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Okay, let's talk about fish. I'm not talking about the carnivore VS vegetarian thing; but rather, if you eat
it, what you need to be aware of.
The trigger for this newsletter is
an article in the
New York
Times that details the results of lab tests they commissioned on sushi in New York restaurants and
stores. The tests, conducted by the Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute, in Piscataway NJ, found
that there was so much mercury in tuna and swordfish in 20 Manhattan restaurants and stores that eating just six pieces
of sushi a week would exceed acceptable levels set by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Needless to say the article brought out the spin doctors in full force.
- According to the
National
Fisheries Institute: "In a poorly-sourced, sensational article in this morning's New York Times,
reporter Marian Burros presents a distorted report on sushi and seafood that is at odds with widely accepted science.
The story is unreliable and contradicts broadly-held medical advice that tuna and other kinds of fish are an
essential part of a healthy diet. The Times story is alarmist, special interest-driven journalism and should be
treated with extreme skepticism."
- And according to
Japan's
Fisheries Agency, mercury found in tuna is not at levels that pose a health threat. "The newspaper
is exaggerating the risk."
So, is the mercury dangerous or not? Well,
if the FDA is
to be believed, research shows that most people's fish consumption does not cause a health concern,
and that a healthy diet that includes the nutritional benefits of fish and shellfish doesn't change the level of
methyl mercury in the body much at all. If you eat a lot of fish one week, you can cut back the next week or two
and you'll be fine. That is, if the FDA is to be believed! Then again, to be fair, the FDA does mention that high
levels of mercury in the bloodstream of unborn babies and young children may harm the developing nervous system.
Although, at the same time,
they recommend that: "women and young children in particular should include fish or
shellfish in their diets due to their many nutritional benefits."
So what's the story here?
Is mercury in fish a danger, or isn't it?
- What can you do about it?
- Is sushi different from cooked fish?
- Which is healthier, wild fish or farm raised?
- And why is fish getting so darn expensive?
Mercury -- deadly beauty
People have known about the dangers
of mercury since the days of the Roman Empire, when slaves who worked in the "quicksilver" mines would die horribly
after 2-3 years exposure. And in the 19th century, the workers who used mercury to make hats went bald and suffered from
severe muscular tremors, dementia, and fits of wild, uncontrollable laughter. Thus the phrase: "Mad Hatter."
It's no secret that mercury is one of the most toxic metals known. Numerous studies have shown its impact
on health. There is strong evidence that mercury lowers T-Cell counts. This, alone, implicates it in cancer, autoimmune
diseases, allergies, Candida overgrowth, and multiple sclerosis. It has also been shown that mercury cuts the oxygen
carrying capacity of blood by half. This would account for many instances of chronic fatigue.
Mercury also has an affinity for brain tissue and is implicated in brain tumors and dementia. And,
finally, mercury has an affinity for fetal tissue, which accounts for its implication in birth defects, which is why
most doctors and the
American Pregnancy
Association recommend that women should not eat high mercury fish while pregnant. Too much methyl mercury in
the bloodstream can damage the developing nervous system in fetuses, infants, and young children. In adults, it can
cause vision problems, memory loss, headaches and hair loss.
48 Tons in Our Food and Water
There is nothing complex about the process. Mercury is a naturally occurring toxin which is found
in soil, rocks, wood, and fuels like coal and oil. Simple soil erosion deposits mercury in rivers and lakes, but
concentrations remain low, unless, as has been discovered in the recently deforested regions of the Amazon, erosion
reaches extraordinary levels. The burning of rainforests also releases mercury that has been taken up from the soil
by the trees.
But the major source of mercury in our food chain, responsible for about 1/3 of the levels found in
our bodies, is our burning of coal to generate electric power. That is the single greatest contributor to the problem.
Mercury that naturally occurs in the coal is released during burning and enters the air; it is then precipitated into
the oceans, lakes, and rivers by rain. According to the EPA, coal-fired power plants in the United States emit about
48 tons of mercury into the air every year -- and more than half of this mercury falls within 5 miles of the plant
itself. When it reaches the water, microorganisms consume it and convert it into a substance called methyl mercury.
Into the Food Chain
A study at the University of Tennessee recently rated methyl mercury among the most dangerous poisons
on Earth (just behind plutonium). It has no known beneficial use in the body, and it accumulates in the muscle tissue
of fish, animals, and humans. When minnows eat plankton or algae that is contaminated with methyl mercury, it is deposited
in their flesh; larger fish prey upon the minnows, and the toxin concentrates straight up the food chain to the most prized
game fish -- the big predators like bass, pike, walleyes, brown trout; and to all the finest food and sport fish of the
seas -- tuna, swordfish, shark, roughy, marlin, and halibut. According to the EPA, fish at the top of the aquatic food
chain bio-accumulate methyl mercury to a level approximately 1 million to 10 million times greater than dissolved
concentrations found in surrounding waters.
Of course, when you climb one more rung up that food chain, you find us, the people who eat fish. Just like
the predatory fish that we catch and eat, we store mercury
in our tissues. Just like the ancient Romans, we know that high exposure to mercury is fatal. When the FDA says,
"If you eat a lot of fish one week, you can cut back the next week or two and you'll be fine," they are most decidedly
wrong. Mercury does not readily clear the body. It electrically bonds with tissue and remains for years and years
and years. When you eat a lot of fish with high mercury levels one week, those levels don't drop next week.
They remain...waiting for the next time you eat fish with mercury to climb higher...and higher...and
higher -- unless you make a concerted effort to chelate that mercury out of your body.
And the problem will only get worse. The use of coal energy plants is climbing throughout
the world particularly in China -- but also here in the US where the Bush administration has simply decided to exempt the
coal-fired power industry from any controls on mercury pollution.
Levels of mercury in the food chain will continue to climb.
Removing the mercury from your body
As I said, mercury does not easily leave your body on its own. You have to chelate it out.
The best way to do this is with a formula made from extracts of cilantro and chlorella. Why cilantro and chlorella?
Because cilantro changes the electric charge on intracellular deposits of heavy metals such as mercury to
a neutral state, which relaxes their tight bond to body tissue, freeing them up to be flushed from the body. Studies have
shown that levels of mercury, lead, and aluminum in the urine increase significantly after consuming large amounts of
cilantro. Once free, the next step is to actually facilitate the removal of the metals from the body. And here's where
chlorella comes in. Chlorella possesses the capacity to absorb heavy metals. This property has been exploited as a means
for treating industrial effluent that contains heavy metals before it is discharged, and to recover the bio-available fraction
of the metal in the process. In studies undertaken in Germany, high doses of chlorella have been found to be very effective
in eliminating heavy metals from the body -- from the brain, intestinal wall, muscles, ligaments, connective tissue, and
bone.
Together, these herbs create
a powerful oral chelation formula that can remove an average of 91% of the mercury in your body in as little as 42
days.
And talking about tuna
Chelation is not the only way to reduce your mercury levels from tuna. As it turns out, it's possible
to buy low mercury tuna. Yes, you read that correctly. It turns out that it's not just a question of how high up the food
chain a fish is that determines its mercury level. It's also a question of how long that fish has been in the ocean. The
more time it's in the ocean, the more time it has to accumulate mercury. In addition, younger fish swim and eat closer to
the surface of the water where the mercury levels are lower, whereas the older, larger fish, favored by most commercial fishermen
and canners swim closer to the ocean floor.
As I said, most restaurants and fishermen like the larger (25-70 lb) older tuna. Much more meat -- larger juicer
steaks. More bang for the buck so to speak. Some canners, however, specialize in smaller (12 lb or less) younger, troll caught
tuna. Mercury levels in these fish are almost non-existent. Two good sources are:
Is sushi different from cooked fish?
When it comes to mercury, there's
really no difference between sushi, canned fish, and freshly grilled fish. Mercury is mercury. But that doesn't mean
that there's no difference of any kind.
Raw fish may contain a number of bacteria, which causes diarrhea, cramping and vomiting, and also viruses
such as Hepatitis A and
noroviruses. In addition, raw fish frequently contains
parasites, although
freezing the fish for a short time before thawing and using raw will take care of that problem. Japan's
National Health Institute recommends freezing fish to -4°F for several hours when preparing raw fish
And beyond that, in some cases bacteria in fish can produce toxins which can lead to illnesses including
scombrotoxic fish poisoning, the most common form of fish poisoning in the United States. Symptoms include
diarrhea, flushing, sweating, headache, and vomiting and can commence within two minutes to two hours after eating the
contaminated fish.
Which is healthier, wild fish or farm raised?
Mercury levels are definitely lower in farm raised fish, but for virtually every other contaminant,
wild fish is the safer choice, hands down. Farmed raised fish are fed more antibiotics by weight than any other form
of livestock. In addition, farmed raised fish have significantly higher levels of PCBs, dioxin, and other cancer causing
chemicals than do wild fish.
In addition, it's worth noting that farm raised fish do not have the same health benefits as do wild fish.
If you're eating salmon for its omega-3 fatty acids, for example, you should know that farm raised salmon do not have
the same omega 3:6 profile as wild salmon. Farm-raised fish contain up to 400% more omega-6 fatty acid than do wild
salmon. At these levels, the fatty acids in farm raised fish may actually contribute to inflammation in the body,
not help bring it down.
And finally, if it matters to you (and it should), fish farms are decidedly "ungreen."
Conclusion: why is fish getting so darn expensive?
Since we've opened the door by talking about the health aspects of eating fish, it's probably worth
talking for a moment about the ethical and ecological aspects of commercial fishing. In the last half century, increased
consumer demand for seafood has pushed the catch of commercial fish to over 100 million tons a year from the world's oceans.
Fisheries now use sonar and satellite-tracking equipment to locate schools of fish, and
despite an international moratorium, sweep clean miles of ocean with gigantic
driftnets that trap
every creature in their path. Species that are not economically valuable (such as sea turtles, dolphins, and sea lions)
are discarded: over 27 million tons of aquatic animals are thrown, dead or dying, back into the ocean every year. Another
common technique used for fishing tuna is "
longline fishing," in which a fishing line up to 60 miles long is embedded with thousands of hooks
and trailed behind a single boat. Due to these and similar practices, over fishing has decimated marine ecosystems.
Currently, 25% of all the world's fish stocks are either overexploited or depleted. Another 52% is fully exploited and
in imminent danger of collapse. In all,
a total of almost 80% of the
world's fisheries are fully exploited, depleted, or in a state of collapse. A recent study that analyzed data
from five ocean basins collected since the 1950s reports that
90% of each of the world's
large ocean species (including cod, halibut, tuna, swordfish and marlin) has disappeared from the world's oceans in
recent decades.
Quite simply, we are fishing many species to the point of extinction. That means that much of the debate
on fish as food is moot. As a viable protein source for the human race, it will most likely be pushed beyond its limits
within the next one to two decades. After that, it will be a "special treat" for those who can afford it...and
who don't mind becoming living thermometers in the process. |