Thin fish, small catches: can Japan’s sushi culture survive climate crisis?
by Justin McCurry in Shiogama from on (#658VS)
Global heating is warming waters, changing salmon and tuna migration - and hurting fisheries
There is little at Shiogama seafood market to suggest that Japanese consumers could one day be deprived of their favourite seafood - from giant crab's legs simmering in a winter nabe hotpot to spheres of salmon roe resting on a bed of rice wrapped in nori seaweed.
Stalls heave with huge sides of bluefin tuna, expertly transformed into more manageable portions by knife-wielding workers, while early-morning shoppers pause to inspect boxes of squid, flounder and sea pineapples landed only hours earlier.
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