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Canned tuna, especially chunk light tuna, has very low mercury compared to tuna steaks/sushi grade tuna, because the fish it comes from are smaller Does anyone know how much is in the pouches? Large carnivorous fish are high in mercury because they eat lots of fish which also contain mercury, but the smaller fish ingest less mercury overall.
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Wanted to lose weight, started eating canned albacore tuna daily, got mercury poisoning According to starkists website their canned tuna has 1.0 ppm mercury content, i haven’t seen any direct number for the pouches anywhere It's been with me since
Salmon is much better for you in regards to mercury but daily can still add up.
Tuna is one of the highest mercury content species, as generally, bigger, higher trophic level fish have more mercury Saltwater fish tend to be higher in mercury than freshwater fish, and shrimp and crab are generally lower. The highest mercury levels are found in bigger tuna, like bluefin and yellowfin Skipjack is a smaller fish which doesn't live as long, and as such, has lower mercury levels
The epa and fda count it as low in mercury They refer to canned light tuna, which is commonly skipjack (note that sometimes canned light tuna can be yellowfin, and according to wikipedia it was yellowfin labeled as. If they've been having that much tuna, i'm thinking they should probably keep it well under 2x/week, at least for a while
I'm assuming mercury just keeps accumulating in the body and has no way of being filtered or excreted over time.
Tuna, in and of itself, isn't bad for cats And you'll find that cat canned cat food won't contain only tuna It will have vitamins, minerals, and other supplements included Low quality canned cat food is still going to be ok for a cat to have
Canned human quality tuna has mercury, which may not be removed completely But cat food will have been processed differently Worried about tuna giving you mercury poisoning Here's the exact study that caused this concern
Its recommendations are much higher than that of the fda and online calculators.
Tuna and salmon eat other fish, so their mercury levels are higher. Thoughts on “safe catch” tuna I’ve avoided giving my 19 month old any tuna up until now I personally love it and he obviously wants to try everything i’m eating these days
I know the data about mercury and children but wondering if i can/should make an exception about yellowfin and this particular brand? Are starkist tuna packets harmful if eaten too often I know tuna has higher levels of mercury compared to other fish