafood consumer-based initiatives: (1) seafood is labelled correctly, and (2) the recommended species are healthy for consumers. We used DNA barco...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Scientific reports Vol. 10; no. 1; p. 20390
Main Authors: Biffi, Daniella, López-Mobilia, Andrea, Kelez, Shaleyla, Williams, Dean A., Chumchal, Matthew M., Weinburgh, Molly
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: London Nature Publishing Group UK 23-11-2020
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Summary:Peru is experiencing a “gastronomic boom” that is increasing the demand for seafood. We investigated two implicit assumptions of two popular sustainable seafood consumer-based initiatives: (1) seafood is labelled correctly, and (2) the recommended species are healthy for consumers. We used DNA barcoding to determine the taxonomic identity of 449 seafood samples from markets and restaurants and analysed the concentration of total mercury (THg) in a sub-sample (271 samples) of these. We found that a third of seafood is mislabelled and that over a quarter of all samples had mercury levels above the upper limit recommended by the US EPA (300 ng/g ww). Additionally, 30% of samples were threatened and protected species. Mislabelling often occurred for economic reasons and the lack of unique common names. Mislabelled samples also had significantly higher mercury concentrations than correctly labelled samples. The “best choice” species compiled from two sustainable seafood guides had less mislabelling, and when identified correctly through DNA barcoding, had on average lower mercury than the other species. Nevertheless, some high mercury species are included in these lists. Mislabelling makes the efforts of seafood campaigns less effective as does the inclusion of threatened species and species high in mercury.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-020-77338-x