Search results for "EUROPEAN PILCHARD"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Carbon, nitrogen and oxygen isotope fractionation during food cooking: Implications for the interpretation of the fossil human record.

2017

13 pages; International audience; ObjectivesStable isotope data provide insight into the reconstruction of ancient human diet. However, cooking may alter the original stable isotope compositions of food due to losses and modifications of biochemical and water components.MethodsTo address this issue, carbon, nitrogen and oxygen isotope ratios were measured on meat aliquots sampled from various animals such as pork, beef, duck and chicken, and also from the flesh of fishes such as salmon, European seabass, European pilchard, sole, gilt-head bream, and tuna. For each specimen, three pieces were cooked according to the three most commonly-known cooking practices: boiling, frying and roasting on…

010506 paleontologyMeatSwine[SHS.ANTHRO-BIO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropologyEUROPEAN PILCHARDBiology01 natural sciencesIsotopes of oxygenAnthropology PhysicalIsotopesSalmon[SDU.STU.GC]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistrymedicinestable isotopeAnimals0601 history and archaeologyFood sciencehumans0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRoasting2. Zero hungerCooking Practices060101 anthropologycookingδ13CStable isotope ratioFossilsFleshfoodfood and beverages06 humanities and the arts[ SDU.STU.GC ] Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Geochemistrymedicine.drug_formulation_ingredient13. Climate actionAnthropology[ SHS.ANTHRO-BIO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Biological anthropologyCattleAnatomyTunadietChickensFood Analysis
researchProduct

Nematode Parasites of the European Pilchard, Sardina pilchardus (Walbaum, 1792): A Genuine Human Hazard?

2022

The European pilchard is one of the most frequently consumed fish species in Mediterranean countries, especially in Italy and Spain, and has been reported as the cause of at least eight human anisakidosis cases in Spain. With the aim to shed light on the potential human parasitosis risk posed by nematode larvae belonging to families Anisakidae or Raphidascarididae, a total of 350 sardines captured in the Atlantic Ocean (175 specimens) and the Mediterranean Sea (175 specimens), acquired in various Spanish nationwide supermarket chains, were helminthologically analyzed. The statistical analysis of some helminth parameters revealed a higher presence of nematodes belonging to the genus Hysterot…

ParàsitsGeneral VeterinaryEuropean pilchard; <i>Sardina pilchardus</i>; Spain; <i>Hysterothylacium</i>; <i>Anisakis</i>; human anisakidosis riskAnimal Science and ZoologyAnisakisAnimals
researchProduct