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Tuna |
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All reports explain that Tuna has high levels of
mercury. Tuna, like Salmon, is a predatory fish and a big fish.
Smaller fish have smaller amounts of mercury and toxins. The bigger
fish eat the smaller fish and the toxins continue to
accumulate in the bigger fish over time as it grows older and even bigger. Tuna,
like Salmon, is also a fatty fish and contaminants are stored in the higher
fat ratio of these fish.
This goes for canned Tuna as well. Reports indicate that Albacore White Canned Tuna has by far the worst levels of mercury, in some studies the levels far exceeded even standards set by the government. Women of child bearing years including teenage women (pregnant now or hoping to get pregnant one day, nursing) and young children should avoid Tuna. Fish and Seafood: Charting a Course for the Safest Choices, CHEC However, Delicious Organics offers Vital Choice Albacore White Tuna because we feel confident that this is the safest we can find and that it is okay in moderation for most people (still pregnant and nursing women, children and others at higher risk might want to opt for Vital Choice Salmon instead.) Vital Choice does not use nets to catch the fish. The deeper the water, the bigger the fish. Instead they troll catch smaller surface Tuna that have less contamination. The canned tuna is also cooked only once to preserve the high omega 3 value. Most other canned fish that are cooked twice, have higher mercury levels and lower omega 3 levels. If you're craving your tuna fish, this is the only one to eat.
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Letter from Vital Choice founder, Randy Hartnell, in response to my concern with eating and offering Tuna and Halibut with all the latest warnings about those fish, particularly canned Albacore Tuna:
From: Randy Hartnell Hi Annie, The University of Oregon just completed a study of troll (hook and line) caught Pacific albacore and found the average mercury levels to be 0.14 ppm across all samples. Significantly, it also confirmed the relationship between size/age of the fish and it's mercury level. As you know we select only the smallest of the these fish so can confidently state that our tuna is among the cleanest you will find anywhere. It is not mercury "free" (there is no such thing) but levels are well below those which are considered hazardous and, in my opinion, more than offset by the health benefits of eating it. You frequently read warnings about Albacore because commercial packers use larger fish, sometimes exceeding 1 ppm. Besides being higher in mercury, they are twice-cooked resulting in radically lower omega 3 levels. We apply the same logic and practice to our halibut. We buy only the smallest fish--10 to 20 lbs, well below the 40 lb AVERAGE sold to the general market. I'm currently at a conference in Tucson and don't have access to our latest testing but believe our halibut tested in the 0.07 to 0.20 range. comparable to the albacore. It is my belief that one serving of each per week would be perfectly safe and healthy. Best, Randy |
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What is the difference between supermarket and Vital Choice custom canned troll-caught Albacore Tuna?To optimize the purity of
Vital Choice albacore tuna, they purchase only from fishermen and boats they
know, so they are aware how and where the fish are caught, processed and
stored prior to their taking possession. In addition, they select only
the smallest of the available troll-caught fish. Not only does hook-and-line
harvest attract the "cleaner" surface-dwelling juvenile fish, but it is also
more sustainable than alternative methods. What is the mercury content of the Vital Choice Tuna?Recent test results on our albacore showed NO DETECT for PCBs
and an average total mercury level of .14 parts per million (ppm). This is
less than one-sixth of the FDA's recommended "action level" of 1 ppm, and
one-third of the .5 ppm average amount recently found in a sampling of
supermarket canned tuna: Recipes: |
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