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  2. Fish toxins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fish_toxins

    Tribal people historically used various plants for medicinal and food exploitation purposes. [4] Use of fish poisons is a very old practice in the history of humankind. In 1212 AD, King Frederick II prohibited the use of certain plant piscicides, and by the 15th century, similar laws had been decreed in other European countries, as well. [5]

  3. Food and drink prohibitions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_and_drink_prohibitions

    Among the Somali people, most clans have a taboo against the consumption of fish, and do not intermarry with the few occupational clans that do eat it. [51] [52] There are taboos on eating fish among many upland pastoralists and agriculturalists (and even some coastal peoples) inhabiting parts of Ethiopia, Eritrea, Somalia, Kenya, and northern ...

  4. Reasons for Not Eating Animal Food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reasons_for_not_eating...

    Opening for Reasons for eating Animal Food. Phillips' list of 16 reasons for a vegetable diet first appeared in his own publication, Monthly Magazine, on July 27, 1811.This list was then submitted to the Medical and Physical Journal, which printed it in the October 26, 1811 edition, entitled "The Writer's Reasons for not Eating Animal Food."

  5. Aquarium fish feed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquarium_fish_feed

    Live foods are based on small living creatures in their recognizable form and can be either still living, dried or frozen. Live fish food include earthworms, sludge worms, water fleas, bloodworms, and feeder fish. Food for larvae and young fish include infusoria (Protozoa and other microorganisms), newly hatched brine shrimp and microworms ...

  6. Ciguatera fish poisoning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciguatera_fish_poisoning

    Preventive efforts include not eating reef fish, not eating high-risk fish such as barracuda, and not eating fish liver, roe, or fish heads. [2] Ciguatoxin has no taste or smell, and cannot be destroyed by conventional cooking. [2] There is no specific treatment for ciguatera fish poisoning once it occurs. [2]

  7. Coelacanth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coelacanth

    Coelacanths are considered a poor source of food for humans and likely most other fish-eating animals. Coelacanth flesh has large amounts of oil, urea , wax esters , and other compounds that give the flesh a distinctly unpleasant flavor, make it difficult to digest, and can cause diarrhea .

  8. Aquaculture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquaculture

    Fish do not actually produce omega-3 fatty acids, but instead accumulate them from either consuming microalgae that produce these fatty acids, as is the case with forage fish like herring and sardines, or, as is the case with fatty predatory fish, like salmon, by eating prey fish that have accumulated omega-3 fatty acids from microalgae.

  9. Eating live seafood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eating_live_seafood

    The practice of eating live seafood, such as fish, crab, oysters, baby shrimp, or baby octopus, is widespread. Oysters are typically eaten live. [ 1 ] The view that oysters are acceptable to eat, even by strict ethical criteria, has notably been propounded in the seminal 1975 text Animal Liberation , by philosopher Peter Singer .