What you need to know about mercury in fish

safe-fishIf you’re pregnant, thinking about getting pregnant, or just had a baby and are breastfeeding, no doubt you’re concerned about the mercury in fish (or you should be).

As both a health writer and eco-writer, I can tell you the decision you have to make about whether or not to eat fish when you’re pregnant is really a tough one. On the one hand, fish is one of the healthiest foods you can eat. It provides high quality protein and the essential fatty acids you and your baby need for growth and development. But industrial pollution in the oceans contaminates fish with mercury, which poses a major health threat, especially to a developing fetus.

Unfortunately, new research indicates the problem is only going to get worse. We can expect a 50 percent spike in the Pacific Ocean’s mercury level by the year 2050, that is, if the world’s coal industry continues along its current path. This dire prediction comes from a landmark study on Mercury in Aquatic Ecosystems, published May, 2009, by scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey.

So should pregnant women eat fish?

The answer to that question depends on who you ask. Because fish contains both essential nutrition for health and toxic mercury that can harm fetal brain and nervous system development, The American Pregnancy Association recommends moderate intake of the types of fish deemed “safer” based on the the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) list. (See the safer to least safe types of fish below.) Although the FDA emphasizes the health properties of fish, the EPA urges much more caution. And here’s what the NRDC advises for pregnant women and young children:

Children under six, as well as women who are pregnant or planning to become pregnant, are the most vulnerable to mercury’s harmful effects. They should restrict or eliminate certain fish from their diet, including ahi or bigeye tuna, tilefish, swordfish, shark, king mackerel, marlin, orange roughy and fish caught in any waters that are subject to a mercury advisory. Women with elevated mercury levels should ideally begin avoiding or restricting their consumption of mercury-laden fish as much as a year before they become pregnant.

Here’s the fish recommendations for pregnant women, from the NRDC. For personalized advice based on your weight, check out the NRDC’s mercury thermometer.

NRDC Fish safety list for pregnant women

LEAST MERCURYEnjoy these fish:
Anchovies, Butterfish, Catfish, Clam, Crab (Domestic), Crawfish/Crayfish, Croaker (Atlantic), Flounder, Haddock (Atlantic), Hake, Herring, Mackerel (N. Atlantic, Chub), Mullet, Oyster, Perch (Ocean), Plaice, Pollock, Salmon (Canned), Salmon (Fresh), Sardine, Scallop,Shad (American), Shrimp, Sole (Pacific), Squid (Calamari), Tilapia, Trout (Freshwater), Whitefish, Whiting

MODERATE MERCURYEat 6 servings or less per month:
Bass (Striped, Black), Carp, Cod (Alaskan), Croaker (White Pacific), Halibut (Atlantic), Halibut (Pacific), Jacksmelt, (Silverside), Lobster, Mahi Mahi, Monkfish, Perch (Freshwater), Sablefish, Skate, Snapper, Tuna (Canned chunk light), Tuna (Skipjack), Weakfish (Sea Trout)

HIGH MERCURYEat 3 servings or less per month:

Bluefish, Grouper, Mackerel (Spanish, Gulf), Sea Bass (Chilean), Tuna (Canned Albacore), Tuna (Yellowfin)

HIGHEST MERCURYAvoid eating:

Mackerel (King), Marlin, Orange Roughy, Shark, Swordfish, Tilefish, Tuna, (Bigeye, Ahi)

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One Response to “What you need to know about mercury in fish”

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