Geoduck

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Geoduck
Panopea generosa
GooeyduckSeafood.jpg
Four live specimens of Panopea generosa in a seafood tank
Scientific classification
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P. generosa
Binomial name
Panopea generosa
Gould, 1850

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The Pacific geoduck (/ˈɡdʌk/ "gooey duck"), scientific name Panopea generosa, is a species of very large, edible saltwater clam in the family Hiatellidae.[1][2] The common name is derived from a Lushootseed (Nisqually) word gʷídəq.

The geoduck is native to the west coast of North America. The shell of the clam ranges from 15 centimetres (5.9 in) to over 20 centimetres (7.9 in) in length, but the extremely long siphons make the clam itself much longer than this: the "neck" or siphons alone can be 1 metre (3.3 ft) in length. The geoduck is the largest burrowing clam in the world.[3] It is also one of the longest-living animals of any type, with a lifespan of up to 140 years; the oldest has been recorded at 168 years old.[4]

Etymology

Geoduck for sale at Tsukiji fish market in Tokyo

The name of this clam (/ˈɡdʌk/ "gooey duck") is derived from a Lushootseed (Nisqually) word gʷídəq[5][6] either a word composed of a first element of unknown meaning and əq meaning "genitals" (referring to the shape of the clam),[7] or a phrase meaning "dig deep".[8] Alternate spellings include gweduc, gweduck, goeduck, and goiduck. It is sometimes known as the mud duck, king clam, or when translated literally from Chinese, the elephant-trunk clam.

Between 1983 and 2010, the scientific name of this clam was confused with that of an extinct clam, Panopea abrupta (Conrad, 1849) in the scientific literature.[2]

Biology

Native to the west coast of Canada and the northwest coast of the United States (primarily Washington and British Columbia), these marine bivalve mollusks are the largest burrowing clams in the world, weighing in at an average of 1.5 pounds (0.68 kg) at maturity, but specimens weighing over 15 pounds (6.8 kg) and as much as 2 meters (over 6.5 ft) in length are not unheard of.[citation needed]

A related species, Panopea zelandica, is found in New Zealand and has been harvested commercially since 1989. The largest quantities have come from Golden Bay in the South Island where 100 tonnes were harvested in one year. There is a growing concern over the increase of parasites in the Puget Sound population of geoduck. Whether these microsporidium-like parasitic species were introduced by commercial farming is being studied by Sea Grant. Research to date does indicate their presence.[9]

Geoducks are one of the longest-living organisms in the animal kingdom. The oldest recorded specimen was 168 years old, but individuals usually live up to 140 years.[4] A geoduck sucks water containing plankton down through its long siphon, filters this for food and ejects its refuse out through a separate hole in the siphon. Adult geoducks have few natural predators, which may also contribute to their longevity. In Alaska, sea otters, and dogfish have proved capable of dislodging geoducks; starfish also attack and feed on the exposed geoduck siphon.

Geoducks are broadcast spawners. A female geoduck produces about 5 billion eggs in her century-long lifespan. However, due to a low rate of recruitment and a high rate of mortality for geoduck eggs, larvae, and post-settled juveniles, populations are slow to rebound.[10] In the Puget Sound, studies indicate that the recovery time for a harvested tract is 39 years.[11]

Biomass densities in Southeast Alaska are estimated by divers, then inflated by twenty percent to account for geoducks not visible at the time of survey.[12] This estimate is used to predict the two percent allowed for commercial harvesting.[12]

Industry

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Seafood geoduck display in a Chinese restaurant in Hong Kong

The world's first geoduck fishery was created in 1970, but demand for the half-forgotten clam was low due to its texture[citation needed]. As of 2011, these clams sell in China for over $150/lb (US$330/kg).[13][14]

The geoduck's high market value has created an $80-million US industry, with harvesting occurring in the states of Alaska, Washington, and Oregon and the Canadian province of British Columbia. It is one of the most closely regulated fisheries in both countries. In Washington, Department of Natural Resources staff are on the water continually monitoring harvests to ensure revenues are received, and the same is true in Canada where the Underwater Harvesters' Association manages the Canadian Fishery in conjunction with Canada's Department of Fisheries and Oceans. The Washington State Department of Health tests water and flesh to assure clams are not filtering and holding pollutants, an ongoing problem. With the rise in price has come the inevitable problem with poaching, and with it the possibility some could be harvested from unsafe areas.[15]

An ostensibly record-setting geoduck, Ye Olde Curiosity Shop, Seattle, Washington.

As of 2007, advances in the testing system for contaminated clams have allowed geoduck harvesters to deliver live clams more consistently. The new testing system determines the viability of clams from tested beds before the harvesters fish the area. Previous methods tested clams after harvest. This advancement has meant that 90 percent of clams were delivered live to market in 2007. In 2001, only 10 percent were live.[16] Because geoduck have a much higher market value live—an additional $2 to $3 per pound—this development has helped to stimulate the burgeoning industry.

Environmental impact

Geoduck farming grow-out and harvest practices are controversial,[17] and have created conflicts with shoreline property owners,[18][19][20][21][22] and concerns from nongovernmental organizations.[23] However, the Environmental Defense Fund has found that bivalves (oysters, mussels, and clams) are beneficial to the marine environment.[24] The water must be certifiably clean to plant geoducks commercially.[25] Regulation was mandated in 2007.[26][27] Studies have been funded to determine short- and long-term environmental and genetic impacts.[28] In southern Puget Sound, the effect of geoduck farming on large mobile animals is ambiguous.[29] A 2004 draft biological assessment, commissioned by three of the largest commercial shellfish companies in the Puget Sound region, identified no long-term effects of geoduck farming on threatened or endangered species.[30]

Culinary uses

The large, meaty siphon is prized for its savory flavor and crunchy texture. Geoduck is regarded by some as an aphrodisiac because of its phallic shape.[3][31] A team of American and Italian researchers analyzed bivalves and found they were rich in amino acids that trigger increased levels of sex hormones.[32] Their high zinc content aids the production of testosterone.[33] It is very popular in China, where it is considered a delicacy,[3] mostly eaten cooked in a fondue-style Chinese hot pot. In Korean cuisine, geoducks are eaten raw with spicy chili sauce, sautéed, or in soups and stews. In Japan, geoduck is prepared as raw sashimi, dipped in soy sauce and wasabi. On Japanese menus in cheaper sushi restaurants, geoduck is sometimes substituted for Tresus keenae, a species of horse clam, and labeled mirugai or mirukuigai. It is considered to have a texture similar to an ark shell (known in Japanese as akagai). Mirugai is sometimes translated into English as "giant clam", and it is distinguished from himejako sushi, which is made from Tridacna gigas.

Chinese import ban

In December 2013, China imposed a ban on geoduck and other "double-shell aquatic animals" – such as clams, oysters, mussels, and scallops – that were imported from the west coast of the United States. Chinese officials claimed to have found in an Alaskan shipment high levels of paralytic shellfish poisoning, a biotoxin that shellfish can accumulate, which when eaten by humans, can cause severe illness or even death. Companies exporting the product claim that Chinese inspectors were using a standard more rigorous than considered safe for human consumption. A shipment from Washington state was high in arsenic.[34] The ban was in place for less than 6 months, ending in May 2014.[35]

In popular culture

Film

  • A documentary about geoducks, 3 Feet Under: Digging Deep for the Geoduck Clam, won the best documentary award at the Thunderbird International Film Festival.[36]

Internet

  • On the 24th episode of the YouTube web-show, Wreckless Eating (uploaded on June 1, 2012), Matt Zion, Chris Wreckless, and Chelsea try the geoduck along with a "load of weird foods", which include starfruit, bitter melon, capers in salt, almond extract, salted fish/plum/octopus and wasabi abura (aka horseradish oil).

Mascots

Print

  • In the book Onions in the Stew, on her time living on the Puget Sound,[37] author Betty MacDonald described digging for and eating a geoduck, which she reported as being delicious; and her book The Egg and I describes in detail how to collect and cook clams including the geoduck.[38]
  • In the book Snow Falling on Cedars, childhood friends Hatsue and Ishmael dig for geoducks "below the bluffs at South Beach".[39]

Music

  • Canadian children's entertainer Fred Penner has a song titled The Gooey Duck Song, which refers to the process of digging geoducks.

Television

  • The mockumentary Love Mussel (2001) tells the story of actor Kevin Smith covering the story of a small town in New Zealand following the discovery that the geoduck, a local shellfish, has similar effects to Viagra.[40]
  • A geoduck farm was featured in season 2, episode 24 the American Discovery Channel television show Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe, on July 18, 2006, which features host Mike Rowe harvesting geoduck clams in Puget Sound.[41]
  • One contestant has their standard clams replaced with geoduck as a sabotage on Season 2, Episode 1 of Cutthroat Kitchen.
  • On Hell's Kitchen Season 13, Episode 2, in the team challenge, a series of sand sculptures had been set up and in each sculpture were several geoducks, which the contests had to dig up for the first part of the challenge. The second part had them make geoduck sashimi.
  • On The Great Food Truck Race Season 4, Episode 2, "A strange brew in Portland" In the truck stop challenge, contestants were challenged to sell food which had to feature geoduck as the primary ingredient. The first food truck team to sell $200 worth of a limited supply of geoduck food got to move on towards the finish.[42]

References

  1. Panopea generosa Gould, 1850.  Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 28 December 2010.
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  6. American Heritage Dictionary
  7. Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd edition (March 2012), s.v. "geoduck" (subscription required).
  8. A. Campbell, R. M. Harbo, and C. M. Hand, "Harvesting and distribution of Pacific Geoduck Clams", Proceedings of the North Pacific Symposium on Invertebrate Stock Assessment and Management (1998), p. 350.
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  10. Georgina Willner. "The Potential Impacts of the Commercial Geoduck (Panope generosa) Hydraulic Harvest Method on Organisms in the Sediment and at the Water-Sediment Interface in Puget Sound", Master's Thesis, The Evergreen State College, Olympia, Washington, June 2006.
  11. David Palazzi, Lynn Goodwin, Alex Bradbury, Bob Sizemore, Leigh Espy, Susan Sturges, Candis Ladenburg, and Blanch Sabottke. "FINAL Supplemental Environment Impact Statement (S.E.I.S.) for The Puget Sound Commercial Geoduck Fishery", Washington State Department of Natural Resources and Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife, May 23, 2001. p. 135.
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  14. Welch, Craig, 2012. NW geoducks fetch top dollar in China, and as prices soar, so do concerns about illegal harvesting in Puget Sound, The Seattle Times, April 22, 2012, pp 1 & 10.
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  20. Save Our Shoreline
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  22. Henderson Bay Shoreline Association
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  30. http://www.protectourshoreline.org/taylor/7BiologicalEvaluation.pdf
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  35. http://www.bizjournals.com/seattle/morning_call/2014/05/china-lifts-washington-geoduck-ban.html
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  42. http://www.foodnetwork.com/shows/the-great-food-truck-race/400-series/a-strange-brew-in-portland.html

External links