stevestory
Posts: 13407 Joined: Oct. 2005
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Two high school students have managed to do more science than the Discovery Institute has done in 15 years:
Quote | Fish Tale Has DNA Hook: Students Find Bad Labels
By JOHN SCHWARTZ Published: August 21, 2008
Many New York sushi restaurants and seafood markets are playing a game of bait and switch, say two high school students turned high-tech sleuths.
What steps do you take to make sure that you are actually eating what you think you are eating?
In a tale of teenagers, sushi and science, Kate Stoeckle and Louisa Strauss, who graduated this year from the Trinity School in Manhattan, took on a freelance science project in which they checked 60 samples of seafood using a simplified genetic fingerprinting technique to see whether the fish New Yorkers buy is what they think they are getting.
They found that one-fourth of the fish samples with identifiable DNA were mislabeled. A piece of sushi sold as the luxury treat white tuna turned out to be Mozambique tilapia, a much cheaper fish that is often raised by farming. Roe supposedly from flying fish was actually from smelt. Seven of nine samples that were called red snapper were mislabeled, and they turned out to be anything from Atlantic cod to Acadian redfish, an endangered species. |
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/22/science/22fish.html?em
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