Seafood substitution, the intentional or negligent mislabeling of fish and seafood, is estimated to cost American consumers over $25 billion per year. According to some studies, more than a third of the five billion pounds of seafood consumed in the United States is mislabeled when sold. Despite being virtually omnipresent throughout every level the US food supply chain, seafood substitution is rarely prosecuted due to a woeful mismatch between the scale of the problem and the resources dedicated to enforcement. This comment explores the pervasiveness of the fish fraud problem and the inadequacies of the current response before developing a “crowd-sourced” enforcement model to realign the economics of the seafood industry in order to reduc...
How do new federal guidelines for food safety affect the behavior of seafood processors? How well ar...
The United States is the world’s largest fish importer. Recent reports, however, indicate that 25–30...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Ov...
Seafood substitution, the intentional or negligent mislabeling of fish and seafood, is estimated to ...
In 2012 alone, Americans consumed approximately 4.5 billion pounds of seafood, over 90% of which was...
The United States has an enormous appetite for seafood. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis...
The seafood industry has long been plagued by the substitution of a species under a false label. Sea...
Seafood mislabeling is a widely documented problem that has significant implications for human and e...
Mandatory Country of Origin Labeling (MCOOL) was implemented on seafood in the United States on Apri...
Imagine you are seated at a nice restaurant down by the wharf where you live. You are celebrating a ...
Seafood mislabeling has numerous consequences, including economic deception and food safety risks. T...
Studies in domestic seafood consumption reveal surprising trends, as the United States continues to ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Al...
The desire for a sustainable seafood industry that protects the environment and the future of fishin...
“Up to 32% of the wild-caught seafood imported into the United States is a product of illegal or unr...
How do new federal guidelines for food safety affect the behavior of seafood processors? How well ar...
The United States is the world’s largest fish importer. Recent reports, however, indicate that 25–30...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Ov...
Seafood substitution, the intentional or negligent mislabeling of fish and seafood, is estimated to ...
In 2012 alone, Americans consumed approximately 4.5 billion pounds of seafood, over 90% of which was...
The United States has an enormous appetite for seafood. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Adminis...
The seafood industry has long been plagued by the substitution of a species under a false label. Sea...
Seafood mislabeling is a widely documented problem that has significant implications for human and e...
Mandatory Country of Origin Labeling (MCOOL) was implemented on seafood in the United States on Apri...
Imagine you are seated at a nice restaurant down by the wharf where you live. You are celebrating a ...
Seafood mislabeling has numerous consequences, including economic deception and food safety risks. T...
Studies in domestic seafood consumption reveal surprising trends, as the United States continues to ...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Al...
The desire for a sustainable seafood industry that protects the environment and the future of fishin...
“Up to 32% of the wild-caught seafood imported into the United States is a product of illegal or unr...
How do new federal guidelines for food safety affect the behavior of seafood processors? How well ar...
The United States is the world’s largest fish importer. Recent reports, however, indicate that 25–30...
This is the final version of the article. Available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.Ov...