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Wild Alaska fish livers homemade dog treats 5 oz./bag Liverfish Training Treat Pouch from wild Alaska cod & salmon dog that is made in Alaska. Liverfish Training Treat Pouch for Dog & Puppies. Itty bitty crunchies won't make them gain weight while learning basic commands.
Ingredients: Alaska Grown Barley Flour; Wild Alaska Fish Livers (from cod, salmon, rockfish); Fresh Whole Eggs, Mixed Tocopherols (natural Vitamin E), Citric Acid
Guaranteed Analysis with 15.82% Protein, 13.92% Crude Fat, 1.9% Crude Fiber.
- Five ingredients
- Ingredients from Alaska, USA and Belgium
- Fresh wild Alaska fish livers from cod, salmon directly sourced in Alaska
- Sustainable fishing via long line, pot caught, jig, gill & set net
- Made in Alaska
- Made in the USA
- No artificial preservatives
- No substitutions
- No artificial flavorings or seasonings
- No artificial colorings
- No wheat
- No corn
- Resealable bag
- No Salt
- No refined sugar
- No processed fats
- Resealable bag
The benefits of fish livers. Read on.
The fishing industry usually discards fish livers, but a team of researchers has confirmed that they are a good source of polyunsaturated fatty acids, which are beneficial to health. Anchovies are one of the fish whose livers contain the highest levels of these substances.
Fish livers have hardly been used to date, with exceptions such as cod livers, which are used to produce the well-known medicinal oil. In general, fishermen tend to throw fish entrails away into the sea, and if they make it to processing plants they are one of the first fish body parts to be discarded.
However, these organs contain compounds that are beneficial to health, according to a new study by scientists from the University of Almeria, which has been published in the Journal of Food Composition and Analysis.
"The livers of edible fish are a good source of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (LCPUFA), especially those in the omega 3 family, such as eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)," José Luis Guil-Guerrero, lead author of the study, said.
These fatty acids are used to prevent and treat various complaints, such as some kinds of cancer, depression, Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia, behavioural problems and cardiovascular diseases.
The study focused on 12 kinds of fish that are commonly eaten in south eastern Spain, such as hake, shortfin mako and European pilchard. The livers of the great weever (Trachinus draco) and the European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) were those that showed up the highest levels of LCPUFA (51.4% and 47.9% out of the total fatty acids, respectively).
In addition, all the species had a combination of omega-3/omega-6 acids that was "beneficial for human consumption," especially in the case of the liver of the blue whiting (Micromesistius poutassou).
"Unfortunately, discarding these livers means that all their nutritional properties are missed," says Guil-Guerrero, "and if they were used this would also reduce the environmental pollution caused by throwing innards into the water, which is an inherent problem in the fish product processing industry in coastal areas."