MOTHER JONES BY E-MAIL

Why Mercury Tuna Is Still Legal

NEWS: The Bush FDA helped industry suppress the bad news about mercury. Still want fish for dinner?

September/October 2008 Issue


TOOLS

EmailE-mail article
PrintPrint article




BACKTALK

E-mail the editor





Google


First, Deborah Landvik-Fellner's hair started falling out. Then her speech began to slur and her memory grew unreliable. Her heart started fluttering, and her hands shook. One day she walked out of the supermarket and woke up surrounded by a crowd of people. She'd collapsed in the parking lot for no apparent reason. Landvik-Fellner, then 45, went to one doctor, then another, and another. None could figure out what was wrong. Finally, in 2004, after five years of weird symptoms, her husband Mike saw a TV show about a man who was poisoning his business partner with mercury, a potent toxin that can damage the heart, nervous system, and kidneys. The business partner's symptoms—shaky hands, staggering gait—reminded Mike of his wife's. On a lark, he suggested that she have her blood tested. When the results came back, they were both stunned: 48 parts per billion of mercury, nearly 10 times what the Environmental Protection Agency says is safe.

A few Google searches later, the Fellners, who own an auto shop in Rockaway, New Jersey, had solved Deborah's health mystery. For some 12 years, she'd been eating a can of albacore tuna every day, because it was one of the few foods that didn't exacerbate her Crohn's disease. (Her family, of Norwegian extraction, consumed a lot of fish anyway. "We'd think nothing of putting a piece of cod on a piece of flatbread for breakfast.") She'd never realized that most tuna sold in the United States is contaminated with the toxic heavy metal—some up to double the epa's safety benchmark.

Landvik-Fellner stopped eating tuna, and within about a year, her symptoms began to subside. But by now she was angry, and confused. If eating tuna could make your hair fall out, shouldn't the label tell you so? In 2006, she filed a lawsuit against Tri-Union Seafoods, parent company of Chicken of the Sea, alleging that the company had violated the New Jersey Consumer Fraud Act by failing to disclose that its product contained mercury.

"Toxic tort" cases are notoriously hard to win, and Landvik-Fellner faced long odds against the deep-pocketed industry. That much she knew. What she didn't anticipate was that her biggest obstacle would turn out to be the US Food and Drug Administration—the very agency responsible for protecting the public from mercury in the first place.


tuna is big business. Americans eat nearly three pounds of canned tuna per capita every year, making it the nation's second most popular seafood (behind shrimp). The government promotes it via school lunch programs, wic (the federal food program for poor women and children), and even in the fda and US Department of Agriculture dietary recommendations. It's a staple of low-carb diets. Bodybuilders binge on it. Low in fat, high in protein, canned tuna contains lots of omega-3 fatty acids that are thought to protect against heart disease and boost brain development early in life. Some tuna cans come stamped with the American Heart Association seal of approval.

But thanks to emissions from power plants and garbage incinerators, tuna also absorbs significant amounts of methylmercury, a form of mercury that concentrates in the fatty tissues of big fish and humans. Fatal in high doses, mercury at lower levels has been linked to heart disease in older men and developmental problems in babies. Tuna is not the highest-mercury fish we eat—that honor belongs to swordfish and tilefish—but it is by far the most widely consumed. "Tuna is the largest source of mercury in the diet because people eat so much of it," says Edward Groth, a scientist who has written a report on mercury in fish for the environmental groups Oceana and Mercury Policy Project.

None of this is news to federal regulators. In 1970, a New York chemistry professor tested a can of tuna in his pantry and discovered that it contained significantly more mercury than what the fda then considered safe. After running tests of its own, the agency recalled nearly 1 million cans of tuna. It also issued an "action level" under which fish with more than 0.5 parts per million (ppm) of methylmercury could be pulled from the market.

An action level is not a regulation. It doesn't require anyone to do anything. Even so, the fishing industry found the new benchmark so intolerable that it sued the fda. In 1979, drawing mostly on a National Marine Fisheries Service assessment that relaxing the guideline would "provide economic benefit" to industry, the fda doubled the level to 1 ppm, making it twice as high as what the epa (which issues mercury advisories for anglers) and the European Union consider safe. The action level in China is 0.3 ppm—more than three times more stringent than the fda's. (Tuna often exceeds even the weak US standard: In 2006, for instance, the group Defenders of Wildlife tested cans of tuna straight out of grocery stores and found that 1 in 20, particularly those imported from Latin America, had mercury above the fda action level and could, in theory, be pulled from the shelves.)

After its initial burst of activity in the 1970s, the fda seemed to lose interest in tuna. In the 1990s, it even stopped its occasional tests of store-bought fish. But after years of criticism from environmental groups and scientists, it drafted an advisory in 2000 that warned pregnant women about mercury. Tuna SurpriseThe original draft listed canned tuna as a high-mercury product. But then, fda officials met privately with representatives of the country's three largest tuna companies (Bumble Bee, Tri-Union, and StarKist), the US Tuna Foundation, and the National Food Processors Association.

The companies were very worried. The Tuna Foundation had warned the agency in private meetings that including canned tuna in the mercury advisory could cause sales to plummet nearly 25 percent, and that seafood producers "would face the distinct possibility of numerous class action lawsuits." fda focus groups also suggested that tuna consumption would fall. Sure enough, the final advisory—released after President Bush had taken office—didn't include canned tuna.

When the fda failed to come through on tougher regulations, some states stepped up with more stringent warnings. Washington, for example, warns that children under six should eat no more than half a can of albacore a week. Scientists, doctors, and environmental groups also continued to urge the fda to adopt more stringent federal warnings based on the epa's reference dose for safe mercury exposure.

In 2003, the fda did revise the mercury advisory for several kinds of fish, but again it bent the science to accommodate the industry's interests. Clark Carrington, an fda official, told the agency's Food Advisory Committee that in drawing up three categories for fish—high, medium, and low mercury—agency staffers had crafted the boundaries so that canned light tuna would end up in the low mercury group "in order to keep the market share at a reasonable level." (Canned light represents some 75 percent of the US tuna market; the rest is albacore, or white tuna, which tends to be higher in mercury.)

The new fda advisory warned pregnant and nursing women to eat no more than 6 ounces of albacore, and no more than 12 ounces of chunk light tuna, per week. The fda recommended following the same guidelines for children, with the vague suggestion that they eat "smaller portions." A 44-pound preschooler who follows the fda guideline would consume four times the mercury the epa considers safe.

The fda relayed its advisory mostly through brochures in doctors' offices, never requiring warnings in stores or on tuna cans. Still, the industry has blamed the advisory for a 10 percent drop in sales within a year, and it's worked hard to mute the message. In 2005, the tuna companies launched a $25 million campaign to counteract the fda's advisory, with full-page newspaper ads touting the brain-building benefits of omega-3 fatty acids ("Tuna: A Smart Catch") and reassuring women that "No government study has ever found unsafe levels of mercury in women or young children who eat canned tuna." (True, but none has ever looked.) David Burney, then the executive director of the US Tuna Foundation, told the New York Times in 2005 that his wife ate a can of albacore tuna almost every day while pregnant, and that his nine-year-old triplets ate several cans of albacore a week.

The US Tuna Foundation (which recently merged with the National Fisheries Institute) also enlisted spokespeople such as celebrity pediatrician Dr. Lillian Beard, who earned $6,000 a month for two days of work promoting canned tuna, plus $10,000 to serve on a nutrition advisory council for six months. In October 2004, Beard wrote a column in Pediatric News that suggested giving children "a little warm milk or tuna fish before bedtime" to help make them sleepy. She made no mention of her industry ties.

The US Tuna Foundation also underwrote science to help make its case, in one instance picking up nearly the entire $500,000 cost of a 2005 Harvard Center for Risk Analysis study and using the results to suggest that Americans weren't eating enough fish. The Center for Consumer Freedom, a nonprofit founded by the tobacco industry to fight restaurant smoking bans, similarly rose in tuna's defense, creating a website, FishScam.com, that claims the fda standards are actually overcautious.

Meanwhile, reporters who have written about mercury in tuna have found themselves in hot water with the industry. The National Fisheries Institute and the US Tuna Foundation have waged aggressive and public attacks on people like Marian Burros at the New York Times (who earlier this year published a story warning of mercury in sushi tuna) and Larry Wheeler at USA Today. When I contacted the Fisheries Institute, its spokesman, Gavin Gibbons, first grilled me about whether this story had been prompted by an environmental group (it wasn't) and then warned that all our conversations would be recorded and the transcripts posted on the organization's website, along with any correspondence. In response to my specific questions, Gibbons emailed that linking high blood mercury levels to any kind of symptoms "is an unproven assertion that flies in the face of independent and proven scientific knowledge about canned tuna and all seafood's proven benefits...It is irresponsible to perpetuate anecdotal tales of high seafood consumption causing health concerns when those types of stories contradict published science showing the health benefits of eating fish at least twice per week."


luke lindley is one of the people Gibbons says it would be irresponsible to write about. As an undergrad at Stanford, the now-24-year-old medical student was "deeply immersed" in bodybuilding, so he ate "tuna for breakfast, tuna for lunch, tuna for dinner" for years. In 2003, he began having trouble with his memory. His hair fell out and he suffered gastrointestinal problems so severe he ended up taking a year off med school. Finally—after seeing a news report on mercury in tuna—he asked his doctor to test a sample of his hair. According to another doctor who reviewed the records, it had mercury levels higher than in any patient the doctor had ever seen. "I thought I was eating a low-fat, healthy diet," says Lindley. "As it turned out, I was ingesting enough mercury to make my hair fall out."

Dr. Jane Hightower has made something of a cottage industry out of treating fish consumers suffering from elevated mercury levels. In 2003 the San Francisco physician published a paper in Environmental Health Perspectives after surveying her entire patient load and testing more than 100 people whose questionnaires suggested they consumed a lot of fish. The majority had blood mercury levels well above what the epa considers safe. One was a 10-year-old named Matthew Davis who suffered serious neurological problems his doctors suspected were from the three to six ounces of canned albacore he ate daily. His fingers curled involuntarily, and his hands shook when he tried to write. The problems mostly resolved after he quit eating tuna.

Dr. Michael Gochfeld, a professor in environmental and occupational health sciences at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School in New Jersey, says that mercury poisoning from fish is probably underreported because doctors don't know to look for it. His clinic at the medical school, he says, has been seeing more cases—at least half a dozen a year. People come in complaining of slurred speech, clumsiness, and vision problems. "It is usually related to fish," he says.

Yet, like the tuna industry, the fda says there's nothing to worry about. "There are no confirmed cases of adverse effects from methylmercury in commercial fish in the United States," says Stephanie Kwisnek, an fda spokeswoman. "There are infrequent anecdotal reports in the media that are virtually impossible to confirm. The fda does not track them on any kind of a formal basis."


deborah landvik-fellner's Chicken of the Sea lawsuit should have been fairly straightforward. That she ate a lot of canned tuna is indisputable, as is the fact that she had steeply elevated levels of mercury in her blood. Whether mercury caused all of her symptoms, whether Tri-Union ought to be held responsible for the effects of what they call her "abnormal consumption," even the definition of "abnormal," are the kind of disputed facts usually left to a jury. But so far, Landvik-Fellner hasn't come anywhere near a jury—in good part because the Bush fda has worked to protect industry from claims like hers.

In the Landvik-Fellner case, Tri-Union has used an increasingly popular legal strategy, arguing that her claim was "preempted" by federal law. The argument goes like this: If a product is regulated by the federal government, however weakly, consumers shouldn't be allowed to sue—and states should be prohibited from passing regulations or issuing health and safety warnings more stringent than the feds'.

But Tri-Union went one step further. It argued that Landvik-Fellner's case was preempted because the fda had refused to require warning labels on tuna—in other words, when the feds fail to regulate a product, that, too, can preempt state law. It was an argument familiar to top officials at the fda. In fact, Daniel Troy, the agency's chief counsel from 2001 to 2004, was a lawyer who'd spent most of his career in the private sector suing the fda on behalf of drug and food companies. Troy, who was a leading proponent of the preemption doctrine, essentially ran the agency for more than a year before President Bush appointed Lester Crawford, a former vice president of the National Food Processors Association, as fda commissioner. During his tenure, Troy invited big companies to bring him cases in which the agency could help defeat anti-industry lawsuits using the preemption argument. One of those cases involved a suit by the California attorney general's office seeking to force tuna companies to disclose their product's mercury content on the label. A lawyer representing the companies suggested to Troy that a letter from Crawford might help the industry's preemption argument. The lawyer helpfully enclosed a lengthy memo outlining the points the commissioner should include.

In August 2005, a letter precisely hitting all of the tuna lawyer's points arrived on the desk of California attorney general Bill Lockyer. Tuna companies quickly introduced it in court. Barely a month later, Crawford resigned from the fda in connection with criminal charges that he'd misreported his ownership of stock in fda-regulated companies.

But his letter lived on in the courts: In the California case, a lengthy trial featuring various industry spokespeople—including pediatrician Beard, who was paid $5,000 to testify that if people got worried about mercury in tuna, they might eat more junk food—ended with the judge citing Crawford's letter as a key factor in ruling for the tuna companies. And the letter made another appearance in Landvik-Fellner's case: Tri-Union's lawyers have brought it up as evidence that her lawsuit is preempted by federal regulations. After a year of legal wrangling, in January 2007 a US District Court judge agreed with the industry—and once again the ruling cited what the judge called Crawford's "persuasive" letter.

Fellner appealed the case to the 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, and on August 19, just after this story was published in our print edition, the court handed down a remarkable decision in her favor. A three-judge panel agreed with her arguments that a letter from the FDA commissioner written at the behest of the tuna company's lawyers was not the sort of federal action that could trump the state law. The court also scoffed at the notion that the FDA's advisory on mercury in fish qualified as a federal regulation, which requires formal proceedings, public criticism, and other serious vetting. "[W]e fail to see how an educational campaign might preempt Fellner's lawsuit," the panel wrote.

In fact, the court found that the New Jersey laws that Fellner sued under complemented, rather than conflicted with, the federal guidelines on mercury. And in a conclusion that is no doubt giving the tuna industry fits, the court noted that contrary to the industry's pleas, it would be fairly simple to come up with a warning label that would comply with both the FDA and New Jersey law. That last point may have implications beyond Fellner's case.

The original Proposition 65 litigation in California, brought by the state attorney general to force the tuna companies to put warning labels on tuna cans, is currently on appeal in the California state courts. Oral arguments haven't been scheduled yet, but lawyers in the attorney general's office have already alerted the appellate court of the decision in the Fellner case. The California courts don't have to follow the federal ones, but they usually give them quite a bit of deference. If the California courts do align with the 3rd Circuit, they could open the door to states requiring warning labels about mercury on tuna cans. Fellner, for her part, is thrilled with the outcome. "People are feeding their children tuna fish. There are still a lot of people out there who don't know," she says.

Stephanie Mencimer is a reporter at the Mother Jones Washington, DC, Bureau.

Photo: Chris Buck | Cartoon by Steve Brodner


 

Post a Comment

Your Name: 

Your Comment: 
 
Please press "Submit" only once to avoid double-posting.
All HTML formatting is removed from comments.
Read the Mother Jones community rules here.

Comments:

Granted most all of your larger ocean fish are laden with mercury. But so are the local lakes in the U.S.A. from all of the coal power plants. To date ones best protection in my view is if you are going to consume ocean fish, the smaller the species the better. And I would do so after taking like 5 grams of Chlorella which absorbs and detox's heavy metals in general.
Posted by:Robert G. BriantSeptember 3, 2008 7:34:14 PMRespond ^
It seems to me you are basing your comments on anecdotal information -- a woman with Crohn's can have many issues. In the large scientific studies that have been done, e.g. in the Seychelles, the Avon Study in England, eating fish was shown to be good for the health of mothers and children. I would think eating little else besides cans of tuna would be bad for anyone, in terms of general nutrition. The FDA used a somewhat bogus study to set their mercury limits in fish, a study done in the Faeroe Islands, where the source of dietary contaminants, including mercury, was whale blubber, not fish. They then built in a 1000% safety factor, setting limits much lower than where any problem was seen. A recent Harvard study has shown that scare stories, such as yours, has stopped poorer women from eating fish while pregnant, because canned tuna is what they can afford. This has a direct correlation to lowering the IQ of their babies. If fish was bad for you, how could the Japanese - who have admittedly higher mercury levels than we do - live longer, healthier lives than Americans, with half the health care costs? They eat fish every day, and they smoke! I don't see that their children are having IQ problems either. I think that you and the other journalists who write these mercury scare stories should do some more homework -- explain to us why in countries where fish is eaten far more than here (Mediterranean diet for example as well as Japan) people are healthier and longer lived. Most Americans eat junk food for dinner, and you're telling them that's better than eating fish?
Posted by:NancySeptember 4, 2008 1:14:40 PMRespond ^
Fortunately, tuna stocks are depleted to the point it won't be a problem much longer.

As Paul Watson says, we really shouldn't eat ANY fish.
Posted by:David Traver AdolphusSeptember 5, 2008 4:01:16 PMRespond ^
The question is whether to eat fish, or not.

A portion of the mercury in the environment becomes methylmercury which can have negative effects on the nervous system. Methylmercury is most often introduced into humans through the consumption of fish. Because of these concerns, fish advisories are widespread.

However, fish provides many essential nutrients and minerals, including dietary selenium. Studies at the Energy & Environmental Research Center (EERC) Center for Air Toxic Metals® (CATM®) are investigating the critical issue of interactions between dietary selenium and mercury. It appears from these studies that the critical issue is having sufficient levels of selenium in the diet. Selenium binds tightly with the mercury making it inert.

Results seem to show that mercury’s effects are not apparent when adequate or rich sources of selenium are consumed at the same time. Note that eating whale meat, a custom of the Faroe Islanders, resulted in mercury poisoning. Whale meat is very high in mercury, and deficient in selenium.

While these studies are ongoing, their results help to explain mercury’s toxic effects and lead to the conclusion that consumption of ocean fish may not pose as great a risk as once thought, and indeed may be an essential source of selenium for protection from other sources of mercury in the diet. Moreover, avoidance of fish can deprive the body of the beneficial effects of many important nutrients, including selenium and omega-3 fatty acids.
For more information, see http://www.undeerc.org/catm/newsletters.html (Volume 12 Issues #2)
Posted by:keith mooreSeptember 5, 2008 4:46:16 PMRespond ^
Looks like a couple of employees of the tuna industry have been tasked to post comments on negative articles (see above). For myself and my family, I am convinced tuna is dangerous and unhealthy. No more for us!
Posted by:Robert McArthurSeptember 5, 2008 5:45:02 PMRespond ^
My comment actual is on the "Immune to Reason" article in the Sept/Oct. 2008 issue. This too is linked to mercury. Thimerosal is 47% ethylmercury. It was in many shots from around 1990 (maybe earlier, I don't know) until the government asked the manufacturers to voluntarily begin removing it in 2000. Some shots contained doses of this so called preservative may have remained to be dispensed for years. What was on the label was 1% thimerosal, but nobody calculated how much mercury our babies, toddlers and children were recieving. My son, got his first brain injury from a negligent OBGYN who pulled on his head for 50 minutes with a vaccuum extractor. Dispite this they pressured me heavily, in my own tramatized and heavily drugged state to begin innoculating him, after he was intubated as his did not even breath on his own for several days. I asked as we went in for 2 mo, 4mo, 6mo, 12 mo. shots if this thimerosal was in the shots and I was assured by our Pediatrician it was not. My son was showing adverse reaction to innoculations which were conveniently ignored, as reporting them is "optional". (and is should not be). My baby was sick, sick a lot, I could barely count 4-6 days between viruses and another one would set in. He never could nurse properly so I was sent home with an industrial strength pump. When I saw "Mothering Magazine's" article on mercury in the shots I began to connect the dots. Years later when I traced the lot numbers turns out Alex (who only recieved vaccines for what I considered life threatening illnesses) got a whopping 375mcg in his first 22 months of life, an astounding amount. The EPA would consider this breaking the law child abuse if a parent was to give this poison to their child. This explained the clear language regression and many illness's my child contracted, as this thimerosal was weaking his immune system and interfering with his development. I began a regiment of detoxification and optimal nutrition and he very slowly began to get back on track. Unfortunately industry was too clearly to take thimerosal out of all shots, the neurological impairment charts would have dropped off so suddenly that they surely would have been found culpible. Instead industry states that they can't possibly make enough flu shots with thimerosal and they still put it in those vaccines. Simultaneously AAP (american academy of pediatrics) starting saying that infants as young as 6 mo. should be getting flu shots. If you are considering a flu shot - demand to see the warning label dispensed with all RX drugs including all shots. Bring a magnifying glass to read the fine print. When my city was giving out free flu vaccines I went into the room and asked to see the insert. As a footnote it was listed that thimerosal was in these shots - it was not listed under ingredients, as it should have been. If industry - and this government that appears to be controlled by industry want people to have confidence in vaccines then they need to make them safe. I do not have enough confidence in my governement, or any of the 3 pediatricians we have used in the past to innoculate my child - I am not misinformed, or underinformed. Read "Evidence of Harm" if you still have confidence in the governement beaurocracies set up to protect your health. It will shed any remaining confidence you may have. What was missing from Author Allen's article was parading out a few kids who have suffered through childhood illnesses and not had good outcomes. Yes there are some out there, but weigh that against the legions of children growing up with mild to moderate to severe neurological impairments (just look at the amount of money public schools spend on full time aids) who "mystery" conditions will never be diagnosed properly. kc
Posted by:kaseySeptember 7, 2008 7:14:03 PMRespond ^
Apparently Gavin Gibbons is making the rounds on blogs which link to your article. I found it quite amusing. Did you know that Gavin a a former Senior Producer for Fox News?
Posted by:The OperatorSeptember 8, 2008 6:24:02 AMRespond ^
Well I guess Deregulation doesn`t work that well and we all knew what a joke Bush`s Clean air and Water act was This makes me furious Big increase in Autism may be from this
Posted by:CLASSYKARENOctober 5, 2008 6:25:59 AMRespond ^
Obviouosly, this still is and has been, Bushs' FDA, not only as regards the Mercury issue, but many others as well, that always seem to rule on the side of industry. Economics 101 as the Bush league would say. Seems like the rest of the world thinks sound science and common sense should be the backbone and the guide for the integrety of FDA's interface with its influence on our society. Hopefully this new administration will rewite the innumerable wrongs of the past eight years worth of this agencies mis-deeds. We are all ultimately dependent on a well functioning and life sustaining environment...its that simple...really!
Posted by:Mike O'NeillOctober 27, 2008 1:31:16 PMRespond ^
Never again will I eat any tuna. In our consumerist society, that is the only way to put these bad guys out of business.
Posted by:Travis FramptonOctober 27, 2008 1:45:23 PMRespond ^
It makes sense to eat lower on the food chain.

According to a national Vegetarian Resource Group Poll conducted by Harris Interactive, nearly 15 percent of Americans say they never eat fish or seafood.

Significant environmental damage results from livestock agriculture, often driving many other species into extinction. The existence of dodo birds was first recorded in the early 1500s by Portuguese Sailors. The dodo, which weighed about 50 pounds, was incapable of defending itself and could not flee from its enemies, since it lacked the ability to fly. Large numbers of these birds were killed by human beings for food. Additionally, pigs that were brought to the islands destroyed a significant portion of the dodos' eggs, creating a severe decline in the dodo population. The species became extinct by the 18th century.

The Steller's sea cow once inhabited the coastal waters of the Commander Islands in the Bering Sea. Russian Sealers, who were the first to record the existence of these creatures in 1741, estimated the entire population to be about 5,000. Their meat was considered a delicacy by Russian sealers, who decimated the entire species by 1768.

The Labrador duck has been extinct since 1875. This species formerly inhabited the coastal regions of northeastern Canada. The extinction of the passenger pigeon was caused by the American westward expansion in the second half of the 19th century. As passenger pigeons became a popular food item, the numbers of this species rapidly diminished. Millions were slaughtered each year and shipped by railway cars to be sold in city markets. Another bird to become extinct because of its use as food was the heath hen, which became extinct about 1932.

The pacific sardine lives along the coasts of North America from Alaska to southern California. Sardines, once a major part of the California fishing industry, are now considered to be "commercially extinct." Another species classified as "commercially extinct" is the New England haddock. Ecologists have also been concerned about the significant reduction in finfish, the Atlantic bluefin tuna, Lake Erie cisco, and blackfins that inhabit Lakes Huron and Michigan.

More than 200,000 porpoises are killed every year by fishermen seeking tuna in the Pacific. Sea turtles are similarly killed in Caribbean shrimp operations. Some animals are killed because, as carnivores, they compete with the human predator for the right to kill other animals for food, including wild game and domesticated species raised by livestock ranchers. Alaskan hunters are eager to reduce the wolf population in their state because this animal is a predator of moose.

Cougars, coyotes and wolves are considered a menace to the cattle and sheep industries, and livestock ranchers have engaged in a large-scale campaign to exterminate them. Two species of wolves are now endangered, and very few wolves can be found in the United States except in Alaska and northeastern Minnesota. The relatively small number of eagles in the U.S. is largely due to the destruction of this species by livestock ranchers, particularly those in the sheep business.

Herbivorous animals that inhabit rangeland areas are also killed by the livestock industry because they compete with cattle arid sheep for food. Large numbers of kangaroos are being exterminated in Australia, while in the United States livestock ranchers seek to destroy wild horses, wild burros, deer, elk, antelope and prairie dogs.

An ever-increasing amount of beef eaten in the United States is imported from Central and South America. To provide pasture for cattle, these countries have been clearing their priceless tropical rainforests. In 1960, when the U. S. first began to import beef, Central America was blessed with 130,000 square miles of rainforest. But now, less than 80,000 square miles remain. At this rate, the entire tropical rainforests of Central America will be gone in another forty years.

These tropical rainforests are among the world's most precious natural resources. Amounting to only 30 percent of the world's forests, the rainforests contain 80 percent of the earth's land vegetation, and account for a substantial percentage of the earth's oxygen supplies. These forests are the oldest ecosystems on earth and have developed extreme ecological richness. Half of all species on earth live in the moist tropical rainforests. But these jewels of nature are being rapidly destroyed to provide land on which cattle can be grazed for the American fast-food market.

The current rate of species extinction is 1,000 species a year, and most of that is due to the destruction of rainforests and related habitats in the tropics.
Posted by:Vasu MurtiOctober 27, 2008 3:31:20 PMRespond ^
This accurante and well written story is but the tip of the iceberg. Remember aspertame and god knows how many defective drugs that have been foisted on us by the unregulated greedheads.
Posted by:joab kuninOctober 27, 2008 4:35:00 PMRespond ^
The following quotes, facts, figures and statistics are excerpted from Please Don't Eat the Animals (2007) by Jennifer Horsman and Jaime Flowers:

"A reduction in beef and other meat consumption is the most potent single act you can take to halt the destruction of our environment and preserve our natural resources. Our choices do matter: What's healthiest for each of us personally is also healthiest for the life support system of our precious, but wounded planet."

---John Robbins, author, Diet for a New America, and President, EarthSave Foundation

One study puts animal waste in the United States to between 2.4 trillion to 3.9 trillion pounds per year. The United states produces 15,000 pounds of manure per person. This is 130 times the amount of waste produced by the entire human population of the United States.

A 1,000-cow dairy can produce approximately 120,000 pounds of waste per day. This is the functional equivalent of the amount of sanitary waste produced by a city of 20,000 people.

A 20,000-chicken factory produces about 2.4 million pounds of manure a year. Poultry factories are one of the fastest growing industries throughout Asia.

One pig excretes nearly three gallons of waste per day, or 2.5 times the average human's daily total. One hog farm with 50,000 pigs in France produces more waste than the entire city of Los Angeles, and some pig farms are much larger.

Factory farm pollution is the primary source of damage to coastal waters in North and South America, Europe, and Asia. Scientists report that over sixty percent of the coastal waters in the United States are moderately to severely degraded from factory farm nutrient pollution. This pollution creates oxygen-depleted dead zones, which are huge areas of ocean devoid of aquatic life.

Meat production causes deforestation, which then contributes to global warming. Trees convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, and the destruction of forests around the globe to make room for grazing cattle furthers the greenhouse effect. The Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations reports that the annual rate of tropical deforestation has increased from 9 million hectares in 1980 to 16.8 million hectares in 1990, and unfortunately, this destruction has accelerated since then. By 1994, a staggering 200 million hectares of rainforest had been destroyed in South America just for cattle.

"The impact of countless hooves and mouths over the years has done more to alter the type of vegetation and land forms of the West than all the water projects, strip mines, power plants, freeways, and sub-division developments combined."

---Philip Fradkin, in Audubon, National Audubon Society, New York

Agricultural meat production generates air pollution. As manure decomposes, it releases over 400 volatile organic compounds, many of which are extremely harmful to human health. Nitrogen, a major by-product of animal wastes, changes to ammonia as it escapes into the air, and this is a major source of acid rain. Worldwide, livestock produce over 30 million tons of ammonia. Hydrogen sulfide, another chemical released from animal waste, can cause irreversible neurological damage, even at low levels.

The world Conservation Union lists over 1,000 different fish species that are threatened or endangered. According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) estimate, over 60 percent of the world's fish species are either fully exploited or depleted. Commercial fish populations of cod, hake, haddock, and flounder have fallen by as much as 95 percent in the north Atlantic.

The United States and Europe lose several billion tons of topsoil each year from cropland and grazing land, and 84 percent of this erosion is caused by livestock agriculture. While this soil is theoretically a renewable resource, we are losing soil at a much faster rate than we are able to replace it. It takes 100 to 500 years to produce one inch of topsoil, but due to livestock grazing and feeding, farming areas can lose up to six inches of topsoil a year.

Livestock production affects a startling 70 to 85 percent of the land area of the United States, United Kingdom, and the European Union. That includes the public and private rangeland used for grazing, as well as the land used to produce the crops that feed the animals. By comparison, urbanization only affects 3 percent of the United States land area, slightly larger for the European Union and the United Kingdom. Meat production consumes the world's land resources.

Half of all fresh water worldwide is used for thirsty livestock. Producing eight ounces of beef requires an unimaginable 25,000 liters of water, or the water necessary for one pound of steak equals the water consumption of the average household for a year.

The United States government spends $10 million each year to kill an estimated 100,000 wild animals, including coyotes, foxes, bobcats, badgers, bears, and mountain lions just to placate ranchers who don't want these animals killing their livestock. The cost far outweighs the damage to livestock that these predators cause.

The Worldwatch Institute estimates one pound of steak from a steer raised in a feedlot costs: five pounds of grain, a whopping 2,500 gallons of water, the energy equivalent of a gallon of gasoline, and about 34 pounds of topsoil.

33 percent of our nation's raw materials and fossil fuels go into livestock destined for slaughter. In a vegan economy, only 2 percent of our resources will go to the production of food.

"It seems disingenuous for the intellectual elite of the first world to dwell on the subject of too many babies being born in the second- and third-world nations while virtually ignoring the overpopulation of cattle and the realities of a food chain that robs the poor of sustenance to feed the rich a steady diet of grain-fed meat."

---Jeremy Rifkin, author, Beyond Beef: The Rise and Fall of the Cattle Culture, and president of the Greenhouse Crisis Foundation

Lester Brown of the Overseas Development Council calculates that if Americans reduced their meat consumption by only 10 percent per year, it would free at least 12 million tons of grain for human consumption--or enough to feed 60 million people.
Posted by:Vasu MurtiOctober 27, 2008 7:21:05 PMRespond ^
Thank you for writing this. While in graduate school, I did a research project on mercury in fish during pregnancy and found information that matched perfectly with many things you said -- completely changing my perception of tuna.

Tuna had by far the highest mercury levels of any "mid-risk" fish. The unfortunate byproduct of this set-up is that existing fish consumption recommendations for pregnant women is limited to 2 servings a week. This recommendation is based on the assumption that those 2 servings will be tuna (which for many it will). But if you eat any of the numerous fish with substantially lower mercury levels, you can consume fish pretty much at will during pregnancy (based on recommended maximum intake of mercury and average levels in the fish).

When you combine this with evidence from major medical journals indicating that youngsters whose mothers' ate 3 or more fish meals a week while pregnant have average IQ scores 2 points higher than those who did not, it shines light on another thing this industry should not be allowed to get away with.
Posted by:CaitlinOctober 27, 2008 8:08:51 PMRespond ^
Nancy

As an individual who has been living with the effects of heavy metal poisoning I find so much wrong with your comments on this article. However, I won't waste my time..

So I'll just say... Keep up the good work Stephanie!

It seems to me you are basing your comments on anecdotal information -- a woman with Crohn's can have many issues. In the large scientific studies that have been done, e.g. in the Seychelles, the Avon Study in England, eating fish was shown to be good for the health of mothers and children. I would think eating little else besides cans of tuna would be bad for anyone, in terms of general nutrition. The FDA used a somewhat bogus study to set their mercury limits in fish, a study done in the Faeroe Islands, where the source of dietary contaminants, including mercury, was whale blubber, not fish. They then built in a 1000% safety factor, setting limits much lower than where any problem was seen. A recent Harvard study has shown that scare stories, such as yours, has stopped poorer women from eating fish while pregnant, because canned tuna is what they can afford. This has a direct correlation to lowering the IQ of their babies. If fish was bad for you, how could the Japanese - who have admittedly higher mercury levels than we do - live longer, healthier lives than Americans, with half the health care costs? They eat fish every day, and they smoke! I don't see that their children are having IQ problems either. I think that you and the other journalists who write these mercury scare stories should do some more homework -- explain to us why in countries where fish is eaten far more than here (Mediterranean diet for example as well as Japan) people are healthier and longer lived. Most Americans eat junk food for dinner, and you're telling them that's better than eating fish?
Posted by:NancySeptember 4, 2008 1:14:40 PM
Posted by:JackOctober 29, 2008 1:25:12 PMRespond ^
So does this apply to farm raised fish also?
Posted by:RICKOctober 30, 2008 8:35:18 PMRespond ^
Vasu: If you knew any chemistry, you would know that your quote "Nitrogen, a major by-product of animal wastes, changes to ammonia as it escapes into the air, and this is a major source of acid rain." is totally false.
1. If nitrogen turned into ammonia when it excapes into the air, all we would be breathing would be ammonia, as the air IS 78% nitrogen.
2."this is a major source of acid rain"
This to is totally wrong. Mix ammonia with water (a common component of rain) and you make ammonium hydroxide. This is a strong base, just the opposite of an acid. In fact it will neutralize acids.
You totally discredit your arguments when you include such bizar incorrect statements.
Posted by:John ChristensenNovember 10, 2008 2:23:29 AMRespond ^

Jail.org - Inmate Search
Criminal records, instant public records & people search & current court records. www.jail.org

U.S. Public Records Search
Search County & State Court Records, Criminal records, Vital and Adoption Records www.PublicRecordsInfo.com

Records.com - People Search
Public Records and Background Checks. Instantly Search Criminal Records, Addresses and Court Records www.Records.com

Court Records & County Records
Find Instant Public Records, Criminal Records as Well as County Property Records Search. www.PublicRecordsIndex.com

Real Viagra, Cialis Levitra Deal
Dare to compare our competitive prices. Free overnight delivery to new patients in the US. No catch 22!

Bob's Red Mill Organic Flaxseed Meal
In addition to its great nutty flavor, our flaxseed meal is high in fiber and packed with essential Omega-3 Fatty Acids.

PEACEFUL HOLIDAY GIFTS
Items featuring the 1958 peace symbol shirts, buttons, hoodys, signs, stickers, pins...more.
union made • detroit peacebuttons.info

End the genocide in Darfur
Every day, Darfuris face rape, murder, and starvation. Be a Voice for Darfur: tell Obama to end the suffering.
















Chambliss Wins

Miscellaneous Felix Salmon Review

Remembrance of Houses Future

The Shootout in Mumbai


More MoJo voices...



bookIN PRINT

CLICK HERE
for more great reading

headphones IN TUNE
New music every issue

CLICK TO LISTEN

Advertise Liberally

This article has been made possible by the Foundation for National Progress, the Investigative Fund of Mother Jones, and gifts from generous readers like you.

© 2008 The Foundation for National Progress

About Us   Support Us   Advertise   Ad Policy   Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Subscribe   RSS