Tuna hits highest price in nine years at Tokyo auction

By Roland Buerk

BBC News, Tokyo

Tuna stocks are running low but demand for the delicacy remains high A tuna has been sold at auction in Tokyo's fish market for 16.28 million yen ($175,000, £109,000), the highest price paid in Japan for nine years. The bluefin tuna weighs 232 kg - nearly four times as much as the average Japanese man. It was caught off the northern tip of Japan's main island of Honshu, in waters famed for high quality fish. Tuna is prized in Japan, where people eat it raw in sushi, but there is concern that stocks are dwindling. RECORD-BREAKING FOODS One of the biggest truffles found in decades fetched $330,000 (£165,000) at auction in 2007 A salad filled with caviar, kreel-caught langoustines, Cornish crab and lobster cost $1,024 (£635) A Glasgow chef made a $3,467 (£2,150) pizza for a couple in Rome - topped with edible gold, lobster and champagne-soaked caviar The most expensive sandwich in the world was recognised in 2007 at $161 (£100) A Belfast hotel claimed it offered the world's most expensive cocktail at $1,209 (£750) The record-breaking tuna was put on the block in the first auction of the new year at Tokyo's Tsukiji fish market. The tuna was bought jointly by one of the city's most upmarket restaurants, and an entrepreneur from Hong Kong who runs a chain of sushi bars. Last year a similar fish made less than 10 million yen. Bluefin tuna is known as the king of sushi and the Japanese eat more of it than any other nation, according to the BBC's correspondent in Tokyo, Roland Buerk. Conservationists are calling for a moratorium on fishing to save the bluefin tuna from extinction in the Atlantic and Mediterranean.



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