![]() |
||
Featured LocationsFind A SchoolNear You Arizona Culinary Institutes Arizona Culinary Schools Atlanta Culinary Schools Austin Culinary Schools Baltimore Culinary Schools Boston Culinary Schools California Culinary Arts Schools Canadian Culinary Schools Chicago School of Culinary Arts New York City Culinary Schools New York Culinary Schools Chicago Culinary School Colorado Culinary Schools Connecticut Culinary Schools CT Culinary Art Schools Miami Culinary Arts School California Culinary Arts School Michigan Culinary Arts Schools Michigan St Louis Culinary School Culinary Programs Culinary School Florida Culinary School Los Angeles Culinary Schools Canada Culinary Schools Houston Culinary Schools Illinois Culinary Schools in U.S Culinary Schools Las Vegas Culinary Schools New Jersey Culinary Schools New York City Culinary Schools North Carolina Culinary Schools Ohio Culinary Schools Online Culinary Schools Orlando Culinary Schools PA Culinary Schools Pennsylvania Culinary Schools Philadelphia Culinary Schools San Diego Culinary Schools Texas Culinary Schools Virginia Culinary Schools Washington Dallas Culinary Schools Georgia Culinary Schools Le Cordon Bleu Louisiana Culinary Schools Institute New Orleans Culinary Schools Ohio Culinary Schools Pittsburgh Culinary Institute San Francisco Culinary Schools Seattle Culinary Schools Toronto Culinary Schools Vancouver Culinary Schools |
Article Food Canning FISH BECOMING MORE EXPENSIVE BY THE DAY First blue marlin, then sailfish, and finally swordfish in the tropical Atlantic Ocean started to become scarce ever since industrialized fishing managed to ruthlessly over fish. Codfish, and flatfish off Newfoundlands Grand Banks have now become endangered. As one species was fished out, another would rise temporarily, spurred by the extra food available in the sea. Then it too, would be targeted and heavily fishes (or killed by accident when the commercial fish were caught), and driven, to dramatic population declines. Today, not only one region or ocean has been declared hopelessly
over fished, but all five of them (Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Southern
and Northern Ocean). While only a few decades ago pisciculture was never contemplated, today it is a multibillion-dollar industry in many countries including Norway, Chile, Canada, the U S A, Spain, Scotland, Israel, China, Nicaragua, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. The situation will likely continue, because now there are fewer fish then ever before. Species after species, scientists have found the same pattern; thriving populations speedily crashed as the indiscriminate commercial fishing fleets moved in. In the Gulf of Thailand, 60 percent of large finfish, sharks, and skates were killed off during the first five years of industrialized fishing. This situation was partially created by advanced engineering to locate fish schools (sonar) and governments offering loans to fishermen to buy huge modern factory boats equipped with the latest technology. In developing countries fishermen simply throw in dynamite and dead fish float to the surface for easy gathering. In the process the whole aquaculture under the sea is destroyed forever. The fish had no chance of survival. In the past, fishermen working with primitive tools and active close to shore were limited in their efforts to catch huge amounts of fish, and the fish had a chance to survive. It is puzzling how Canada allows Portuguese, Spanish, even
Japanese factory boats to sail to the Grand Banks off Newfoundland which
at one time teemed with cod, but now cannot even feed a fishermen and
their families. The cod stocks have been so decimated that scientists claim that there will never be a return to normal levels. Consider the proportions of this tragedy since for more than 500 years cod was plentiful enough to sustain several countries fisheries, and Canada used to export substantial quantities of salted cod to the Caribbean. Now, we import cod from Norway! Such a situation would have been unimaginable in the 1980s. How this happened was a simple case of greed and over fishing and failing to heed the advise of marine scientists. Salmon runs on the west coast are also declining at alarming rates, Government hatcheries release million, if nor billions of fingerlings annually, but fewer and fewer are retuning to hatch. The only logical conclusion is that they are being caught before they have a chance to return. Shark populations are also in terrible shape, partly the result
of them being caught in kilometres of lines set for commercial fishing,
but also because of the growing and barbaric practice of shark-fining:
sharks are pulled out of the water just long enough for the fishermen
to slice off fins and tails for the cartilage remedies and food popular
in Hong-Kong and China. The finless sharks are retuned to the ocean, where,
unable to navigate, they perish. The repercussions of this rape of nature are unpredictable, but certainly harmful to all. Fifty years ago, the Baltic Sea was full of big tuna and whales;
today the biggest feature in its waters is jellyfish. It is in effect,
a sea without fish! http://www.foodreference.com/html/artfish.html
|
Culinary SchoolsFind a SchoolNear You California Culinary Academy Cooking and Hospitality Institute of Chicago Florida Culinary Institute Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts - Atlanta Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts - Miami Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts - Las Vegas Le Cordon Bleu College of Culinary Arts - Minneapolis/St. Paul Pennsylvania Culinary Institute Texas Culinary Academy Culinary Programs Resources Culinary ArticlesCharlie TrotterAnn Gingrass Julia Child Frank Stitt Charlie Palmer Emeril Lagasse Tanya Holland Paul Prudhomme Food Dictionary History of Tamales About Chocolate Pantry Staples Sauces About Chocolate Freeze-Drying Pasta History American Salad Pasta History Cleaning Produce Outdoor Grilling Whole Grain Avocados Beef Food Canning Fish How Safe? Wisdom New Leaf GM Food Thai Cooking Curry Fish Tales Sicily Food and Dining Current Trends Tea Food and Lifestyles Knives Temperature Omega 3 Carbohydrates Age Old Obsession Egg Handling Handbook Strawberries Own a Restaurant Sushi Italian Cuisine Vegetables and Fruits Afternoon Tea Australia Wine Saffron Food Safety Spanish Cuisine |
|
|
||
|
Home | Updated Privacy | Terms of Use | Contact Us | Sitemap © Copyright, 2003 - 2012. Culinary Schools - Culinary Arts All Rights Reserved [suggest a site] |