Issues > January/February 2006 (#112) > Heavy Metal Tuna

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about PAUL MCRANDLE

Paul McRandle is National Geograhic Green Guide's Deputy Editor.

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Rustic Alaskan Salmon Loaf

Wild Alaskan salmon, fresh only in season from May to September, is available canned year-round. It is delicious in quick, easy recipes like this baked dish, which serves 6-8 people.

Two 7.5-oz. cans wild Alaskan salmon
1-1/2 cup cooked millet or wild rice, cooled
1 cup minced onion
1/2 cup minced celery
3 eggs
2 T Dijon mustard
2 T chopped fresh dill
1 T granulated garlic
3/4 t coarse salt
freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Preheat oven to 350º F. Open the cans, drain most of the liquid and place the salmon in a medium-size mixing bowl, breaking it into small pieces with a fork. Add the cooled grain, onion, celery, eggs, mustard, dill, garlic, salt and pepper and mix.

Pour into a buttered loaf pan, or mold into a loaf on a cookie sheet. Bake 45 minutes or until a knife inserted in the center comes out clean. Serve with salad or sautéed greens.

—Amy Topel

Samples of supermarket swordfish and tuna steaks from 22 states show that these seafood products still contain mercury levels unsafe for growing children and pregnant women. In September the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) announced that women living on the East and West coasts had twice as much mercury in their blood (5.9 parts per billion, or ppb) than inland women (2.4 ppb). Levels higher than 3.5 ppb may pose a threat to the woman or fetus. "I don't think that the FDA's tuna standards are protective enough of children," says Luz Claudio, Ph.D., associate professor of community medicine at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine. "Despite FDA warnings about mercury in tuna, mercury levels are high enough in 16 percent of women of child-bearing age to harm fetuses," Claudio says, referring to the risk of brain damage and learning deficits the neurotoxin poses.

"The best way to get people to make informed fish choices is to post mercury information in the stores," says Jackie Savitz, director of Oceana's Seafood Contamination Campaign, which co-sponsored the supermarket study. After prominently displaying mercury-warning posters in May 2003 in their seafood departments, Wild Oats saw no decline in overall seafood sales, according to Sonja Tuitele, director of corporate communications. Safeway also has agreed to put up signs.

Good news: A September 2005 study at Oregon State University's Seafood Laboratory found that troll-caught Pacific albacore have less than half the mercury of deep-sea albacore and about as much as chunk light tuna. "Albacore also has higher amounts of omega-3s than other varieties of tuna," notes Michael Morrissey, Ph.D., a professor of food science at Oregon State. A study by the Harvard Medical School (with National Institutes of Health funding), published in the October 2005 Environmental Health Perspectives, found that before birth and during early childhood the high omega-3 fatty acid content in fish could raise children's intelligence. Rather than avoid all fish, the researchers advised, children and women who are pregnant or of child-bearing age should eat fish low in mercury (no more than 12 ounces per week). See The Green Guide's Fish Picks card.

Filed under: Fish, mercury in fish

Green Guide 112 | January/February 2006 | For Your Health