Shrimp: A Devastating Delicacy
Shrimp aquaculture devastates the environment, jeopardizes consumers and threatens coastal communities. The United States is provided with a constant supply of shrimp: a once revered delicacy, but now only $9.99 a dozen. But, how low is the cost, really?
At The Environment’s Expense
Mangroves
- tropical coastal forests - are clear cut to make room for shrimp
farms. Mangroves serve as spawning and nursery grounds for thousands of
marine organisms and protect the coastline. Shrimp farms depend on
staggering amounts of antibiotics, fungicides, algaecides and
pesticides that pollute the water and marine life, including other fish.
Consumers’ Health Pays
Antibiotics
are used in shrimp farms to prevent the spread of viruses. One such
virus, the White Spot Virus, decimated farms throughout Asia and
Central America in the 1990’s. Even when the virus doesn’t obliterate
the farm, it survives freezing and may still exist when the shrimp
finds its way to the consumer’s plate. To prevent outbreaks, companies
pump thousands of tons of antibiotics into the farms.
One
antibiotic – Chloramphenicol – is banned in the United States, but the
US imports shrimp from countries that use it. Chloramphenicol is linked
to human aplastic anemia – a lethal blood disorder, intestinal
problems, neurological reactions and other health concerns.
Unfortunately, the US does not have a rigorous inspection program for
imported shrimp. Thailand, China, Vietnam and Ecuador all use this
antibiotic in their shrimp farms and they send thousands of pounds of
shrimp to the US every year, jeopardizing consumers’ health.
Cost to Local Communities
Traditionally,
local communities depend on the mangroves for their survival. Women
gather shellfish, mussels, crabs and other seafood to feed their
families and to sell in local markets. Fishermen gain access to the sea
through the mangroves, which they can no longer do when the shrimp
farms are constructed. Due to cheap farm raised shrimp, American
shrimpers are forced to sell their boats and coastal communities in the
Global South are left without their livelihood, food and culture.