Originally Posted by
captnemo
Editorial
According to an unprecedented alert from the Texas Department of State Health Services, speckled trout and catfish from any part of Galveston Bay are deeply contaminated with two toxic compounds. After a two-year study, the agency found that both fish had high levels of PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) and dioxins.
The contaminant levels in those two species were so pervasive and dangerous that healthy adults should not eat more than eight ounces of either fish per month. Children, mothers who are breast-feeding and pregnant — or potentially pregnant — women should not eat even a morsel. PCBs and dioxins have been linked to cancer, liver failure and other diseases.
This week's advisory, involving fish caught anywhere in the bay, was a departure from past warnings against eating crabs and fish from the Houston Ship Channel or upper bay.
Restaurant diners have little need to fret. Retailers seldom serve speckled trout, and catfish dishes use farmed fish, often from Asia.
But Galveston's sport fishing and party boat industry — whose clients catch fish to eat — could be hard-hit. Nonpaying fishermen, who simply know the bay as a serene place to catch their own dinner, also need to heed the advisory. Narrowing their meal choices are, right now, about the only two preventions the bay's devoted fisherman have.
It will be years before these compounds disappear from the bay and its wildlife, said Elena Craft, a toxicologist from the Environmental Defense Fund. The good news is that other sport fish — red drum, black drum and flounder — have been found safe to eat. And the chemicals seem mostly located in tributaries and other specific sites.
The best response, Craft said, is to catch and release the two contaminated fish, eat low on the fish food chain (heavier fish carry more contaminants), and support policies that better screen the thousands of unexamined chemical compounds that still flood Texas waterways. Communing with nature, unfortunately, now requires constant awareness of civilization.