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99% of eel products from endangered species


99% of eel products from endangered species

At risk of extinction: Almost all eels consumed worldwide belong either to the American eel, Japanese eel or European eel species. -- The Straits Times/ANN

More than 99% of eel products sold in 11 countries and regions worldwide come from three species at risk of extinction, a recent joint study by a Japanese and Taiwan­ese research team showed, underscoring the opaque nature of the global eel trade.

Using DNA barcoding, resear­chers at Chuo University in Tokyo and the National Taiwan Univer­sity in Taipei found that almost all eels consumed worldwide belong either to the American eel, Japa­n­ese eel or European eel species - all listed by the International Union for Conservation of Nature as endangered or critically endangered.

With the globally murky eel trade making it difficult to track actual distribution, the team gene­tically identified 282 proces­s­ed and live eel products purcha­sed between 2023 and 2025 in 26 cities across Asia, Europe, North America and Oceania.

They found that American eel was the most commonly detected species at 154 samples, followed by Japanese eel at 120 and Euro­pean eel at four.

There was also one Indonesian shortfin eel, while three samples could not be identified.

Based on these findings and other data such as production volumes and trade statistics, the team estimated that the American eel makes up 75.3% of global distribution, Japanese eel at 18% and European eel at 6.7%.

Consumption was heavily concentrated in East Asia, with dom­es­tic supply in China accounting for around 60% of global distribution from 2020 to 2022.

Japan came in second at around 19%, but had the highest per capi­ta annual eel supply.

In June, the European Union proposed imposing export restrictions on all eel species under the Washington Convention, an international treaty regulating endangered species trade, warning that extinction is likely without regulation.

Conservation ecology professor Kenzo Kaifu from Chuo University, who was involved in the study, said that not knowing actual resource and consumption volu­mes is a major issue. -- Kyodo News/ANN

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