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Seafood Watch - Seafood Guide
Red Snapper/Squirrelfish Snapper
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Gray Snapper
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Uku, Utu, Jobfish
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Hawaii
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Wild-caught
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Gray, Lane, Mutton, Yellowtail Snapper
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Gray Silk, Mangrove, Rainbow Snapper
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U.S.
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Wild-caught
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Pink Snapper
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'Opakapaka, Palu-enaena
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Hawaii
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Hook-and-line
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Red Snapper
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Mule Sow, Rat, Tai, American Red Snapper
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U.S. Gulf of Mexico
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Wild-caught
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Red Snapper
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Red Snapper, American Red Snapper, Night Snapper, Tai
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Imported
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Wild-caught
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Red Snapper/Squirrelfish Snapper
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Ehu, 'Ula'ula, Palu-malau, Tai
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Hawaii
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Hook-and-line
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Ruby Snapper/Longtail Snapper
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Onaga, 'Ula'ula koa'e
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Hawaii
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Hook-and-line
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Silk Snapper
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Silky Snapper, Yellow-eyed Snapper
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U.S. Gulf of Mexico, U.S. South Atlantic, U.S. Caribbean
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Wild-caught
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Vermilion Snapper
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Beeliners, Night Snappers
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U.S.
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Wild-caught
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Snapper, Red/Squirrelfish (Hawaii)
The Hawaiian red snapper (or ehu) is caught using environmentally friendly methods to reduce habitat damage and bycatch. However, uncertainty about population size around the main Hawaiian Islands makes it a "Good Alternative."
Summary
As a group, snappers have several characteristics, including slow growth rates and small habitat ranges, that make them vulnerable to overfishing. Little is known about their distribution or behavior because they live in deep water.
In Hawaii, red snapper lives in deep water around rocky reefs alongside several other closely related snappers and the Hawaiian grouper. They're all fished together, year-round, using hook-and-line gear that causes little habitat damage and bycatch.
Though previously overfished, snapper and grouper populations are now carefully managed and rebuilding. However, because these species are assessed as a group instead of individually, there's uncertainty about the size of each population. As a result, red snapper is a "Good Alternative."
Scientific Reports About Our Ratings
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