Ordering seafood feels safe… until you learn what’s really on your plate. Behind the ice displays and glossy menus are damaged oceans, mislabeled fillets, and fish loaded with more than just protein. Some species are disappearing. Others carry mercury warnings or troubling farming histories. Yet you keep being told it’s “healthy.” The next time you or…
Seafood can still belong on your plate—but not blindly. Tilapia, pangasius, imported shrimp, and some farmed salmon raise questions about crowded pens, antibiotics, and weak oversight. Bluefin tuna, Chilean sea bass, Atlantic cod, and mislabeled “red snapper” carry the weight of overfishing, fraud, and fragile ecosystems. Large predators like swordfish and yellowfin tuna add mercury concerns, especially for pregnant women and children.
The way forward is not fear, but filters. Ask where the fish was caught or farmed. Look for trusted labels like Marine Stewardship Council or guidance from programs such as Seafood Watch. Choose restaurants that proudly share sourcing, not those that dodge the question. When you reward transparency and sustainability, you protect your health, support better fisheries, and prove something powerful: you can love seafood without turning your back on the ocean that provides it.