“…During and following petroleum spills in marine environments, there are often immediate and lingering concerns regarding negative impacts on deep sea as well as estuarine resources and possible health risks associated with consuming finfish and shellfish harvested from affected areas (Bolger, Henry, & Carrington, ; Cunha, Neuparth, Moreira, Santos, & Reis‐Henriques, ; Dickey, ; Field, Fall, & Nighswander, ; Fitzgerald & Gohlke, ; Garza, Prada, Varela, & Rodriguez, ; Genualdi, DeJager, & Begley, ; Gilroy, ; Gohlke, Doke, Tipre, Leader, & Fitzgerald, ; Greiner, Lagasse, & Neff, ; Law, & Hellou, ; Levin, Gilmore, & Carruth, ; Rotkin‐Ellman & Solomon, ; Rotkin‐Ellman, Wong, & Solomon, ; Sammarco et al., ; Sammarco, Kolian, & Warby, ; Sathiakumar, Tipre, & Turner‐Henson, ; Saxton, Newton, & Rorberg, ; Simon‐Friedt et al., ; Surís‐Regueiro, Garza‐Gil, & Varela‐Lafuente, ; Wilson, Wickliffe, & Overton, ; Wilson et al., ; Xia, Hagood, & Childers, ; Ylitalo, Krahn, & Dickhoff, ). This was certainly evident following the two largest marine petroleum spills in the United States, those being the Exxon Valdez tanker spill and the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) platform spill (Bolger et al., ; Dickey, ; Field et al., ; Fitzgerald & Gohlke, ; Genualdi et al., ; Gohlke et al., ; Greiner et al., ; Levin et al., ; Rotkin‐Ellman, & Solomon, ; Rotkin‐Ellman et al., ; Sammarco et al., , ; Sathiakumar et al., ; Saxton et al., ; Simon‐Friedt et al., ; Wilson et al., , ; Xia et al., ; Ylitalo et al., ). Because of such concerns, considerable resources from the responsible party or parties, health agencies, and academic researchers are then directed toward scrutinizing finfish and shellfish samples to determine if any spill‐related chemicals have contaminated the seafood supply (Dickey, ; Gohlke et al., ; Lubchenco, McNutt, & Dreyfus, ; Rotki...…”