Sushi News: LA-area Restaurant Mercury Study

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There is no SUSHI NEWS section here, so I wasn't sure where to post this. But I thought it was really interesting & important information. Sure, we all know there is mercury in fish, some species with higher levels than others. But this study sort of questions the FDA's system of monitoring mercury levels, &, even more interestingly, they proved it by testing samples from 6 popular LA area restaurants.

So this article is just an FYI. I figured it was relavent to us as sushi eaters.

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Group Warns of Toxic Tuna
Tests on sushi from L.A.-area eateries raise questions about FDA mercury monitoring.
By Jerry Hirsch, Times Staff Writer
March 6, 2006

Tuna is arguably the most popular offering at sushi bars. Many customers like slices of blood-red fish slathered in a spicy wasabi sauce. Others prefer the more simple nigiri style, which is sliced tuna over rice.

But now a public health advocacy group is warning about the safety of tuna sushi and questioning the Food and Drug Administration's system of monitoring the mercury levels in fish, based on tests on a small sample of such delicacies at Los Angeles restaurants.

The group, GotMercury.org, purchased sushi from five top Zagat-rated restaurants in Southern California and from the Benihana Inc. chain in late January. Instead of eating the orders, the Forrest Knolls, Calif.-based organization took the fish for testing at CRG Marine Laboratories in Torrance.

The mercury levels of the 12 tuna samples averaged about double the FDA standard, and a quarter of the orders were near or above the limit where the agency says fish should not be sold, said Eli Saddler, a public health analyst and attorney for GotMercury.org.

"Eating sushi has become the new Russian roulette," Saddler said.

The advocacy group focused on sushi because the popular food has become one of the largest sources of fresh tuna consumption. Saddler believes this is the first time an independent group has attempted to monitor mercury levels in sushi.

The samples came from some of Southern California's toniest restaurants — Matsuhisa, Sushi Katsu-ya, Sushi Sasabune, HamaSaku and Sushi Nozawa. GotMercury.org also went to Benihana in Santa Monica because it's part of a large national chain where sushi is featured.

"Our testing shows a pattern of mercury levels being significantly higher than what the FDA reports," Saddler said.

Mercury, which is linked to reduced brain development in fetuses and young children, is found in at least trace levels in nearly all fish.

The FDA and Environmental Protection Agency have warned that women who may become pregnant and young children shouldn't eat certain high-mercury fish, including swordfish, shark, tilefish and king mackerel. They should also limit their consumption of tuna, the agencies have said.

Increasing concern about mercury in fish has pushed some in the food industry to advocate improved testing.

Last week, Micro Analytical Systems Inc. of San Rafael, Calif., and Clackamas, Ore.-based wholesaler Pacific Seafood Group began a test venture to provide fish certified to be low in mercury to Holiday Quality Foods, a small grocery chain in rural Northern California.

The venture uses a rapid-testing device developed by Micro Analytical that takes minutes rather than days to determine how much mercury is in a fish sample. In most instances, only fish that tests below the median mercury level in the FDA database — for yellowfin tuna, that's 0.27 part per million — gets the venture's Safe Harbor label, indicating that it is a low-mercury filet.

Aliso Viejo hairdresser Christopher Bliss used to eat sushi as often as twice weekly. But when his wife Valerie became pregnant two years ago, they gave it up because they were worried about the mercury content of the fish.

"Now we eat it once a month. I don't think that's enough to worry about," Bliss said. Still, they have enough concern not to feed it to Ava, their 18-month-old daughter.

Susan Pasarow of Studio City likes to eat at Sushi Katsu-ya, not far from her home.

"They are the best," Pasarow said. "I like to order all the yummy rolls." And she gets lots of items with tuna.

Pasarow wasn't happy to learn that Katsu-ya fish had the highest mercury concentrations among the 12 samples, but said she was aware of the problems of mercury in fish.

"That's why I hesitate to have sushi very often. I go maybe once a month or once every other month," Pasarow said.

The two samples from Sushi Katsu-ya in Studio City came back with mercury concentrations of 1 part per million and higher, above the FDA's threshold for mercury in any seafood species, Saddler said. One sample from Sushi Nozawa, also in Studio City, came back just shy of the limit, Saddler said.

Neither restaurant responded to calls asking about the tests. Representatives of Benihana and Matsuhisa in Beverly Hills declined to comment on the findings. And HamaSaku in Los Angeles had Young Kim of Ocean Group Inc., its tuna provider, return the call.

"We are just a wholesaler, we don't monitor for mercury," Kim said.

Saddler said he didn't blame the restaurants for the problem.

"I know this is the way the fish comes in, but they should do a better job of warning customers," Saddler said.

That's the practice of Nobi Kusuhara, chef and owner of Sushi Sasabune in West Los Angeles. He said it's well known that tuna and swordfish have high mercury levels and he regularly warns pregnant customers not to order those fish.

"We would like to be able to get fish that has been tested for mercury," Kusuhara said. "That would be good for the customer and would be good for us."

Kusuhara said there was no system for regularly and rapidly checking the mercury concentrations of what's for sale at the local fish market and at Southern California wholesalers. The FDA and other health regulators should have a more rigorous testing system, he said.

Saddler said the yellowfin samples culled from the Southern California restaurants had a median mercury concentration of 0.82 ppm, not far from the FDA limit. The testing methodology used by CRG is similar to what the FDA uses, said Richard Gossett, CRG's laboratory manager.

"A child or a woman eating even one 2-ounce sushi order with the amounts of mercury found in some of the tuna we tested could exceed what the FDA considers safe," Saddler said.

The test results might be coming in higher than expected because the fish prized for sushi are older, larger tuna that have had years of ocean hunting to build up their mercury levels, Saddler said. Younger and smaller fish probably would contain less mercury.

Nonetheless, Saddler said the results highlighted flaws in the FDA's fish monitoring program. The agency does limited fish testing, and instead puts its efforts into informing the public about the hazards of high-mercury fish species.

David Acheson, the FDA's chief medical officer, said the agency hadn't advocated large-scale testing of fish because of the enormous time and expense such an endeavor would take.

Moreover, current regulations don't give the FDA much leverage in trying to prevent the sale of fish containing 1 ppm or more of mercury, he said. To take action, the agency has to prove that the particular fish had too much mercury and the consumption of that fish would be harmful. Acheson said there was little chance the FDA would be able to prove in a courtroom that an individual fish was harmful.

Saddler said that now that companies such as Micro Analytical are starting to develop rapid and inexpensive testing systems, the FDA should push for increased monitoring.

His organization also wants restaurants and grocery stores to stop selling the species known to be highest in mercury and that frequently exceed the FDA maximum threshold unless seafood suppliers provide proof that fish being sold don't exceed the FDA's limits.

As a branch of the Turtle Island Restoration Network, GotMercury.org previously has pushed for policy changes involving fish and mercury in California. It was one of the groups that persuaded California Atty. Gen. Bill Lockyer to sue the state's major supermarket and restaurant chains for allegedly violating California's Proposition 65 by failing to post signs warning patrons. Benihana and 10 other restaurant chains settled the suit last year and have posted warning signs. The supermarket case is pending, but many of the chains also have posted signs.

"We have worked closely with them throughout this whole mercury battle," said Tom Dresslar, a spokesman for Lockyer.

Despite the test results, Saddler said he wasn't going to give up sushi. He just plans to stop ordering tuna entrees.

"There's salmon, shrimp, clams and other shellfish," Saddler said. "Most of the other stuff would be OK if you are worried about mercury."

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-fi-fish6mar06,0,4862249.story?coll=la-home-headlines