Invasive Asian carp is getting a new name and a public makeover to draw more eaters 
By Keith Matheny US Source: usatoday 2/8/2009
Keith Matheny
Care for a plate of slimehead? How about some orange roughy?

It's the same fish, but one sounds much more palatable than the other. The U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service gave the slimehead a rebranding in the late 1970s in an effort to make the underused fish more marketable.

Now, Illinois officials and their partners want to give the invasive Asian carp threatening the Great Lakes a similar makeover. The goal: To grow the fish's image as a healthy, delicious, organic, sustainable food source — which will, in turn, get more fishermen removing more tons of the fish from Illinois rivers just outside of Lake Michigan.
 

Markets such as pet food, bait and fertilizer have expanded the use of invasive Asian carp in recent years. But "it's been hard to get the human consumption part of this because of the four-letter word: carp," said Kevin Irons, assistant chief of fisheries for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
A full-on media blitz is coming later this year to change that. The proposed new name for the fish is being kept tightly under wraps for a big rollout in June, prior to the Boston Seafood Show in mid-July. But other aspects of the "The Perfect Catch" campaign will point out that the invasive Asian carp species — silver, bighead, grass and black carp — are flaky, tasty, organic, sustainable, low in mercury and rich in protein and omega-3 fatty acids.

 
Lake Michigan Carp, Silver Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
1351Mystery of 200-pound bluefin tuna washed up on Orcas Islandmynorthwest2023-10-09US
1352Ghoulish footballfish makes rare appearance on Orange County beachlatimes2023-10-21US
1353Alligator gar caught in Texas weighing 283 pounds shatters multiple recordsFox News2023-10-25US
1354From kingfish to insects: insights from the €200 m ocean impact fundthefishsite2023-10-25BZ
1355Сом в шляпеohotniki2023-10-23RU
1356Japanese Method of Humane Fish Killing Improves Quality and FlavorecoRI News2023-10-12JP
1357The return of an old scourge reveals a deep sickness in the global fishing industrybostonglobe2023-10-12CN
1358Artist expresses depths of grief, then healing, in eye-catching paintings of fishnola2023-10-13US
1359First ever bluefin tuna found in Salish Sea stumps local marine expertsKOMO News2023-10-14US
1360Leading UK chefs join campaign to cast farmed salmon off menutheguardian2023-10-14UK
1361Osakis fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo opechopress2023-10-20CA
1362Plan for water cuts from 3 Western states is enough to protect Colorado RiverThe Associated Press2023-10-25US
1363Tsleil-Waututh’s race to save salmon habitat in drought stricken southwest B.C.coastalnewstoday2023-10-20CA
1364Alleged salmon price-fixing scheme prompts $5.2M Canadian settlementvancouverisawesome2023-10-20CA
1365The Ausable River's fish died in droves in July.CBC News2023-10-12CA
1366Reaping the rewards of a move from agri- to aqua-culturethefishsite2023-10-20IN
1367‘It smells so bad’: glut of wild salmon creates stink in Norway and Finlandtheguardian2023-10-02UK
1368Estonia's national fish stock fell by half even while adhering to quotaerr2023-10-04EE
1369Invasive spiny water flea found in Lake Winnipesaukee for first time evermasslive2023-10-01US
1370Fisherman loses runaway walleye during photo op and makes miraculous catchechopress2023-10-20US
1371Illegal fishing plagues Omani coastal citiesmuscatdaily2023-10-07OM
1372A young leader fights for Yukon River salmon, her community – and herselfalaskapublic2023-10-03US
1373North Carolina angler's colorful puddingwife catch may set world recordfoxweather2023-10-03US
1374Canada’s DFO confronts Native fishermennationalfisherman2023-10-19CA
1375US Women's Fly Fishing Team Wins Bronze Medal at 2023einnews2023-10-19US

220 221 222 54 of [223 - pages.]