lLabeling and marketing local seafood products may involve different considerations than for other types of local food. One consideration is that the production of wild-caught seafood may be bounded spatially and temporally in ways that are different than local agriculture due to the location of fishing grounds, impacts of fishery regulation, and movement and migra tion of wild fish. Given these constraints, the perceived distance definition of local seafood may differ from other types of food. Campbell et al. (2014) report that fish transported 175 miles inland for consumption still is valued by consumers as local seafood, which stands in contrast to the distance definition of local for other foods (Smith and MacKinnon 2007; Adams and Adams 2008). With the continued emergence of local seafood systems, market participants will need to explore an environmentally and socially acceptable distance definition for local seafood.