This study aimed to produce new value‐added products from dolphinfish (
Coryphaena hippurus
) as fillets when using cold smoking combined with natural antioxidants, obtained from
Halocnemum strobilaceum
a plant belonging to halophytes. The fillet treatments were controlled (untreated), immersed in standard brine (
STD
), treated with Na
CI
and antioxidant before freezing (Aox‐pre) and treated with NaCl and antioxidant after thawing (Aox‐post). The quality of dolphinfish fillets was assessed using sensory, biochemical, microbiological, and technological parameters. Treating fillets with antioxidants before freezing and cold smoking (Aox‐pre) enhanced significantly the shelf life, as well as improved the biochemical, microbiological, and sensory aspects of the product. Aox‐pre fillets had the lowest peroxide values (
PV
) and malondialdehyde (
MDA
) content, demonstrating that the immediate treatment of fillets with the polyphenols protected lipids from peroxidation. The smoking process, together with antioxidant treatment, significantly reduced microbial counts after 15 days of storage, compared to the control. Overall, combining antioxidant treatments with cold smoking has a positive effect on the quality of Aox‐pre fillets with respect to both sensory components and biochemical parameters associated with shelf life. Consequently, Aox‐pre treatment enhances the marketability of this species, promoting local and seasonal products, contributing to costal fisheries sustainability.
The mercury (Hg) poisoning of Minamata Bay of Japan widely activated a global attention to Hg toxicity and its potential consequences to the aquatic ecosystem and human health. This has resulted to an increased need for a dynamic assembly, contextualization, and quantification of both the current state-of-the-art and approaches for understanding the cause-and-effect relationships of Hg exposure. Thus, the objective of this present review is to provide both hazardous toxic properties and toxicological update of Hg, focusing on how it ultimately affects the aquatic biota to potentially produce human health effects. Primarily, we discussed processes that relate to Hg exposure, including immunological aspects and risk assessment, vulnerability, toxicokinetics, and toxicodynamics, using edible fish, swordfish (Xiphias gladius), as a model. In addition, we summarized available information about Hg concentration limits set by different governmental agencies, as recognized by national and international standardization authorities.
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