Our Planet

Scientists want to turn fish fins into sashimi

Fish meat grown from discarded fins could be the next sustainable food solution

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 08 Jun 2022 12:00PM

Scientists want to turn fish fins into sashimi
Many parts of fish, including their fins, are often discarded as waste. – PxHere pic, June 8, 2022

FOR every fish caught, turned into a sushi roll and eaten, a huge amount of sea life is destroyed. The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation recently estimated that 35% of fish caught or aquacultured is lost or wasted each year – and that figure doesn’t include bycatch such as corals, prawns and seals.

A new process can grow clean meat from fish waste, helping meet the world’s increasing food needs and relieving pressure on fisheries.

Fish consumption has increased in step with global population growth, resulting in enormous damage to the marine ecosystem, largely from overfishing. Current food-supply systems cannot meet demand, and industrial fisheries are notorious for their wasteful methods.

But the waste gave researchers an idea. Many fish can regenerate their body parts, including fins, heart, tissue and neurons. Scientists can culture cells from discarded fins to grow ‘aquatic clean meat’ – laboratory-cultured fish flesh – as a sustainable food alternative.

Fin cells can change themselves into various cell types, such as neural cells, fat cells and skeletal muscle-like cells, without genetic manipulation. Researchers of the new technique cultured the cells to stack one by one like Lego blocks – eventually, they formed meat like sashimi.

Creating aquatic clean meat in this way is environmentally friendly and increases animal welfare and sustainability.

It uses fins that would otherwise be discarded as waste. Fin cells can also be collected without killing live fish, and the skin that peels off during breeding can be used as a raw material as well.

Human activity has driven the ocean to the brink of death.

Marine ecosystems have been significantly damaged by chemical pollution such as heavy metals and nutrients from intensive agriculture, waste from livestock farming and aquaculture, microplastic pollution, and climate change due to excess atmospheric carbon dioxide.

Aquatic clean meat is self-sufficient and a strong candidate for a sustainable food resource. The meat can be grown even in confined areas such as space shuttles. It can be supplied year-round without reliance on seasonal catches.

Technology to produce aquatic clean meat does not cause environmental pollution and can prevent overfishing. It offers a way to protect marine populations from current and future human threats. – The Vibes, June 8, 2022

Dr Yusuke Tsuruwaka is a researcher in cell biology at Keio University, Japan. Eriko Shimada is a researcher in cell biology at the National Institute of Technology, Tsuruoka College, Japan.

The authors are researchers and co-founders of Cellevolt.

Published under Creative Commons and in partnership with 360info.org

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