
American
Caviar: An Eco-Friendly Way to Celebrate Special Occasions
Caviar
connoisseurs and novices alike have a new choice available
for special occasions that will please not only palates but
also environmentally conscious minds.
Caviar
varieties produced from sturgeon and paddlefish farmed in
the United States offer excellent taste and are environmentally
sustainable: a win-win situation for culinary professionals
and consumers who are concerned about the sharp decline of
sturgeon populations in the Caspian Sea, the source of most
of the world's caviar. Caspian Sea sturgeon -- whose eggs
produce coveted beluga, sevruga and osetra caviar -- have
been in a severe downward spiral in recent years due to overfishing,
illegal trade, habitat loss and pollution.
Of
the most concern is beluga sturgeon, whose population in the
Caspian Sea has plunged by more than 90 percent in the past
20 years. Leading conservation organizations -- SeaWeb,
Pew Institute for Ocean Science and Natural Resources Defense
Council -- are seeking a halt to the international trade of
beluga caviar as a key to the survival of this endangered
species. Through the three organizations' Caviar Emptor:
Let the Connoisseur Beware campaign, they are also urging
consumers to consider American caviars as a better alternative.
Renowned
chefs, major media organizations and consumers across the
nation are heralding the American caviars, which hail from
places such as California and Missouri. Chefs on both coasts
have removed the Caspian Sea caviars from their menus and
replaced them with the American farmed varieties. Leading
chefs Jacques Pepin, Rick Moonen of Oceana in New York City,
and Traci Des Jardins of Jardiniere in San Francisco were
among the first to join conservation organizations in the
effort to help protect the struggling Caspian Sea sturgeon.
American
caviars also performed well in taste tests by the New
York Times , the Los Angeles Times , the Wall
Street Journal , the Washington Post , as well
as Wine Spectator , Gourmet , Forbes
and Metropolitan Home magazines (See "What's
Being Said About American Caviars" )
The
Caviar Emptor campaign suggests
consumers choose American caviars, including white sturgeon
roe under the brand Sterling Caviar from Stolt Sea Farm in
California, which are environmentally friendly choices.
In
addition to pointing consumers to preferred environmentally
sustainable caviar alternatives to help conserve the Caspian
Sea sturgeon species, Caviar Emptor is recommending an international
ban on trade in beluga caviar; listing of beluga sturgeon
as an endangered species under the U.S. Endangered Species
Act, which would halt U.S. imports; greater international
funding to protect and restore Caspian Sea sturgeon; stronger
U.S. enforcement of international trade restrictions on caviar
imports; support for environmentally sound aquaculture as
an alternative to wild sturgeon caviar; and stronger state
management of U.S. sturgeon species.
For
more information or interviews with Caviar Emptor spokespeople,
please contact
Shannon
Crownover ( shannon@seaweb.org
)
or
Steven Capozzola (scapozzola@seaweb.org)
www.caviaremptor.org
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