Whale meat in sushi restaurants in Los Angeles and Seoul originated from Japan14/04/2010 23:26:42
Scientists have identified four species of whales and one species of dolphin from a plate of sashimi, like this one sold in a restaurant in Seoul. (photo courtesy of Louie Psihoyos, Oceanic Preservation Society April 2010. An international team of Oregon State University scientists, documentary filmmakers and environmental advocates has uncovered an apparent illegal trade in whale meat, linking whales killed in Japan's controversial scientific whaling program to sushi restaurants South Korea, and Los Angeles.
"The sequences were identical to Sei whale products that had previously been purchased in Japan in 2007 and 2008, which means they not only came from the same area of the ocean - but possibly from the same distinct population," said Scott Baker, associate director of the Marine Mammal Institute at Oregon State University, who conducted the analysis. "And since the international moratorium on commercial hunting (1986), there has been no other known source of Sei whales available commercially other than in Japan," Baker added. "This underscores the very real problem of the illegal international trade of whale meat products."
"The Cove" Bycatch "Our ability to use genetics as a tool to monitor whale populations around the world has advanced significantly over the past few years," Baker said, "but unless we have access to all of the data - including those whales killed under Japan's scientific whaling - we cannot provide resource managers with the best possible science. "This is not just about better control of whaling itself," Baker added, "but getting a better handle on the international trade of whale products." Korean whale dishes Further testing by collaborators from Seoul National University confirmed the individual identity of the whale products by DNA "profiling." Same whale identified in Japan "Since the international moratorium, it has been assumed that there is no international trade in whale products," Baker said. "But when products from the same whale are sold in Japan in 2007 and in Korea in 2009, it suggests that international trade, though illegal, is still an issue. Likewise, the Antarctic Minke whale is not found in Korean waters, but it is hunted by Japan's controversial scientific whaling program in the Antarctic. "How did it show up in a restaurant in Seoul?" Baker has developed an international reputation for his research in determining the origin of whale meat products sold in markets around the world. His research on identification of dolphin meat contaminated with high levels of mercury was featured in "The Cove," where he worked with Psihoyos and Hambleton. In their paper, the authors describe the long legacy of falsifying whale catch records, beginning with the Soviet Union, which failed to account for more than 100,000 whales it killed in the 20th century. This illegal, unreported or unregulated whaling "continues today under the cover of incidental fisheries bycatch and scientific whaling." Results of the study were published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dE17L-z8frg
Posted by: Andres | 05 Apr 2011 15:38:58
Since the deliberate attack on the Ady Gill by the japanese criminals, I have made certain toi buy absolutely nothing that is either made in japan or by a japanese owned company.
Destroying their nation's economy will be the only way to force this useless bunch of **** in their government to put an end to the slaughter of whales and dolphins.
Of course we all know in our hearts that there are significant factions within the japanese government who are either indirectly involved in the whaling industry or who are maybe even taking back-handers from the waling companies.
It's just as well they're on the far side of the planet because if I ever met one of them . . .
Posted by: Harry Bowden | 16 Apr 2010 14:07:34