Supermarket shoppers must change their buying habits and start purchasing a wider range of fish in order to help preserve heavily exploited species, according to a conservation group.
The Marine Conservation Society (MCS) reported yesterday that the five most popular types of seafood account for up to 80 per cent of British supermarket sales, and more worryingly some fish species of concern are still available in some stores.
The exploited fish include North Sea plaice, Dover sole, warm-water prawns trawled in the wild, marlin, and Atlantic cod from over-fished stocks such as the Eastern Baltic.
The MCS said around 85 per cent of chilled and frozen fish sold in the UK were by supermarket retailers, with haddock, tuna, cod, and prawns making up most of the sales .
Sainsbury's and Iceland are the main culprits, both selling two varieties of fish on the group's list of fish to avoid', while Asda, Tesco, and the Co-op each sell one type, according to a supermarket survey conducted by the MCS.
Bernadette Clarke, fishery officer for the MCS, warned that the pressure is rising on some seafood stocks .
"Whilst the supermarkets do generally have a wide range of fish - in the case of Waitrose 26 fish - there is still this demand by consumers and interest in just five species, and mainly cod and haddock," she said.
"Certainly consumers need to be a bit more experimental in their taste in fish," she added.
The MSC is calling for large food chains to improve their fish labelling, by including the products common and scientific names, the method and area of capture, and the sustainability level of the fish stock .
Consumers Told To Be More Experimental With Fish
Thu, 22 Mar 2007
Get the latest prices, codes, vouchers & deals fortnightly.
Compare broadband
Compare & save £200+ on TV, phone &
broadband. From £2.99.
Enter your postcode to begin:

The latest money saving news.
E.On in energy price freeze pledge - Mon, 21 May 2012 |
New online savings bank brings two new accounts to UK consumers - Thu, 17 May 2012 |
Supermarket Introduces Sub-7pc Credit Card - Tue, 15 May 2012 |
| More news |
Our 5 most popular guides:
Cheap iPhone deals
Comparing iPhone 4, iPhone 4S and 3GS deals
Comparing iPhone 4, iPhone 4S and 3GS deals
Rising food prices
Why food prices are rising at such a rapid rate
Why food prices are rising at such a rapid rate
Top petrol tips
10 tips for spending less at the pumps
10 tips for spending less at the pumps
Free stuff
Why spend when you can get all this for free!
Why spend when you can get all this for free!
Save on your bills
How to save on your energy bills without moving
How to save on your energy bills without moving















