Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Yes! You Can Buy Sustainable Seafood Online

If you enjoy fresh swordfish, live Dungeness crab, fresh salmon, abalone, diver scallops and other quality seafood, you’ve probably heard a lot about “sustainable seafood” lately. It’s a hot topic on all the Food Network and Cooking Channel cooking shows, and you can’t miss the labels on the restaurant menus. Whether you buy swordfish, crab and diver scallops in your local fish department or buy seafood online from a reputable online seafood market, you can make sustainable seafood choices that will help maintain the supply of seafood and reduce damage to the environment caused by overfishing in general and particular fishing methods. These tips can help you make sustainable seafood choices so that you can continue enjoying fresh king salmon, fresh swordfish, fresh albacore tuna and all your other favorite seafood for a long time to come.
Buy from Someone You Trust
There are lots of places you can buy seafood online, but many of them are wholesale suppliers that sell lots of frozen, imported, low-quality fish, often passing them off as higher-priced domestic and sustainable fish. If you decide to buy seafood online, look for an online seafood market that is an actual, physical market located near the ocean. Check them out online – not just their website, but on websites where their customer reviews will tell you all you need to know about their quality, service and trustworthiness. When you find swordfish for sale or buy king salmon from a trustworthy online seafood market, you can rest assured that you’ll get exactly the fish and shellfish you order.
Check a List
There are a number of organizations that maintain sustainable seafood lists to help consumers make choices about the seafood they buy. They include the Monterey Bay Aquarium-Seafood Watch and the Blue Ocean Institute Seafood Choices Guide.  You’ll find a list of seafood guides at the URI Sustainable Seafood Initiative.
One of the best ways to use a sustainable seafood list is to look up the types of seafood you most enjoy and learn about its sustainability. When you buy king salmon, for example, you’re buying a Good Alternative, according to the Seafood Watch. While some species of salmon are endangered, king salmon are carefully managed to ensure that the population of king salmon remains stable or increases. Ablacore tuna is another sustainable seafood choice with a high, stable population and well-regulated fishing industry.
It’s easy to buy sustainable seafood online when you take the time to research each online seafood market you consider. Once you find a market you can trust, learning whether or not a seafood choice is sustainable is as easy as asking.

1 comment:

  1. Nice Article it provided me with essential information about fresh seafood.
    Thanks....

    ReplyDelete