Seafood Watch - Seafood Guide

Pacific Sardines

© Monterey Bay Aquarium
SEAFOODRATINGMARKET NAMESWHERE CAUGHTHOW CAUGHT
Atlantic Sardines Avoid: Avoid these products for now. These fish come from sources that are overfished or fished or farmed in ways that harm the environment. European Pilchard, Iwashi, Pilchard, Sardine Mediterranean Wild-caught
Pacific Sardines Best Choice: These fish are abundant, well managed and fished or farmed in environmentally friendly ways. Iwashi, Pilchard, Sardine U.S. Wild-caught


Sardine, Pacific

Pacific sardine populations appear to be abundant and healthy and are a "Best Choice."

Consumer Note

The name "sardines" is applied to many small fishes of the herring family, but most commonly refers to Pacific sardines. Sardines are known as iwashi when prepared for sushi.

Summary

Sardines reproduce rapidly, but their populations depend on favorable marine conditions.

Pacific sardines once supported one of the largest and most profitable fisheries in the U.S., but by the late 1940s the fish were virtually gone. Although overfishing likely contributed to this, the dramatic decrease was later found to be part of a natural "boom and bust" cycle, which occurs in Pacific sardine populations every 30 to 40 years when a change in water temperature and oceanic conditions favors either sardines or anchovies.

Pacific sardines have made a comeback - good news for people who enjoy these tasty fish as well as the many kinds of seabirds, marine mammals and other fish in the food web that rely on them as the basis of their diet.


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How fish are caught or farmed makes a difference. Fishing boat