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AMERICANS ATE MORE SEAFOOD IN 1998
Officials from NOAA's National Marine Fisheries Service said that the per capita consumption level of 14.9 pounds per person represents an increase of 0.3 pound from the 1997 level. Of the 14.9 pounds of seafood consumed per person, 10.2 pounds were fresh or frozen fish or shellfish, 4.4 pounds were canned seafood, and 0.3 pounds of seafood was cured. Compared to 1997 figures, that represents a 0.3 pound increase in the fresh/frozen products. The consumption of shrimp (all preparation) achieved a record 2.8 pounds consumed per person. Also, farm-raised catfish consumption reached 1.0 pound per person for the first time. Total U.S. supply of edible
fishery products on a round-weight basis was up 11.2 percent
in 1998. While U.S. landings for human consumption declined by
1.0 percent, imported fish and shellfish increased 7.7 percent
in 1998, comprising 63 percent of the seafood consumed in the
United States. U.S. exports declined by 14.3 percent. Inventories
of frozen seafood in cold storage remained relatively stable,
rising 0.3 percent over the 1997 level.
Pounds
* Record The NMFS calculation of per
capita consumption is based on a "disappearance" model.
The total U.S. supply of imports and landings is converted to
edible weight and decreases in supply such as exports and inventories
are subtracted out. The remaining total is divided by a population
value to estimate per capita consumption. Data for the model
are derived primarily from secondary sources and are subject
to incomplete reporting; changes in source data or invalid model
assumptions may each have a significant effect on the resulting
calculation.
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