logo
Something's fishy: Florida State research cracks the case on shrimp swap scandal

Something's fishy: Florida State research cracks the case on shrimp swap scandal

Yahoo19-02-2025

When it comes to seafood, people want the real deal – not some fishy bait-and-switch.
But in the billion-dollar shrimp industry, it turns out diners might not be getting what they paid for: Eateries offering imported shrimp disguised as locally caught delicacies.
David Williams, founder of Houston-based food safety tech company SeaD Consulting, has spent years diving into the murky waters of seafood sourcing. His team's research kept surfacing the same troubling question:
Do consumers really know where their shrimp come from?
'Why would you want to be lied to?' Williams said. After all, no one orders a plate of shrimp expecting a side of deception.
Here's why it matters: The seafood industry is swimming with imported shrimp, often from farms abroad that may use antibiotics and questionable practices banned here in the states. But restaurants aren't always upfront about what they're serving (sometimes even they don't know), leaving diners in the dark about what's really on their plates. And it takes business away from U.S. shrimpers.
So in 2022, Williams took his concerns to Florida State University assistant professor Prashant Singh, hoping to crack the case of the sneaky shrimp swap.
Singh was intrigued. "There is this saying, 'don't look for a great idea. Look for one great problem to solve.' SeaD Consulting gave me a problem to solve," Singh said, explaining why the proposal was accepted.
With the help of SeaD Consulting researchers and Florida State University's Department of Nutrition and Integrative Physiology graduate students Samuel Kwawukume and Frank Velez, as well as assistant professor for health, nutrition and food science Leqi Cui, Singh took on the challenge.
Singh, a food safety microbiologist who obtained his doctorate in food science from the University of Missouri, has an extensive background in researching dairy, poultry and beef. Researching seafood was a new area of exploration for him.
"One day I suddenly realized I've got the ocean," he jokingly said upon moving to the Sunshine State in 2018, providing him a natural laboratory to expand his research focus.
Williams is a commercial fishery scientist and has decades of experience under his belt. After speaking with fishermen working on the Gulf Coast, he realized the shrimp market was in jeopardy.
He identified the dilemma as an "authenticity-in-the-restaurant problem," when he found the local "shrimp business was unable to support itself" because people were making substitutions by importing to save dollars on food supply.
This ignited a research campaign funded by the nonprofit organization called Southern Shrimp Alliance. The group is made of fishermen, processors and other members of the domestic shrimp industry.
In an interview with the Tallahassee Democrat in FSU's Sandels Building, Singh, Kwawukume and graduate teaching assistant Nethraja Kandula, demonstrated how their shrimp authenticity test – which has created ripples in the restaurant scene – was conducted.
Tall refrigerators positioned on the side of the laboratory located inside the building on Convocation Way were filled with hundreds of samples. Glass cylinders with colorful chemicals and testing tubes with labels sat on the counters and shelves next to testing devices.
This testing site sparked national conversations about the quality of shrimp falsely marketed to consumers on a day-to-day basis.
Taking a refrigerated bag of deep-fried shrimp pulled from restaurants, they took the crustaceans and peeled the crispy layers exposing the white meat to pick out a piece of flesh. This one piece of tissue, almost as fine as a strand of hair, was all they needed.
"The test is designed to identify a DNA sequence," he said. "So, we just run the same test using all the samples." A portable Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) machine helps the scientists identify the difference between domestic species of shrimp and imported species of shrimp.
"We take a tiny piece of shrimp tissue with a disposable toothpick, which is used for DNA isolation by boiling the samples in lysis buffer (a solution that helps to open cells and release their contents)." That's then used to create a reaction and identify the presence of substances in the liquid sample.
After two years of research, the findings were presented at conferences, including a gathering in August 2024 with people who study and monitor the shrimp industry.
Singh informed attendees about the mislabeled shrimp products they were consuming by presenting his research. But after sharing his studies to groups about the fraudulent label, many were shocked, but it didn't spark a lasting impression that the team was looking for.
"Nobody cared initially," he admitted after guests failed to follow up on what could be done to address the misrepresentation. SeaD Consulting realized that stating facts just wasn't enough to provoke change. The only way to create and maintain sustainable conversations was to essentially create "chaos."
After licensing the FSU instruments for testing, Williams was hired by the Southern Shrimp Alliance to visit restaurants. He was initially visiting seafood festivals in major cities and found that a majority of the shrimp featured was imported, even though it was implied to be locally sourced. That is when he was asked to visit restaurants.
Williams went undercover at restaurants and ordered shrimp dishes to collect samples for rapid testing, taking in a number of factors like décor and menu wording to determine if "deceptive advertising" was at play.
"The implication that the customer perceives is the fact that it is domestic shrimp," he said referring to how a restaurant's ambience can create a false sense of authenticity.
After Williams and Singh tested samples from a number of restaurants across the Southeast, they found that in major cities like New Orleans, 21 out of 24 restaurants passed the authenticity test. Tampa failed, with a majority of its restaurants actually offering imported shrimp on their menus, a prime example of the deception Williams mentioned.
These region-based findings were shared with news outlets, notifying consumers across the nation that they may be getting bamboozled.
Restaurants that failed the testing received letters from SeaD Consulting advising them to correct the false advertising, while those confirmed to sell domestic shrimp were named in the articles with praises.
Restaurants that fail to comply with the guidance will have their names reported to news outlets as the consulting organization continues its research to support the sustainability of U.S. shrimpers and hold restauranteurs accountable for consumer transparency.
Legislators in states like Louisiana have already created laws or regulations to correct these behaviors and protect local shrimpers. Florida legislators, who are preparing to start legislative session in March, have not filed any bills to address these concerns, based on a recent review, though Williams has not actively lobbied for them to do so.
Singh believes the practice of offering cheaper substitutes for locally-sourced items doesn't end with shrimp. He believes that other product like grouper and snapper may be in the same boat, raising more questions about the accuracy of menu labels.
Singh has reached out to other food industries to see how further research can begin.
"I feel happy. It's like my research paid off," Singh said. "Reaching out and touching the life of those people. I don't want anything else but to support the local economy."
Kyla A Sanford covers dining and entertainment for the Tallahassee Democrat. New restaurant opening up, special deals, or events coming up? Let me know at ksanford@tallahassee.com. You can also email your suggestions for a future TLH Eats restaurant profile.
This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Bait and switch? FSU study, researcher dives into seafood mislabeling

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Clarifying claims about Missouri schools asking students for menstrual cycle information
Clarifying claims about Missouri schools asking students for menstrual cycle information

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Clarifying claims about Missouri schools asking students for menstrual cycle information

In mid-2025, social media users alleged that Missouri schools were requesting students' menstrual cycle histories. The claim appeared to originate from Democratic state Rep. Elizabeth Fuchs, who said during a YouTube interview that in a "casual conversation" an acquaintance expressed surprise that their child's high school band registration form included a request for the child's menstrual cycle history. At least one Missouri high school did ask students about their menstrual cycle histories. However, the school, Southern Boone High School in Ashland, Missouri, said the inclusion of the questions was a mistake by a third-party contractor, Ohio-based FinalForms, which helps coordinate some — but not all — Missouri school activity forms. The Missouri State High School Activities Association acknowledged that its set of registration forms distributed to schools in 2025 included menstrual cycle history questions, but said that section was solely intended for primary care providers as guidance for physical exams. According to the association, schools are not supposed to collect that information, but only a section pertaining to medical eligibility to participate in activities. In the case of Southern Boone, the association said the website FinalForms set up for the collection of student medical eligibility form information accidentally included the primary care provider section. FinalForms did not admit fault, but said in a statement that the company does not create or mandate form content and that "sensitive medical data" is controlled by school administrations, not FinalForms. In mid-2025, a rumor spread online that Missouri schools were requesting students' menstrual cycle histories. Allegations circulated on platforms like TikTok, YouTube, Threads and Facebook. Some claims specifically said a Missouri high school band program asked female students for menstrual cycle data. Snopes readers also searched our website for information on Missouri schools or the aforementioned band program "asking," "tracking" or "requiring" menstrual cycle information from students. It is true that at least one Missouri high school, Southern Boone High School in Ashland, Missouri, asked students for menstrual cycle information in an online set of activity registration questions in 2025. However, both Southern Boone and the Missouri State High School Activities Association, the state's governing body for high school activities, said the request for menstrual cycle history was included on these forms due to a mistake on the part of FinalForms, a third-party contractor based in Ohio that provides some, but not all, Missouri schools with websites for coordinating activity registration and other data. In a statement shared in a LinkedIn message, a spokesperson for FinalForms did not acknowledge any mistakes and said the company does not mandate or create form content. MSHSAA's director, Jennifer Rukstad, told Snopes in an email that although the association's official set of registration forms includes questions about menstrual cycles, those questions — and the pages they are on — are meant as guidance for a primary care provider's physical exam and schools are not supposed to collect answers to them. It was unclear how widespread this issue was, as Rukstad said MSHSAA only knew of one school that provided an erroneous form. As such, we are not providing a rating to this claim. Snopes previously confirmed that Florida's high school athletics association voted to recommend that schools require student athletes to turn in their menstrual histories. The claim appeared to first circulate widely through a June 2 TikTok video by Missouri resident Suzie Wilson. In the video, which had nearly 120,000 views as of this writing, Wilson said the issue "was brought to my attention" by Democratic state Rep. Elizabeth Fuchs. Fuchs told Snopes via a phone call that she first heard about these allegations in a "very casual conversation with an acquaintance." That acquaintance, a parent at an unidentified Missouri school, did not wish to be named; Fuchs declined to name them or the school to respect that wish. Fuchs said her acquaintance was "taken aback" that the form for high school band registration asked for information about their child's menstrual cycle. The Missouri representative later mentioned this conversation in an interview with progressive news content creator Jeremiah Patterson, who then claimed on May 31 that a Missouri high school band program "is requiring students to hand over menstruation information." "He kept saying 'required, required,'" Fuchs said. "I corrected that in part two of the interview. The parent I talked to said she did not fill out that part of the form and was still able to submit it." Patterson said via email that his main source on the story was Wilson, who told him an unnamed parent said students must fill out "some sort of response" for the menstrual cycle disclosure question. Wilson shared the same information in a phone call with Snopes. Wilson also clarified to Snopes that she heard about the issue from Fuchs' interview with the Patterson show, not from a direct conversation with Fuchs. Wilson posted her initial video about the issue on June 2, which led parents to reach out to her on TikTok, she said. Based on the parents' comments, Wilson alleged in her second, more popular video that at least two Missouri schools used a form that requests menstruation information: Southern Boone and Lee's Summit High School, which is located in a suburb of Kansas City, Missouri. Wilson also told Snopes she heard from the wife of a school official at Rolla Public Schools, around 80 miles south of the Southern Boone district, that their district used the same form. A screenshot of Southern Boone's form, which Wilson provided, showed questions asking students when their first period happened, when their most recent period was and the frequency of their periods. "My big thing is for our girls just to say no," Wilson said. "Don't fill that form out." A spokesperson for the Southern Boone County R-1 School District, Matt Sharp, confirmed in an email that the district's online activity registration form included questions about menstruation history but said it was an error FinalForms made. "Questions related to menstrual cycle history are not required and should not have appeared on our activity registration forms," Sharp said, adding: "As soon as the school district became aware of the issue, we worked quickly with FinalForms to have it corrected and the unnecessary questions removed." The MSHSAA — the state's governing body for high school activities — also said the issue came from FinalForms. The official MSHSAA registration set of forms for physical activities does have questions about menstrual cycle history, but those questions are part of the "Medical History Form" meant only for the family and the student's primary care provider, said Rukstad, the association's director. Schools are not supposed to collect the first three pages of the set of forms, Rukstad said; in fact, the forms specify as much. Schools, Rukstad said, are only required to collect the last page of the MSHSAA "Preparticipation Physical Forms": the "Medical Eligibility Form" (see Page 5). That page must be completed by a primary care provider to indicate that they conducted a physical exam and the student is medically eligible to participate in activities. Rukstad said that the Medical Eligibility Form "contains no specific medical information," and Sharp specified that it does not include questions about menstrual cycle history. According to Rukstad, the website FinalForms designed to collect the medical eligibility information at Southern Boone "included the questions from pages 1 and 2 from the pre-participation physical form." "As soon as we were alerted about it, we contacted the school and Final Forms, and the error was collected a few hours later," Rukstad said. "Additionally, we sent a message to all our member schools reminding them of the process, and Final Forms sent a message to their customers in Missouri doing the same." Rukstad said that aside from Southern Boone, she was unaware of any other schools affected by the same error, but added that "if there were others," she trusted that FinalForms fixed the issue. (MSHSAA, Rukstad said, does not have a business relationship with FinalForms.) "The simple answers to your questions are, no, all high schools are not required to use Final Forms, and NO student in Missouri is required to release information regarding their menstrual cycle in order to participate in extracurricular activities," Rukstad said. A spokesperson for Rolla Public Schools, Gina Zervos, said the school uses the MSHSAA set of forms but only collects the last page, as required. "The remaining pages are used and retained by the signing physician," Zervos said, adding that the school does not use FinalForms in any capacity. Lee's Summit High School did not immediately return a request for comment. According to a representative for FinalForms, on June 3 the company sent "all Missouri customers" a statement regarding "recent questions and concerns regarding the inclusion of certain medical questions — specifically those related to the menstrual cycle — on forms used by your school or district." FinalForms did not directly acknowledge any mistake on the company's part in the statement. The company also did not return additional questions asking them to rebut or corroborate the statements from Southern Boone and MSHSAA. The statement, which a representative for the company sent to Snopes on June 11 via LinkedIn, said, "We do not create or mandate form content" and "Instead, we implement the exact forms and fields that your school or district requests — many of which are modeled after standardized state forms, such as the MSHSAA Pre-Participation Physical Evaluation," or PPE. (The PPE form is on Page 3 of the full set of registration forms from MSHSAA.) The statement also noted that schools may request to remove medical questions from FinalForms and the company "will promptly update your site to reflect" a district's decisions. Furthermore, "sensitive medical data" is controlled by the district's administration and permissions would be "granted solely by authorized school district personnel based on staff roles and responsibilities." "Band directors, coaches, or activity leaders do not have access to detailed medical data collected on the MSHSAA PPE Physical Questions form such as menstrual cycle responses," FinalForms' statement said. "We recognize and take seriously the responsibility of protecting student privacy and empowering local control over data collection practices." However, Fuchs and Wilson remained skeptical that nobody had collected the data; Fuchs pointed to a 2019 story wherein the Missouri state health director at the time testified to keeping a spreadsheet of women's periods to help identify failed abortions. "This terrifies me that we have our children's names and menstrual start dates in data somewhere. There seems to be some real discrepancy on who owns it, who might have access to it," Fuchs said, adding that her office was looking into "how, legislatively, we're able to amend this." To summarize: The Missouri State High School Activities Association's physical form does include menstrual cycle history questions, but schools within the association are not supposed to ask students for that information — that part of the form is meant as guidance for primary care providers performing physical exams on students. At least one Missouri school contracted with a third-party company, FinalForms, which the school said erroneously included those menstrual cycle history questions on the activity registration website the company built for the school. It was unclear how many other schools may have had similar situations. "FinalForms." Accessed 11 June 2025. "FinalForms." FinalForms, Southern Boone School District, Accessed 11 June 2025. Missouri State High School Activities Association. MSHSAA Preparticipation Physical Forms/Procedure. Apr. 2023, Accessed 11 June 2025. "Representative Elizabeth Fuchs." Accessed 11 June 2025. "Southern Boone High School." Accessed 11 June 2025. "Southern Boone School District." Accessed 11 June 2025. Wilson, Suzie. Menstrual Cycle Form. Accessed 11 June 2025.

Lilly's experimental obesity drug shows promise in early study
Lilly's experimental obesity drug shows promise in early study

Miami Herald

timean hour ago

  • Miami Herald

Lilly's experimental obesity drug shows promise in early study

An experimental weight-loss drug from Eli Lilly & Co. helped patients lose weight with few side effects, according to the summary of a small study that suggests the company has another foothold in the obesity market. The drug, called eloralintide, helped some patients lose more than 11% of their body weight in three months, according to an abstract posted Friday ahead of the American Diabetes Association conference in Chicago. The drug is moving to the next stage of development and researchers will present details on dosing and safety at the conference next week. "The data look particularly strong, and should push the program back into investor conversations," Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Prakhar Agrawal wrote in a note to investors. Lilly has shared few details about eloralintide before now, as it's still in the early stages of testing. It's part of a class of drugs that mimic the hormone amylin, which slows digestion and makes people feel full longer. They're thought to be a gentler option for losing weight than currently available injections like Zepbound and Wegovy, which often have side effects like nausea and vomiting. The study enrolled 100 patients who were given different doses of the experimental drug or a placebo for 12 weeks. Weight loss ranged from 2.6% to 11.3%, according to the abstract. Gastrointestinal side effects were relatively minimal, with about 10% of patients experiencing diarrhea and 8% vomiting. Few details were provided, however, including information on risks and benefits based on dose. The promise of drugs that are easier to take than blockbusters like Lilly's Zepbound and its rival Wegovy, from Novo Nordisk A/S, has drawn increasing interest from companies hoping for a piece of pharma's hottest market. In March, Roche Holding AG entered into a $5.3 billion deal to co-develop and commercialize Zealand Pharma A/S' amylin drug, called petrelintide. It is seen as the one to beat in the amylin class, with early trials showing patients lost as much as 8.6% of their body weight in four months, with less nausea than Lilly and Novo's current therapies. AbbVie Inc. agreed to pay as much as $2.2 billion in March for an amylin drug from Danish biotech Gubra A/S, marking its first foray into the obesity market. New York-based startup Metsera Inc. is developing a related compound that may be taken less frequently than weekly shots like Zepbound and Wegovy. Lilly is already a leader in the obesity market, where Zepbound is capturing the majority of new prescriptions. The company has several promising next-generation products in the late stages of development, including a pill called orforglipron and an experimental shot that's thought to be even more effective for weight loss. The company is studying eloralintide alone and in combination with Zepbound - similar to the approach Novo is taking with its next-generation drug CagriSema, which combines an amylin component with semaglutide, the backbone of Wegovy and the diabetes drug Ozempic. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Meriden woman with rare brain condition inspires others on social media
Meriden woman with rare brain condition inspires others on social media

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Meriden woman with rare brain condition inspires others on social media

HARTFORD, Conn. (WTNH) — A Connecticut woman had no idea she had a rare brain condition since birth until she passed out and was flown to Hartford Hospital, where she would end up needing four surgeries. 'My mom had said that I came to her with a regular headache and she said within a matter of five minutes, I had passed out,' 26-year-old Michaela Williams of Meriden said. That jumpstarted her emergency medical ordeal. Dr. Eric Sussman, a Hartford Hospital neurosurgeon helped save her life. It turns out that Williams was among just 1% of the population to have a condition called arteriovenous malformation, or AVM. It is abnormal tangles of high pressure blood vessels in her brain. They flowed into delicate arteries which started to bleed under pressure. 'Removing the AVM is very, I think, one of the more complex surgeries that we do. But in her case it was just the whole clinical picture of her being sick and really teetering on the edge the whole time she was here,' Sussman, who specializes in vascular surgery, said. Sussman says Williams underwent four surgeries, including a craniotomy, where part of her skull was removed to allow her brain to heal for a period of time. Williams' strength and faith pulled her through. Sussman calls it miraculous. 'I'm still creative. I like to write. I like to paint. I like to go outside,' Williams said, who continues to make uplifting TikTok videos like she did before her diagnosis. She hopes to help others who may be going through a tough time. 'I want them to feel encouraged, understood, heard. I want them to feel like they're not the only one,' Williams would like to make a dating app for others living with brain injuries.'Everybody that follows me on TikTok, they are family. They encourage me, they push me, uplift me and we encourage and push and uplift each other,' Williams said. There are two very positive takeaways from Williams' journey. First, she was very lucky that her mother was home when she first passed out to get her emergency care. Second, Dr. Sussman said that her brain will continue to heal, possibly for a few more years. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store