Authors
Stefano Mariani, Andrew M Griffiths, Amaya Velasco, Kristina Kappel, Marc Jérôme, Ricardo I Perez-Martin, Ute Schröder, Veronique Verrez-Bagnis, Helena Silva, Sara G Vandamme, Belgees Boufana, Rogerio Mendes, Marc Shorten, Cat Smith, Elizabeth Hankard, Samantha A Hook, Alice S Weymer, Daryl Gunning, Carmen G Sotelo
Publication date
2015/12
Journal
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
Volume
13
Issue
10
Pages
536-540
Publisher
Ecological Society of America
Description
Over the span of a decade, genetic identification methods have progressively exposed the inadequacies of the seafood supply chain, revealing previously unrecognized levels of seafood fraud, raising awareness among the public, and serving as a warning to industry that malpractice will be detected. Here we present the outcome of the latest and largest multi‐species, transnational survey of fish labeling accuracy to date, which demonstrates an apparent sudden reduction of seafood mislabeling in Europe. We argue that recent efforts in legislation, governance, and outreach have had a positive impact on industry regulation. Coordinated, technology‐based, policy‐oriented actions can play a pivotal role in shaping a transparent, sustainable global seafood market and in bolstering healthier oceans.
Total citations
2016201720182019202020212022202320241013121912161193
Scholar articles
S Mariani, AM Griffiths, A Velasco, K Kappel, M Jérôme… - Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2015