Current:Home > MyMexico-based startup accused of selling health drink made from endangered fish: "Nature's best kept secret"-DB Wealth Institute B2 Reviews & Ratings
Mexico-based startup accused of selling health drink made from endangered fish: "Nature's best kept secret"
lotradecoin partnership View Date:2025-01-12 14:09:59
Environmental watchdogs accused a Mexico-based startup Thursday of violating international trade law by selling a health supplement made from endangered totoaba fish to several countries including the U.S. and China.
Advocates told The Associated Press they also have concerns that the company, The Blue Formula, could be selling fish that is illegally caught in the wild.
The product, which the company describes as "nature's best kept secret," is a small sachet of powder containing collagen taken from the fish that is designed to be mixed into a drink.
Under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, to which Mexico and the U.S. are both signatories, any export for sale of totoaba fish is illegal, unless bred in captivity with a particular permit. As a listed protected species, commercial import is also illegal under U.S. trade law.
Totoaba fish have been listed as an endangered species under the U.S. Endangered Species Act since 1979, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection.
The environmental watchdog group Cetacean Action Treasury first cited the company in November. Then on Thursday, a coalition of environmental charities - The Center for Biological Diversity, National Resources Defense Council and Animal Welfare Institute - filed a written complaint to CITES.
The Blue Formula did not immediately respond to an AP request for comment.
The company claims on its website to operate "100%" sustainably by sourcing fish from Cygnus Ocean, a farm which has a permit to breed totoaba, and using a portion of their profits to release some farmed fish back into the wild.
However, Cygnus Ocean does not have a permit for commercial export of their farmed fish, according to the environmental groups. The farm also did not immediately respond to a request from the AP for comment.
While the ecological impact of breeding totoaba in captivity is much smaller relative to wild fishing, advocates like Alejandro Olivera, the Center for Biological Diversity's Mexico representative, fear the company and farm could be used as a front.
"There is no good enforcement of the traceability of totoaba in Mexico," said Olivera, "so it could be easily used to launder wild totoaba."
Gillnet fishing for wild totoaba is illegal and one of the leading killers of critically endangered vaquita porpoise, of which recent surveys suggest less than a dozen may exist in the wild.
"This hunger for endangered species is killing vaquitas here. Because the mesh size of the gillnets for totoaba is about the size of a head of a vaquita. So they get easily entangled," Lorenzo Rojas-Bracho, who works with Mexico's National Institute of Ecology, previously told "60 Minutes."
Gillnetting is driven by the exorbitant price for totoaba bladders in China, where they are sold as a delicacy for as much as gold.
As "60 Minutes" previously reported, the bladders are believed to possess medicinal value which gives them monetary value. The environmental group Greenpeace used hidden cameras to capture Hong Kong merchants trying to sell totoaba swim bladders. The prices went up to $40,000.
The Blue Formula's supplement costs just under $100 for 200 grams.
In October U.S. Customs and Border Protection seized over $1 million worth of totoaba bladders in Arizona, hidden in a shipment of frozen fish. The agency called it "one of the larger commercial seizures of its kind in the U.S."
Roughly as much again was seized in Hong Kong the same month, in transit from Mexico to Thailand.
- In:
- Endangered Species
- Mexico
veryGood! (29243)
Related
- Wisconsin’s Evers urges federal judge not to make changes at youth prison in wake of counselor death
- Haitian immigrants sue Indiana over law that limits driver’s license access to certain Ukrainians
- Hundreds of Salem Hospital patients warned of possible exposure to hepatitis, HIV
- NBA MVP power rankings: Luka Doncic makes it look easy with revamped Mavericks offense
- Get Designer Michael Kors Bags on Sale Including a $398 Purse for $59 & More Deals Starting at $49
- DeSantis appointees seek Disney communications about governor, laws in fight over district
- Nearly a third of Gen-Zers steal from self-checkout aisles, survey shows
- Billie Eilish Says She Never Felt Truly Like a Woman
- Drugs to treat diabetes, heart disease and blood cancers among those affected by price negotiations
- Shohei Ohtani, Ronald Acuña Jr. win MLB MVP awards for historic 2023 campaigns
Ranking
- US unemployment claims fall 7,000 to 227,000 in sign of resiliency in job market
- You'll be able to buy a car off Amazon next year
- Court orders Balance of Nature to stop sales of supplements after FDA lawsuits
- ChatGPT-maker Open AI pushes out co-founder and CEO Sam Altman, says he wasn’t ‘consistently candid’
- Ranking MLB jersey advertisements: Whose patch is least offensive?
- It feels like I'm not crazy. Gardeners aren't surprised as USDA updates key map.
- Years after strike, West Virginia public workers push back against another insurance cost increase
- No evidence yet to support hate crime charge in death of pro-Israel protester, officials say
Recommendation
-
Hideki Matsuyama will be without regular caddie, coach after their passports and visas were stolen
-
3 shot in van leaving Maryland funeral, police searching for suspect
-
Rosalynn Carter, 96-year-old former first lady, is in hospice care at home, Carter Center says
-
'Not Iowa basketball': Caitlin Clark, No. 2 Hawkeyes struggle in loss to Kansas State
-
Jim Harbaugh wants to hire Colin Kaepernick to Chargers' coaching staff. Will the QB bite?
-
Is the right to free speech being curbed in Israel amid the war with Hamas?
-
Olympic champ Sunisa Lee gained 45 pounds due to kidney issue. 'It was so scary.'
-
K-Pop star Rose joins first lady Jill Biden to talk mental health